Kathleen Waslov, senior vice president, Willis Towers Watson, said more large multinational organizations are embracing captives for their employee benefit liabilities, with many taking a more centralized approach.
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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