IRMI Update—Issue #12

An E-mail Newsletter for Risk and Insurance Professionals
ISSN: 1530-7948
March 6, 2001

In This Issue

Message from the Editor

Colleague,

My comments on e-commerce insurance in the last issue drew some interesting responses from readers (see below), and it is obvious this is an important topic to you. Let me assure you that IRMI will continue to cover this topic in IRMI.com and in our various publications. We plan to add another column or two in IRMI.com on e-commerce risk management to complement Mike Rossi's excellent series on Cyber-Insurance (and, of course, Mike will continue to expand the information he is providing there).

If you subscribe to IRMI publications, you can find detailed information on cyber-insurance in the Media Insurance section of Professional Liability Insurance. We've also covered various e-commerce risk management topics in past issues of The Risk Report, and more are scheduled for the future. Naturally, we'll also explain the pending changes in the commercial general liability (CGL) insurance policy, some of which relate to Internet risks, in supplements to Commercial Liability Insurance.

As you can see, we are committed to helping you identify and manage e-commerce risks. If you have requests for specific topics you'd like us to cover, we'd love to hear them.

Thank you for your support, and have a great day.

Jack

Jack P. Gibson
President
IRMI

Risk Tip

Get Your Captive Ready Now! The long-anticipated hard market seems to have arrived—maybe not on schedule, but it's here. So far, the price increases have not been devastating. But what's around the corner? We had better be prepared. By the time the risk manager realizes there's a problem, it's too late to start exploring the use of a captive. Accordingly, the savvy risk manager performs due diligence far enough in advance to be able to make alternative decisions, secure in the knowledge they have been carefully investigated.

If yours is not a giant organization with great financial resources, you may not need a single-parent captive or wish to capitalize one. One alternative is the protected cell captive (PCC), a concept that emerged in the late 1990s and is now receiving much popular attention. A PCC is a legal entity that isolates premiums and losses of different insured organizations in segregated cells, each of which is insulated from the liabilities of the company's other accounts, including being protected from creditors in the event of another client's insolvency. Like a trust, the sponsor of the PCC is the "trustee" of the assets in each cell, but each cell belongs to a "beneficial owner." A PCC is essentially a rent-a-captive with the advantage of legal segregation of accounts. Tax considerations are beyond the scope of this risk tip, but they can be a consideration when determining whether to domicile onshore or offshore.

Whether you explore the potential use of a PCC or a single-parent captive, explore something NOW! If you're doing so only as a hedge against an extremely hard market, you may never need your alternative. But if the worst-case market scenario occurs, won't it be comforting to know that you've done your homework and all you must do to implement your safety net is reach over and flip the switch?

By: Barney Mercer, CPCU, ARM
Vice President, Risk Management
Snelling Personnel Services
E-mail:

Suggest a Risk Tip. Future issues of IRMI Update will include more risk tips from our readers. Send us a practical tip (less than 300 words) for identifying and managing risks, buying insurance, managing claims, or filling gaps in insurance coverages. We'll acknowledge your contribution as we did for Barney.

New Expert Commentary

We add new Expert Commentary to IRMI.com every week. There are now 115 articles on IRMI.com, and many more are in production. Below you'll find summaries of some recent additions with links to the articles.

Training & CE

Additional Insured Course Approved in 28 States—The new "IRMI on Additional Insured Status" continuing education course is an advanced-level class and has been submitted for credit in all states that allow distance learning. You can read the course material online, download it from the Web for printing, or order a printed book and test from the Training & CE section of IRMI.com. Here is a list of the states that have approved it for property-casualty insurance CE credit: AK, CO, CT, GA, ID, IL, KS, KY, MA, MI, MS, MO, NE, NV, NM, OH, OK, OR, PA, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, WA, WV, and WY.

You can get all the CE credit you need to satisfy most state's annual requirement for under $50 through the Training and CE section of IRMI.com!

IRMI Products & Services

IRMI Workers Comp—Your Safety Net in a Changing Marketplace—This definitive (1,300 page) reference from IRMI gives you practical information on all aspects of workers compensation—from detailed summaries of the state laws and benefit levels to using the assigned risk plan in each state to setting up a safety program. It's available in a two-volume printed set or on CD ROM. View the table of contents and order online today.

Your View—Outlook for E-Commerce Insurance

There is a great deal of interest in e-commerce insurance as evidenced by the many responses to Jack's last editorial in IRMI Update #11 advocating the eventual combining of these coverages into the more traditional insurance policies. While most readers seem to agree with the concept, they are skeptical about when it will occur. The following are excerpts from some of the responses we received.

—Chuck Schramm, CPCU, CIC, ARM, AAI, ARM Lamb, Little & Company, Rolling Meadows, IL

"The sleeper in all of the exposures may be employee dishonesty. The average employee theft in cyber space is over $2 million, according to the FBI. This means many such losses are over $10 million, though it's hard to know because the losses don't get much publicity. Businesses tend to be underinsured for this exposure, even before considering cyber theft."

—Michael M. Kaddatz, CPCU, ARM Managing Director, ARM Tech, Lake Forest, CA

"Buying a separate policy doesn't make sense to me. As a publisher, we are covered already to a major extent by our errors & omission policies. For first-party damage under our property insurance, our preference goes out to broaden the definition of property with information assets, for example."

—Mahdy de Groot Corporate Risk Manager, Wolters Kluwer nv, Amsterdam

"Is any one buying the stand-alone cyber policies? I hear that a lot of companies are 'evaluating' them. Sounds like a lot of looking and not much buying."

—Dick Ryan Director of Risk Management, Franklin Templeton Investments, San Mateo, CA

—Lucy Harris, CIC, CPCU Producer, SCF Insurance Services, Inc., La Mesa, CA

—Harriet Freeman J.S. Wurzler Underwriting Managers, Inc., Okemos, MI

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