WASHINGTON--With officials from China and the United States meeting in Washington this week, representatives of the insurance and other financial services industries gathered yesterday to urge that the
WASHINGTON--With officials from China and the United States meeting in Washington this week, representatives of the insurance and other financial services industries gathered yesterday to urge that the
WASHINGTON--While the commission charged with evaluating hurricane loss models for the state of Florida approved one model, it rejected another and faces criticism from that company that it is not adap
WASHINGTON--Exemptions from federal antitrust laws, such as the one enjoyed by the insurance industry, should be reviewed and, if continued, should be kept as narrow as possible, leaders of the Antitru
WASHINGTON--A spokesman for State Farm said that although the company is cooperating with a federal investigation into the handling of flood claims in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, unlike other insure
WASHINGTON--Renewal of the federal Terrorism Risk Insurance Act drew expressions of support at a House Financial Services Subcommittee hearing yesterday, but how long that extension should last was deb
WASHINGTON--The American Insurance Association and the Coalition to Insure Against Terrorism said they have established a united front in support of extending the federal Terrorism Risk Insurance Exten
In a letter to Chamber President Tom Donohue, officers both past and present from the National Conference of Insurance Legislators praised the group for its support of maintaining the insurance indust
A Louisiana federal court judge erred in ruling that a standard insurance policy exclusion for water and flooding damage did not apply where levee breaches from Hurricane Katrina were involved,