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New Insurance Facility to Boost Natural Disaster Resilience in Pacific Island Countries

8 December 2016 By admin Leave a Comment

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The World Bank has announced the start of the fifth round of Pacific Catastrophe Risk Assessment and Financing Initiative (PCRAFI) Insurance, along with the recent establishment of a new Cook Islands-based insurance company, called the PCRAFI Facility, which will deliver this innovative and competitive insurance.

The Facility has issued its first insurance policies to the Cook Islands, Marshall Islands, Tonga, Samoa and Vanuatu, which will be complemented by reinsurance provided by Sompo Japan Nipponkoa Insurance, Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance, Tokio Marine & Nichido Fire Insurance, Swiss Re, and Munich Re via its subsidiary NewRe – securing Pacific Island countries total coverage of US$38.2 million against tropical cyclones, earthquakes and tsunamis. World Bank Treasury played an integral role in securing participating Pacific Island countries competitive rates from the international reinsurance market.

“We are pleased the PCRAFI Facility has been established to assist in providing Pacific Island countries with insurance coverage against tropical cyclones and earthquakes,” said Cook Islands Minister of Finance and Economic Management Hon. Mark Brown.“We look forward to the Facility growing and developing additional products to help us better meet our post-disaster financial needs in the Pacific region.”

The Facility will receive US$6 million in capital in its first year of operation from the PCRAFI Multi-Donor Trust Fund – with the World Bank as Trustee – with funding support from Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States, and building on the more than US$40 million in grant funding the four donors have provided to Pacific Island countries under the G7 InsuResilience Initiative.

See full story at www.worldbank.org

Filed Under: Happenings Tagged With: new insurance facility

Auto Insurance Premiums Based on Facebook Posts? No, Says Facebook

6 December 2016 By admin Leave a Comment

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Facebook put the kibosh on a planned application from U.K. insurance firm Admiral that would have determined auto insurance premiums based on information gathered from customers’ posts on the social network.

The insurance company billed its firstcarquote service as “insurance for the digital generation,” saying on its website:

firstcarquote is a new insurance service created by Admiral to help people who are buying or driving their first car. As well as helping new drivers get cheaper car insurance, firstcarquote can help drivers who haven’t bought a car yet figure out which make and model will be cheapest for them to insure.

New drivers are often quoted much higher insurance premiums as they have little driving history, zero no claims bonus and are viewed as “high-risk.” But we want to help make sure safe drivers aren’t penalized and get the best price possible.

Admiral’s plan for firstcarquote had been to prompt users to grant it access to their data on the social network via Facebook Login, and then use an algorithm to determine their safe driving potential and base their premiums on that information, but that plan has apparently been scrapped.

In the frequently asked questions section of the firstcarquote, a revised description now appears:

I heard that your algorithm would scan my posts and page likes to assess whether I’ll be a safe driver, and give me a larger discount based on that analysis. A previous version of firstcarquote allowed you to share additional data with us. However, the current version of the product does not have this feature. We do not have access to customers’ Facebook data, and never had access to anything that customers didn’t voluntarily share with us.

See full story at  www.adweek.com

Filed Under: Happenings Tagged With: auto insurance

Will insurance pay for these tailgate party blunders?

1 December 2016 By admin Leave a Comment

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A combustible mix of alcohol, open flames and dense traffic, to name a few factors, can make tailgates ripe for costly accidents and injuries. In many cases, the right insurance coverage can spare you from paying for these mishaps on your own.

1. You accidentally grill the car

Covered by: Auto insurance

The play by play: Like end zones and excessive-celebration penalties, grilling and tailgating just go together. But whether you get overzealous with the lighter fluid or accidentally leave hot coals in your trunk, car fires are a looming threat.

2. An opposing fan vandalizes your vehicle

Covered by: Auto insurance

The play by play: Ideally, tailgate rivalries would never escalate beyond playful barbs and spirited debates. But the risk of opposing fans, say, spray-painting their team’s name onto your bumper may be another reason to add comprehensive insurance to your auto policy. This coverage will pay to repair damage stemming from vandalism, riots and civil disturbances, among other things, minus your deductible.

3. You give your buddies food poisoning

Covered by: Homeowners, renters and condo insurance

The play by play: Without ready access to refrigeration, hand-washing stations and other kitchen conveniences, food safety is a major tailgating concern. If you happen to be helming the grill when a bad batch of chicken wings or brats circulates to the crowd, those who get sick might sue you for their medical bills.

If you have homeowners, condo or renters insurance, you may be able to avoid having to pay for others’ food poisoning treatment out of your own pocket. These policies generally provide personal liability insurance, which covers others’ bodily harm that you’re responsible for, up to your policy’s limit.

By ALEXGLENN

See full story at www.marketwatch.com

Filed Under: Happenings Tagged With: insurance

Why Do You Need Health Insurance?

29 November 2016 By admin Leave a Comment

Health insurance

With the Affordable Care Act mandating that most Americans purchase health insurance, some people – especially those who are young or healthy – are questioning why they need coverage at all.

“Like auto insurance, health insurance is a service you pay for but hope you will never need. It’s there for the unpredictable, unexpected and fundamentally uncontrollable problems that come up in people’s lives,” says Dr. Molly Cooke, a practicing internist who is past president of the American College of Physicians and a professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.

Most consumers want and value health insurance, but they can’t afford the coverage or have been shut out from the marketplace because they have pre-existing medical conditions, according to research by the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Consider these factors when deciding whether to buy health insurance. Without coverage:

You may need to pay a penalty.

Most Americans who can afford health insurance should have it by Jan. 1, 2017 or will need to pay a tax of $695 per adult or 2.5 percent of annual income (whichever is greater).

You risk financial ruin.

You may be healthy now, but the onset of a sudden or serious illness (cancer, diabetes, appendicitis) or a traumatic event (ski accident, car crash) can leave you with staggering medical bills. The inability to pay high medical bills, one of the most common reasons people file for personal bankruptcy, can ruin your credit history and set you back for years.

By Magaly Olivero

See full story at health.usnews.com

Filed Under: Health Tagged With: health insurance

‘Insurance Super Day’ Delivers Stronger-Than-Expected Results But AIG Disappoints

24 November 2016 By admin Leave a Comment

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American International Group Inc. swung to a quarterly profit but suffered a setback in its turnaround effort for its property-casualty insurance unit, while four other big insurers posted stronger-than-expected operating results for the third quarter.

Analysts at Evercore ISI dubbed Wednesday as “Insurance Super Day” with life insurers MetLife Inc., Prudential Financial Inc. and Lincoln National Corp., along with car and home insurer Allstate Corp. and AIG, reporting results after the closing bell.

The improved results at the three life insurers come despite a tough environment for sales of many of their interest-rate-related products. The property casualty insurers, meanwhile, reported higher catastrophe losses from storms versus an unusually placid hurricane season the prior year.

AIG’s shares tumbled 3.4% after hours, while Allstate gained 4.1% and MetLife added 2.5%. The others were unchanged.

MetLife, in one of its last few quarters as the U.S.’s biggest life insurer by assets, said its results were buoyed by a 6% increase in net investment income to $5.2 billion. That gain was driven by strong performance of private-equity holdings and the sale of a real-estate joint venture interest. MetLife is spinning off part of its U.S. retail life-insurance operations into a new company as early as the first quarter.​​

Prudential, which is set to succeed MetLife as the biggest life insurer, highlighted strength in its international business, along with new business in its retirement and asset management divisions.

Smaller peer Lincoln National Corp. said its operating earnings for the quarter marked a record, citing expense and capital management as factors. And Allstate reported higher property-liability insurance premiums but a big increase in catastrophe losses.

By LESLIE SCISM

See full story at The Wall Street Journal

Filed Under: Interesting Stuff Tagged With: insurance super day

Facebook forces Admiral to pull plan to price car insurance based on posts

22 November 2016 By admin Leave a Comment

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Admiral has been forced to scrap plans to use Facebook posts to analyse the personalities of car owners and set the price of their insurance after the social media company said the scheme breached its privacy rules.

In an embarrassing U-turn, the insurance firm pulled the product less than two hours before it was due to officially launch on Wednesday. The product, called firstcarquote, was launched later with “reduced functionality”: users can log in to the product with Facebook but it will no longer analyse their data.

Facebook said protecting the privacy of its users was of the “utmost importance” and that it had clear guidelines about how information obtained from the site should be used.

Section 3.15 of Facebook’s platform policy states that the site’s data should not be used to “make decisions about eligibility, including whether to approve or reject an application or how much interest to charge on a loan”.

Admiral and Facebook remain in talks about trying to revive the product, with industry insiders arguing about who was to blame for the last-minute climbdown. Facebook is understood to have known about firstcarquote for months and the product has been operational on the internet for weeks in a test form.

Privacy campaigners welcomed Admiral’s reversal but said that it was only the start of other companies trying to use personal data in a similar way.

Simon Morrissey, head of data and privacy at law firm Lewis Silkin, said: “This is the tip of a very large iceberg that consumers and businesses are increasingly going to encounter. The challenge with these sorts of solutions is that users may find it increasingly difficult to avoid opting in as the financial disadvantage in doing so becomes so significant that users have no other option but to hand over access to their data.”

By Graham Ruddick

See full story at The Guardian

 

Filed Under: Interesting Stuff Tagged With: car insurance

5 Reasons To Get Bicycle Insurance

17 November 2016 By admin Leave a Comment

5-reasons-for-bicycle-insurance

Think bicycle insurance is unnecessary? You’re probably unaware about the steps you can take to further protect yourself and your bicycle. Here are 5 factors that will change your mind.

Protect your investment
A bicycle can be expensive, so securing it with a lock and chain isn’t enough. When you think about the amount you’ve spent on your bike, the cost of insuring it is a small one to protect your two-wheeled asset.

Protect against property damage
You might be a safe rider but that doesn’t prevent accidents caused by other people, which could result in damage to property. Bicycle insurance not only protects your bike, but also protects you.

Is your bicycle covered by home contents insurance?
While some home insurance plans provide special coverage for the value of your bike, there could be exclusions or a limit. Getting a policy that caters to your unique cycling habits is your smartest bet.

Get coverage for parts, accessories and more
Depending your your policy, bicycle insurance gives you more coverage in the event your bike gets stolen. Wouldn’t you like to rest easy knowing that your bike is covered for things like spare parts, riding apparel, accessories and more?

It doesn’t have to be expensive
Choose a plan based on your needs and budget. Do your research – go through websites, reviews and speak to insurance agents – before deciding on any policy.

Read more at www.msig.com.sg

Filed Under: Interesting Stuff Tagged With: bicycle insurance

Eight ways of saving on your insurance premium

15 November 2016 By admin Leave a Comment

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Here are eight money-pinching tips to save your life insurance premiums.

  1. Shop around

You do not buy your Christmas gift at the first store that you see.
So, why are you buying your insurance with the first sales person you meet?
500k term coverage is the same, regardless of which insurer you purchase from.
However, that 500k cover does not cost the same from different insurers.

  1. Buy Direct

Do you really need to pay more for financial advice ?
Some of the consumers out there are more financially literate than the advisors themselves!
For this group, buying direct may be the way to go.

  1. Taking care of your health

When you are in good health, the insurer will charge you the standard pricing.
On the other hand, insurers may levy additional premiums if you are overweight or have a health condition.
Therefore, taking care of yourself is also easing the burden on your bank account.

  1. Quit smoking

When you are a smoker, it will cost you more in insurance premium.
The cheapest 500k term insurance for a 30 years old male smoker is priced at $55,836 and only at $42,548 for a non-smoker. WHAT ?!!

  1. Buy when young

When buying at an older age, the insurance premiums are higher.
I am a mathematics nerd so I shall draw data from the comparison tool to make this point.

A 20 years old female non-smoker will pay a total of $67,904 for a 100k Whole Life policy whereas a 30 years old counterpart shall pay $81,432.
That’s a good 20% difference in saving !

  1. Buy in bulk

No, you cannot buy multiple policies and expect a discount.
However, instead of buying three 100k policies, you can avoid paying policy fee by having only one 300k policy.

By Surely

See full story at www.clearlysurely.com

 

Filed Under: Tips Tagged With: insurance premium

Am I Wasting Money Buying Additional Medical Insurance?

10 November 2016 By admin Leave a Comment

Having addressed the healthcare financing system in Singapore, Singaporeans would still want to know the answer to the question –  who pays their medical bills? The straight answer to this is “whether it is the government, Medisave, employers, or insurance, it is ultimately Singaporeans themselves who must bear the burden”. – August 2005, vol. 34 No. 7, page 462, Annuls Academy of Medicine. This situation forms the backdrop of healthcare financing for Singaporeans and thus affects how and to what extent each person should be covered for medical insurance.

The challenge:

3m-system“I am already covered by my company, why should I need to buy additional medical insurance ?” The majority of Singaporeans are employed and thus enjoy some form of medical insurance coverage provided by their employers. As such, many Singaporeans have the mistaken impression that if their employers have provided hospitalisation and surgical coverage for them, they consider themselves to be ‘comprehensively’ and ‘fully’ covered, so they do not bother to look at any other medical coverage.

This impression is potentially hazardous as employee hospitalisation and surgical insurance in reality does not provide long term coverage and thus cannot be the foundation of a person’s medical insurance portfolio. Relying on employee medical insurance alone also carries these disadvantages:

Disadvantages:

  1. Changing jobs leads to the giving up of medical insurance from the previous employer and the enrolment in the new employer’s insurance scheme. The medical insurer will therefore change accordingly.
    • This inevitably raises the question of whether the person’s health and medical history at the point of changeover could still qualify him/her to be insured at ‘standard’ rates, and at the same terms and conditions. Thus, job moves do create uncertainty in a person’s medical insurance and subject his/her healthcare financing to risk.
  2. Employers who manage their health insurance cost would normally accept certain limitations to the policy terms and conditions. They could be in many forms, including sub-limits, deductible and co-insurance.
    • Every employee has to be aware of these limits, but in reality, many employees take them for granted by assuming that their employee health insurance covers everything.
  3. Furthermore, as some health policies are incepted without the need to declare medical history, they would automatically exclude all pre-existing illnesses or medical conditions at inception and typically for the 12 months thereafter.
    • This would be detrimental to the employee if he/she has sought medical advice or treatment for any major medical condition before policy inception.
  4. Like most private medical insurance, employee health insurance does not insure a person until the ripe old age of 100, thus exposing him/her to financing risk when they need it most during their golden years.
  5. Each insurer’s medical plan, coverage and terms and conditions of coverage can be quite different. As a result, each time a person changes employment – and thus their health insurer – he/she has to re-analyse the new insurer’s scope and extent of coverage to see if they still adequately supplement his/her personal medical plans. Owing to the tedious nature of this task, employees usually do away with it, erroneously assuming that their coverage is the same as before.

See full story at www.healthxchange.com.sg

Filed Under: Health Tagged With: medical insurance

Report finds Singapore fifth most expensive place for individual medical international insurance

8 November 2016 By admin Leave a Comment

Medical insurance

The average price of individual medical insurance in Singapore

Available to download for free from March 30th via their website, Article 1 presents some intriguing findings, including figures for Singapore. Numerous reports in the past year have found Singapore to be not only a highly liveable city, but also increasingly expensive. This is also extended to the cost of health care at private hospitals and, therefore, health insurance as well.

In fact, Singapore was found to be among the most expensive locations – on average – in the report. Coming in 5th overall, with an average plan cost of USD 9,784, only China, Israel, Hong Kong and the US are more expensive. When broken down into each demographic the average premiums in Singapore are: USD 4,499 for Singles, USD 9,445 for Couples, USD 14,102 for Families, and USD 10,762 for Retirees.

When ranked, Singapore falls 4th most expensive for Single plans, 5th most expensive for Couples plans, 5th most expensive for Family plans, and 5th most expensive for Retirees. While Singapore is among the top 5 most expensive locations in the report, the numbers are somewhat lower when compared to premiums in the US. For example, the average premium in Singapore is 44.70% of the average in the US. This points to a large difference in the average premiums in the top countries.

What influences the premiums in Singapore?

At first glance, it may seem a little odd to see health insurance premiums in Singapore ranking so high. Pacific Prime has identified a number of reasons as to why premiums in Article 1 are so high. Below are four that are most relevant to Singapore:

1. The cost of health care can be expensive for expats
Singapore is well known to have one of the best, and, indeed, most interesting health care systems in the world. Citizens and Permanent Residents have access to the Medisave system which functions as a nationalized health insurance plan enabling substantial health care savings at both the public and private hospitals and clinics.

Non-citizens and Permanent Residents – essentially almost all foreigners in Singapore – don’t have access to the Medisave system which means they are charged full price for any health related care.

The issue with this is that the unsubsidised costs can vary widely. For example, an excision of a mole can cost between SGD 275 and SGD 488 just for the surgery with costs on top for dr’s fees, etc. Private hospitals often cost even more, with the average price at Mount Elizabeth Hospital for the treatment advertised as being between SGD 5,000 and SGD 10,000.

By rob.mcbroom

See full story at www.pacificprime.sg

Filed Under: Health Tagged With: medical insurance

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