Hints and tips:
...Mayhem persists among the US’s property and casualty insurers. Auto-insurance businesses are still losing money....
...No premiums for insurtech Once high-flying insurance start-ups like Lemonade, Hippo and Root have emerged as the biggest casualties of the broader sell off in tech stocks, the FT’s Ian Smith writes....
...Property and casualty cover is seen as a far more natural home....
...Exane likes Sampo and Lancashire as the most defensive of the property and casualty insurers....
...Legal & General, the UK insurance company, registered a social housing provider late last year as part of a broader push into housing, investing from its own balance sheet....
...will enable further gains in property prices....
...Burglaries — another offence for which police records are likely to be reliable because of insurance companies’ demands — were up 10 per cent in London, against a 6 per cent average for England and Wales...
...Insurance stocks had been trending downwards for weeks as the start of the Atlantic hurricane season weighed on investors’ minds, and rating agency Moody’s warned that property and casualty insurers, as...
...This will remove over £1bn from the cost of providing motor insurance. We expect the industry to pass on this saving, so motorists see an average saving of £40-50 per year off their insurance bills....
...The inquiries also identified 39 properties in Paris and the south of France belonging to Omar Bongo of Gabon and his entourage, as well as 24 properties and 112 bank accounts linked to President Dennis...
...Over the last year, we understand that a number of AIG’s 100,000+ employees have left A.I.G. to join the company’s direct competitors in the global property and casualty and life insurance businesses....
...We have been looking at some companies there. We have bought a company in London in the casualty business. We bought it and were able to list it on Lloyd’s....
...The $15bn-$20bn potential cost to the global insurance industry compares with insured losses of up to $60bn from Hurricane Katrina and capital of over $400bn in the US property/casualty industry....
...companies....
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