Attendees at the 2017 International Conference of the Captive Insurance Companies Association, held in San Diego, said captives started as disruptive alternatives to traditional insurance and have grown to become ongoing risk management tools.
March 14, 2017
Register to be notified of new A.M. BestTV episodes.
Sign Up for AM Best TV Alerts
Captives, Born in Disruption, Become Tools of Resilience
Delaware's Kinion: From 38 to 1,000-Plus Captives in Eight Years
NRRA's Myers: Soft Market Takes a Toll on Risk Retention Groupsers
Willis' Owens: Captives Becoming Tool to Protect Pension Risk
Zurich's Bauman: Captives May Lead the Way in Customized Cyber Cover
Assa Abloy's Finnman: Even Locks Have Unique Cyber Exposures
Montana's Matthews: Proposed Bill Would Allow Captives to Become Dormant
Vermont's Provost: Proposed Bill Reduces Taxes for New Captives
Incoming CICA Head Towle: I'm Still Advocating for Captives
Captive Growth Tied to Cyber, Health Care, Expanding Cells
Marsh's Serricchio: Health Care, Universities Use Captives for TRIA Cover
Missouri's Talley: Small Captives Revamping in Response to Tax Law
JLT's Towle: Interest Reviving in Group Captives
Willis' Waslov: Global Organizations Taking Firmer Control of Own Risk
Aon's Gray: Captives Using Analytics to Uncover Risks
A.M. Best's Ruane: Captives Face Underwriting Pressures
StatSure's Taussig: It's Time for Captive Protection for Hedge Funds
Retiring CICA Head Harwick: Captives No Longer Just an Alternative
Cedar's Silvia: Captive Managers Drawn Into Anti-Money Laundering Effort
USA Risk's Osborne: Self-Procurement Tax Driving Domicile Selection
VCIA's Smith: Vermont Moving Toward Agency Captives
Willis' Rider: New Global Tax Initiative Put Captives on Notice
Hawaii's Shimomoto: Growth Coming From Asian Captives
Citadel's Weller: Captive Opportunities Emerge Onshore
Tennessee Captive Director: State Broke the 500 Mark