Jump to content

Home: Difference between revisions

From Insurer Brain
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(273 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
<!--
<div style="float:right; width:100%; max-width:480px; box-sizing:border-box; margin:0 0 1em 3em; padding:.8em; border:1px solid #ddd; border-radius:8px; background:#f9f9f9;">
<div class="fullscreen-logo">
'''Quote of the day:'''
[[File:Logo of Insurer Brain.svg|frameless|center|link=]]
{{Quote of the day}}
</div>
</div>
-->
<!-- Force daily refresh: {{CURRENTYEAR}}-{{CURRENTMONTH}}-{{CURRENTDAY2}} -->
'''Did you know?'''

__NOCACHE__
== Skill-building book summaries ==
{{#switch: {{#expr: {{CURRENTTIMESTAMP}} mod 100}}
''Looking to grow your skills? Start with our latest book summaries:''
| 0 = {{:Definition:Bordereaux}}

| 1 = {{:Definition:Burning cost}}
🌱 [[Tiny habits (2019) – BJ Fogg]]. Start absurdly small and celebrate to rewire behaviour.
| 2 = {{:Definition:Commutation (reinsurance)}}

| 3 = {{:Definition:Finite reinsurance}}
⚛️ [[Atomic habits (2018) – James Clear]]. Compound small improvements with clear systems.
| 4 = {{:Definition:Fronting}}

| 5 = {{:Definition:Follow-the-fortunes}}
💥[[The power of habit (2012) – Charles Duhigg]]. Use cue–routine–reward to change outcomes.
| 6 = {{:Definition:Cut-through clause}}

| 7 = {{:Definition:Binding authority}}
🥂 [[Never eat alone (2005) – Keith Ferrazzi and Tahl Raz]]. Build relationships with consistent, generous outreach.
| 8 = {{:Definition:Clash cover}}

| 9 = {{:Definition:Attachment point}}
✅ [[Getting things done (2001) – David Allen]]. Capture and clarify to achieve stress-free productivity.
| 10 = {{:Definition:Exhaustion point}}

| 11 = {{:Definition:Reinstatement premium}}
🤗 [[How to win friends and influence people (1936) – Dale Carnegie]]. Use timeless rules for rapport and persuasion.
| 12 = {{:Definition:Sliding-scale commission}}

| 13 = {{:Definition:Profit commission}}
== Inspirational quotes ==
| 14 = {{:Definition:Loss portfolio transfer}}
''Need a spark of inspiration to lift your day or shift your perspective? Explore our latest collection of quotes:''
| 15 = {{:Definition:Adverse development cover (ADC)}}

| 16 = {{:Definition:Aggregate excess-of-loss reinsurance}}
✨ [[Quotes about the meaning of life]]
| 17 = {{:Definition:Catastrophe excess-of-loss reinsurance}}
| 18 = {{:Definition:Per-risk excess of loss reinsurance}}
| 19 = {{:Definition:Risks-attaching basis}}
| 20 = {{:Definition:Losses-occurring basis}}
| 21 = {{:Definition:Claims-made trigger}}
| 22 = {{:Definition:Signing down}}
| 23 = {{:Definition:Sunset clause}}
| 24 = {{:Definition:Utmost good faith}}
| 25 = {{:Definition:Contra proferentem}}
| 26 = {{:Definition:Incurred but not reported (IBNR)}}
| 27 = {{:Definition:Bornhuetter-Ferguson method}}
| 28 = {{:Definition:Chain-ladder method}}
| 29 = {{:Definition:Stochastic reserving}}
| 30 = {{:Definition:Loss development triangle}}
| 31 = {{:Definition:Credibility factor}}
| 32 = {{:Definition:Allocated loss adjustment expense (ALAE)}}
| 33 = {{:Definition:Unallocated loss adjustment expense (ULAE)}}
| 34 = {{:Definition:Experience modification factor}}
| 35 = {{:Definition:Industry loss warranty (ILW)}}
| 36 = {{:Definition:Sidecar (reinsurance)}}
| 37 = {{:Definition:Collateralized reinsurance}}
| 38 = {{:Definition:Catastrophe bond (CAT bond)}}
| 39 = {{:Definition:Retrocession}}
| 40 = {{:Definition:Surplus share reinsurance}}
| 41 = {{:Definition:Surplus strain}}
| 42 = {{:Definition:Surplus relief}}
| 43 = {{:Definition:Funds withheld reinsurance}}
| 44 = {{:Definition:Modified coinsurance}}
| 45 = {{:Definition:Coinsurance penalty}}
| 46 = {{:Definition:Anti-concurrent causation clause}}
| 47 = {{:Definition:Continuous trigger}}
| 48 = {{:Definition:Efficient proximate cause}}
| 49 = {{:Definition:Horizontal exhaustion}}
| 50 = {{:Definition:Vertical exhaustion}}
| 51 = {{:Definition:Sue and labor clause}}
| 52 = {{:Definition:Honorable engagement clause}}
| 53 = {{:Definition:Hours clause}}
| 54 = {{:Definition:Batch clause}}
| 55 = {{:Definition:Aggregation clause}}
| 56 = {{:Definition:Omnibus clause}}
| 57 = {{:Definition:Running down clause}}
| 58 = {{:Definition:Warehouse-to-warehouse clause}}
| 59 = {{:Definition:General average}}
| 60 = {{:Definition:Particular average}}
| 61 = {{:Definition:Constructive total loss}}
| 62 = {{:Definition:York-Antwerp Rules}}
| 63 = {{:Definition:Protection and indemnity (P&I)}}
| 64 = {{:Definition:Demand surge}}
| 65 = {{:Definition:Social inflation}}
| 66 = {{:Definition:Nuclear verdict}}
| 67 = {{:Definition:Silent cyber}}
| 68 = {{:Definition:Affirmative cyber coverage}}
| 69 = {{:Definition:Parametric insurance}}
| 70 = {{:Definition:Embedded insurance}}
| 71 = {{:Definition:Takaful}}
| 72 = {{:Definition:Bancassurance}}
| 73 = {{:Definition:Microinsurance}}
| 74 = {{:Definition:Captive insurance company}}
| 75 = {{:Definition:Cell captive}}
| 76 = {{:Definition:Protected cell company (PCC)}}
| 77 = {{:Definition:Reciprocal insurance exchange}}
| 78 = {{:Definition:Risk retention group (RRG)}}
| 79 = {{:Definition:Lloyd's syndicate}}
| 80 = {{:Definition:Reinsurance to close (RITC)}}
| 81 = {{:Definition:Equitas}}
| 82 = {{:Definition:Funds at Lloyd's (FAL)}}
| 83 = {{:Definition:Syndicate-in-a-box (SIAB)}}
| 84 = {{:Definition:Part VII transfer}}
| 85 = {{:Definition:Solvent scheme of arrangement}}
| 86 = {{:Definition:Run-off (insurance)}}
| 87 = {{:Definition:Demutualization}}
| 88 = {{:Definition:Depopulation program}}
| 89 = {{:Definition:Probable maximum loss (PML)}}
| 90 = {{:Definition:Exceedance probability curve (EP curve)}}
| 91 = {{:Definition:Realistic disaster scenario (RDS)}}
| 92 = {{:Definition:Monte Carlo simulation}}
| 93 = {{:Definition:Copula}}
| 94 = {{:Definition:Bühlmann model}}
| 95 = {{:Definition:Cape Cod method}}
| 96 = {{:Definition:Extra-contractual obligation (ECO)}}
| 97 = {{:Definition:Loss in excess of policy limits (XPL)}}
| 98 = {{:Definition:Doctrine of reasonable expectations}}
| 99 = {{:Definition:Longevity swap}}
}}

Latest revision as of 22:46, 12 March 2026

Did you know?

📐 Horizontal exhaustion is a legal and coverage-allocation principle that requires all insurance policies at the same layer of coverage to be fully exhausted before any higher-layer excess or umbrella policy is triggered. The concept arises most frequently in complex commercial insurance programs and long-tail liability disputes — such as asbestos, environmental contamination, or product liability claims — where multiple policy periods and multiple insurers are implicated over many years.

🔄 Consider a manufacturer facing bodily injury claims spanning two decades of occurrences. The company may have purchased primary CGL policies from different carriers in each year, plus excess layers stacked above them. Under horizontal exhaustion, a claimant or policyholder must collect the full limits of every triggered primary policy across all relevant policy years before any first-layer excess policy becomes obligated to pay. The excess insurer essentially sits behind the entire row of primary policies, not just the one directly beneath it in a single policy year. This stands in contrast to "vertical exhaustion," where the policyholder can move up through primary and excess layers within a single policy year before tapping adjacent years.

🧩 Which exhaustion method applies can shift millions — sometimes billions — of dollars between primary and excess carriers, making it one of the most heavily litigated coverage questions in insurance coverage law. Courts across U.S. jurisdictions are split, with some favoring horizontal exhaustion and others permitting vertical approaches depending on policy language and state precedent. For risk managers designing layered programs and for reinsurers pricing excess-of-loss treaties, the prevailing exhaustion rule in applicable jurisdictions directly affects exposure estimates, reserve calculations, and settlement strategies. Brokers and coverage counsel must track these jurisdictional differences carefully when structuring or advising on multi-year, multi-carrier programs.

Related concepts: