Guernsey has seen a positive start to the year in the insurance linked securities market.
Statistics for new cells of protected cell companies (PCCs), the main method of writing new ILS business, are well ahead of those for 2017 to date.
Industry figures say that business flows, from both established and new clients, have been good so far in 2018. The industry saw overall net growth, including ILS, of 2.2% last year, with top line growth of 10%.
The total number of international insurers in Guernsey stood at 853 at the end of 2017, with more than half (57%) represented by PCC cells, which Derek Maddison, Chairman of the Guernsey International Insurance Association, said reflected the island’s strong position in ILS.
He said one driver for the industry was the increasing number of natural catastrophes for which people are seeking cover.
“Some of these risks can be difficult to place in conventional insurance markets,” he said. “There may not be enough capacity or the insureds may want a particular trigger to be used instead of proving an event in the conventional insurance sense. There is also a growing appetite among the institutional investors to diversify into such risks.”
Many Guernsey industry representatives will attend Guernsey Finance’s ILS event ‘ILS Insight’ in Zurich on Thursday 5 July. A panel session considering the effects of Hurricane Irma and other natural catastrophes will be followed by a technical showcase demonstrating the solutions provided by Guernsey.
Guernsey was the first jurisdiction to establish legislation permitting the formation of PCCs more than 20 years ago.
Recently the Guernsey insurance industry has been considering establishing entities combining insurance and investment activity in one vehicle.
“Although this is at an early stage, this could present significant efficiencies for ILS fund managers,” said Guernsey lawyer Christopher Anderson, Partner at Carey Olsen.
Guernsey Finance Chief Executive Dominic Wheatley said: “These are exciting times for ILS. With international fragility and uncertainty on the rise, and innovation in the market, the ILS sector is rapidly developing.”