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America’s Most Trustworthy Companies

trust

For the fourth straight year, Forbes has unveiled its list of America’s 100 Most Trustworthy Companies and, as Reactions pointed out, three property/casualty insurers not only made the cut, but received perfect scores: Montpelier Re, Greenlight Capital and National Interstate.

The other insurance firms in the top 100 were: Chubb, Arch, Renaissance Re, Transatlantic, FPIC, Safety Insurance Group, EMC and Navigators. Here is the full list, which includes Bed, Bath & Beyond, Hess and Lowe’s in the “large cap” division.

For the rankings, Forbes partners with Audit Integrity, and in the write up, they were quick to kick another insurance giant while it is down in an attempt to show how their past predictions have proven true.

Audit Integrity looks beyond the raw data on companies’ income statements and balance sheets to assess the true quality of corporate accounting and management practices. As early as August 2005, Audit Integrity’s proprietary rating system signaled potential problems at Lehman Brothers. In December of 2005 it gave American International Group a significant downgrade.

Awww. Poor AIG. Always getting made fun of for helping tank the economy.

They also note some of the rationale behind the list, which is directly in line with a core tenant of risk mitigation: avoid negative events.

Audit Integrity’s evaluation penalizes companies for unusual or excessive executive compensation, high levels of management turnover, substantial insider trading relative to their corporate peers or high levels of short-term executive compensation, which encourages management to focus on short-term results. Good housekeeping practices leave companies better prepared to handle an economic downturn, especially one as severe as right now. The absence of negative events counts, as much as the existence of positive events, in getting businesses on the list. “These companies have made it through our screening process and shown consistent high quality,” Zwingli says. “Healthy individuals are often that way because they don’t engage in unhealthy behavior. These companies are the same way.”

What’s the saying?

“All news is good news.”

Yeah, I don’t think that is true for companies. And apparently, neither do Audit Integrity and Forbes.

In related news, Greenwich Associates recently released its “Excellence Awards for Middle Market Insurance Brokerage.”

Greenwich Associates Names Top Insurance Brokers

Greenwich Associates, an international research-based consulting firm, has named the winners of its 2009 Greenwich Excellence Awards for Middle Market Insurance Brokerage. More than 9,000 companies with annual sales between $10 and $500 million were asked to name the insurance brokers and carrier they use and to rate their levels of satisfaction with their providers. The results are as follows:

National Winners

  1. Arthur J. Gallagher & Co.
  2. BB&T Insurance Services
  3. USI Holdings Corp.
  4. Wells Fargo
  5. Willis Group

Regional Winners

Northeast

  1. Aon Corporation
  2. Brown & Brown Inc.
  3. First Niagra
  4. Marsh & McLennan
  5. USI Holdings Corp.
  6. Wells Fargo
  7. Willis Group

South

  1. Aon Corporation
  2. Arthur J. Gallagher & Co.
  3. BB&T Insurance Services
  4. Brown & Brown Inc.
  5. J. Smith Lanier & Co.
  6. Marsh & McLennan
  7. Wells Fargo
  8. Willis Group

Midwest

  1. Arthur J. Gallagher & Co.
  2. Wells Fargo
  3. Willis Group

West

  1. Arthur J. Gallagher & Co.
  2. Lockton Companies Inc.
  3. Marsh & McLennan
  4. USI Holdings Corp.
  5. Wells Fargo
  6. Willis Group

The full list includes honorable mentions and carriers cited for broker-type servicing efforts. David Fox, a Greenwich Associates consultant, says that the award-winning brokers “have been cited by their corporate clients for their superior service in helping companies identify risks, create solutions for managing these risks and implement cost-effective coverage.”