The Ill Effects Of Terrorism To The Stock Market

Our present world is crammed with terrorism. It doesn’t only affects peace but it also brings severe damages to the economy. There has been much written about the short-term macroeconomic impact of terrorism attacks on investors risk aversion, equity market valuations, bond yields, oil prices, aggregate consumption and investment activity and even the medium-term effects in the regulatory, trade and fiscal policy responses by governments and the private sector, but much less is known about how this potentially long-lasting heightened terrorist threat affects the stock prices of individual firms.

Some studies have argued it may reveal itself in the psychological fear of terrorism that can affect economic behavior. Let us recall the 9/11 bombing. After that terrorist attack, insurers reduced or even rendered inexistent the supply of terrorism insurance throughout the economy, delaying or preventing many projects from going forward mostly construction in large cities because of creditor or investor concerns. The unprecedented terrorist attacks on that dreaded September 11, 2001 caused massive casualties and damage and ushered in an era of great uncertainty. That shocking display of brute force also changed the way we think about terrorism and moved the topic to the front-burner of academic and public attention. One important way in which we have changed our perspective about terrorism is as a geopolitical risk that affects the global economy and financial markets.

G. Andrew Karolyi and Rodolfo Martell, examined the stock price impact of terrorist attacks. Using an official list of terrorism-related incidents compiled by the Counter-terrorism Office of the U.S. Department of State, they identified 75 attacks between 1995 and 2002 in which publicly traded firms are targets. Looking at the event study analysis around the day of the attacks uncovers evidence of a statistically significant negative stock price reaction of -0.83%, which corresponds to an average loss per firm per attack of $401 million in firm market capitalization. A cross sectional analysis of the abnormal returns suggests that the impact of terrorist attacks differs according to the home country of the target firm and the country in which the incident occurred. Terrorist attacks in countries that are wealthier and more democratic are associated with larger negative share price reactions. Most intriguingly, we see that human capital losses, such as kidnappings of company executives, are associated with larger negative stock price reactions than physical losses, such as bombings of facilities or buildings.

The passage of U.S. Terrorism Risk Insurance Act (TRIA) in 2002, with its backstop provision of up to $100 billion zero-cost reinsurance for terrorism events, was indeed an important U.S. legislative event. But sadly, it did not provide for any long-term scheme for terrorism insurance and, even today, it is not clear which course of action the industry and government is to follow once TRIA expires in December 2005. Some argue that America cannot risk a gamble on terror insurance and that renewal of TRIA is critical as a private insurance market will never develop. Some experts goes on to saying that, catastrophic terrorism risk is uninsurable by the private market because its true dimensions are incalculable, whether you live in London, Madrid or New York.

With these dramatic view realizations of the market for terrorism insurance, we can argue that it is even more important now to develop new measures of the economic consequences of terrorism events to guide policy. In this article, the stock price reaction of publicly-traded firms that have been affected or targeted by a terrorist attack providing average estimates of the losses caused by these events has been used. Karolyi and Martells’ subsequent analysis of the cross-sectional variation in the stock price reactions suggests that losses inflicted by terrorist attacks are larger when they take the form of kidnappings. They also showed that these losses are greater when the firm is located in a richer country or in a country with a more democratic regime. It is important, though, to remember that their results were obtained using only a subset of the universe of terrorist incidents classified as such by the State Department, since they are studying only the reaction associated with publicly-traded companies. Also, in their study, they opted for a simplified approach and they only studied the short-term reaction of firms to these attacks and ignored potential longer-term effects on cash-flows or cost of capital (risk premium) effects. The re-emergence of a market for terrorism risk insurance demands that insurers generate better models to assess the likelihood and potential losses derived from terrorism. Their results suggest that characteristics of the attack (kidnappings vs. property destruction) and characteristics of the country of the targeted firms provide help in assessing the losses. They hope the results presented in their study may serve at least as a useful starting point in the current debate surrounding terrorism insurance, the renewal of TRIA and the characteristics of the legislation that will replace it.

In conclusion, to put it in a nutshell, an understanding of the nature of terrorism and the magnitudes of its effects is a prerequisite for designing successful policies to prevent terror, to alleviate the costs of terrorism, or to reduce an economys vulnerability to attacks.

Five Crazy But Common Car Insurance Exclusions

Five Crazy But Common Car Insurance Exclusions

You buy your car insurance, you glance at the policy documents, and you assume you’re covered for all eventualities where your car is stolen or damaged. Think again.

Read through your policy documents in detail. Some insurers don’t cover injuries to passengers aged over 75. Others won’t pay out if your car is stolen by someone who deceives you into handing over your keys. A small number won’t cover damage to your car that’s caused in a road rage incident. It’s common industry practice not to provide gap insurance, so if your car is written off or stolen, you won’t receive the full amount you paid when you bought your car.

Every car insurance policy includes some exclusions. Many of the exclusions would be extremely frustrating if they happened to you, and you then discovered that you’re not covered by your insurance firm. Some of them are downright crazy. Five of the most crazy but common car insurance exclusions are:

1. Nuclear Fallout
If Britain was wiped out by a nuclear bomb and you managed to survive, you wouldn’t receive a pay out from your insurer for the damage caused to your car. This is not only because the insurance firm will probably have been destroyed in the blast; it’s because it’s standard practice for motor insurance policies to exclude damage caused by nuclear fallout.

The same applies if your local nuclear power plant explodes and destroys your car, or if your car is contaminated by radioactive waste: you will not be compensated for the damage caused.

Currently this exclusion applies to policies bought from almost all the major motor insurance firms, including Admiral, Direct Line, Aviva, Churchill, Saga, Prudential, Sheila’s Wheels, and Co-operative Insurance to name a few.

2. UFOs
Most car insurance firms will not pay out if your car is damaged by pressure waves from aircraft travelling at or beyond the speed of sound. This includes damage caused by sonic and supersonic UFOs from outer space.

If you are zapped by an alien laser-beam while driving on the motorway, your insurance firm is unlikely to cover your injuries or the damage to your car. This is because such aggression would be considered an act of war. Car insurance firms usually exclude cover for damage caused by war, civil war, acts of a foreign enemy, or revolution.

Currently this exclusion applies to policies bought from almost all major car insurance firms, including Direct Line, Aviva, Admiral, Churchill, Saga, Prudential, Sheila’s Wheels, and LV=.

3. Car Stolen by Jealous Husband or Wife
Motor insurers will not provide cover if your car is taken without your permission by any member of your household or family. This includes your spouse or partner, your children, your parents or a lodger in your home. The only exception to this rule is if you report your car as stolen to the police, and prosecute the person who took your car in court.

Currently this exclusion applies to policies bought from almost all major motor insurance firms, including Direct Line, Admiral, Co-operative Insurance, Sheila’s Wheels, and LV=.

4. Earthquakes
Fortunately for us Brits, the UK is not prone to earthquakes or tremors. However, were the worst to happen and the ground opened up and swallowed your car, or even if a less violent earthquake shattered your windscreen, it’s probable that your insurer would refuse to pay out.

A small but significant number of car insurance firms do not cover for damage caused by earthquakes. Admiral is the most notable insurer with this exception. Other insurers who refuse cover for earthquakes include Saga, Prudential, and Sheila’s Wheels.

As well as looking out for earthquakes, remember to check your insurance policy documents for the phrase “acts of God”. Sheila’s Wheels breakdown service, for example, cannot be held liable if they leave you stranded by the roadside because of an “act of God”.

5. Blind Drivers
Unsurprisingly, there is not a single insurance firm who will provide cover for drivers who can’t see. This is never stated explicitly in insurance policy documents, but insurance companies cover their backs by saying they won’t pay out for claims resulting from damage caused by “unlicensed drivers”.

Being unable to get insurance or a licence wasn’t enough to stop one blind person from getting behind the steering wheel. In 2006, 31-year-old Omed Aziz was banned from driving for three years and given a suspended jail sentence after police caught him driving on the wrong side of the road.

This exclusion seems to apply to policies bought from almost all motor insurance firms.

How do you make sure you’ve got the best possible insurance cover for your car? Firstly, don’t just choose a policy based on price. Research what’s covered and what’s excluded by each company you’re considering. Secondly, if the level of cover you want isn’t available from standard car insurance firms, consider taking out extra insurance, such as gap insurance, from a specialist insurer.

Car insurance exclusions are usually not that hard to find, you just need to have a look at the rarely-read policy documents.

To be sure you’re not hit by a nasty surprise when you need to make a claim, make some time to read through policy documents when choosing your car insurance. Most insurance firms make their policy documents available online as a free download.

Winning Football Strategies For Betfair Trading

It is easy to predict football odds in relation to time and goals. The following are two football strategies developed with the help of Betfair football markets. Betfair trading methods make use of diverse staking techniques and insurance bets to give a person trading alternatives. All football betting strategies carry some or the other risk. Below mentioned trading strategies help in reducing the risk.

Hedge 1-1:

This hedging strategy of Betfair trading depends on a reduction in odds of the score line 1-1 in the score market after scoring a goal or two to obtain a score of 1-1. Whether you are a beginner or an experienced trader, this strategy provides a safe method of trading.

Provided the stake is correct, people can make excellent profits on the initial stake, if they are able to hedge with the help of this strategy. A great advantage of this tactic is that it is compared to a lay first hedge.

Whenever you make use of a lay first hedge, your profit will be less compared to the earlier lay stake. However, your profit will be much larger with a bet first hedge than your earlier bet stake. This means that probable profits of the score market from this hedge is extremely good.

There is also something known as a Betfair Dutching strategy, which will allow individuals to prolong trading in a football match, if events go against them. The following are some hedging strategies:

1.Place a 1-1 bet in the score market before the kick-off
2.Place an insurance bet
3.Lay the 1-1 score line to profit, if earlier bet odds are greater than lay odds after scoring a goal
4.Do nothing if there are no goals

Dutch All Three Outcomes:

Bet for an away team, home team and then draw for an equivalent profit. People can Dutch (backing more than one outcome in a single event) all the three football match outcomes by gambling on the draw. If there is no score after the kick off bet on both teams, since the odds increase greatly.

Alternatively, according to Betfair trading you can bet on a winning team if one team seems to be winning and then after a little time if odds of the trailing team and of a draw taking place increases bet on the losing team. This will help bettors to draw for at least some profit.

Both these methods take benefit of small increments in odds and profits, thus will be very small, if an individual waits for only short periods between bets. The strategy mentioned below takes benefit of much larger changes in Betfair trading odds, because of the scoring of either one goal or several goals. Greater varieties in odds give rise to larger profits on a flourishing Dutch. The following are certain Betfair trading basic strategies:

1.Before the kick off, bet on both the football teams in the odds market to gain an equal amount
2.Bet the draw after scoring the scoring of a goal for a sure equal profit on all probable results.

Term Life Insurance Verbiage

An important part of a sound financial plan, life insurance provides a death benefit to your beneficiaries and can replace some of the income you were earning. This can help preserve any investments, savings, or other assets you intended on paying off.

The Benefits Of Term Life Insurance:

Term life insurance is a policy that provides coverage to the insured over a certain length of time. This makes this policy an assset to your overall financial portfolio. One key advantage of level term life insurance is that the monthly premiums remain level for the life of the policy (whether it be 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, or 30 years).

The benefits in the different types of life insurance should not be overlooked. Before you buy a life insurance policy you should evaluate the overall condition of your financial portfolio. Yearly renewable term life insurance has a lower initial premium. However, the premium rises each year. Yearly renewable term life insurance is only cost effective for a few years because of the increasing premiums. If you are looking for term life insurance that runs more than a few years then a level term life insurance policy can cost less.

Buying Term Life Insurance Can Be A Good Decision:

For starters, term life insurance will cost less than permanent insurance. A potential buyer may have serveral dependents at home and he/she has to protect his/her income. They may have bought a house and now have a 30 year mortgage for $300,000. In this scenario you can plainly see a good reason to purchase a level term life insurance policy for $300,000 30 year term to cover their mortgage. If something were to happen to the proposed insured between now or anytime over the next 30 years the insurance company would write a check for the full face amount of the term life insurance policy for the survivor. This would allow the survivor to pay off the mortgage and the balance would be paid to the designated beneficiary.

Term Life Offers Conversion Options:

One nice thing about term life insurance is you can consider conversion options, such as a convertible option. A convertible term life insurance policy means that during a specified time you can convert all or part of the term insurance to a permanent life insurance product. If you chose3 this option you wouldn’t have to prove evidence of insurability since you were already insured. For instance, if you take out a term life insurance policy your need for the amount of coverage may change down the road. You may still need some life insurance but can afford to lower the face amount of the policy, thereby lowering your premiums when you excercise a coversion option. The conversion option on a term life insurance policy simply gives you the option to convert over a certain amount to cover final expenses.

The attraction to term life insurance is that it can be bought at an extremely low price and can be very beneficial to young families. If you lock in a term rate at an early age while you are young and healthy the rate is guaranteed for the full length of time on a guaranteed level term.

It is also possible to combine term life insurance with a permanent life insurance policy. During the earlier years of the policy you’ll have more coverage. As you get older there’s a good chance you may not need as much insurance as you originally applied for. For example, the children may have grown up and the house is paid off. So the need for so much coverage is not there and the term insurance will expire. The client will still have the permanent insurance policy that was put in force at the same time the term insurance was issued. Now the client can use the permanent life insurance to pay off final expenses down the road.

Why You Need Life Insurance:

1. Protect your familys home by allowing them to pay off your mortgage.

2. Allow your family to maintain their standard of living.

3. Give your spouse retirement income and peace of mind.

4. Pay off outstanding debts you have incurred.

5. Save the family business.

Important Benefits Of Term Life Insurance Policies:

1. Term policies are a practical way to receive the most coverage for your dollar amount and can also meet a wide variety of personal and business needs.

2. Term insurance provides protection for a certain period of time (10,15,20,25,30 years) and pays the death benefit to your beneficiary if anything were to happen to you during this time.

3. Many term life insurance policies allow you to convert your policy to a permanent policy within a specific time period.

Impact Of Health Care Legislation Hr 3962 On The Outsourcing Industry

President Barack Obama had a hard won victory on Saturday night (the 7-8th day of November 2009) when the landmark health care reform legislation (HR 3962) was passed with 220-215 votes. Now if everything goes the Obama way, then by the end of the year 09 Affordable Health Care for America Act would apply as a law impacting almost fifty million US lives. But what does this Act actually imply? How does it stand to impact an average US life? How does the Act affect the outsourcing industry at large? Through my article below I endeavor to answer these and many more questions.
Ab-initio we will refresh the fundamentals of federalism, stating the Roles, Duties, Nature, Scope and Restrictions on the government in a written federal constitution. Next we proceed to see whether the above attempt by the federal government to accede healthcare legislation is ultra-vires the powers granted by the US Constitution.

What is Federalism?

According to the traditional classification followed by the political scientists, constitutions are either unitary or federal. In a unitary constitution, the powers of the government are centralized in one government viz., the Central Government. In the federal constitution, on the contrary, there is a division of power between the federal and the state governments in a way that they are both inter-dependent and independent at the same time.
As we all know that Constitutions are organic documents which operate as fundamental law. The governments and their organs owe their origin to the constitution, derive their authority from the constitution and discharge their responsibilities within the framework of the constitution. The judiciary has the power to declare a law unconstitutional if the law is found to have contravened any provision of the constitution. The American Constitution is the oldest and a well praised example of federalism.

What are the powers granted by the US Constitution to the State Government?

Powers reserved for State Governments are:
Establishing local governments
Issuing licenses (driver, hunting, marriage, etc.)
Regulating intrastate commerce
Conducting elections
Ratifying amendments to the U.S. Constitution
Providing for public health and safety
Exercising powers which are neither delegated to the Federal Government nor were prohibited from the States by the Federal Constitution (residuary powers)
Framing other domestic law (for example, setting legal drinking and smoking ages etc.)

What are the powers granted by the US Constitution to the Federal Government?

Under the Constitution, powers reserved for the Federal Government are:
Printing of money
Declaration of war
Establishing the armed forces
Entering into treaties with foreign governments
Regulating commerce domestically and internationally
Establishing post offices and issuing postage
Making laws necessary to enforce the Constitution

What are the powers shared by Federal and State Government?

Under the Constitution, the shared, or “concurrent” powers are:
Setting up courts
Creating and collecting taxes
Building highways
Borrowing money
Making and enforcing laws
Chartering banks and corporations
Spending money for the betterment of the general welfare
Acquiring private property with appropriate compensation

What is the HR 3962 Act ?

The HR 3962 Act conceptualizes a new, voluntary, public, long-term care insurance program to help purchase services and support for people who have functional limitations. The Act endeavors to form a new national program to provide affordable coverage for those who cant get health insurance today because of pre-existing conditions. Under this, the insurance companies must spend 85 cents out of every premium dollar on medical services, thereby fostering the expansion of Medicaid and improving the Medicare. Under this, the young adults, till the age 26, are covered within their parents policies.

The Obama administration intends to attain this by creating mandates. As a self-sustaining public insurance option (that is financed not by tax dollars but by insurance premiums), this provides an alternative to and competes with private health insurance companies, on a level playing field. Additionally, the Act intends to eliminate the antitrust exemption for health insurers and medical malpractice insurers thereby fostering competition thus targeting the existing monopolies in the health insurance market. It aims to establish a new mandatory essential benefits package that shall become the minimum quality standard for employer plans, with the passage of time. The package places a cap for annual out-of-pocket spending, at a maximum of $5,000 per individual and $10,000 per family to prevent bankruptcies from medical expenses.

This Act requires the employers to either provide insurance to their employees or contribute to the cost of their coverage through the public plan/exchange, though the small businesses are exempted from this requirement.

Arguments regarding Constitutionality of HR 3962

The legal fraternity is divided between two schools of thought about the constitutionality of the Act. First school believes that the Act is unconstitutional and places reliance on Articles I 8 and V of the US constitution and on Tenth Amendment. They claim that their argument is supported by the celebrated case of MARBURY v. MADISON, 5 U.S. 137 (1803) and some federalist opinions. The second school of thought places reliance on Article I 8 and the celebrated case of McCulloh v. Maryland, 4 Wheaton 316 (1819); Steward Machine Co. v. Davis, 301 U.S. 548 (1937); United States v. Butler, 297 U.S. 1 (1936) and some federalist opinions. An in-toto analysis of these school of thoughts would conclude that the true interpretation of the word general welfare in Article I 8 of the U.S. Constitution can only determine the constitutionality of an Act like HR 3962. Till date the court opinions have been more inclined towards Hamilton (Federalist 33, 83 etc.) and Story rather than Madison (Federalist 41, 45 etc.).
Simply put, when the government mandates welfare as a quid-pro-quo for premiums collected, such welfare translates to nothing but a tax liability for the country men. Such an attempt by the government to regulate insurance sector by masquerading as an industry player is inspired from socialism. I personally feel that socialism is a Marxian concept and may not go well in an economy with capitalist foundations. The good thing is that people all over the world should buy insurance; this however turns bad when the government forces people to do so.

What are the implications of HR 3962 on the Outsourcing industry?

The object clause to the Act states that it is meant to provide affordable, quality health care for all Americans and reduce the growth in health care spending.

In reality, the act is a victim of haste. Ideally if the intention of the Obama administration and the object clause of the Act were actually in-sync then the administration should have awaited a confirmed indication of the end-of-recession. The administration should have first looked at strengthening the fundamentals of the economy, by:
better regulating the existing insurance sector,
improving the US agrarian culture and making the country self sufficient regards its food requirements,
checking the cost-of-living index and
creating more jobs in the private sector.
But if the intention is to make more and more Americans dependant on Federal Government for basic requirements, then the attempt is bang on.

Impact on the outsourcing industry:

Prima-facie it may seem complex but there are clear indications for the outsourcing industry to benefit once the HR 3962 is implemented. The benefit roots from the fact that the employees will become expensive for the employers post this Acts applicability. Now given the very competitive market scenarios, thin profit margin and the inability of the employer to transfer this increased cost to the end consumer, the employer is forced to search for the less costly alternatives. It is needless to say here that the Act magnifies the already existing labor arbitrage opportunities internationally. To appreciate the existing labor arbitrage opportunities you can refer to my older blog post.