The six Cs of captive insurance (2024)

Why Canadian companies should consider using captive solutions

The six Cs of captive insurance (1)

Canadian companies are navigating a time of unprecedented change. They’re facing uncertainty around the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) replacement, known as the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA); they’re up against an increasingly stringent regulatory environment around cybersecurity and data privacy; they’re trying to weigh up the opportunities and challenges that come with emerging technologies and digital development; and they’re battling an increasingly volatile climate which is driving catastrophic losses.

In times of disruption, good or bad, uncertainty over the risk landscape often drives businesses to start thinking about captive insurance as part of their risk management strategies. A captive insurance company is essentially a form of self-insurance whereby the insurer (the captive) is wholly owned by the insured (the business). The types of entities forming captives range from major multi-national corporations to smaller non-profits. It’s a global marketplace and it’s used by all industries.

From an organizational standpoint, a captive insurance company promotes solid enterprise risk management. If you’re going to self-insure, you want to make sure you’re sailing a water-tight ship. Once the captive has been set-up, it can drive risk management discipline and can provide additional structure and protection around a company’s balance sheet, while maintaining flexibility in program design and providing potential savings.

“There are six Cs as to why companies form captives: cost, capacity, control, compliance, cover, and commercial,” said Patrick Ferguson, senior vice president, Marsh Captive Solutions. “A lot of companies set up captives around that first bucket – cost. They’re able to save market premiums by self-insuring part of their risk through a captive. Another good rationale for setting up a captive is that it allows access to the reinsurance markets where pricing is cheaper than buying insurance directly.

“A lot of companies are using captive solutions to tackle some of the emerging risks that are out there, such as terrorism, cyber, environmental coverages and so on. With some of those emerging risks, companies are finding it difficult to get insurance, so they’re evaluating whether a captive makes sense. A good example would be the cannabis industry. It’s a growing industry, it’s federally legal, and yet cannabis companies are struggling to get directors & officers (D&O) placements and D&O insurance at competitive market pricing. So, we’ve been in the process of working with some of the cannabis companies around whether a captive might make sense for a primary D&O layer, or even an excess layer.”

When evaluating whether setting up a captive makes sense, it’s important for companies to evaluate it as a long-term risk management objective, according to Ferguson. The benefits of a captive insurance company often don’t come to light for a few years, and many captives face some bumps in the road. For example, it’s not cost-effective for companies to self-insure their commercial auto through a captive one year, and then to drop it the following year because their loss ratios haven’t improved by the desired amount.

“Our view is that there should always be an insurance rationale for setting up a captive first – that should always be a primary reason for looking as a Canadian company at a captive,” Ferguson told Insurance Business. “However, if you do pass that hurdle, there are some tax benefits that are in play. Popular captive countries, like Barbados and Bermuda, have tax information exchange agreements in place, so that the profit that your Barbados or Bermuda captive accrues does not accrue profit from a Canadian tax perspective.”

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The six Cs of captive insurance (2024)

FAQs

What are the 6 C's of insurance? ›

“There are six Cs as to why companies form captives: cost, capacity, control, compliance, cover, and commercial,” said Patrick Ferguson, senior vice president, Marsh Captive Solutions.

What are the basics of captive insurance? ›

A "captive insurer" is generally defined as an insurance company that is wholly owned and controlled by its insureds; its primary purpose is to insure the risks of its owners, and its insureds benefit from the captive insurer's underwriting profits.

What are the characteristics of captive insurance? ›

A captive is a type of insurance company that is wholly owned and controlled by its insureds (the policyholders). It is established by a parent company or a group of related companies to provide coverage for the risks of the parent company and its affiliates.

What are the objectives of captive insurance? ›

A captive insurance company represents an option for many corporations and groups that want to take financial control and manage risks by underwriting their own insurance rather than paying premiums to third-party insurers. The advantages of going captive are: Coverage tailored to meet your needs.

Which of the 6 C's is most important? ›

Let's understand the 6 C's of nursing a little better. Care is the first C; Care is defined as the provision of what is necessary for the health, welfare, maintenance, and protection of someone or something. The primary duty of the nurse is to care for the patient. Amongst all the C's this is the most important.

What is the most important C in the 6 C's? ›

Care is our core business and that of our organisations; and the care we deliver helps the individual person and improves the health of the whole community. Caring defines us and our work. People receiving care expect it to be right for them consistently throughout every stage of their life.

Who are the largest captive insurance companies? ›

Marsh Captive Solutions was the world's largest captive insurance company manager in 2022, with 1,567 captives under management, according to a new Business Insurance survey.

What is the difference between a captive and a PEO? ›

PEOs enable employers to put their time and effort into growing their business while reducing administrative costs. The goal of a captive is to minimize the risk of its member companies while providing high-quality insurance coverage with more flexibility of benefit plan design.

What is the difference between captive insurance and regular insurance? ›

In a traditional insurance program, the insurance carriers take on all risks and retain all profits. With captive insurance, the captive participants share in the risk for a potential reward of lower costs, underwriting profits, and investment incomes.

Is captive insurance the same as reinsurance? ›

Reinsurance involves a captive insurer offloading a portion of its risks to a third-party reinsurer, sharing the risk and financial burden. By doing so, captives ensure that they have the necessary resources and capacity to address potential losses without jeopardizing their solvency.

What are the pros of a captive insurance agent? ›

Secondly, captive insurance agents often don't have to handle their own lead generation, advertising, marketing, process paperwork, or cover the overhead cost of the business—the insurance company does that. This frees up the agent to spend more time doing research for clients as well as building relationships.

How does a captive insurance company make money? ›

Premiums are the main source of income for a captive.

What is Pareto captive? ›

ParetoHealth captives are formed by groups of employers with the same business goal: To reduce the cost—but not the quality—of their employee health programs, without taking on unnecessary risk.

What is captive fronting? ›

Fronting is the term used to describe a proven strategy that allows insurers, including captives, to meet state regulatory requirements and provides the capability to participate in risks that they otherwise would be unable to assume.

What are the 6 C's definitions? ›

Do you already know what the 6Cs are? What nouns beginning with C do you think might be essentially important in delivery of health and social care? So, the 6Cs are care, compassion, competence, communication, courage and commitment.

What are the 6 characteristics of an ideally insurable risk? ›

These elements are "due to chance," definiteness and measurability, statistical predictability, lack of catastrophic exposure, random selection, and large loss exposure.

What are the 7 pillars of insurance? ›

There are seven basic principles applicable to insurance contracts relevant to personal injury and car accident cases:
  • Utmost Good Faith.
  • Insurable Interest.
  • Proximate Cause.
  • Indemnity.
  • Subrogation.
  • Contribution.
  • Loss Minimization.

What are the 6 C's of a team? ›

The 6 C's of team-building – Communication, Collaboration, Cooperation, Coordination, Conflict Resolution, and Celebration – are the building blocks of a successful and cohesive team.

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