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| name = Cowbell Cyber
| name = Cowbell Cyber
| legal_name = Cowbell Cyber, Inc.
| legal_name = Cowbell Cyber, Inc.
| logo = Logo of Cowbell Cyber.svg
| logo = Logo of Cowbell.svg
| logo_size =
| logo_size =
| logo_alt =
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Latest revision as of 06:27, 9 March 2026

{{#invoke:infobox|infoboxTemplate|child= | bodyclass = vcard

| above =

Cowbell Cyber

| subheader = Cowbell Cyber, Inc. | subheaderstyle = font-weight:bold; font-size:105%;

| image = {{#invoke:InfoboxImage|InfoboxImage|image=Logo of Cowbell.svg|size=|sizedefault=frameless|alt=}} | caption =

| header1 = Corporate identity

| label2 = Type | data2 = Private — cyber insurtech MGA and carrier | class2 = category

| label3 = Traded as | data3 =

| label4 = ISIN | data4 =

| label5 = LEI | data5 =

| label6 = Registration number | data6 =

| label7 = Regulated | data7 =

| label8 = License type | data8 = Insurance producer
Surplus lines broker
Domestic surplus lines insurer
Captive insurer

| label9 = NPN | data9 =

| label10 = Coverholder reference | data10 =

| label11 = License number | data11 =

| label12 = Incorporation | data12 =

| label13 = Founded | data13 = 2019; 7 years ago (2019){{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=|preview=Page using Template:Start date and age with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|showblankpositional=1| 1 | 2 | 3 | br | df | end | p | paren }}

| label14 = Headquarters | data14 = Pleasanton, California | class14 = label

| label15 = Country | data15 =

| label16 = Domicile | data16 =

| label17 = Licensed jurisdictions | data17 = United States (all 50 states and DC)
United Kingdom
Australia

| label18 = Regulator | data18 = Nebraska Department of Insurance (Cowbell Specialty Insurance Company)
Vermont (Cowbell Reinsurance Company, captive)

| label19 = Ultimate parent | data19 = Cowbell Cyber, Inc.

| label20 = Major shareholders | data20 = Zurich Insurance Group
Anthemis Group
Permira
Prosperity7 Ventures
Brewer Lane Ventures
PruVen Capital
NYCA Partners
Viola FinTech
ManchesterStory Group

| label21 = Group status | data21 =

| label22 = Key people | data22 = Jack Kudale, Founder, CEO, Chairman
Trent Cooksley, Co-founder, COO
Rajeev Gupta, Co-founder, CPO
Simon Hughes, Chief Commercial Officer
John Botros, CFO
Joshua Chan, CTO
Mamta Birla, SVP Head of Global Claims
Emma Werth, Underwriting and Reinsurance Leadership
Matthieu Chan Tsin, Resiliency Services GM

| label23 = Number of employees | data23 =

| header24 = Business & markets

| label25 = Operating status | data25 =

| label26 = Customer segments | data26 = SMEs (up to $100M revenue)
Middle market ($100M–$1B revenue)

| label27 = Lines of business | data27 = Cyber insurance
Technology errors and omissions
Management liability

| label28 = Business segments | data28 =

| label29 = Main products & services | data29 = Prime 100 (admitted cyber, up to $100M revenue)
Prime 100 Pro (admitted cyber, enhanced endorsements, limits up to $3M)
Prime 250 (non-admitted cyber, $100M–$1B revenue)
Prime Plus (excess cyber, up to $1B revenue, limits up to $5M)
Prime Tech (non-admitted Tech E&O and cyber, up to $1B revenue, limits up to $5M)
Zurich Select Plus (management liability via Zurich North America)
Prime One (Australia, Zurich-backed, limits up to A$5M)

| label30 = Technology platform | data30 = Cowbell Factors (continuous risk rating and benchmarking)
Cowbell Co-Pilot (GenAI-assisted underwriting)
Cowbell Connectors (cloud and security provider integrations)
AWS Security Hub integration

| label31 = Capacity providers | data31 = Palomar Specialty Insurance Company (AM Best A (Excellent))
Chaucer Insurance Company (AM Best A (Excellent))
Obsidian Insurance Company (AM Best A-)
Zurich Australian Insurance Limited (Australia)
Cowbell Specialty Insurance Company (owned; Nebraska domestic surplus lines insurer; NAIC 17372)
Cowbell Reinsurance Company (owned; Vermont captive)

| label32 = Distribution | data32 = 14,000+ producers
Broker-first, API-enabled, digital channels

| label33 = Geographic markets | data33 = United States
United Kingdom
Australia

| label34 = Branches | data34 =

| label35 = Customers served | data35 =

| label36 = Competitors | data36 =

| label37 = Market share rank | data37 =

| header38 = Key financials

| label39 = Currency | data39 =

| label40 = Market cap | data40 =

| label41 = Revenue | data41 =

| label42 = Insurance revenue | data42 =

| label43 = Operating income | data43 =

| label44 = EBITDA | data44 =

| label45 = Net income | data45 =

| label46 = Gross written premium | data46 =

| label47 = Net written premium | data47 = $10M estimated (Cowbell Specialty Insurance Company only, 2024)

| label48 = Loss ratio | data48 = 43% ultimate loss ratio (2022, company-stated)

| label49 = Combined ratio | data49 =

| label50 = Commission / MGA fee | data50 =

| label51 = Total assets | data51 =

| label52 = Invested assets | data52 =

| label53 = Technical reserves | data53 =

| label54 = Contractual service margin | data54 =

| label55 = Net debt | data55 =

| label56 = Equity | data56 = $19M statutory paid-in capital (Cowbell Specialty Insurance Company)

| label57 = Operating margin | data57 =

| label58 = Solvency ratio | data58 =

| label59 = Return on equity | data59 =

| label60 = Total funding raised | data60 = $208.3M (cumulative disclosed, 2019–2024)

| label61 = Last funding round | data61 = Series C, $60M, July 2024

| label62 = Last known valuation | data62 =

| label63 = Lead investors | data63 = Zurich Insurance Group (Series C)
Prosperity7 Ventures (2023 equity financing)
Anthemis Group (Series B)
Brewer Lane Ventures (Series A)
ManchesterStory Group (Seed)

| label64 = Capital structure | data64 =

| label65 = Insurer financial strength | data65 =

| label66 = Capacity partner ratings | data66 = Palomar Specialty Insurance Company: AM Best A (Excellent)
Chaucer Insurance Company: AM Best A (Excellent)
Obsidian Insurance Company: AM Best A-

| label67 = External ratings | data67 =

| data68 =

}}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=|preview = Page using Template:Infobox company with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y | address | alt | branches | capacity_partner_ratings | capacity_providers | capital_structure | caption | child | combined_ratio | commission_rate | competitors | country | coverholder_ref | csm | currency | customer_segments | distribution | domicile | ebitda | embed | equity | exchange | financial_year | footnotes | founded | geographic_markets | group_status | gwp | headquarter | headquarters | ifsr | image | image_size | imagesize | incorporated | incorporation | insurance_jurisdictions | insurance_revenue | invested_assets | isin | key_people | last_round | last_valuation | lead_investors | legal_name | lei | license_number | license_type | lines_of_business | logo | logo_alt | logo_caption | logo_size | loss_ratio | market_cap | market_share_rank | markets_served | name | net_debt | net_income | npn | num_customers | num_employees | nwp | operating_income | operating_margin | operating_status | parent | products | ratings | registered | registration_number | regulated | regulator | reporting_year | revenue | roe | segments | shareholders | shareholders_equity | solvency_ratio | status_in_group | supervisory_authority | technology_platform | technical_reserves | ticker | total_assets | total_funding | total_revenue | type | ultimate_parent }} Template:Summary:Cowbell Cyber The following sections provide further details.

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Corporate profile and regulatory footprint

🏢 Legal identity. Cowbell Cyber, Inc. is a privately held cyber insurance technology company headquartered in Pleasanton, California.[1][2] The company operates as an insurtech platform combining MGA distribution with selective risk-bearing through an owned domestic surplus lines insurer and a reinsurance captive. Cowbell Insurance Agency LLC serves as the primary US distribution entity, licensed as both a producer and surplus lines broker across all 50 states and the District of Columbia.[3]

📋 Risk-bearing entities. Cowbell Specialty Insurance Company is a Nebraska-domiciled domestic surplus lines insurer (NAIC code 17372, FEIN 88-3279955), organized on July 11, 2022, and commencing business on April 1, 2023.[4] The carrier is licensed as a foreign surplus lines insurer in 46 states plus DC.[5] Cowbell Reinsurance Company operates as a licensed insurance captive domiciled in Vermont, launched to add capacity and support growth.[6]

🌍 International operations. Cowbell Managing General Agency Ltd (Companies House number 14570024) is the UK operating entity, described as a subsidiary of Cowbell Cyber, Inc.[7][8] In Australia, Cowbell Insurance Solutions Pty Ltd (ABN 52 684 362 552) operates as a corporate authorized representative (No. 001308835) of AUB Group Limited under AFSL 700075.[9]

📊 Group structure. The minimum confirmed corporate group comprises Cowbell Cyber, Inc. (parent), Cowbell Insurance Agency LLC, Cowbell Specialty Insurance Company, Cowbell Reinsurance Company, Cowbell Managing General Agency Ltd (UK), and Cowbell Insurance Solutions Pty Ltd (Australia).[4][3][6][7]

📈 Scale indicators. Cowbell disclosed a risk pool of 21 million accounts covering 62 percent of US SMEs in January 2022, later expanding to 38 million continuously monitored US and UK businesses by November 2023. The distribution network grew from 12,000 producers and 2,000 agencies in January 2022 to 14,000 producers by March 2022, with licensed producer growth expanding nearly threefold over two years as of July 2024.[6][10]

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Founders, leadership, and governance

👤 Founders. Cowbell was co-founded by three executives who continue to lead the company: Jack Kudale (Founder, CEO, Chairman), Trent Cooksley (Co-founder, Chief Operating Officer), and Rajeev Gupta (Co-founder, Chief Product Officer).[11][12][8][13]

🏛️ Executive team. The functional leadership roster covers key operational areas: Simon Hughes (Chief Commercial Officer), John Botros (CFO), Joshua Chan (CTO), Mamta Birla (SVP Head of Global Claims), Emma Werth (underwriting and reinsurance leadership), and Matthieu Chan Tsin (Resiliency Services GM).[11][6][1]

🔷 Board of directors. The board includes strategic investor representatives and industry domain leaders: Stephen Moss (Zurich Insurance Group), Michael Christenson, David Miles, Sean Park, John Kim, Varun Badhwar, and Jack Kudale (Founder, CEO, Chairman).[14] Matthew Jones joined the board in connection with the Series B financing, and Victoria Cheng joined as a board observer at the same time.[15]

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Funding, capitalization, and valuation signals

💰 Cumulative funding. Cowbell has raised a minimum of $208.3M across five disclosed financings from September 2019 through July 2024.[16] The November 2023 financing stated $148M raised to date, which exceeds the $123.3M reconstructible from the disclosed seed, Series A, and Series B announcements, suggesting additional interim financings not enumerated in public releases.[10]

💵 Cowbell Cyber disclosed equity financing rounds, amount, lead investors, and cumulative funding, 2019–2024, USD
Round Date Amount raised Lead investor(s) Notable co-investors Cumulative funding
Seed 2019-09-24 $3.3M ManchesterStory Group Holmes Murphy & Associates; Tri-Valley Ventures; Global Insurance Accelerator $3.3M
Series A 2021-03-11 $20.0M Brewer Lane Ventures Pivot Investment Partners; Avanta Ventures; Markel Corporation; ManchesterStory; Tri-Valley Ventures; Holmes Murphy $23.3M
Series B 2022-03-15 $100.0M Anthemis Group Permira; PruVen Capital; NYCA Partners; Viola FinTech; existing investors $123.3M
Equity financing 2023-11-01 $25.0M Prosperity7 Ventures New and existing investors $148.3M
Series C 2024-07-26 $60.0M Zurich Insurance Group $208.3M

📊 Investor archetypes. Early-round participants include insurance-focused investors such as ManchesterStory Group and Holmes Murphy & Associates (seed), with Markel Corporation joining at Series A.[16][17] The Series B was led by Anthemis Group and attracted institutional fintech and venture investors including Permira, PruVen Capital, NYCA Partners, and Viola FinTech.[15] Zurich Insurance Group entered as a strategic insurer investor at Series C with a $60M equity commitment, and the 2023 financing was led by Prosperity7 Ventures (the venture arm of Aramco).[18][10]

🎯 Operating posture signals. The Series C press release frames capital deployment toward scaling, international expansion, resilience services, and additional products, with explicit reference to near-term operating profitability.[18] The November 2023 financing similarly references a profitable growth path, supported by a company-stated 43% ultimate loss ratio for the 2022 underwriting year.[10]

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Business model, underwriting approach, and customer segments

🔧 Operating model. Cowbell positions itself as a provider of adaptive cyber insurance supported by continuous underwriting, risk measurement, and bundled risk services. The platform uses proprietary Cowbell Factors to benchmark businesses against a large data set and deliver continuous awareness of cyber risk.[19] Three distinct risk-bearing layers are evidenced: carrier paper relationships for admitted and E&S products (through Palomar and Chaucer), captive risk participation through Cowbell Reinsurance Company, and an owned domestic surplus lines insurer (Cowbell Specialty Insurance Company).[1][6][5] This hybrid structure combines MGA distribution economics with selective, staged risk retention.

📋 Segment definitions. Product architecture defines clear segment boundaries. Prime 100 targets admitted standalone cyber for businesses with up to $100M in revenue, while Prime 100 Pro offers enhanced coverage options within the same segment with limits up to $3M.[1][20] Prime 250 addresses middle market risks ($100M to $1B revenue) on a non-admitted basis, and Prime Plus provides excess cyber protection (limits up to $5M, follow-form) for businesses with up to $1B in revenue.[21][22] Prime Tech combines Technology E&O and cyber coverage for technology businesses with up to $1B revenue and limits up to $5M.[2]

🏭 Customer mix signals. The stated focus is SMEs and the middle market, supported by revenue thresholds embedded in product design.[18] The admitted SME product and broker-first rapid quote/bind flow indicate a volume-oriented lower-to-mid-premium core, while Prime 250's surplus lines basis and tailored coverages for specific industries (including construction-specific and manufacturing-specific endorsements) point to underwriting for more complex mid-market insureds.[21][1]

🚫 Industry exclusions. Prime Plus explicitly excludes certain classes including crypto, cannabis, online trading, online gambling, social networks, crowdfunding, politically affiliated organizations, adult websites, and data aggregators.[22] Product pages list illustrative target classes including financial services, healthcare, professional services, retail, and contractors, though these are not comprehensive underwriting guides.[1]

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Product suite and coverage analysis

📄 Policy structure. Cowbell's cyber policies are written on a claims-made and reported basis. The Prime 250 application specifies that coverage applies only to claims first made during the policy period (or extension period) and reported according to policy terms, with first-party expense and first-party loss reducing the limit of liability and subject to deductibles.[23] The policy wording is branded as the Cowbell Cyber Risk Insurance Policy, as evidenced by a specimen policy package for Prime 250.[24]

🛡️ Cowbell Cyber coverage elements by product tier, Prime 100 vs Prime 250, as described on product pages
Coverage element Prime 100 (up to $100M revenue) Prime 250 ($100M–$1B revenue)
Business interruption / system performance Business Income & Extra Expense; system failure and voluntary shutdown not covered Business Interruption Loss; includes interruption/degradation and voluntary shutdown to minimize damage
Data restoration / recovery Restoration of Electronic Data Data restoration
Cyber extortion / ransomware Extortion Threats and separate Ransom Payments Extortion Costs (including ransomware)
Bricking / hardware damage Hardware Replacement Costs Bricking cost (replace, remediate, or improve system)
Reputational harm / PR Public Relations Expense Reputational harm expense
Social engineering Social Engineering with documented verification procedure requirement Included in Cyber crime loss as social engineering and reverse social engineering
Funds transfer fraud / cyber crime Computer & Funds Transfer Fraud; Telecommunications Fraud Cyber crime loss including fraudulent transfer of funds, telecom charges from telecom hack, utility fraud, and cryptojacking
Media liability Website Media Liability Media liability (IP infringement other than patent in advertising/media context)
Privacy / network security liability Security Breach Liability including regulatory fines/penalties and PCI-DSS fines/penalties Liability costs described generally (defense and damages)

🔑 Prime 100 Pro enhancements. Prime 100 Pro is positioned as broader coverage with endorsements typically reserved for larger businesses, explicitly naming cryptojacking, contingent business interruption, and reverse social engineering. Limits are available up to $3M, and accounts under $50M revenue require only six underwriting questions. Additional enhancement endorsements include system failure loss, contingent business interruption, specified defense/breach counsel, cryptojacking loss, and bricking cost.[20]

🔒 Notable exclusions. A specimen Prime 250 policy package includes a War and Cyber War Exclusion Endorsement that broadens the standard war exclusion to encompass cyber war, defined as harmful acts committed by or under control of a sovereign state meeting specified criteria, with a carve-back tied to the physical location of insured or service provider computer systems relative to the affected sovereign state.[24] The specimen also includes a BIPA Exclusion Endorsement (excluding Illinois Biometric Information Protection Act violations) and a Product or Service Failure Exclusion Endorsement.[24]

🩺 Breach response services. Prime 100 includes Security Breach Expense covering investigation and forensics, customer notification, call center services, overtime salaries, and post-event credit monitoring.[1] Cowbell operates a coordinated incident response model with an in-house claims team and a vetted panel of breach counsel, forensic investigators, and credit monitoring providers at pre-negotiated vendor rates.[25] Vendor engagement is determined case-by-case and at Cowbell's discretion, subject to policy terms.[26]

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Cybersecurity and risk services

🛡️ Bundled risk engineering. Cowbell embeds resiliency services and continuous monitoring into the policyholder experience, positioning itself beyond pure risk transfer. Policyholders receive continuous risk ratings via Cowbell Factors, tailored recommendations (Cowbell Insights), integrations with cloud and security providers (Cowbell Connectors), and cybersecurity awareness training through Wizer with unlimited seats for the first policy year.[1][12] All policyholders are entitled to an hour-long risk engineering consultation with Cowbell cybersecurity experts.[27]

Cowbell 365. Cowbell 365 is an around-the-clock service providing pre- and post-incident support delivered by an in-house team of cyber claims specialists and cyber risk engineers.[12] The company states that for ransom-related claims, a ransom payment is necessary less than 25 percent of the time, and that it has maintained a reported claims ratio under 3 percent since inception.[12]

💊 Cowbell Rx marketplace. Cowbell Rx is a referral marketplace providing access to third-party cybersecurity partners with discounts of up to 60 percent, explicitly stated as separate from the insurance policy.[28][29] Sophos is a notable Cowbell Rx integration partner, with policyholders able to explore Sophos MDR through the marketplace.[30]

🤖 Technology stack. Cowbell describes itself as a pioneer of continuous underwriting using Cowbell Factors for risk assessment and benchmarking.[19] Prime Tech introduced Cowbell Co-Pilot, a generative AI solution integrated into the underwriting workflow that uses large language models to accelerate contract review, with a claimed 40 percent faster review time on average.[31] An AWS-focused offering provides quoting based on AWS security configuration and monitoring via AWS Security Hub, and a collaboration with Qualys integrates vulnerability management into underwriting risk reduction.[13][5]

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Capacity, reinsurance, and strategic partnerships

📜 Carrier paper relationships. Prime 100 and Prime 100 Pro are written on paper provided by Palomar Specialty Insurance Company (AM Best A (Excellent)) and backed by global reinsurers. Prime 250 is written on paper from both Palomar and Chaucer Insurance Company (AM Best A (Excellent)).[1][21] Prime Tech is delivered through Obsidian Insurance Company (AM Best A-), a hybrid program carrier whose partnership with Cowbell deepened in April 2024 to include Tech E&O primary coverage.[31]

🏗️ Reinsurance and captive. Cowbell Re adds flexibility and supports growth, while the platform maintains a diversified panel of over 20 reinsurance partners globally (unnamed).[6] Cowbell Specialty Insurance Company joined a panel of 15 carriers and reinsurers supporting Cowbell Prime programs at launch in September 2022, with the combined Cowbell Specialty and Cowbell Re structure providing additional flexibility and control.[5]

🤝 Zurich strategic relationship. The Zurich partnership spans equity investment, governance, and product capacity. Zurich Insurance Group led the $60M Series C in July 2024 and holds board representation through Stephen Moss (Group Head of Financial Lines and Cyber at Zurich).[18][14] Cowbell's management liability offering is a collaboration with Zurich North America via Zurich Select Plus, targeting private companies under 250 employees and $50M in assets, distributed through the E&S channel with access via Cowbell's platform and API.[32] In Australia, Prime One is written on Zurich Australian Insurance Limited paper under a multi-year fully delegated exclusive collaboration, with limits up to A$5M and availability via licensed brokers.[33]

🎯 Competitive positioning. Cowbell's evidenced differentiators within the cyber insurtech ecosystem include its hybrid risk-bearing buildout (MGA distribution, captive, and owned surplus lines insurer), large continuously monitored risk pool and continuous underwriting positioning, broker-first and API-enabled distribution with rapid quote/bind (under five minutes), and integrated claims and risk engineering through Cowbell 365 and a curated incident response panel model.[6][10][1][12]

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Financial performance signals

📉 Key financial indicators. Cowbell reported a premium run-rate exceeding $200M in 2021 and 2.5x premium growth in 2022, though audited annual GWP has not been published.[6][10] The company disclosed a 43 percent ultimate loss ratio for the 2022 underwriting year (basis not clarified as gross or net) and a reported claims ratio under 3 percent since inception.[10][12]

📊 Cowbell Cyber key financial indicators, most recent disclosed figures
KPI Most recent figure Source context
Premium run-rate Over $200M (2021) Company-stated
Premium growth 2.5x (2022) Company-stated; basis not specified
Ultimate loss ratio 43% (2022) Company-stated; basis not specified
Reported claims ratio Under 3% since inception Company-stated
Statutory paid-in capital (Cowbell Specialty) $19M SLTX / A.M. Best evaluation
Estimated NWP (Cowbell Specialty only) $10M (2024 est.) SLTX / A.M. Best evaluation

🏦 Carrier-level financials. Cowbell Specialty Insurance Company, the owned carrier subsidiary, operates at smaller scale relative to the broader platform's premium claims, with an estimated $10M in net premiums written for 2024 and $19M in statutory paid-in capital.[4] This is consistent with a model where a portion of platform premium is written on partner carrier paper while the owned carrier gradually assumes a share of risk or specific program layers.[5]

💡 Profitability trajectory. The 2023 financing references a profitable growth path, and the Series C press release explicitly cites near-term operating profitability as a strategic milestone.[10][18]

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Risk factors

Capacity and counterparty dependency. Core products rely on specific carriers (Palomar, Chaucer, Obsidian) for paper. Loss of a primary paper relationship or tightening reinsurance terms could disrupt growth or require repricing.[1]

📜 Surplus lines regulatory risk. Prime 250 and Prime Plus are explicitly non-admitted surplus lines products, which introduces regulatory process dependencies and heightened friction and variability by state.[21]

🌐 Aggregation and systemic event risk. Cowbell has acknowledged systemic cyber loss dynamics (its "resonance" framing in thought leadership), and the policy wording includes a war and cyber war exclusion endorsement, underscoring market-wide sensitivity to attribution and systemic events.[34]

🔗 Claims vendor concentration. Cowbell's panel-based incident response model can create concentration exposure if a limited set of vendors becomes saturated during widespread incident waves.[25]

🗺️ International execution. UK and Australia expansions depend on local licensing structures, carrier partnerships (notably Zurich in Australia), distribution ramp, local claims operations, and regulatory compliance.[10]

📦 Product expansion. Expansion into Tech E&O and management liability increases exposure to longer-tail casualty and professional liability claims dynamics distinct from cyber loss patterns. Underwriting discipline and reinsurance structures for these adjacencies require separate validation.[31]

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Strategy outlook

🚀 Technology deepening. Cowbell's strategic trajectory includes increased use of AI and generative AI to drive underwriting efficiency and broker decision support, as demonstrated by the Co-Pilot product and Series C narrative.[18][31]

🌏 Geographic expansion. The company has launched UK operations (Prime One) and an Australian market entry with Zurich-backed capacity under a multi-year fully delegated exclusive collaboration.[10][33]

📑 Broader product portfolio. Prime Tech (combined Tech E&O and cyber) and management liability via the Zurich Select Plus collaboration extend Cowbell beyond pure cyber insurance.[31][32]

🏗️ Deeper risk-bearing. The carrier subsidiary (Cowbell Specialty) and captive (Cowbell Re) are positioned as improving flexibility and control over the underwriting program, supporting the long-term transition from pure MGA to hybrid risk-bearing platform.[5]

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Timeline of key events

📅 Cowbell Cyber key corporate and product milestones, 2019–2026
Date Event
2019-09-24 Seed financing ($3.3M); launched continuous underwriting platform positioning
2020-12-01 Admitted standalone cyber program (Cowbell Prime) available in 31 states
2021-01-12 Prime Plus excess cyber line announced
2021-03-11 Series A ($20M) led by Brewer Lane Ventures
2022-01-12 Cowbell Reinsurance Company captive launched (Vermont)
2022-03-15 Series B ($100M) led by Anthemis Group
2022-09-21 Adaptive Cyber Insurance announced; Cowbell Specialty Insurance Company launched with 46-state surplus lines licensing
2023-02-28 Cowbell 365 (24/7 claims and risk engineering) announced
2023-11-01 $25M equity financing led by Prosperity7; $148M raised to date; 43% ultimate loss ratio disclosed for 2022
2024-04-23 Prime Tech launched with Cowbell Co-Pilot; deepened Obsidian partnership into Tech E&O primary
2024-07-26 Series C ($60M) led by Zurich Insurance Group
2025-06-26 Zurich Select Plus management liability offering launched
2026-02-06 Australia launch with Zurich-backed Prime One; multi-year fully delegated exclusive collaboration; limits up to A$5M
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Incident response panel

🔍 Panel framework. Cowbell operates a curated incident response panel with categories and example vendors disclosed in a published panel document. Listed vendors are illustrative of providers regularly engaged; vendors are independent, and engagement is determined case-by-case at Cowbell's discretion in accordance with policy terms.[26]

  • Defense and breach counsel: BakerHostetler, Cipriani & Werner, Constangy, Mullen Coughlin, Pierson Ferdinand, Wood Smith Henning & Berman, Lewis Brisbois[26][6][10]
  • Forensic investigators and data recovery: Arete, Booz Allen Hamilton, S-RM, Irongate, CRS-IR[26][25]
  • Credit monitoring and notification: Experian, ID Experts, TransUnion[26][18]
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See also

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References

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