Showing posts with label 2. Insurance Payout News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2. Insurance Payout News. Show all posts

WTC Insurance Payout Totals $4.55 Billion


Developer Larry Silverstein is probably sleeping better: Yesterday, seven insurance companies agreed to pay $2 billion in payments, which brings the total insurance payout to $4.55 billion and allows all the constructions projects to move forward with what Governor Eliot Spitzer called "certainty." He also said, "It permits access to the capital markets, it resolves and eliminates one of the outstanding hurdles that had remained and it brings to closure years of litigation."
Apparently the "largest single insurance settlement ever undertaken by the industry," the payout was $130 million less than a court ruled Silverstein was entitled too. Still, the Sun says the payout gives Silverstein both "options" and "security": He can work with fewer investors or banks, and he'll have an easier time as a leader in the rebuild.
Silverstein must share some of the payout with the Port Authority, as part of the deal he made over a year agoto give the PA control over Freedom Tower while Silverstein builds three buildings along Church Street and a mall co-designed with the PA. And Silverstein pointed to the progress made at Ground Zero so far, noting how well-received 7 World Trade Center has been, and said about the payout, "I say from the bottom of my heart, a very, very deep thank you."

Crop Insurance Payouts at a Record $9.1 Billion


Crop insurers paid out a record $9.1 billion in indemnities on 2011 U.S. crops, and the total could top $10 billion when all claims are settled, due to damage from drought, flooding, and freezing weather, a trade group said on Tuesday.
The previous record was $8.7 billion in 2008, said National Crop Insurance Services, based in Overland Park, Kansas.
Crop insurance, which is subsidized by the government, is expected to be a key point in the pending overhaul of U.S. farm law. The cost of the program has more than doubled in a decade.
Drought in the U.S. Plains, spring flooding along the Mississippi River and crop-damaging freezes in the South were factors in the new record, said NCIS.
The popularity of revenue policies also plays a role, coupled with high commodity prices. More than 90 percent of policyholders opt for higher levels of coverage. Crop insurance is subsidized and overseen by the Agriculture Department.
Fifteen companies are approved by USDA to provide coverage on 2012 crops. They include John Deere Insurance Co. and Agrinational Insurance Co. Inc., a branch of Archer-Daniels-Midland Co.
(Reporting By Charles Abbott; Editing by Bob Burgdorfer)