Magazines

Table of Contents
September 24, 2007
East Edition
The Changing Face of Surplus Lines Brokers
The CHANGING FACE of Surplus Lines Brokers
The surplus lines industry is never boring, never plain and certainly never black and white. Often dubbed as the innovator of new insurance products, the industry could even be considered colorful when it comes to the breadth and scope of business risks surplus lines professionals insure. However, when it comes to the industry's surplus lines ...Features
Editor's Note: Promises to keep
From the Big Apple to the Corn State
Predictive Analytics 2.0
Making the case for Internet liability coverage
Chinese imports and product liability coverage
Cutting doctors' hours may not reduce medical errors, studies find
U.S. excess and surplus lines market attracts international attention
Growing Your Property Casualty Agency: Establish an authentic small business department
Idea Exchange: Eight major mistakes employers make when workers' comp rates go down
Idea Exchange: Exporters' insurance: A world of opportunity
Idea Exchange: Prospects and pitfalls in a changing global insurance world
Closing Quote: Open up to legislators, state commissioners!
It Figures: It Figures
Declarations: Declarations
Departments
Currents
- N.H. motorcyclist covered by auto policy
- N.J. bans business auto 'step-downs'
- Tyler named Maryland commissioner
- 11 N.J. public officials caught in FBI insurance sting
- Burnes: four insurers eyeing deregulated Mass. auto market
- N.Y. moves to end bureau-filed rates for workers' comp
- N.J. hockey case could redefine spectator liability
- Allstate to comply with N.Y. anti-tying rule
- R.I. wants paint makers to pay $2.4 billion
- Judge throws out all federal antitrust charges against insurers, brokers
- Industry skeptical, while Treasury opposes natural disaster pool
- Health premiums rise 6.1%; average family coverage costs $12,000
- Progressive combines personal lines management
- U.S. reinsurers report premiums dropped in 2Q
- Insurers have manageable exposure to subprime turmoil, report says
- U.S. fire report: More fires; fewer deaths and injuries; rise in property losses
- Guy Carpenter finds Lloyd's market at its 'healthiest in 300 years'

