Magazines

Table of Contents
March 20, 2006
East Edition
Washington SMARTens-Up
Washington SMART-ens Up: Effects of reform on the surplus lines industry
With the eyes of Congress turning to insurance reform, most commentators are focused on how change might affect the overall insurance industry and agents. But the often-overlooked surplus lines segment of the industry could end up looking different, maybe even better, if certain reforms pass. This year, industry lobbyists on Capitol Hill say ...Features
Editor's Note: Meetings of the mind
What brokers need to watch for in Oil & Gas coverage
For Oil & Gas operators, contracts and coverages go hand in hand
Solve the multi-state surplus tax problem now
Earthquakes, floods and wildfires ... oh my!
Harness the power of seminars
Not all Oil & Gas programs are created equal
Federal Bureau of Investigation targeting insurance fraud
Legislators hear insurance industry's resounding voice after the storm
Ringmaster Richard enters the Lloyd's lion's den
Is your agency's newsletter a snooze-letter?
Departments
Currents
- Citizens Financial banks on 'not your typical' insurance agency sale
- Wind vs. flood Katrina lawsuit sent back to state court
- Atlantic Mutual ratings fall as surplus drops $100 million
- Citizens not banking on insurance
- Catching up with region's insurance politics
- With eye on federal monies, more states adopting primary seat belt laws
- Insurers back in court over World Trade Center
- Few homeowners buy flood insurance when not required, RAND study says
- Berkshire's Buffett still high on insurance despite catastrophe risk
New Markets
Newsbriefs
- PENN. HALTS ROLE IN AGENTS' FINGERPRINT AGENCY
- INSURERS MOVE TO LIMIT R.I. LEAD CLEANUP COSTS
- RMS CEO SEES BIGGER CATASTROPHE LOSSES
- US AIRWAYS CAN'T COLLECT FOR 9/11 DISRUPTION, COURT RULES


