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Use of alternatives to the commercial insurance market for D&O liabilities

By Angus Duncan , Lawrence Fine and John M. Orr | July 5, 2022

This article is from our Directors and Officers Liability survey 2022 and discusses the use of alternatives to the commercial insurance market.
Cyber Risk Management|Environmental Risks
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The steep increase in the price of insurance over the last two-three years has led to a lot of discussions about potential alternatives which might be available for D&O liabilities other than purchasing a D&O insurance policy from the commercial insurance market.

Potential solutions include using a captive insurance vehicle for some or all of the corporate reimbursement cover (“Side B”) or company securities claims cover (“Side C”), using a captive insurance vehicle (in the form of a Protected Cell Company (“PCC”) or a Segregated Account Company (“SAC”)) for some or all of the non-indemnified loss cover (“Side A”) ; establishment of an indemnification trust; a personal guarantee of director liabilities from the CEO or a major shareholder; and other more bespoke solutions.

While the use of captives for Side B or Side C has been done in a number of situations, in our experience, the Side A solution has tended to be more expensive than simply purchasing insurance from the commercial D&O market. However, in our survey, marginally more respondents indicated their organisation had used a captive insurance vehicle for Side A (6%) than for Sides B/C (5%). A further 18% and 20% (respectively) were considering doing so in the future.

The use of a personal guarantee from the CEO or other major shareholder saw some fairly high-profile examples between 2020-21 and, in fact, more of the respondents indicated this was in place (7%) than for either type of captive solutions.

Overall, by far, the majority of respondents indicated none of these alternative risk transfer solutions were in place nor under consideration, and this matches our experience in practice. Nonetheless, it is interesting that a fairly significant number are still considering implementation in the future.

Since the survey was conducted, there has been a material development in the U.S. and in particular in Delaware, where the state has recently passed a law making it clear a standard captive, that is, a normal group company rather than a PCC or SAC, can insure directors for side A losses.

Authors

Executive Director – Coverage Specialist, Global FINEX

Management Liability Coverage Leader
FINEX North America

D&O Liability Product Leader
FINEX North America

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