Most Recent Marsh/JLT: What Happens Next? By James Twining With the E.U. having approved the deal, only one question remains: Just how much of a train wreck will the Marsh/JLT merger be?
Marsh/JLT: What Happens Next? By James Twining With the E.U. having approved the deal, only one question remains: Just how much of a train wreck will the Marsh/JLT merger be?
All Articles End for the London Wholesale Market? By James Twining Six long-term gravitational forces are likely to combine to tip the independent London wholesale insurance market into a different orbit. Has Insurtech Jumped the Shark? By James Twining If we haven't reached peak-hype yet, then we surely can't be that far off. But the need to change is still very real. Why Aren't Brokers Vanishing? By James Twining Despite the threat of disintermediation, the broker survives and, in many case, prospers. Why is this? Do We Even Need Insurers Any Longer? By James Twining Brokers operate under the threat of disintermediation, but they have the data and the relationships. Why do they even need insurers? Is It Time to End the Annual Policy? By James Twining The insurance industry's continued attachment to the annual policy feels increasingly like a relic from a bygone age of quill and parchment.
End for the London Wholesale Market? By James Twining Six long-term gravitational forces are likely to combine to tip the independent London wholesale insurance market into a different orbit.
Has Insurtech Jumped the Shark? By James Twining If we haven't reached peak-hype yet, then we surely can't be that far off. But the need to change is still very real.
Why Aren't Brokers Vanishing? By James Twining Despite the threat of disintermediation, the broker survives and, in many case, prospers. Why is this?
Do We Even Need Insurers Any Longer? By James Twining Brokers operate under the threat of disintermediation, but they have the data and the relationships. Why do they even need insurers?
Is It Time to End the Annual Policy? By James Twining The insurance industry's continued attachment to the annual policy feels increasingly like a relic from a bygone age of quill and parchment.