Companies are increasingly using captives as a long-term strategy to insulate themselves against commercial market-cycle volatility, rather than using captives as a shorter-term solution when rates harden, a new report says.
In a Special Report on U.S. captives' performance in 2012, A.M. Best says, “Before 2000, the captive cycle followed the underwriting cycle for the commercial-lines industry,” explaining that when the commercial market hardened, businesses formed and increased the use of their captives to protect themselves from the steep rate increases. As the commercial market softened and rates declined, captives would be run off or downsized as companies took advantage of the lower prices and more generous coverages in the conventional market.
Since 2000, though, A.M. Best says captives “seem to have found a permanent place in U.S. corporations' risk-management strategies.” The report says that analysts have been told that “corporate memories are longer” and companies are using captives to hedge against volatile rate changes and changes in coverage inherent in the insurance pricing cycle. “Some captives rated by A.M. Best have eliminated the commercial insurer altogether and cede directly to the commercial reinsurance market,” says the report.
Recommended For You
Want to continue reading?
Become a Free PropertyCasualty360 Digital Reader
Your access to unlimited PropertyCasualty360 content isn’t changing.
Once you are an ALM digital member, you’ll receive:
- Breaking insurance news and analysis, on-site and via our newsletters and custom alerts
- Weekly Insurance Speak podcast featuring exclusive interviews with industry leaders
- Educational webcasts, white papers, and ebooks from industry thought leaders
- Critical converage of the employee benefits and financial advisory markets on our other ALM sites, BenefitsPRO and ThinkAdvisor
Already have an account? Sign In Now
© 2025 ALM Global, LLC, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to [email protected]. For more information visit Asset & Logo Licensing.