MagPortal.com   Clustify - document clustering
 Home  |  Newsletter  |  My Articles  |  My Account  |  Help 
Similar Articles
Insurance & Technology
July 12, 2006
Maria Woehr
Not Risking It The availability of catastrophe models generated overconfidence among insurers, which, after the past hurricane season, are realizing the technology's limitations. However, insurers will still continue to rely on cat modeling to reduce risk exposure. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
May 14, 2007
Coy & Aston
Hurricane Ahead, But Lower Insurance Why the price of property coverage is going down in the face of dire predictions. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
March 16, 2004
Julie Gallagher
Battening Down the Hatches When it comes to predicting low-frequency, high-impact catastrophes, underwriters of risk must rely on thousands of years of scenarios rather than their proprietary loss data. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
November 28, 2005
Maria Woehr
Tracking Super Cats The devastating effects of Hurricane Katrina will prompt more insurers to work with super catastrophe, or Super Cat, modeling. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
September 16, 2005
Deena M. Amato-McCoy
Eye of the Storm Insurers that implement processes and technologies for accurately assessing data and measuring risk across business lines and geographies before disaster strikes will weather the storm. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
August 12, 2005
Anthony O'Donnell
Stormy Weather Hurricane Dennis provoked an early debut of technologically driven tools and strategies demonstrating the evolution of CAT-related solutions, or simply representing such technology's increasing availability. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
September 3, 2004
Bill Mann
Frances to Hit Hartford Frances is a big storm, very dangerous in Florida. It might be just as dangerous in the traditional home of the insurance industry, Hartford. mark for My Articles similar articles
Reason
May 2007
Jacob Sullum
Hurricanes Happen Insurance price controls in Florida: The state legislature is ordering insurance companies to charge less for homeowner's policies. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
August 16, 2004
Bill Mann
Charley Smacks Florida, Insurers The hurricane unleashed its fury on Florida. The residual impact shouldn't be as bad as Andrew's. This time, the insurance companies were ready. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
December 23, 2005
Maria Woehr
Forecasting Disaster Benfield, a London-based reinsurance and risk intermediary, in partnership with Tropical Storm Risk, an independent research organization, developed ReMetrica, a new modeling methodology to help carriers with investments affected by the weather in the U.S. manage risk effectively. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
October 12, 2004
Wendy Toth
Hurricane Warfare Insurers find a variety of ways to leverage technology to help claimants recover from the onslaught of ferocious storms. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
February 2007
Richard J. Murnane
Science, Catastrophe Risk Models and Insurance An appreciation of how scientific research is used in the insurance industry's catastrophe risk models provides some insight on the relationship between geoscience and insurance. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
September 10, 2004
Rich Duprey
Insurers Eye Ivan the Terrible How will companies and investors fare if the storm spawns moderate damage? mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
June 18, 2007
Emil Lee
Disaster Preparedness: Are Insurers Ready for the Big One? With private insurers withdrawing from the coastal areas, leaving the taxpayers holding the bag, one wonders: What should investors do if the big one does hit? mark for My Articles similar articles
Inc.
September 1, 2009
Anthony & Fernandez
America's Fastest-Growing Private Company? It's in Insurance When the big insurers exited the Florida market, a start-up saw an opportunity. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
April 18, 2007
Bill Mann
Stupid Florida! Wealth has concentrated on America's coasts, where insurance companies cannot adequately cover their own risks; it makes no sense for them to write coverage. No happy-pill talk about denying people the right to live where they want can overcome this math. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
June 1, 2006
Maria Woehr
The Big (Not So) Easy The Louisiana Senate Insurance Committee has approved legislation that the Property Casualty Insurers Association of America fears could raise rates for consumers and drive insurers that still are dealing with the effects of Hurricane Katrina from the Louisiana market. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
July 12, 2006
Katherine Burger
Here We Go Again This year's hurricane season could all end up being much ado about nothing, but it also could turn out to be the proverbial worst-case scenario, and of course, the insurance industry has to prepare for the worst. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
April 5, 2006
Maria Woehr
Rocky Mountain Low Insurers and Colorado lawmakers are squaring off over a bill that would require P&C and medical malpractice insurers to disclose information related to expenses, claims and payouts, as well as restrict rating methods used within the state. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
February 18, 2005
Wendy Toth
Picking Up The Pace The pace of claims settlement from Florida's recent hurricane season is setting records: Insurers have closed nearly 86 percent of the record total of claims reported for the four major storms of 2004. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Real Estate Investor
July 1, 2006
Parke M. Chapman
An Insurance Storm One month into hurricane season, commercial property owners along the Gulf and Florida coasts are coming to grips with the jaw-dropping costs of insuring against future hurricanes. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
January 16, 2006
Adam Aston
The Worst Isn't Over Smarter science is helping companies and insurers plan for hurricanes. The bad news: This year could be another doozy. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
April 6, 2006
Maria Woehr
Cover Your Assets Insurers must focus on internal risk management rather than depend on the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act, which is set to expire in two years, to mitigate losses from a terrorist attack, according to Risk Management Solutions. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
January 17, 2006
Maria Woehr
Constant Change The coming year's regulatory and political agenda could result in requirements for reform and increasing technology investments, which could alter the business environment for property and casualty, life, and health insurers alike. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
August 17, 2009
Anthony O'Donnell
Warming Atlantic Delivers Three Tropical Cyclones, First Hurricane of the Season Tropical Storm Bill is predicted to become a major hurricane between 48 and 60 hours, as it moves to the northwest from a position east of the Lesser Antilles. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
November 15, 2007
Katherine Burger
Insurers' Technology Investments Transform Catastrophe Claims Management Strategies While technology's power is welcomed by the public, politicians and the media in terms of catastrophe claims response, it's not always so appreciated when it comes to how insurers deploy it to forecast, analyze and underwrite risks. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
February 4, 2009
Anthony O'Donnell
Willis Re Launches Next-Gen Portfolio Management Platform Insurance carriers that adopt Willis Re's conNext single Web-based platform for portfolio management can dispense with multiple, disparate products for mapping, reporting and performance monitoring. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
June 29, 2011
Michael Olsen
Hard Times, Hardening Markets? Insurers could be about to toughen up and raise rates. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
September 9, 2005
Bill Mann
Insurance Disaster Scenario: Meet Stan Insurance companies that made it through the storm of the century intact might not survive a second blow. It's one area of investment where gambling on marginal players carries substantially higher levels of risk. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
March 7, 2006
Deena M. Amato-McCoy
Storm Surge Refusing to be caught off guard again, insurance companies are reexamining their IT strategies and operations in anticipation of the fast-approaching 2006 hurricane season. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
May 3, 2006
Maria Woehr
Mapping Out Risks Seeing that many reinsurance executives want the convenience of conducting risk analysis themselves, Guy Carpenter & Company, part of Marsh & McLennan Companies, has launched the online risk management platform i-aXis. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
November 10, 2008
Anthony O'Donnell
IT Will Power Insurance Industry Response to Crisis Technology spending will be a critical factor for insurers wishing to both take advantage of opportunities provided by the current crisis and address heightened compliance and risk management concerns. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
June 18, 2007
Buz Livingston
Report From Hurricane Alley It doesn't matter if you live in Minnesota or in Miami -- disasters can strike any area. Here are some financial tips for weathering any storm. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
June 2, 2011
Matt Koppenheffer
When Growth Isn't Good Perusing past SEC filings for now closed Bank of Florida, one can see how perfect it is as an example of how to blow up a bank. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
October 20, 2006
Ryan Fuhrmann
That's All for Allstate? Earnings were high, but the "whisper numbers" were higher. Contrarian investors will certainly want to hold off on this one. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
June 1, 2010
Anthony O'Donnell
First Named Storm of Hurricane Season Hits Central America Guatemala hit hardest as that country and Mexico, El Salvador and Honduras declare a state of emergency in response to conditions such as widespread flooding, mudslides and the opening of large sinkholes. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
June 18, 2007
Emil Lee
Profit From Disaster? Here are some investment strategies for playing a possible insurance industry downturn. mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
August 19, 2009
Anthony O'Donnell
Hurricane Bill Now Category 4, Expected to Miss U.S., Bermuda Latest forecasts indicate that neither the U.S. or Bermuda likely to be affected by Hurricane Bill, though Nova Scotia could feel the effects of the storm early next week, according to some scenarios. mark for My Articles similar articles