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Boston — Karen Clark, former president and CEO of AIR Worldwide formed an independent firm—Karen Clark & Co.—to help companies better use catastrophe models as sophisticated tools for making important risk management decisions.
November 12 -
Armonk, N.Y. and Ottawa - IBM and Cognos have entered into a definitive agreement for IBM to acquire Cognos, a publicly held company based in Ottawa, in an all-cash transaction at a price of approximately $5 billion or $58 per share, with a net transaction value of $4.9 billion. The acquisition is subject to Cognos shareholder approval, regulatory approvals and other customary closing conditions. It is expected to close in the first quarter of 2008.The acquisition of Cognos supports IBM's Information on Demand strategy, a cross-company initiative announced on Feb. 16, 2006 that combines IBM's strength in information integration, content and data management and business consulting services to unlock the business value of information, according to IBM. Integrating Cognos, the 23rd IBM acquisition in support of its Information on Demand strategy, will enable new business insights to be delivered to a broader set of people across an organization, beyond the traditional users of business intelligence.
November 12 -
Schaumburg, Ill. – News reports of poison toothpaste and lead-laced toys have not just caught the attention of consumers. The nation’s importers, and the commercial lines writers who serve them, are keenly aware of the dire implications of unsafe products.
November 12 -
Des Plaines, Ill. — The National Insurance Crime Bureau (NICB), a non-profit organization dedicated to preventing, detecting and defeating insurance fraud and vehicle theft through information analysis, investigations, training and public awareness, is launching a free service to help protect the nation's consumers.
November 9 -
New York - With location-specific terrorism risk exposure data, TerrorRisk is a unique risk assessment model that provides the insurance industry with targeted and actionable terrorism risk forecasts to help maximize opportunities and mitigate risk. Developed by New York-based Pitney Bowes MapInfo and Exclusive Analysis, TerrorRisk utilizes fact-based, location-specific metrics to score the propensity and likely severity of violent and political risks on more than 3,700 global points of interest to help insurers and risk managers make more insightful underwriting, rating, coverage and risk selection decisions.
November 7 -
Warren, N.J. - To address the complex and unique risks that information and network technology companies face serving the federal government, the Chubb Group of Insurance Companies, Warren, N.J. , assembled a group of underwriters, loss control engineers and claim specialists to offer specialized products and services for federal contractors in close collaboration with outside legal counsel.
November 7 -
Chicago — Risk management provider Aon Corp. and Arup, a London-based global multidisciplinary engineering and consulting firm, today announced a strategic alliance that brings to the marketplace an unprecedented pre- and post-loss consulting service that offers clients an independent, global catastrophic risk management solution.
November 7 -
Boston — Karen Clark, previously of Applied Insurance Research, is now providing comprehensive reviews of company internal catastrophe risk assessment and management processes. The independent reviews, provided by Boston-based Karen Clark & Co., her newest company, are designed to help companies ensure they have in place holistic risk management processes that comply with best practices. Holistic risk management practices incorporate independent benchmarks and metrics to assess the quality of catastrophe model input and output.
November 6 -
XSELL RELEASES INSURANCE FRAMEWORX PLATFORMXSell LLC, a Jacksonville, Fla., provider of on-demand marketing solutions, released XSell's Insurance FrameworX, a version of its Web-based Customer Interaction Marketing platform.
November 1 -
London - Risk Management Solutions Inc. (RMS), a Newark , Calif. , provider of products and services for catastrophe risk management, launched a new initiative among six of Lloyd's largest managing agents this week designed to change the way exposure data is used in the London Market. The RMS London Market Data Community gives members access to data that has been standardized for use among the members. Data is prepared once by the RMS Data Cleansing Team, and then made available to the community, saving subscribers the time and money involved in preparing the information individually.
November 1 -
Chicago – Citing increased competition and falling rates, insurance brokerage Aon Corp., said yesterday that it will cut 2,700 jobs, or approximately 6% of its workforce, as part of a restructuring plan.The broker made the announcement as part of its release of its 3rd quarter financial results.
November 1 -
New Orleans — Carriers using advanced analytics in their underwriting, claims and marketing efforts will have a better chance of surviving the current and future state of a softening insurance market, Frank Coyne, chairman, president and CEO of ISO told the 800 attendees in attendance this week at the company’s ISOTech 2007 Connect Conference in New Orleans, La.
October 29 -
Armonk, N.Y. – In the past three years, 62% of enterprises with more than $5 billion in revenue encountered a major risk event, and 42% of these enterprises were not well prepared for the event, according to a study of more than 1,200 chief financial officers (CFOs) and senior finance executives from 79 countries worldwide. The study, from IBM, concludes that a surprising number of enterprises are not well prepared to handle the impact of a major risk event to their organization.
October 26 -
New York - Guy Carpenter & Co. LLC, a global risk and reinsurance specialist and a part of the Marsh & McLennan Cos., expanded its award-winning, Web-enabled i-aXs data management platform to include both workers' compensation and accident and health lines.
October 23 -
Wakefield, Mass. and Jersey City, N.J.– P&C policy and rating solutions provider ISO Insurance Technology Solutions (ISO-ITS) and consulting firm Edgewater Technology Inc. have entered into a strategic alliance.
October 17 -
Reston, Va.–Insurance regulators in eight states have granted written recognition to the straight-through processing (STP) standards initiative of NAVA, the Association for Insured Retirement Solutions.
October 15 -
Jersey City, N.J. — Extending its reach in healthcare market as a provider of data, analytics and decision-support solutions, ISO Properties Inc. confirmed the acquisition of Salt Lake City-based HealthCare Insight LLC (HCI), which provides solutions that enable healthcare claims payors to prevent fraud, abuse and overpayment. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.
October 11 -
WASHINGTON — The practice of insurers basing auto insurance premiums on a customer's credit rating was questioned at a House hearing yesterday, with critics asking whether it disproportionately hurts young people and minorities.
October 3 -
Washington — Gov. Marc Racicot, president of the American Insurance Association (AIA), made the case that the Federal Trade Commission's (FTC) credit study is the latest proof that credit-based insurance scores are fair, objective and beneficial to a vast majority of consumers. The American Insurance Association, Washington, represents approximately 350 major insurance companies that provide all lines of property/casualty insurance and write more than $123 billion annually in premiums. "There is no question that credit-based insurance scores are an efficient and accurate predictor of risk," stated Gov. Racicot. "Their use helps insurers refine their pricing to better reflect an individual's risk profile, resulting in most consumers paying less for insurance." In a statement to a U.S. House Subcommittee, Racicot responded to the FTC study, "Credit-Based Insurance Scores: Impact on Consumers of Automobile Insurance," (July 2007), which is the subject of a hearing today in the U.S. House Committee on Financial Services, Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations. "It's a simple equation—the better your credit score, the lower your risk in the eyes of insurers— resulting in you paying less for your insurance," concluded Racicot. "The use of credit-based insurance scores has been in existence for more than a decade and has helped expand the availability of insurance in many markets, and increased competition among insurers." Opponents still contend that credit scoring tends to raise premiums overall, that it doesn't correlate directly with risk and that it may serve as a proxy for racial and ethnic discrimination, because some minority groups have lower incomes and are more likely to have credit problems. The FTC's study firmly validates the insurance risk assessment capabilities and consumer benefits of credit-based insurance scores. Most people pay less for insurance because of insurer use of credit, which the FTC's study, and numerous state studies have confirmed. According to the FTC, scores are 'predictive of the number of claims consumers file and the total cost of those claims,' and 'scores also may make the process of granting and pricing insurance quicker and cheaper, cost savings that may be passed on to consumers in the form of lower premiums.' Additionally, the FTC study directly refutes unfounded claims that insurers use credit-based insurance scores to 'unfairly target' minorities saying such scores 'have little effect as a "proxy" for membership in racial and ethnic groups in decisions related to insurance.' The FTC study shows there is no way to determine a person's race, ethnicity or economic status by simply looking at an insurance score. In August, the Federal Reserve also issued a report to Congress that evaluated the use of credit scoring and its effects on the availability and affordability of credit. The Federal Reserve's findings tracked closely with those in the FTC's study. Both clearly established that credit is a reliable risk predictor, and that credit scoring has little to no effect as a proxy for race or ethnicity, reports the government body. In urer use of credit is governed not only by the Fair Credit Reporting Act, which expressly allows for its use, but by dozens of state laws and regulations, including what is considered standard practice in the market, the National Conference of Insurance Legislators (NCOIL) Model Act on Credit. Introduced in 2002, the NCOIL model is law or regulation in 26 states, and it balances insurers' need to use an actuarially sound variable while enumerating certain consumer rights and protections, including not having credit be the sole determining factor for coverage or non-renewal, or allowing an exemption to insurer use of credit due to "special life circumstances" for things such as the death of a spouse or an unexpected medical emergency. The law also requires insurers to re-rate customers with corrected credit reports, notify applicants that credit information is being used in setting rates and let customers know if their credit information results in an adverse action—a higher premium, for example, or denial of coverage. It also is designed to protect consumers' privacy. Sources: PR Newswire, INN archives
October 2 -
Washington — A subgroup of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) is drafting a proposal to amend the existing regulatory framework to allow for single-state licensing of U.S. reinsurers, the insurance body reports. NAIC's Reinsurance Task Force is encouraging the NAIC to develop a reinsurance supervision review department (RSRD) to comprehensively modernize reinsurance regulation in the United States. "As state insurance regulators look at enhancements to reinsurance regulation in the United States," said NAIC President and Alabama Insurance Commissioner Walter Bell, "we are encouraged by supervisory developments in non-U.S. jurisdictions where robust regulation of reinsurance has recently been introduced." In the European Union, for example, member states are in the process of implementing a new reinsurance directive. The NAIC's reinsurance proposal could ultimately provide a framework for mutual recognition between the U.S. and non-U.S. jurisdictions. The RSRD would assist in the evaluation of the extent to which non-U.S. jurisdictions apply regulatory oversight that is "functionally equivalent" to U.S. regulation. Under the proposal, non-U.S. reinsurers domiciled in "functionally equivalent" jurisdictions would be allowed to access the entire U.S. market through a single port of entry state. "U.S. regulators believe that a reinsurance regulatory framework also must be sufficiently flexible to accommodate the rapidly changing reinsurance environment, while providing for appropriate levels of financial stability, solvency and predictability that are critical to a vigorous market, consumer protection and a strong and secure insurance regulatory system," Bell added. NAIC's Task Force will discuss this proposal during a meeting Nov. 7-8, 2007, held in conjunction with the NAIC Financial Summit in Atlanta. For more information, visit www.naic.org/committees_e_reinsurance.htm. Source: National Association of Insurance Commissioners
October 2