Tom Johansmeyer
Manhattan - http://migrantblogger.wordpress.com
Tom Johansmeyer is a New York-based writer specializing in travel, cigars, art and finance.
Tom Johansmeyer
Manhattan - http://migrantblogger.wordpress.com
Tom Johansmeyer is a New York-based writer specializing in travel, cigars, art and finance.
After weeks of speculation, the financial damage from the Chile earthquake and Windstorm Xynthia in Europe is starting to emerge. According to a recent report by Moody's, 16 global reinsurance companies have reported their net insured losses (before taxes) from the catastrophe event, and the damage has already reached $3.5 billion, increasing an already high tally. The firm expects these events to have a noticeable impact on first quarter results for the industry.
According to the report, the first quarter of 2010's results "will have many moving pieces, including the possibility of favorable loss reserve development." It continues, though, that "we would expect a number of reinsurers to post both operating and net losses for the quarter."
Continue reading Q1 Cats Likely to Have Reinsurance Earnings Impact
A day before it was set to go under the gavel, the sale of Sex.com stalled. The domain name was set to be auction, but an involuntary Chapter 11 filing by three of the company's creditors has put the brakes on the bidding. Escom LLC, which owns Sex.com, his on the hook, it seems, for an eight-figure tab.Continue reading Sex.com Sale Stalled by Involuntary Bankruptcy Filing
Twitter's a pretty lucky company. Few get two bytes at the hype apple in rapid succession, but this social media platform has found a way to make up for its disappointing announcement about its advertising model. According to VentureBeat, Twitter might unveil its long-awaited, heavily-hyped and possibly investor-satisfying corporate accounts. Next month, at its inaugural Chirp developer conference, we could finally see what might just be the foundation of Twitter's business model.
Continue reading Twitter May Chirp Its Commercial Accounts Next Month
Now if you blame the media, someone else will have to share in the losses.
Insurance company Aviva (AV) is taking the side of camera-wielding, microphone-thrusting pushy press folks with a new form of protection that will cover everything from electronics to foot-in-mouth syndrome (i.e., liability). The insurance product will be available to a variety of companies, including both online and print publishers, broadcasters, photographers and marketing and advertising companies. So, if you're responsible for the news, the ads or the process of putting them in front of eyeballs, Aviva probably has you in mind.
Continue reading New Insurance Product Protects Media
Merna Re, the largest catastrophe bond of all time, is set to mature in June, and State Farm is already putting together its replacement, the creatively named Merna Re II. The successor, planned for issuance in April, is said to be for $400 million in risk capital, though investor demand could push it as high as $700 million. This still pales in comparison to the $1.2 billion that the original brought in the door.
If State Farm is able to stimulate demand for Merna Re II, which would protect the company from non-California earthquake risk in the U.S., it will be third cat bond to come to market in 2010, which is expected to be a strong year for this form of risk transfer. The cat bond market fell silent after the near-collapse of American International Group (AIG) in September 2008 but was still the third busiest in terms of capital issued in the history of the cat bond market. Heading into 2009, prospects for the cat bond space seemed uncertain, but a robust fourth quarter eventually resulted in a year-over-year increase, driven mostly by repeat issuers.
Continue reading State Farm Planning Monster Cat Bond
American International Group (AIG) has gone back to the feds. The insurer pulled another $2.2 billion from its Treasury Department facility to support the property-casualty business units that will comprise the restructured company. AIG used the cash from Treasury to redeem some securities held by its insurance subsidiaries to increase liquidity and address rating agency considerations.
According to David Havens, managing director of credit trading at Nomura Securities (NMR), "AIG still needs to be cognizant of where the rating agencies stand on their solvency." He adds, in Bloomberg News, that the funds may have been sought after the company got "feedback from the rating agencies that the regulatory capital within the operating companies doesn't muster up."
Continue reading AIG to Hit Feds for Another $2 Billion
Hartford Financial Services Group (HIG) is getting ready to repay its $3.4 billion in TARP money to the feds. The insurance company is using money raised from debt and equity offerings to settle its score with the American taxpayer. Continue reading Hartford to Repay TARP Cash
Mergers are always a tricky business, and for an insurance industry with excess capital available, they're likely on the agenda for the coming year. Before giving in to the urge to merge, several major industry executives cautioned at the World Insurance Forum, it's crucial to make sure that the interests of both merging companies are aligned.Continue reading From Bermuda: Insurers Need to Ink Mergers with Caution
Nobody's naming names right now, but Social Times reports from SXSW that "a number" of companies are paying Twitter hefty fees for unrestricted access to the "firehose." While some Twitter data is accessible free through the company's developer program, the full data set is only available to those willing to write a check – and, it turns out, a substantial one.Continue reading Twitter Getting Six Figures a Month for Data
Catastrophe modelers, insurers and reinsurers are still sorting out the damage from Windstorm Xynthia in Europe and the earthquake in Chile. Taking only the highest of high-end estimates, the damage from these two catastrophes could exceed $12 billion, resulting in fairly steep property-catastrophe losses long before hurricane season begins. With three more major property reinsurance renewals remaining for the year -- at April 1, June 1 (Florida) and July 1 -- there is plenty of time for the impact of these events to be absorbed into reinsurance pricing.
Continue reading Assessing the Tab for Q1 Catastrophes
When Facebook announced its new location-based capabilities after Twitter has already enabled it, the future looked pretty grim for Foursquare. Though wildly popular with the nerd crowd (of which I'm a member ... the nerd world, not Foursquare), could a year-old location-based game go head-to-head with the 400 million-user-strong behemoth of the social media industry? In a strange twist, Facebook is actually breathing life into the killer app many expected it to kill.Continue reading Facebook Growing, Not Killing, Foursquare
Four more banks bit the dust last week, bringing the total to 30 -- just shy of 75 days into 2010. Regulators closed banks in New York, Florida and Louisiana, representing in aggregate nearly $1.1 billion in assets and a little over a billion dollars in deposits.
Park Avenue Bank in New York was shut down by the FDIC this week. It had $520.1 million in assets and $494.5 million in deposits as of the end of last year. Its deposits will be assumed by Valley National Bank, which is based in Wayne, New Jersey, and it will pay a small premium for them. Valley National also agreed to pick up virtually all of the bank's assets.
Continue reading 75 Days, 30 Bank Failures
Do crowds really have any wisdom? Well, we're working without confirmation, but members of the AAPL Sanity Board forum, which isn't open to the public, puts the first-day tally for Apple's (AAPL) iPad at 120,000. Continue reading iPad Hype Gets New Life with Day One Sales Guesstimates
Art Capital Group and Annie Leibovitz have moved on from each other. Last week, the photographer found something of an angel in private equity firm Colony Capital LLC.
Leibovitz owed $24 million to the art investment bank last September, when she restructured her debt for terms that were not disclosed. The private equity firm, which worked with Michael Jackson in the past, settled the debt to Art Capital Group on March 8, 2010, and announced a "new partnership" with Leibovitz. None of the terms are being disclosed ... as usual.
Continue reading Leibovitz Leaves Art Capital for Colony
The amount of money sitting in sovereign wealth funds grew in 2009. As financial markets around the world recovered from the severity of the financial crisis that struck in September 2008, the coffers of these unique financial entities swelled to $3.51 trillion, according to the latest research from the alternative investment analysts at Preqin.
Nonetheless, some funds did experience withdrawals by their respective governments. In some cases, governments used sovereign wealth fund assets to close budgetary gaps.
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