All Captives articles – Page 5
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Online only
Nasa satellite tracks Gulf oil leak
This satellite picture shows the size of the Gulf oil slick
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Captive Risk
Switzerland
CAPTIVES 48 (at end of 2008, according to independent supervisory authority Finma)CAPTIVE PREMIUM CHF273.8m (€197m) at end of 2008LEGISLATION Swiss Federal Law on the Supervision of Insurance Companies and Financial Market Authority 2007CAPTIVE TAX RATE 0%FEES CHF3,000, but dependent on complexity of caseREGULATOR Swiss Financial Market Supervisory AuthoritySwitzerland has close ...
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Captive Risk
Sweden
CAPTIVES 50 non-life captivesCAPTIVE PREMIUM circa SEK1,087m (€112m)LEGISLATION Insurance Business Law 1982; Regulation of Insurance Business 1982:790; Law of Annual Statement for Insurance Companies 1995:560; Insurance Contract Law 2005:104CAPTIVE TAX RATE flat rate tax system: 26.3%. Tax deferral due to equalisation reserves possibleFEES application fee SEK110,000; registration fee SEK2,000; and ...
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Captive Risk
Malta
CAPTIVES* nine pure captives, 24 international third-party writers under management and eight protected cellsCAPTIVE PREMIUM* €670mLEGISLATION Insurance Business Act, Insurance Business (Companies Carrying on Business of Affiliated Insurance) Regulations 2003; and MFSA Rule 21 on Affiliated InsuranceCAPTIVE TAX RATE 35% on the captive (with opportunity of tax refunds in relation ...
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Captive Risk
Luxembourg
CAPTIVES 261 captives and eight direct written captivesCAPTIVE PREMIUM total premium, including professional insurers, was €6.6bn in 2008LEGISLATION amended law of 6 December 1991 on insurance sectorCAPTIVE TAX RATE 28.59% on a deferred basis FEES application €2,000; annual licence €4,000 for a reinsurer; €8,000+ for direct writer, depending on premium ...
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Captive Risk
Isle of Man
CAPTIVES 143CAPTIVE PREMIUM €1.43bnLEGISLATION Insurance Act 2008 and Protected Cell Companies Act 2004CAPTIVE TAX RATE 0%FEES £4,250 (€5,030)REGULATOR Insurance and Pensions AuthorityThe Isle of Man is one of Europe’s oldest captive centres, having been a recognised captive domicile since 1982. It has had PCC legislation in place for a number ...
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Captive Risk
Guernsey
CAPTIVES 343 insurers, 327 PCC cells and eight ICC cellsCAPTIVE PREMIUM £3.3bn (€3.84bn) as at 31 December 2008LEGISLATION the Insurance Business (Bailiwick of Guernsey) Law, 2002; the Insurance Managers and Insurance Intermediaries (Bailiwick of Guernsey) Law, 2002CAPTIVE TAX RATE 0%FEES application fee of £4,370 for captive or cell company, or ...
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Captive Risk
Dublin
CAPTIVES 202CAPTIVE PREMIUM gross written premium (2008) €1.84bn (Dima survey)LEGISLATION various acts and statutory instruments as listed on Central Bank andFinancial Services of Ireland (CBFSI) website, including guidance note ‘Operational Guidance on Prudential Requirements Applicable toCaptive Insurance Undertakings’CAPTIVE TAX RATE 12.5%FEES no application fee; annual fee dependent on premium volumeREGULATOR ...
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Captive Risk
Domicile, sweet domicile
Good people, short flights and a flexible regulator all help captives professionals decide on their ideal base. Liz Booth looks at the pros and cons of the main locations in Europe, and considers if being in or out of the EU is an advantage
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Online only
Hurricane Alex strikes Mexico
Texas escapes Alex’s wrath, biggest risk now is the heavy rainfall
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Features
The new pollution
Once just a ‘low likelihood’ technical concern, environmental liability is now seen as a standard business risk, moving fast up the priority list. More companies are considering using their captives
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Analysis
Willing to listen
The European Commission is happy to hear the concerns of the captive insurance community about Solvency II, finds Nathan Skinner, but there is still considerable uncertainty and a lack of preparation
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Interviews
Co-operation is key
Pierre Sonigo insists that captives deserve preferential treatment because of their unique role in insuring non-insurable risks and improving risk quality
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Interviews
A chance to be heard
The captive insurance industry must speak out about the potential threat of Solvency II and press for application of the proportionality principle, says Valerie Alexander
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Features
Bear vs bull
Their extreme conservatism may have helped captives escape the recession relatively unscathed, but is it time to take the bull by the horns and make their investments work harder? As Helen Yates is told, fortune still favours the brave
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Opinion
Keep a cat in the bag
Angus Duncan and Robert Cannon consider why catastrophe bonds might be a viable alternative to traditional reinsurance for captives
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Features
Captives after the crisis
Captives proved their long-term importance as businesses held steady through the recession, writes Paul Allen. But Solvency II and other regulatory reforms could shake up its future
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Features
A group activity
A new healthcare law in the USA could spark the growth of employee benefit captives, says Helen Yates
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Interviews
Infographic: BP accounts for 97% of US refinery safety violations
Safety inspectors cite two BP refineries 760 times for safety violations