Opinion
League tables could help brokers decide future
With the launch of Oval this week (see p2) - on top of the many acquisitional broking groups announc...
View from the Top - David Martin, chairman, corporate division, Aon
It is an old chestnut that brokers get angry when insurers give lower quotes to private clients goin...
Colossus' domination in PI medical area ignores advances
I attended the most recent Post Magazine Claims Club event as an associate member and listened with ...
Lloyd's cannot be complacent about market
The decision by Ace to transfer its excess and surplus lines business from its syndicate at Lloyd's ...
View from the Top - Bridget McIntyre, sales and marketing director, Norwich Union Insurance
As a service industry, we often hear the claim that we are only as good as the staff we employ. Whil...
Salvage - Seeing through the salvage assessments
Alan Greenouff believes it is time for the industry to embrace proper and transparent assessment arrangements for damaged vehicles and to agree to a standard approach
Periodic payments ruling is bad news for insurers
The introduction of periodic payment for catastrophic injury has had widespread support from those who responded to a recent consultation paper on the topic. But such payments will not be good news for insurers, believes James Dadge
Should ratings rule brokers?
It seems that the days brokers used insurers on working reputation alone are gone. Now, with their c...
View from the Top - Mary Francis, director general, Association of British Insurers
Uninsured driving costs the insurance industry and its customers £500m a year. That adds up to £30 o...
Rehabilitation - Counting the cost of rehabilitation
Whether rehabilitation actually saves insurers more money than it costs has become a sticking point for those doubters yet to be convinced of its value. But Mark Baylis says a new government initiative could prove its cost-effectiveness once and for all
Seven years ago
Looking back
Brokers are not feeling the benefit of premium finance for insurance agreements
Your recent article on the subject of premium finance 'The best credit money can buy?' (Post Magazin...
IT managers must focus on role
IT directors that try to be business managers, and mechanics, end up being poor at both, and the ins...
Industry sees ATE sense at last
At last some clarity for both insurers and claimants. It has been a long time coming, but finally so...
Survival of the fittest network
The battle has begun. Following the Financial Services Authority's final go-ahead for brokers and ot...
Tory leader deja vu
Did Iain Duncan Smith take part in two sessions at the Chartered Insurance Institute conference. Is ...
BICMA seeks an end to adversarial rehab
We at the Bodily Injury Claims Management Association are currently preparing a model agreement to r...
Is body repair set to follow adjusters?
It appears that exactly the same is happening in the body repair industry as happened in the loss ad...
View from the Top - Duncan Boyle, UK chief executive, Royal & Sun Alliance
At the Chartered Insurance Institute conference last month, I took part in a panel discussion regard...
Does new D&O guidance go far enough?
This week several City institutions, including the Association of British Insurers and British Insur...
Seven years ago
Looking back
Bradstock serves as warning
The news this week that Alternative Investment Market-listed Lloyd's broker Bradstock had ceased tra...
Driving up standards on British roads?
With around a third of road traffic accidents attributable to someone driving as part of their work, the recently-published government safety leaflet on the subject is welcomed among insurers. However, Brian Lee deems its lack of legal or regulatory…
Insurers under fire as D&O premiums soar
Buyers of directors' and officers' insurance are disgruntled by the hefty increases in prices the sector has been seeing. David Gamble warns underwriters to co-operate - or face a large premium exodus