Mitsui Sumitomo
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Industry veteran Michael Wade will join Helios as a director and chairman, and take on a senior advisory post at Mitsui.
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The storm is not expected to be a threat to the order of Jebi or Hagibis.
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The acquisition will enable the Japanese carrier to expand further into the US and across a host of insurance lines, including property and marine.
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Cat bond spreads settled 11% above sponsor targets as many deals were scaled back or parked.
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The cat bond provides a mix of per occurrence and annual aggregate cover.
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Specialty CUOs Andrew Wright and Mark Clements, and reinsurance CUO Phil Wooldridge step down as the newcomer is charged with “repositioning”.
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The Akibare Re series 2020-1 class A notes priced at the top of the guidance range at 275 basis points.
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Pricing has moved to the top of the guidance range, sources said.
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The deal uses an occurrence trigger, unlike the aggregate bond that is expected to pay out on Jebi losses.
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Despite early fears that the storm could rival last year’s Jebi in losses, expectations are converging around the $10bn level.
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Mitsui Sumitomo estimated its Hagibis hit at $2bn while Sompo said it had recovered almost $1bn from reinsurers this year.
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Mitsui Sumitomo has put its Typhoon Jebi losses up to 258bn yen ($2.4bn), compared with an initial estimate of 140bn yen.
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Loss creep dragged down returns, according to index provider ILS Advisers.
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New aggregate demand from Japanese cedants may also present opportunities for ILS markets.
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The loss puts Mitsui Sumitomo’s $200mn Akibare Re 2016-1 cat bond around 94 percent of the way to attaching.
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The Luca Albertini-led ILS manager will become a direct subsidiary of the Japanese insurance group, rather than being held by MS Amlin.
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