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Chubb Vice Chairman Urges Insurers to Counteract Egregious Class Action Securities Suits To Prevent the Erosion of the D&O Liability Insurance Marketplace Calls for the Establishment of an Institute for Securities Class Action Defense NEW YORK, February 5, 2003 – To help prevent the directors’ and officers’ liability insurance marketplace from eroding, an insurance executive urged his industry to work together against a pattern of egregious class action securities lawsuits. Speaking before members of the Professional Liability Underwriting Society, John J. Degnan, vice chairman of The Chubb Corporation, called on the insurance industry to establish an Institute for Securities Class Action Defense. The institute would help "confront and reverse a very troubling pattern of abusive, outrageously aggressive and, in some cases, downright dishonest conduct on the part of the plaintiffs’ bar in class action securities litigation," Degnan said. "It troubles me, frankly, to watch the plaintiffs' bar cloak itself in the robes of protectors of the public's interest in good corporate governance, while it almost methodically settles case after case for the limits of available insurance in a well documented process that advances the financial interests of the advocates to a far greater degree than it does of the shareholders," he added. While such litigation has caused D&O loss costs to rise, leading to higher D&O insurance rates, narrower coverage terms and conditions, and larger deductibles, Degnan warned that such short-term marketplace benefits for insurers may be outweighed by serious long-term consequences. "For those of us who want to be in this business for the long haul, there needs to be a focus on bringing costs down and ensuring that rates are reasonable so that the coverages we provide continue to represent a rational buying decision," he said. "We should not replicate the circumstances of the mid-1980s when casualty markets withdrew capacity and spawned the Bermuda insurance industry. Make no mistake: Our insured companies and their directors and officers will find over time an efficient mechanism for transferring risk." By establishing a defense institute, Degnan suggested the insurance industry could fight back against a small number of law firms that have been able to "drive strategy and public relations in a concerted manner" against the more diverse interests of insurers, their customers and defense lawyers. To support his proposal, he pointed to the success the industry has had when it has collectively resisted "truly unjust—even specious—theories of coverage or of liability" involving tobacco, repetitive stress and electromagnetic fields and when it created an initiative addressing environmental liability concerns. To be funded initially by insurers, agents and brokers with an interest in the D&O business, the Institute for Class Action Defense would be "devoted exclusively toward advancing the successful defense of all securities class action litigation," Degnan said. Its activities would include:
The Chubb Corporation is a holding company for a family of property and casualty insurance companies known informally as the Chubb Group of Insurance Companies. The member insurers of the Chubb Group of Insurance Companies form a multi-billion dollar organization providing property and casualty insurance for personal and commercial customers worldwide through 5,000 independent agents and brokers. Chubb's global network includes branches and affiliates throughout North America, Europe, Latin America, Asia and Australia. |
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