Alternative Risk Transfer

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Alternative Risk Transfer (often referred to as ART) is the use of techniques other than traditional insurance and reinsurance to provide risk bearing entities with coverage or protection. The field of ART grew out of a series of insurance capacity crises in the 1970s through 1990s that drove purchasers of traditional coverage to seek more robust ways to buy protection.

Most of these techniques permit investors in the capital markets to take a more direct role in providing insurance and reinsurance protection, and as such the broad field of ART is said to be bringing about a Convergence of insurance and financial markets

Contents

[edit] Key market participants

Investment banks, notably Goldman Sachs across life and catastrophe sectors and Lehman Brothers in the life sector.

Insurers, including AIG, Zurich, and XL

Reinsurers, notably Swiss Re across the life and catastrophe sectors.

Brokers including Marsh, Aon Corporation, Benfields, and Carvill.

[edit] Key sectors

Key sectors of the Alternative Risk Transfer marketplace include the use of Captive Insurance companies, financial reinsurance, Finite Risk insurance, catastrophe bonds, Reinsurance Sidecars, contingent capital, captive insurers and reinsurers, dual trigger insurance, industry loss warranties, Weather derivatives

[edit] See also

[edit] Sources

For extensive coverage of this space see Reactions Magazine, Benfield Quarterly, Insurance Insider. The key reference work for the space is "Alternative Risk Strategies" published by Risk magazine 2002

Captive & ART Review [1]
A monthly publication dedicated to Alternative Risk Transfer for the business community