About Emily Holbrook

Emily Holbrook is a former editor of the Risk Management Monitor and Risk Management magazine. You can read more of her writing at EmilyHolbrook.com.
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RiskCast: Episode 3

The editors of Risk Management gathered once again to discuss recent, interesting risk management stories. From discussions about the nation’s dirty drinking water, to the “Iranian Cyber Army’s” attack on Twitter, to the risks and benefits of the new LED traffic lights, to the risks of incorporating wild animals with your entertainment act — you’ve got it here in the third entertaining installment of RiskCast.

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Risk Management Links of the Day: 12.23.09

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  • Travel often? Airport food may not be as safe as you thought it was. “A USA TODAY review of inspection records for nearly 800 restaurants at 10 airports found items such as tuna salad and turkey sandwiches stored at dangerously warm temperatures, raw meat contaminating ready-to-eat foods, rat droppings and kitchens lacking soap for workers to wash hands.” The report highlighted instances at Atlanta, New York City, Detroit and Boston airports.
  • This should quiet the property-casualty industry nay-sayers: its net income through the first three quarters of 2009 improved 272% compared to the same period last year. “Net income improved by close to $12 billion, rising to $16.2 billion, according to a report on the industry’s consolidated nine-month results released today by Jersey City, N.J.-based Insurance Services Office, Inc., and the Property Casualty Insurers Association of America.”
  • An interesting editorial on financial regulation. BusinessWeek columnist Chris Farrell gives his take on a way to prevent risk-taking firms from damaging the broader financial system yet again. And the answer doesn’t include reinstating the Glass-Steagall Act.

Find an interesting link? Email any stories, videos or images you come across and would like to see included. Or just follow me on Twitter @RiskMgmtMonitor and pass it along that way.

    Risk Management Links of the Day: 12.22.09

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    • Travelers has set up a new catastrophe bond, named Longpoint Re II. The new “Cayman Islands special purpose vehicle” will provide $250 million of reinsurance from losses resulting from certain hurricane events in the northeastern United States. “The reinsurance purchased from Longpoint Re II is intended to work in conjunction with Travelers’ traditional reinsurance to provide $1bn of protection for Northeast hurricane events in excess of $2.25bn of losses.”
    • AIG halts plans for an initial public offering of its Chartis property casualty unit. The company’s relatively new CEO, Robert Benmosche, allegedly told employees he is leaning towards more of a “hold and grow” plan than a racing towards a chunk of capital infusion (which the company would receive from such an IPO). Such a move could be seen as smart, and even admirable as “Benmosche, 65, is slowing the pace of divestitures to boost the value of assets needed to repay loans in the $182.3 billion bailout.”
    • Coca-Cola moves ahead with innovative benefits funding plan. The Labor Department has given the go-ahead to the beverage giant’s plan to fund retiree health care benefits “through a special trust and its captive insurance company.” Towers Perrin consulted on the project, which took 12 months to complete, and Prudential Insurance provided the medical stop-loss policies.
    • RIMS names new president. The Risk and Insurance Management Society announced Terry Fleming as president, effective January 1, 2010. Fleming has served on the Society’s board since 2004 and is currently vice president.
    • Obama has finally chosen his cybersecurity czar. And the winner is . . . Howard Schmidt, head of the Information Security Forum, a non-profit cybersecurity organization. But Schmidt, even with his impressive resume, wasn’t Obama’s first choice, or second or third. In July, Forbes reported that at least three other candidates had been offered the position but turned it down.
      Find an interesting link? Email me any stories, videos or images you come across and would like to see included. Or just follow me on Twitter @RiskMgmtMonitor and pass it along that way.

      Risk Management Links of the Day: 12.21.09

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      • Ernst & Young was fined $8.5 million for violating securities laws while auditing Bally’s Fitness. “In 2002, worried about growing financial scandals, the audit firm of Ernst & Young set out to identify its riskiest clients and force them to comply with accounting rules. The effort backfired.” On the violations, SEC enforcement division director Robert Khuzami said: “It is deeply disconcerting that partners, even at the highest levels of E. & Y., failed to fulfill their basic obligations to the investing public by not conducting proper audits.”
      • Insurance woes plague Florida businesses as unemployment insurance premiums are set to skyrocket. “The minimum rate for employers with few claims, which was $8, is leaping to more than $100 per employee. That has left business owners like Rusk with sticker shock.”
      • An Op-ed arguing for the transparency of e-mails and key internal accounting documents on AIG servers by Eliot Spitzer, Frank Partnoy and William Black in the New York Times. “As fraud investigators, we would like to examine the trading patterns of A.I.G.’s financial products division, and its communications with Goldman Sachs and other bank counterparties who benefited from the bailout. We would like to understand whether the leaders of A.I.G. understood that they were approaching a financial Armageddon, and whether they alerted their counterparties, regulators and shareholders to the impending calamity.”
      • PricewaterhouseCoopers says it’s thankful for a deal of any sort out of Copenhagen, but the outcome was not exactly what it had wished for. Richard Gledhill, head of climate change for the company said: “Business was looking for more. Major capital investments in low carbon infrastructure require long and loud regulatory signals and long term carbon price visibility. We aren’t there yet, so we aren’t going to see the scale OR SPEED of investment required to accelerate the transition to a low carbon economy.”
      • D&O rates for financial industry companies declined in the third quarter, according to Aon. On average, pricing fell 2.7% during the third quarter of this year compared with the same quarter last year. “The decreasing number of claims may signal an end to the litigation explosion for financial services firms,” Mike Rice, national practice leader of Aon’s financial services group and author of the index, said in the report. Aon foresees a continuing softening of D&O rates for financial companies into 2010.

      Find an interesting link? Email me any stories, videos or images you come across and would like to see included. Or just follow me on Twitter @RiskMgmtMonitor and pass it along that way.