Model Errors in Disaster Planning This article is the fourth in a series on how the evolution of catastrophe models provides a foundation for innovation.
How to Find Coverage for Terrorism Risks By Duncan Ellis With Congress not yet renewing TRIPRA, businesses should use risk models and contingency plans to gain access to alternative sources.
TRIA Non-Renewal: Your Next Steps By Duncan Ellis Solutions may include asking insurers if they will not invoke sunset clauses or conditional exclusions, and provide stop-gap coverage.
TRIA Non-Renewal: Effect on P&C? By Robert Hartwig There is general agreement that prices will be higher and more volatile, and coverage sometimes hard to find.
TRIA Non-Renewal: Effect on Work Comp? By Mark Walls Likely not much. The workers' compensation marketplace has already adapted to the absence of the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act.
How CAT Models Lead to Soft Prices By Nick Lamparelli James Rice This article is the third in a series on how the evolution of catastrophe models provides a foundation for much-needed innovation in insurance.
What’s the Cost of the Polar Vortex? By Kory Wells Even one slip and fall because of winter weather can lead to a big increase in workers' comp premiums, so it's crucial to be prepared.
Riding Out the Storm: the New Models By James Rice Nick Lamparelli This article is the second in a series on how the evolution of catastrophe models provides a foundation for much-needed innovation in insurance.
Auto Insurance in an Existential Crisis By Stephen Applebaum Alan Demers The 125-year-old, $300 billion U.S. auto insurance industry is caught between runaway inflation and strained consumer wallets.
The Promise of Continuous Underwriting By Bill Deemer Bobby Touran Typically, a risk is underwritten, bound... and forgotten. But new streams of data and automation allow for continuous underwriting.
Convergence and the Insurance Ecosystem By Stephen Applebaum Alan Demers Companies must anticipate the future, innovate beyond their core and transform their capabilities as rapidly as technology allows.
Lemonade's 'Synthetic Agent' Nonsense By Matteo Carbone Desperate for growth, Lemonade produces another howler: A lender receiving a 16% interest rate is presented as a (synthetic) agent.