• X
  • LinkedIn
  • Show more sharing options
  • Print
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • Free trial
  • Log in

Search results for

Tip: Use operators exact match "", AND, OR to customise your search. You can use them separately or you can combine them to find specific content.
There are 17,816 results that match your search.17,816 results
  • Alterra Capital Holdings and private equity firm Stone Point Capital have committed up to $200mn to the first post-Japan property catastrophe sidecar.
  • EUR150mn of Atlas Capital notes issued by French reinsurer Scor are highly unlikely to trigger following the Tohoku earthquake which struck Japan on 11 March, Trading Risk understands.
  • Goldman Sachs is seeking to raise at least $100mn in a repeat of its innovative 2010 health insurance securitisation, Vitality Re, Trading Risk understands.
  • European catastrophe loss aggregator Perils has released its 2011 update showing that the total insured industry exposure to European windstorms is up 4.6 percent.
  • ILS manager Securis Investment Partners has put plans for a £200mn exchange-listed closed-end fund on hold, citing the Japanese earthquake and investor caution for the delay.
  • Industry loss warranty (ILW) prices have risen 20 to 30 percent on average after a string of catastrophe losses this year, broker Aon Benfield says in its latest reinsurance market outlook report.
  • Swiss Re has redeemed the highest-ranking EUR108mn tranche of its Crystal Credit issue, ratings agency Standard & Poor's said as it withdrew its BB- rating on the notes.
  • Insurance index provider ISO has launched a new casualty index, in a bid to open up a new market for cat bonds.
  • Raising new funds could be a challenge for many collateralised reinsurers as questions remain over how much of their capital has been tied up in recent disaster losses, Willis Re said today (March 31) in a report on the April reinsurance renewals.
  • Investors in Munich Re's $300mn Muteki catastrophe bond for Japanese carrier Zenkyoren are likely to see a complete loss of their capital after the March 11 Tohoku earthquake, ratings agency Moody's says.