All Global Reinsurance articles in October 2007
View all stories from this issue.
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Features
Rain or shine
Saving for a rainy day has taken on a whole new meaning. Weather derivatives, discovers Ronald Gift Mullins, are no longer a novelty.
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Features
The same old mistakes
Despite earning record profits in 2006, reinsurers are failing to put their excess capital to good use, warn David Siesko and Neil Weiss. Investing in cutting-edge claims technology and best practice now will save headaches in years to come.
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GR Focus
A terrorist’s mind
Political risk underwriters do not attempt to get inside a terrorist’s mind. Solid underwriting principles apply as much to this sector as any other. David James describes the evolution of a market with confused origins and an uncertain future.
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Country Analysis
Taking the lead
Long considered to be playing second fiddle to Hong Kong, Singapore has emerged as an Asian insurance powerhouse. Liz Booth investigates the country’s rising prominence.
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Features
The price isn’t right
Angry industry associations have hit out at suggestions that the subscription market is anti-competitive. Helen Yates asks if this could push differentiated pricing up the agenda
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Features
Politics and insurance
With proposals for a federal catastrophe facility in the US, what can we learn from the Florida story? asks Lindsey Rogerson.
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Features
From the same hymn sheet
A pilot scheme led by Hannover Re is exploring the standardisation of communication in property placements across Europe. Professor Volker Gruhn, Jürgen Petzold and Clemens Schäfer explain more.
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Industry Matters
Grandfather insurance
Why are marine insurers trying to defy gravity? asks Neil Macnaughtan
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GR Focus
Global terror map
Terrorist threats are constantly evolving, making life for insurers particularly difficult. Exclusive Analysis presents a snapshot of terror trends around the globe and what they could mean for insurers and reinsurers.
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Investment Analysis
Predicting the fallout
As the credit crunch widens its grip on the global debt markets, Lindsey Rogerson asks if the insurance and reinsurance industry should be concerned
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Industry Matters
Enabling Reform
The London market needs to respond to global competition pressures quickly, says Graham Wright
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GR Focus
Derailing TRIA
The Terrorism Risk Insurance Act will sunset on 31 December 2007. A bill proposing its renewal for the next 15 years should provide much needed stability. But only if it does not mandate insurers to cover attacks using weapons of mass destruction. Ben McKay explains why.
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Industry Matters
Staffing crisis
Sandy Scott says that knowledge must be attained and then maintained
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Features
The crunch is coming
In the absence of major hurricanes, talk at this year’s Monte Carlo Rendez-Vous focused on the “credit crunch”. Mairi Mallon considers what fallout the industry should expect from the collapse of the US subprime market.
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Features
GR Survey: Insuring tomorrow’s climate
Is the industry strong enough to cope with $40bn-plus weather losses every single year? Helen Yates presents the results from GR’s latest survey on insuring climate change
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Industry Matters
Market changing events
Aon Re Global released its expectations for the worldwide reinsurance renewals with effective dates of 1 January 2008 in September.The most significant finding indicated that the size of an industry event or events necessary to change the downward direction of the current reinsurance pricing cycle – $15bn to $25bn – ...
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Cover Story
Protection in all conditions
The appetite for cat bonds has continued unabated in 2007, despite other non-traditional products being wound down. But are they here for good, asks Nick Thorpe, and why is everyone going cat bond crazy?
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Editor's Note
Life after Monte Carlo
I survived my first Rendez-Vous de Septembre two years ago. There have been interesting changes in just that short time.Granted, I was particularly green during my first Rendez-Vous. I recall hyperventilating as I hobbled around the marina in impractical heels gasping down the phone that somebody had moved the GE ...
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Analysis
Hardy - A family affair
Hardy Underwriting is on the cusp of entering new territory, according to its CEO Barbara Merry. Emma Jones looks at the grand plans of a “niche” Lloyd’s insurer with 30 years of unbroken underwriting profitability.