Les Boughner of Willis and John Lochner of Towers Watson discuss how the Affordable Care Act and larger health organizations are creating new, larger roles for captive insurance organizations.
Aug. 12, 2014
Register to be notified of new A.M. BestTV episodes.
Sign Up for AM Best TV Alerts
Captive Leaders Fret About "Regulation by Accident"
Captive Industry Deals With "Explosion of Domiciles"
Health, Medical Changes Driving Captive Activity
VT's Provost: We License Insurers, The IRS Handles Taxes
VCIA Head Warns Against Captive "Regulatory Creep"
S. Carolina Captive Regulator: We've Revamped Licensing
A.M. Best's Eslami: Rated Captives Outperform
N.C. Captive Director: Even New Domiciles Must Adjust
AON's Gray: Mature Captives Have More Opportunities
Willitts: Type of Captive Drives Domicile Choice
Towers Watson's Lochner: Medical Captives Branching Out
Utah Captive Director: IRS Scrutiny Affecting Captives
Montana Coordinator: Boards and Execs Run Captives
Counsel: Congress May Yet Allow RRGs to Write Property
Willis Exec: Health Rules Spur Interest in Captives
Towle: Captive Use Rises for Small, Mid-Sized Companies
N.J. Captive Chief: Branch Captives Show Promise
Gen Re Exec: Captive Growth in Medical, Transportation
Thomson: In-State Captives Can Aid Corp. Governance
Regulation Adds Complexity to International Captives
K2M's Montei: Captives Can Benefit From Technology
Boucher: Captives Add Cyber, Medical Stop Loss Cover
NRRA's Deems: Supporting RRGs is a State by State Battle
Captives Taking on Supply Chain, Political, Other Risks