Reinsurance Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Reinsurance stocks.

Reinsurance Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 8 RNR RenaissanceRe (RNR) Moves to Buy: Rationale Behind the Upgrade
May 8 AON $2.8M Bet On Aon? Check Out These 3 Stocks Insiders Are Buying
May 8 BRK.A Here Are 3 Big Reasons Berkshire Hathaway Is Sitting on Almost $190 Billion in Cash
May 7 BRK.A Berkshire Hathaway Q1 Earnings: A Detailed Analysis
May 7 BRK.A Buffett and Munger Mark the End of an Era
May 7 BRK.A 15 Best Places in Missouri for a Couple To Live on Only Social Security
May 7 WRB CNO Financial (CNO) Q1 Earnings Miss Estimates, Revenues Up Y/Y (Revised)
May 7 BRK.A Warren Buffett Just Sold These 2 Stocks, Even Though He Still Loves One of Them
May 7 BRK.A Warren Buffett's $56 Billion Silent Warning to Wall Street May Portend Trouble for Stocks
May 7 BRK.A Decoding Berkshire Hathaway Inc (BRK.A): A Strategic SWOT Insight
May 6 BRK.A Why IBM's CEO disagrees with Warren Buffett's stance on AI
May 6 BRK.A Warren Buffett Has Concerns About Utility Business. Don’t Pull the Plug.
May 6 FGF Fundamental Global Inc. Announces Acquisition of Strong/MDI Screen Systems, Inc. by FG Acquisition Corp. at a $30 Million Valuation
May 6 BRK.A Sorry, Elon: Warren Buffett won’t be buying Tesla stock
May 6 BRK.A Wall Street Lunch: Musk Pitches Tesla Stake To Buffett
May 6 BRK.A Wall Street Lunch: Musk Pitches Tesla Stake To Buffett
May 6 BRK.A What investors can learn from Warren Buffett's latest remarks
May 6 BRK.A What Warren Buffett's market insights could mean for investors
May 6 BRK.A Stocks to Watch Monday: Li Auto, Perficient, Apple, Boeing
May 6 BRK.A Warren Buffett on Apple, AI, and why he ditched Paramount
Reinsurance

Reinsurance is insurance that is purchased by an insurance company. In the classic case, reinsurance allows insurance companies to remain solvent after major claims events, such as major disasters like hurricanes and wildfires. In addition to its basic role in risk management, reinsurance is sometimes used for tax mitigation and other reasons. The company that purchases the reinsurance policy is called a "ceding company" or "cedent" or "cedant" under most arrangements. The company issuing the reinsurance policy is referred simply as the "reinsurer".
A company that purchases reinsurance pays a premium to the reinsurance company, who in exchange would pay a share of the claims incurred by the purchasing company. The reinsurer may be either a specialist reinsurance company, which only undertakes reinsurance business, or another insurance company. Insurance companies that sell reinsurance refer to the business as 'assumed reinsurance'.
There are two basic methods of reinsurance:

Facultative Reinsurance, which is negotiated separately for each insurance policy that is reinsured. Facultative reinsurance is normally purchased by ceding companies for individual risks not covered, or insufficiently covered, by their reinsurance treaties, for amounts in excess of the monetary limits of their reinsurance treaties and for unusual risks. Underwriting expenses, and in particular personnel costs, are higher for such business because each risk is individually underwritten and administered. However, as they can separately evaluate each risk reinsured, the reinsurer's underwriter can price the contract more accurately to reflect the risks involved. Ultimately, a facultative certificate is issued by the reinsurance company to the ceding company reinsuring that one policy.
Treaty Reinsurance means that the ceding company and the reinsurer negotiate and execute a reinsurance contract under which the reinsurer covers the specified share of all the insurance policies issued by the ceding company which come within the scope of that contract. The reinsurance contract may oblige the reinsurer to accept reinsurance of all contracts within the scope (known as "obligatory" reinsurance), or it may allow the insurer to choose which risks it wants to cede, with the reinsurer obliged to accept such risks (known as "facultative-obligatory" or "fac oblig" reinsurance).There are two main types of treaty reinsurance, proportional and non-proportional, which are detailed below. Under proportional reinsurance, the reinsurer's share of the risk is defined for each separate policy, while under non-proportional reinsurance the reinsurer's liability is based on the aggregate claims incurred by the ceding office. In the past 30 years there has been a major shift from proportional to non-proportional reinsurance in the property and casualty fields.

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