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Captive Insurance

As the world’s largest captive manager, Marsh offers an innovative, comprehensive approach to captive solutions, helping organizations of all sizes navigate complex, global risks.

As they face higher insurance rates, lack of capacity, and more stringent carrier terms and conditions, many leaders are exploring alternative strategies to finance their risk. One of the most popular is through a captive insurance company.

A captive can be a powerful tool for your organization to take complete control of risk, while gaining greater financial flexibility and protection. For example, any surpluses generated potentially can be used to fund vital investments across your operations.

One in four captives worldwide is managed by Marsh. More captive owners choose us than any other captive partner, so you can be confident that you have the best experience, expertise, and resources in your corner.

Our team of specialists can help your organization create a captive program that aligns with your strategic and financial goals. By combining our expertise with industry-leading analytics, we are prepared to assess your needs, make recommendations, and quantify the advantages that captive insurance can offer your organization — today and in the future.

Contact our specialists to manage risk on your own terms and maximize your captive’s performance.

ReadyCell

An AI-powered risk financing solution for businesses of any size to quickly form their own insurer and take control of their risk management.

Feature insights

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Event

03/27/2024

ReConnect

We are pleased to sponsor the first dedicated reinsurance conference in the Cayman Islands.

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Article

02/14/2024

How reinsurance can enhance governance and growth for life insurers

Financial institutions and private equity firms with life insurance businesses are increasingly seeing benefits in forming offshore life reinsurance companies.

Manager is using a laptop computer while analyzing the company's financial statements on the screen.

Podcast

02/13/2024

Risk in Context Podcast: Captive benefits transcend company size or market cycle

The last two decades have seen significant growth in captive formations, with parent companies forming these self-insurance mechanisms to address multiple needs, including to close gaps in other insurance programs.

The Captive Insurance Benchmarking Report

Captive insurer growth continues as advantages pique interest with more organizations than ever before are using captives as a valuable risk management tool.

Case studies

Corporate business team meeting discussion and startup concept. Coworking team meeting. Group of two businesspeople working with new startup project in modern office.

Case Study

09/08/2022

Supporting a multinational firm in establishing and managing an employee benefits captive

A large, US-based multinational firm with more than 400,000 employees in over 220 territories was interested in using a captive to write employee benefit risks.

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Case Study

07/25/2022

Large restaurant chain product contamination risk leads to captive formation

As organizations and the risk environment evolve, many organizations are leveraging captives at the core of their risk management strategies.

FAQs

Captive insurance is a risk financing mechanism in which a company insures itself against future losses. In a captive insurance arrangement, the insured brings its risk in-house by creating a licensed company that provides insurance to its parent organization and/or affiliates.

This is different from simply acting as your own insurer. Captive coverage is formalized and regulated, held to many of the same requirements as the commercial market. Captive investors and shareholders enter into it to take on risk, minimize premiums and reap the financial rewards of their actions. But unlike commercial insurance, you decide whether to retain or reinvest the insurer’s profits throughout the parent company. Captive coverage is also designed to fit many of the unique, emerging risks your organization may be facing.

By forming its own insurance company to protect against its unique business risks, a company can manage difficult-to-insure risk exposures, cover gaps in its risk management program, and capture profitable premium that would otherwise be paid to commercial insurers. A captive can create value through financial, strategic, and operational benefits.

Captives are created to enhance a business’s ability to manage the retentions and deductibles associated with traditional risk transfer programs. Typically, a company will select service providers, including a captive manager such as Marsh, who can support the creation, implementation, and day-to-day operation of the program.

Similar to traditional insurance programs, a captive issues policies, processes claims, and follows all applicable regulations. However, the key difference is that a captive gives its parent company the option to retain or distribute the profits across the organization, whereas a traditional insurance company retains those profits.

By placing a captive at the core of your organization’s risk management program, you can achieve a reduced total cost of risk, stabilize risk capacity, and gain access to reinsurance.

Other potential benefits unique to captives include:

  • Better approach to funding for future catastrophic losses such as cybercrime, terrorism, and product liability.
  • Coverage for unique risks that may be unavailable in a traditional insurance arrangement.
  • Potential to build capital and surplus, as well as fund insurance claims, by paying and setting aside premium payments and underwriting investments to cover losses.
  • The ability to capture underwriting and performance management data to build a statistical base, improving the ability to secure coverage with insurers at acceptable terms and pricing.

A captive insurance program can help your organization reduce traditional and emerging risk management pain points. And, by achieving a greater control of risk and reduced costs, your business can enhance your overall economic security and profitability.

Although companies across all industries can enjoy the potential benefits of a captive, those who do create their own captive insurance program typically share the following characteristics:

  • Risk exposures that are difficult to insure or uninsurable in the commercial environment.
  • A strategic approach to managing risk, exposures, and cost of risk rather than purchasing insurance at the lowest price.
  • A commitment to improving their risk profile.

With several unique structures available to your organization, you can customize your captive insurance program and coverage to match your unique risk exposures and strategic initiatives.

For business leaders looking to create their own captive insurance program, there are several structure options.

  • Single parent captive: An organization creates its own insurance company to only insure its own business and its employees or those of a controlled (but unaffiliated) business, such as a management contract. This model is ideal for larger companies that need additional discretion, confidentiality, and/or complete risk control ownership. Single parent captives represent the largest proportion of captive insurance programs at approximately 85%.
  • Cell captives: Also known as rent-a-cell facilities, protected cell captives (PCC), and segregated cell captives, this program is sponsored by a captive insurance company so that business owners don’t have to create their own. It allows a business to benefit from a captive insurance company without the upfront costs, capital investment, or maintenance associated with forming and managing an owned captive. Cell captives are now seeing significant growth because they are faster, less expensive, and simpler to enter. They provide one or two lines of coverage to those who need to wall off different risks in separate cells.

Cell captives are now seeing significant growth because they are faster, less expensive, and simpler to enter. They provide one or two lines of coverage to those who need to wall off different risks in separate cells.

  • Risk retention group (RRG): RRGs are only available within the US. Businesses with similar insurance needs will create and own a liability insurance company to pool risk. This structure is useful for potentially costly liabilities such as automotive risks related to trucking and transportation or medical malpractice. However, it is not applicable for first-party risks such as property or workers’ compensation.
  • Group captives: Ownership of this captive program is limited to only the insureds, either a group of heterogeneous (association or industry-specific) or homogeneous (non-related) companies. The captive exists primarily to provide greater long-term cost stability than the traditional market allows.

With the option to enter any of these structures, no matter what industry you are in, you could potentially achieve improved risk management by building a captive insurance program of your own.

Once a captive is up and running, custom reporting and benchmarking against peers can provide insight into your program within the context of your industry, company size, and/or region.

Benchmarking will help to answer important questions such as:

  • Is the captive aligned with accelerating our corporate objectives?
  • How are my peers using their captives for certain risks?
  • How can our captive respond to emerging risks?

Of course, such profiling relies on excellent risk and insurance company data. One-in-four captives worldwide are managed by Marsh. Our insights enable you to improve captive efficiency, identify areas for potential coverage, and provide data-backed recommendations to your C-suite.

In recent years, the pandemic and other global uncertainties have made the commercial insurance market more challenging. This has fueled significant interest in captive insurance alternatives.

Now, following a year of economic uncertainty and dynamic market conditions, organizations around the world are increasingly looking towards captives as a means of managing high-severity risks and gaining enhanced flexibility and more control over their total cost of risk. Currently, it is estimated that there are more than 6,000 captives worldwide.

Captives can be used to insure both traditional risks as well as emerging risks. Major lines of coverage include all-risk property, casualty, automotive liability, workers’ compensation, general liability, and products liability to name a few.

Emerging risks showing rapid growth in recent years include medical stop loss, voluntary benefits, cyber liability, and directors and officers liability. In this report, we also highlight the increase in third-party risks. These risks, in combination with traditional risks, are helping drive the creation of protected cell captives which account for 1 in 4 of our new formations. For details, please see the 2023 Captive Landscape Report: Captive insurer growth continues as advantages pique interest.

Although captive insurance and self-insurance are both types of risk financing mechanisms, they do vary.

Self-insurance is a formalized way of retaining all types of insurance risk. Rather than transferring risk to a third-party commercial insurance company, a self-insuring firm sets aside money to fund future losses.

Similar to self-insurance, captive insurance is a risk financing mechanism in which a company insures itself against future losses. However, in a captive insurance arrangement, the insured creates a more formal arrangement for protecting against its unique business risks by creating its own insurance company.

By working with an experienced captive manager, your organization can achieve potential benefits unique to a captive insurance program, including better protection against catastrophic losses and coverage for risks that may be unavailable in a traditional insurance arrangement.

Although captive insurance programs come with many potential benefits, there are some important considerations that may factor into your business’s decision when it comes to creating one:

  • Capital commitments: A parent company must contribute the capital required to support the captive’s business plan as determined by the insurance regulator in the selected domicile. Although these funds remain within the parent’s consolidated group, they may not realize the same return as they would have if invested in the parent’s operations.
  • Operating cost: Your business should account for any start-up and annual operating expenses, such as a feasibility study and ongoing captive management.
  • Time commitment: The parent company’s management team will need to devote time to the captive. Creating a captive is not a short-term initiative used to achieve an immediate goal. It's a long-term commitment to an organizational risk management strategy.

By allocating the proper resources to your single parent, RRG or group captive, your organization will be positioned to gradually achieve a better grasp on claims and loss control efforts, as well as lower operating costs compared to commercial insurance.

With specialized expertise and global experience, the captive team at Marsh can work with you to create a comprehensive solution tailored to your organization's unique risk exposures and insurance needs. Leveraging industry-best data analytics and benchmarking, we'll help you manage risk on your own terms and gain more control of your company's total cost of risk.

A domicile is the location where a captive insurer is licensed to do business. There are more than 70 captive domiciles around the world – but don’t let that number overwhelm you. Each and every one can be grouped into two categories: onshore or offshore. An onshore domicile is located within a major country or region, such as the US or the EU. An offshore domicile is located outside a major country and includes ones such as Bermuda, the Cayman Islands, Guernsey, and the Isle of Man.

How do you decide which domicile is right for you? Based on your unique organizational needs, your captive manager will work with you to determine what domicile makes sense to start with and whether any changes should be made over time.

Our professionals in every domicile can help guide you through the life cycle of a captive – from feasibility through optimization. To learn more please contact us at marshcaptivesolutions@marsh.com

Our people

Ellen Charnley

Ellen Charnley

President, Marsh Captive Solutions

  • United States

Julie Boucher

Julie Boucher

US Captive Chief Client Officer

  • United States

Robert Geraghty

Robert Geraghty

International Captive Consulting and Sales Leader

  • United Kingdom

Arthur Koritzinsky

Arthur Koritzinsky

Product Innovation Leader, Captive Solutions

  • United States

Michael Serricchio

Michael Serricchio

Americas Sales and Consulting Leader, Marsh Captive Solutions

  • United States

Michelle Sivanayson

Michelle Sivanayson

Islands Practice Leader, Captive Solutions

  • Bermuda

William Thomas-Ferrand

William Thomas-Ferrand

International Practice Leader, Captive Solutions

  • United Kingdom

Chris Varin

Chris Varin

Chief Digital Officer, Captive Solutions

  • United States

Donna Weber

Donna Weber

Pooling & Cell Facilities Leader, Captive Solutions

  • United States

Glenn Weber

Glenn Weber

Risk Mutualization Leader, Captive Solutions

  • United States