Captive Insurers Worldwide Top 4,000 Mark.STAMFORD, Conn.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 3, 1999--Despite inexpensive, readily available commercial insurance and the proliferation of capital market alternatives, the 18-year upward trend in the growth of the captive insurance Captive insurance companies are limited purpose insurance companies established with the specific objective of financing risks emanating from their parent group or groups, they sometimes also insure risks of the parent company's customers. industry continued in 1998. The estimated total number of captives now stands at 4,135, the number listed in the 1999 Captive Insurance Company Directory published by Tillinghast - Towers Perrin Towers Perrin is a global professional services firm. It was established 1 March 1934 as Towers, Perrin, Forster & Crosby. The umbrella name of Towers Perrin was adopted in 1987. . New captive formations exceeded liquidations by a wide margin. A captive insurance company, as defined by Tillinghast, is a closely held A phrase used to describe the ownership, management, and operation of a corporation by a small group of people. In a closely held corporation, the same people often act as shareholders, directors, and officers, and no outside investors exist. insurance company whose insurance business is primarily supplied by and controlled by its owners, in which the original insureds are the principal beneficiaries. Tillinghast - Towers Perrin estimates 1998 worldwide captive premium at $21.3 billion and total capital and surplus at $54 billion, an increase over last year of some 18% and 20%, respectively. "Captive insurance is undergoing one of its periodic sea changes," said Hugh Rosenbaum, a Tillinghast - Towers Perrin consultant who also is editor of the firm's publication, Captive Insurance Company Reports. "From my perspective, it appears the traditional uses of captives are being replaced by the beginning of what can be called advanced risk financing. "The basic business of captives - insuring their shareholders' property/casualty risks - has reached a mature, steady state," added Rosenbaum. "What seems to be growing is the addition of unrelated business, the beginning of some employee benefits business, and alternative risk financing The introduction to this article provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject matter. Please help [ improve the introduction] to meet Wikipedia's layout standards. You can discuss the issue on the talk page. techniques." The increase in the number of captives and in captive financial figures also has been complemented by an increase in the number of conferences on captives and attendance at them, whether in the U.S., Europe, or in offshore domiciles, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Rosenbaum. New 1998 captive licenses totaled 305 worldwide in the domiciles tracked by Tillinghast - Towers Perrin. Strong growth was concentrated in only a few domiciles, notably Bermuda, the Cayman Islands Cayman Islands (kā`mən), British dependency (2005 est. pop. 44,300), 100 sq mi (259 sq km), comprising three islands in the West Indies. and Vermont, followed by Guernsey, the leading European domicile, the British Virgin Islands British Virgin Islands A British colony in the eastern Caribbean east of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Road Town, on Tortola Island, is the capital. Population: 21,700. Noun 1. and Barbados. Of the captives formed in 1998, 64% are domiciled in the Caribbean and Bermuda. "The number of new formations shows that even with soft market conditions, many entities are still opting to take control of their own risks," said John Lochner, a Tillinghast - Towers Perrin consultant. "These insureds prefer a strategy that permits them to manage their own investment income while avoiding the possibility of future price hikes or coverage loss." The popularity of rent-a-captives evident in 1997 continued unabated in 1998. A rent-a-captive is a third-party sponsored insurer or reinsurer re·in·sure tr.v. re·in·sured, re·in·sur·ing, re·in·sures To insure again, especially by transferring all or part of the risk in a contract to a new contract with another insurance company. organized to handle the risks of multiple insurance programs; a participant may opt to "rent" the use of such a facility rather than setting up a stand-alone captive. The 1999 Directory lists 70 rent-a-captives, 17 of them licensed in 1998. Some of these are specialized rent-a-captives designed legally to separate shareholders into individual "cells." These are licensed as PCCs (private cell companies) in Guernsey, or as SPCs (segregated portfolio companies) in the Cayman Islands. They can also be structured in Bermuda through a Private Act of Parliament. Of the 94 new licenses issued by Bermuda in 1998, about two-thirds are estimated to be operating as "captives." A growing number of Bermuda's insurers fall into a category that includes reinsurers writing third-party business, insurers writing direct policies with third-party individuals, finite reinsurers and rent-a-captives, along with captives writing more than 20% of unrelated business. This class includes both captives and commercial insurers. Many captives formed in the Cayman Islands are being classified as "alternative financing vehicles" for property catastrophe reinsurance The contract made between an insurance company and a third party to protect the insurance company from losses. The contract provides for the third party to pay for the loss sustained by the insurance company when the company makes a payment on the original contract. or other kinds of financial deals. "These entities have become a second niche for the Cayman Islands, which is no longer known only as the domicile of choice for health care captives," observed Lochner. Vermont, the domicile for 334 (or 74%) of the U.S. onshore captives, licensed 12 bank-owned captive companies formed as mortgage insurers. This trend is expected to continue in 1999. Vermont issued 40 new licenses, the second most active year in its history as a captive domicile. The Directory lists approximately 130 captives that were liquidated in 1998. "Reasons include amalgamations as companies were merged or sold, competition from the continuing soft rates offered by commercial insurers or changes in shareholder priorities," said Lochner. The 1999 Captive Insurance Company Directory has 440 pages and costs $250 ($270 or (pound)170 foreign airmail airmail, transport of mail by airplanes. Demonstration flights that showed the feasibility of carrying mail by air were made in Great Britain and in the United States in 1911. ). To order, call Tillinghast Towers Perrin Risk Management Publications at (203) 326-5468. Captive Insurance Company Reports, a monthly newsletter, also is available at $285 ($315 or (pound)195 foreign airmail). Tillinghast - Towers Perrin is a global firm that provides management and actuarial consulting to the insurance and financial services The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page. industries as well as risk management consulting Noun 1. management consulting - a service industry that provides advice to those in charge of running a business service industry - an industry that provides services rather than tangible objects to the public and private sectors. Tillinghast - Towers Perrin is part of Towers Perrin, one of the world's largest management consulting firms List of Management Consulting Firms 1. McKinsey & Company 2. Marakon Associates 3. Boston Consulting Group (BCG) 4. A.T. Kearney 5. Booz Allen Hamilton (BAH) 6. Monitor Group 7. Bain & Company 8. Roland Berger , with more than 8,100 employees and 78 offices in 24 countries. |
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