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Country risk 2009:

Bi-annual Country risk survey monitoring political and economic stability of 185 countries

Euromoney Awards for Excellence 2009

April 2009

Insurance survey 2009: Insurers take cover to avoid capital crunch

The demise of AIG has inflicted an identity crisis on the insurance industry. But insurers face exposure to distressed assets, accounting and valuation issues and a potential shortage of capital. Sounds familiar? Helen Avery reports on how insurers believe they will avoid the same fate as the banks.




Insurers take cover to avoid capital crunch
Insurance survey: Global results
Insurance survey: Full results
Insurance survey: Use of alternative risk transfer
Insurance survey: Methodology


MOST LEADING INSURERS say they have little in common with the failed financial institution that AIG became. They’re right. But leading insurance executives should be more concerned about differentiating the industry from a banking sector in crisis.

In February, UK hedge funds Lansdowne Partners, and Odey Asset Management went short UK insurers. Lansdowne took a short position in Prudential worth about £10.5 million ($15.2 million), a £26.2 million short in Aviva, and further short positions in Legal & General and Old Mutual. Odey Asset Management took a £7.1 million short position in Legal & General. Before the introduction of UK regulation that states that short sales of financial stocks must be disclosed, such behaviour would have gone unnoticed.

But in an environment where...

More information on insurance survey


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Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are too big to fail by an order of magnitude, in terms of the contingent liability to the federal government.

Thomas Stanton, a Washington attorney who once worked for Fannie Mae. From the archive: Freddie and Fannie arent sovereign, July 1999

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