Showing posts with label Insurance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Insurance. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Aviva

NASA astronauts Scott Altman and Mike Massimin...Image via Wikipedia
Aviva plc (LSE: AV., NYSE: AV) is a global insurance company headquartered in London, United Kingdom. It is the sixth-largest insurance company in the world measured by net premium income and has 53 million customers in 28 countries.[3] It is the market leader in both general insurance and life and pensions in the UK and has major businesses in Continental Europe, North America and Asia.[3]
Its primary listing is on the London Stock Exchange and it is a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index. It has a secondary listing on the New York Stock Exchange.
Contents [hide]
1 History
2 Operations
2.1 Companies
3 Senior management
4 Sponsorship
5 References
6 External links
[edit]History

Aviva can trace its history back to Hand in Hand Fire & Life Insurance Society in 1696.[4]
It was created by a merger of two British insurance firms, Norwich Union and CGU plc[5] (itself created by the 1998 merger of Commercial Union and General Accident[6]) as CGNU in 2000. The Aviva name was adopted in July 2002.
During March 2005 Aviva plc acquired the RAC plc breakdown recovery operation for around £1.1 billion.[7]
In July 2006, Aviva greatly increased its presence in the United States by acquiring AmerUs Group, a financial services company founded in 1896.[8] Aviva Corp. is not affiliated with Aviva Energy Corp., an energy consulting firm based in the U.S.
The Company continued to use the Norwich Union name as a trading name in the UK until 1 June 2009 when it became formally known as Aviva within the United Kingdom. The launch was supported by a £9 million advertising campaign to promote the rebranding (one of the most expensive ever in the UK insurance field), with the participation of celebrities including Bruce Willis and Alice Cooper.[9] In January 2010, the process of Aviva's rebrand was formally recognised when they appeared on the shortlist of the Transform Awards for rebranding and brand transformation in a number of categories[10]
In June 2009 the Company decided to dispose of Navigator, its Australian wealth management business, to National Australia Bank for A$825 million (£401 million).[11]
In October 2009 the company decided to focus on its commercial insurance sector and demonstrate its commitment to brokers by launching their 'find a broker' facility, using the British Insurance Brokers Association search engine. To help them with this endeavour, Paul Whitehouse was recruited to play the part of a successful hairdresser running three salons. The message of the campaign focused on business insurance through insurance brokers.[12] The closing line of the campaign was "We're in business to keep you in business".
[edit]Operations

The Company's main activities are general and life insurance as well as long-term savings and fund management. It has around £379 billion of assets under management. The group has 46,000 employees, serving 53 million customers worldwide.
Aviva was the first insurance company to become carbon neutral globally.[13]
[edit]Companies
United Kingdom
Aviva Life – Pensions, investments, Life Insurance and long term savings (formerly Norwich Union)
Aviva Insurance – General Insurance
Aviva Investors – Fund Management (formerly Morley Fund Management)
RAC – Breakdown recovery
United States of America – Aviva USA Corporation
Ireland
Aviva Direct
Aviva Health
Poland – Aviva
Spain
Netherlands – Delta Lloyd Groep
Romania – Aviva
Canada – Aviva Canada
France – Eurofil
Serbia
Australia
China – Aviva-Cofco
India – Aviva India
Malaysia – CIMB Aviva
Singapore
Turkey
Taiwan – First Aviva (in Chinese language)
Sri Lanka
Russia
Lithuania
Italy – Aviva Italia Holding S.p.A.
South Korea
[edit]Senior management

CEO Richard Harvey retired on 11 July 2007. His successor was Andrew Moss, the former group finance director.[14] Moss is paid an annual base salary of £925,000 for his role as Chief Executive.[15]
[edit]Sponsorship

In May 2008 Aviva became Norwich City Football Club's main sponsor. Ironically, in a 2009 television advert starring Paul Whitehouse they feature a Plymouth Argyle F.C. fan who uses Aviva car insurance followed by a Green Army chant.[16] It also acquired the naming rights for the redeveloped Lansdowne Road stadium in Dublin, Ireland, and will now be called the Aviva Stadium.[17]
In 2010, Aviva also took over sponsorship of rugby union's English Premiership from Guinness. The four-year sponsorship deal is valued at £20 million.[18]

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Aviva

NASA astronauts Scott Altman and Mike Massimin...Image via Wikipedia
Aviva plc (LSE: AV., NYSE: AV) is a global insurance company headquartered in London, United Kingdom. It is the sixth-largest insurance company in the world measured by net premium income and has 53 million customers in 28 countries.[3] It is the market leader in both general insurance and life and pensions in the UK and has major businesses in Continental Europe, North America and Asia.[3]
Its primary listing is on the London Stock Exchange and it is a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index. It has a secondary listing on the New York Stock Exchange.
Contents [hide]
1 History
2 Operations
2.1 Companies
3 Senior management
4 Sponsorship
5 References
6 External links
[edit]History

Aviva can trace its history back to Hand in Hand Fire & Life Insurance Society in 1696.[4]
It was created by a merger of two British insurance firms, Norwich Union and CGU plc[5] (itself created by the 1998 merger of Commercial Union and General Accident[6]) as CGNU in 2000. The Aviva name was adopted in July 2002.
During March 2005 Aviva plc acquired the RAC plc breakdown recovery operation for around £1.1 billion.[7]
In July 2006, Aviva greatly increased its presence in the United States by acquiring AmerUs Group, a financial services company founded in 1896.[8] Aviva Corp. is not affiliated with Aviva Energy Corp., an energy consulting firm based in the U.S.
The Company continued to use the Norwich Union name as a trading name in the UK until 1 June 2009 when it became formally known as Aviva within the United Kingdom. The launch was supported by a £9 million advertising campaign to promote the rebranding (one of the most expensive ever in the UK insurance field), with the participation of celebrities including Bruce Willis and Alice Cooper.[9] In January 2010, the process of Aviva's rebrand was formally recognised when they appeared on the shortlist of the Transform Awards for rebranding and brand transformation in a number of categories[10]
In June 2009 the Company decided to dispose of Navigator, its Australian wealth management business, to National Australia Bank for A$825 million (£401 million).[11]
In October 2009 the company decided to focus on its commercial insurance sector and demonstrate its commitment to brokers by launching their 'find a broker' facility, using the British Insurance Brokers Association search engine. To help them with this endeavour, Paul Whitehouse was recruited to play the part of a successful hairdresser running three salons. The message of the campaign focused on business insurance through insurance brokers.[12] The closing line of the campaign was "We're in business to keep you in business".
[edit]Operations

The Company's main activities are general and life insurance as well as long-term savings and fund management. It has around £379 billion of assets under management. The group has 46,000 employees, serving 53 million customers worldwide.
Aviva was the first insurance company to become carbon neutral globally.[13]
[edit]Companies
United Kingdom
Aviva Life – Pensions, investments, Life Insurance and long term savings (formerly Norwich Union)
Aviva Insurance – General Insurance
Aviva Investors – Fund Management (formerly Morley Fund Management)
RAC – Breakdown recovery
United States of America – Aviva USA Corporation
Ireland
Aviva Direct
Aviva Health
Poland – Aviva
Spain
Netherlands – Delta Lloyd Groep
Romania – Aviva
Canada – Aviva Canada
France – Eurofil
Serbia
Australia
China – Aviva-Cofco
India – Aviva India
Malaysia – CIMB Aviva
Singapore
Turkey
Taiwan – First Aviva (in Chinese language)
Sri Lanka
Russia
Lithuania
Italy – Aviva Italia Holding S.p.A.
South Korea
[edit]Senior management

CEO Richard Harvey retired on 11 July 2007. His successor was Andrew Moss, the former group finance director.[14] Moss is paid an annual base salary of £925,000 for his role as Chief Executive.[15]
[edit]Sponsorship

In May 2008 Aviva became Norwich City Football Club's main sponsor. Ironically, in a 2009 television advert starring Paul Whitehouse they feature a Plymouth Argyle F.C. fan who uses Aviva car insurance followed by a Green Army chant.[16] It also acquired the naming rights for the redeveloped Lansdowne Road stadium in Dublin, Ireland, and will now be called the Aviva Stadium.[17]
In 2010, Aviva also took over sponsorship of rugby union's English Premiership from Guinness. The four-year sponsorship deal is valued at £20 million.[18]

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UnitedHealth Group

Image representing MetLife as depicted in Crun...Image via CrunchBase
UnitedHealth Group Incorporated NYSE: UNH is a diversified health and "well-being" company. Headquartered in Minnetonka, Minnesota, UnitedHealth Group offers a spectrum of products and services through two operating businesses: UnitedHealthcare and Optum. Through its family of subsidiaries and divisions, UnitedHealth Group serves approximately 70 million individuals nationwide. In 2010, the company posted a net income of $4.6 billion.[4]
UnitedHealth Group is the parent of UnitedHealthcare, a large health insurer in the United States. It was created in 1977, as UnitedHealthCare Corporation (it was renamed in 1998), but traces its origin to a firm it acquired in 1977, Charter Med Incorporated, which was founded in 1974. In 1979, it introduced the first network-based health plan for seniors. In 1984, it became a publicly traded company.
J.D. Power and Associates recently gave UnitedHealthcare the highest employer satisfaction rating for self-insured health plans [5]. UnitedHealthcare also received high marks from the American Medical Association (AMA) in its 2011 National Health Insurance Report Card. [6]. The fourth annual report card evaluated seven national health insurance companies on the timeliness and accuracy of their claims processing based on a variety of payment, approval and process metrics. UnitedHealthcare moved into the top spot among its industry peers on two metrics: Contracted Fee Schedule Match Rate, which indicates how often an insurer's claim payment matches the contracted fee schedule; and Electronic Remittance Advice (ERA) Accuracy, which measures the rate at which the insurer's allowed amount equals the physician practice's expected allowed amount. And in a recent insurance industry publication, Business Insurance, United was named "readers choice" winner 2010 for "Best health plan provider". [7].
To contrast, however, in a 2010 survey of hospital executives who have dealt with the company, United received a 65% unfavorable rating. While this marks a 33% improvement over the prior year's survey, UnitedHealthcare still ranked last among all listed.[8]
In 2010, UnitedHealth Group spent more than $1.8 million on lobbying activities to work to achieve favorable legislation, and hired seven different lobbying firms to work on its behalf. [9] In addition, its corporate political action committee or PAC, called "United for Health," spent an additional $1 million on lobbying activities in 2010. [10]
Contents [hide]
1 Acquisitions
2 Legal issues
2.1 Ingenix
2.2 Options backdating investigations and lawsuits
2.3 Resignation of McGuire
2.4 McGuire's settlement with SEC
3 Health Care Reform
4 Businesses
4.1 The Lewin Group
5 Foundations
6 References
7 External links
[edit]Acquisitions

Health care in the United States
Public health care
Federal Employees Health Benefits Program
Indian Health Service
Medicaid
Medicare
Military Health System / TRICARE
State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP)
Veterans Health Administration
Private health coverage
Health insurance in the United States
Consumer-driven health care
Flexible spending account (FSA)
Health reimbursement account
Health savings account
High-deductible health plan (HDHP)
Medical savings account
Managed care
Health maintenance organization (HMO)
Preferred provider organization (PPO)
Medical underwriting
Health care law and reform
Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (1986)
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (1996)
Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act (2003)
Patient Safety and Quality Improvement Act (2005)
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (2010)
State level reform
Massachusetts health care reform
Oregon Health Plan
Vermont health care reform
SustiNet (Connecticut)
Municipal health coverage
Fair Share Health Care Act (Maryland)
Healthy Howard (Howard Co., Maryland)
Healthy San Francisco
This box: view · talk · edit
In 1995, the company acquired The MetraHealth Companies Inc. for $1.75 billion. MetraHealth was a privately held company formed by combining the group health care operations of The Travelers Insurance Company and Metropolitan Life Insurance Company also known as MetLife.
In July 2004, UnitedHealth Group acquired Oxford Health Plans and all of United Healthcare's New York-based small group contracts are now Oxford Health Plans products. In December 2005, the company received final regulatory approval for its $9.2 billion purchase of PacifiCare Health Systems. It agreed to divest parts of PacifiCare's commercial health insurance business in Tucson, Arizona and Boulder, Colorado to satisfy antitrust regulator concerns, and also agreed to end its network access agreement with Blue Shield of California.
In March 2007, UnitedHealth Group signed a definitive agreement to acquire Sierra Health Services Inc. for $2.6 billion. Sierra provided health benefits and services to 310,000 members in Nevada and another 320,000 people in senior and government programs throughout the United States.
In June 2009, Ingenix, a UHG subsidiary, acquired AIM Healthcare. AIM is the leading data mining and insurance claim auditing service in the US.
In July 2009, UnitedHealth Group Inc. agreed to acquire Health Net Inc.'s (HNT) Northeast licensed subsidiaries for up to $570 million in payments spread out over a two year period.[11]
In July 2010, Ingenix acquired Picis Inc. Picis is a leading provider of health information solutions for the high-acuity areas of hospitals. [12]
[edit]Legal issues

In 2006, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) began investigating the conduct of UnitedHealth Group's management and directors, for backdating of stock options. Investigations were also begun by the Internal Revenue Service and prosecutors in the U.S. attorney's office for the Southern District of New York, who subpoenaed documents from the company. The investigations came to light after a series of probing stories in the Wall Street Journal in May 2006, discussing apparent backdating of hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of stock options by UHC management. The backdating apparently occurred with the knowledge and approval of the directors, according to the Journal. Major shareholders have filed lawsuits accusing former New Jersey governor Thomas Kean and UHC's other directors of failing in their fiduciary duty.[13][14] On October 15, 2006, CEO William W. McGuire was forced to resign, and relinquish hundreds of millions of dollars in stock options. On December 6, 2007, the SEC announced a settlement under which McGuire will repay $468 million, as a partial settlement of the backdating prosecution. Legal actions filed by the SEC against UnitedHealth Group itself are still pending.[15]
In June 2006, the American Chiropractic Association filed a national class action lawsuit against the American Chiropractic Network (ACN), which is owned by UnitedHealth Group and administers chiropractic benefits, and against UnitedHealth Group itself, for alleged practices in violation of the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO).[16]
[edit]Ingenix
In February 2008, New York State Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo announced an industry-wide investigation into a scheme by health insurers to defraud consumers by manipulating reasonable and customary rates. The announcement included a statement that Cuomo intended "to file suit against Ingenix, Inc., its parent UnitedHealth Group, and three additional subsidiaries." Cuomo asserted that his investigation found that rates found in a database of health care charges maintained by Ingenix were lower than what he determined was the actual cost of certain medical expenses. Cuomo said this inappropriately allowed health insurance companies to deny a portion of provider claims, thereby pushing costs down to members. [17]
On January 13, 2009, UnitedHealth Group and Ingenix announced an agreement with the New York State attorney settling the probe into the independence of the health pricing database. Under the settlement, UnitedHealth Group and Ingenix would pay $50 million to finance a new, non-profit entity that would develop a new health care pricing database. Ingenix would discontinue its medical pricing databases when the new entity makes its product available. The company acknowledged the appearance of a conflict of interest, but admitted no wrongdoing.[18]
On January 15, 2009, UnitedHealth Group announced a $350 million settlement of three class action lawsuits filed in Federal court by the American Medical Association, UnitedHealth Group members, healthcare providers, and state medical societies for not paying out-of-network benefits. This settlement came two days after a similar settlement with Cuomo.[19]
On October 27, 2009, Cuomo announced the creation FAIR Health, the independent, non-profit organization that will develop a nationwide database for consumer reimbursement, as well as a website where consumers will be able to compare prices before they choose doctors. To fund FAIR Health, the Attorney General's office secured nearly $100 million from insurers such as Aetna, UnitedHealth Group, and WellPoint.[20]
[edit]Options backdating investigations and lawsuits
In 2006, the SEC began investigating the conduct of UnitedHealth Group's management and directors, including Dr. McGuire, as did the Internal Revenue Service and prosecutors in the U.S. attorney's office for the Southern District of New York, who have subpoenaed documents from the company.
The investigations came to light after a series of probing stories in the Wall Street Journal in May 2006, discussing the apparent backdating of hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of stock options—in a process called options backdating—by UnitedHealth Group management. The backdating apparently occurred with the knowledge and approval of the directors, according to the Journal. Major shareholders have filed lawsuits accusing former New Jersey governor Thomas Kean and UnitedHealth Group's other directors of failing in their fiduciary duty.[13][21]
[edit]Resignation of McGuire
On October 15, 2006, it was announced that Dr. McGuire would step down immediately as chairman and director of UnitedHealth Group, and step down as CEO on December 1, 2006, due to his involvement in the employee stock options scandal. Simultaneously, it was announced that he would be replaced as CEO by Stephen Hemsley, who has served as President and COO and is a member of the board of directors.[22] McGuire's exit compensation from UnitedHealth, expected to be around $1.1 billion, would be the largest golden parachute in the history of corporate America.[23]
McGuire's compensation became controversial again on May 21, 2009, when Elizabeth Edwards, speaking on The Daily Show, used it to support her argument for a public alternative to commercial insurance[24]. Edwards stressed the importance of restoring competition in health insurance markets noting that at one point, "the President of UnitedHealth made so much money, that one of every $700 that was spent in this country on health care went to pay him."
Estimates of McGuire's 2005 compensation range from $59,625,444 [25] to $124.8 million[26], and the revenue of UnitedHealth Group was then $71 billion. It has therefore been suggested that Mrs. Edwards may have meant to say that one of every $700 that was spent on UnitedHealth Group premiums went to pay McGuire.
[edit]McGuire's settlement with SEC
On December 6, 2007, the SEC announced a settlement under which McGuire was to repay $468 million, including a $7 million civil penalty, as a partial settlement of the backdating prosecution. He was also barred from serving as an officer or director of a public company for ten years.[27][28][29] This was the first time in which the little-used "clawback" provision under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act was used against a


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UnitedHealth Group

Image representing MetLife as depicted in Crun...Image via CrunchBase
UnitedHealth Group Incorporated NYSE: UNH is a diversified health and "well-being" company. Headquartered in Minnetonka, Minnesota, UnitedHealth Group offers a spectrum of products and services through two operating businesses: UnitedHealthcare and Optum. Through its family of subsidiaries and divisions, UnitedHealth Group serves approximately 70 million individuals nationwide. In 2010, the company posted a net income of $4.6 billion.[4]
UnitedHealth Group is the parent of UnitedHealthcare, a large health insurer in the United States. It was created in 1977, as UnitedHealthCare Corporation (it was renamed in 1998), but traces its origin to a firm it acquired in 1977, Charter Med Incorporated, which was founded in 1974. In 1979, it introduced the first network-based health plan for seniors. In 1984, it became a publicly traded company.
J.D. Power and Associates recently gave UnitedHealthcare the highest employer satisfaction rating for self-insured health plans [5]. UnitedHealthcare also received high marks from the American Medical Association (AMA) in its 2011 National Health Insurance Report Card. [6]. The fourth annual report card evaluated seven national health insurance companies on the timeliness and accuracy of their claims processing based on a variety of payment, approval and process metrics. UnitedHealthcare moved into the top spot among its industry peers on two metrics: Contracted Fee Schedule Match Rate, which indicates how often an insurer's claim payment matches the contracted fee schedule; and Electronic Remittance Advice (ERA) Accuracy, which measures the rate at which the insurer's allowed amount equals the physician practice's expected allowed amount. And in a recent insurance industry publication, Business Insurance, United was named "readers choice" winner 2010 for "Best health plan provider". [7].
To contrast, however, in a 2010 survey of hospital executives who have dealt with the company, United received a 65% unfavorable rating. While this marks a 33% improvement over the prior year's survey, UnitedHealthcare still ranked last among all listed.[8]
In 2010, UnitedHealth Group spent more than $1.8 million on lobbying activities to work to achieve favorable legislation, and hired seven different lobbying firms to work on its behalf. [9] In addition, its corporate political action committee or PAC, called "United for Health," spent an additional $1 million on lobbying activities in 2010. [10]
Contents [hide]
1 Acquisitions
2 Legal issues
2.1 Ingenix
2.2 Options backdating investigations and lawsuits
2.3 Resignation of McGuire
2.4 McGuire's settlement with SEC
3 Health Care Reform
4 Businesses
4.1 The Lewin Group
5 Foundations
6 References
7 External links
[edit]Acquisitions

Health care in the United States
Public health care
Federal Employees Health Benefits Program
Indian Health Service
Medicaid
Medicare
Military Health System / TRICARE
State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP)
Veterans Health Administration
Private health coverage
Health insurance in the United States
Consumer-driven health care
Flexible spending account (FSA)
Health reimbursement account
Health savings account
High-deductible health plan (HDHP)
Medical savings account
Managed care
Health maintenance organization (HMO)
Preferred provider organization (PPO)
Medical underwriting
Health care law and reform
Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (1986)
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (1996)
Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act (2003)
Patient Safety and Quality Improvement Act (2005)
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (2010)
State level reform
Massachusetts health care reform
Oregon Health Plan
Vermont health care reform
SustiNet (Connecticut)
Municipal health coverage
Fair Share Health Care Act (Maryland)
Healthy Howard (Howard Co., Maryland)
Healthy San Francisco
This box: view · talk · edit
In 1995, the company acquired The MetraHealth Companies Inc. for $1.75 billion. MetraHealth was a privately held company formed by combining the group health care operations of The Travelers Insurance Company and Metropolitan Life Insurance Company also known as MetLife.
In July 2004, UnitedHealth Group acquired Oxford Health Plans and all of United Healthcare's New York-based small group contracts are now Oxford Health Plans products. In December 2005, the company received final regulatory approval for its $9.2 billion purchase of PacifiCare Health Systems. It agreed to divest parts of PacifiCare's commercial health insurance business in Tucson, Arizona and Boulder, Colorado to satisfy antitrust regulator concerns, and also agreed to end its network access agreement with Blue Shield of California.
In March 2007, UnitedHealth Group signed a definitive agreement to acquire Sierra Health Services Inc. for $2.6 billion. Sierra provided health benefits and services to 310,000 members in Nevada and another 320,000 people in senior and government programs throughout the United States.
In June 2009, Ingenix, a UHG subsidiary, acquired AIM Healthcare. AIM is the leading data mining and insurance claim auditing service in the US.
In July 2009, UnitedHealth Group Inc. agreed to acquire Health Net Inc.'s (HNT) Northeast licensed subsidiaries for up to $570 million in payments spread out over a two year period.[11]
In July 2010, Ingenix acquired Picis Inc. Picis is a leading provider of health information solutions for the high-acuity areas of hospitals. [12]
[edit]Legal issues

In 2006, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) began investigating the conduct of UnitedHealth Group's management and directors, for backdating of stock options. Investigations were also begun by the Internal Revenue Service and prosecutors in the U.S. attorney's office for the Southern District of New York, who subpoenaed documents from the company. The investigations came to light after a series of probing stories in the Wall Street Journal in May 2006, discussing apparent backdating of hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of stock options by UHC management. The backdating apparently occurred with the knowledge and approval of the directors, according to the Journal. Major shareholders have filed lawsuits accusing former New Jersey governor Thomas Kean and UHC's other directors of failing in their fiduciary duty.[13][14] On October 15, 2006, CEO William W. McGuire was forced to resign, and relinquish hundreds of millions of dollars in stock options. On December 6, 2007, the SEC announced a settlement under which McGuire will repay $468 million, as a partial settlement of the backdating prosecution. Legal actions filed by the SEC against UnitedHealth Group itself are still pending.[15]
In June 2006, the American Chiropractic Association filed a national class action lawsuit against the American Chiropractic Network (ACN), which is owned by UnitedHealth Group and administers chiropractic benefits, and against UnitedHealth Group itself, for alleged practices in violation of the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO).[16]
[edit]Ingenix
In February 2008, New York State Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo announced an industry-wide investigation into a scheme by health insurers to defraud consumers by manipulating reasonable and customary rates. The announcement included a statement that Cuomo intended "to file suit against Ingenix, Inc., its parent UnitedHealth Group, and three additional subsidiaries." Cuomo asserted that his investigation found that rates found in a database of health care charges maintained by Ingenix were lower than what he determined was the actual cost of certain medical expenses. Cuomo said this inappropriately allowed health insurance companies to deny a portion of provider claims, thereby pushing costs down to members. [17]
On January 13, 2009, UnitedHealth Group and Ingenix announced an agreement with the New York State attorney settling the probe into the independence of the health pricing database. Under the settlement, UnitedHealth Group and Ingenix would pay $50 million to finance a new, non-profit entity that would develop a new health care pricing database. Ingenix would discontinue its medical pricing databases when the new entity makes its product available. The company acknowledged the appearance of a conflict of interest, but admitted no wrongdoing.[18]
On January 15, 2009, UnitedHealth Group announced a $350 million settlement of three class action lawsuits filed in Federal court by the American Medical Association, UnitedHealth Group members, healthcare providers, and state medical societies for not paying out-of-network benefits. This settlement came two days after a similar settlement with Cuomo.[19]
On October 27, 2009, Cuomo announced the creation FAIR Health, the independent, non-profit organization that will develop a nationwide database for consumer reimbursement, as well as a website where consumers will be able to compare prices before they choose doctors. To fund FAIR Health, the Attorney General's office secured nearly $100 million from insurers such as Aetna, UnitedHealth Group, and WellPoint.[20]
[edit]Options backdating investigations and lawsuits
In 2006, the SEC began investigating the conduct of UnitedHealth Group's management and directors, including Dr. McGuire, as did the Internal Revenue Service and prosecutors in the U.S. attorney's office for the Southern District of New York, who have subpoenaed documents from the company.
The investigations came to light after a series of probing stories in the Wall Street Journal in May 2006, discussing the apparent backdating of hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of stock options—in a process called options backdating—by UnitedHealth Group management. The backdating apparently occurred with the knowledge and approval of the directors, according to the Journal. Major shareholders have filed lawsuits accusing former New Jersey governor Thomas Kean and UnitedHealth Group's other directors of failing in their fiduciary duty.[13][21]
[edit]Resignation of McGuire
On October 15, 2006, it was announced that Dr. McGuire would step down immediately as chairman and director of UnitedHealth Group, and step down as CEO on December 1, 2006, due to his involvement in the employee stock options scandal. Simultaneously, it was announced that he would be replaced as CEO by Stephen Hemsley, who has served as President and COO and is a member of the board of directors.[22] McGuire's exit compensation from UnitedHealth, expected to be around $1.1 billion, would be the largest golden parachute in the history of corporate America.[23]
McGuire's compensation became controversial again on May 21, 2009, when Elizabeth Edwards, speaking on The Daily Show, used it to support her argument for a public alternative to commercial insurance[24]. Edwards stressed the importance of restoring competition in health insurance markets noting that at one point, "the President of UnitedHealth made so much money, that one of every $700 that was spent in this country on health care went to pay him."
Estimates of McGuire's 2005 compensation range from $59,625,444 [25] to $124.8 million[26], and the revenue of UnitedHealth Group was then $71 billion. It has therefore been suggested that Mrs. Edwards may have meant to say that one of every $700 that was spent on UnitedHealth Group premiums went to pay McGuire.
[edit]McGuire's settlement with SEC
On December 6, 2007, the SEC announced a settlement under which McGuire was to repay $468 million, including a $7 million civil penalty, as a partial settlement of the backdating prosecution. He was also barred from serving as an officer or director of a public company for ten years.[27][28][29] This was the first time in which the little-used "clawback" provision under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act was used against a


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Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Assicurazioni Generali


Assicurazioni Generali S.p.A. is the largest insurance company in Italy and one of the largest in Europe.[2] It has its headquarters in Trieste.[3] In 2010, Assicurazioni Generali Group was the second largest insurance group in the world by revenue after AXA.
Under the name of Imperial Regia Privilegiata Compagnia di Assicurazioni Generali Austro-Italiche, the company was founded on December 26, 1831. At the time, Trieste was the most important sea port of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and the company grew in importance, becoming one of the largest insurance operators both in Italy and in the Central Europe.
Contents [hide]
1 Operations
2 Shareholder structure
3 Famous workers
4 References
5 External links
[edit]Operations

Today, Generali operates primarily in Europe, Middle East and East Asia, with large market shares in Italy, Poland, Germany (under the name of Generali Deutschland), France, Austria, Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia, Spain, Switzerland, Israel, Japan, China and Bosnia and Herzegovina, with secondary operations in Latin America, for example, in Panama.
On Jerusalem's Jaffa Road the "Generali Building" (בנין ג'נרלי), built by the Italian company in 1935, is still known by that name though already for decades the company has no connection with it any more. It is a famous Jerusalem landmark, especially due to a large and well-preserved Assicurazioni Generali winged lion still seen on its roof (he:בניין ג'נרלי).
In Serbia the company operates under the name Delta Generali - a joint venture of Assicurazioni Generali and Serbian Delta Holding.
In India the company is represented by Future Generali, a joint venture of Future group and Assicurazioni Generali.
Subsidiaries of the group includes, in Italy: INA Assitalia, Fata Assicurazioni, Alleanza - Toro, Europ-Assistance, and Genertel.


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Assicurazioni Generali


Assicurazioni Generali S.p.A. is the largest insurance company in Italy and one of the largest in Europe.[2] It has its headquarters in Trieste.[3] In 2010, Assicurazioni Generali Group was the second largest insurance group in the world by revenue after AXA.
Under the name of Imperial Regia Privilegiata Compagnia di Assicurazioni Generali Austro-Italiche, the company was founded on December 26, 1831. At the time, Trieste was the most important sea port of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and the company grew in importance, becoming one of the largest insurance operators both in Italy and in the Central Europe.
Contents [hide]
1 Operations
2 Shareholder structure
3 Famous workers
4 References
5 External links
[edit]Operations

Today, Generali operates primarily in Europe, Middle East and East Asia, with large market shares in Italy, Poland, Germany (under the name of Generali Deutschland), France, Austria, Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia, Spain, Switzerland, Israel, Japan, China and Bosnia and Herzegovina, with secondary operations in Latin America, for example, in Panama.
On Jerusalem's Jaffa Road the "Generali Building" (בנין ג'נרלי), built by the Italian company in 1935, is still known by that name though already for decades the company has no connection with it any more. It is a famous Jerusalem landmark, especially due to a large and well-preserved Assicurazioni Generali winged lion still seen on its roof (he:בניין ג'נרלי).
In Serbia the company operates under the name Delta Generali - a joint venture of Assicurazioni Generali and Serbian Delta Holding.
In India the company is represented by Future Generali, a joint venture of Future group and Assicurazioni Generali.
Subsidiaries of the group includes, in Italy: INA Assitalia, Fata Assicurazioni, Alleanza - Toro, Europ-Assistance, and Genertel.


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AXA


AXA S.A. is a French global insurance group headquartered in the 8th arrondissement of Paris. AXA is a conglomerate of independently run businesses, operated according to the laws and regulations of many different countries. The AXA group of companies engage in life, health and other forms of insurance, as well as investment management. The group operates primarily in Western Europe, North America and the Asia Pacific region and the Middle East.
The AXA Group encompasses five operating business segments: Life & Savings, Property & Casualty, International Insurance (including reinsurance), Asset Management and Other Financial Services. It ranks as the 9th largest company in the world (based on revenue) on the 2010 Fortune Global 500 list.[2]
Contents [hide]
1 History
2 The AXA name
3 Operations
3.1 In the United Kingdom
3.1.1 AXA Sun Life
3.2 On the Isle of Man
3.3 AXA Schengen
3.4 In Canada
3.5 In the United States
3.6 In Mexico
3.7 In Asia Pacific
4 Capital Ownership
5 Head office
6 Philantropic initiatives
7 See also
8 References
9 External links
[edit]History

The company was originally founded in 1816 as Mutuelle de L'assurance contre L'incendie (the Ancienne Mutuelle).[3] It acquired Compagnie Parisienne de Garantie in 1978 and became Mutuelles Unies.[4] It went on to buy the Drouot Group in 1982, at which time it adopted the AXA name.[4] The takeover of The Equitable, a well-known American insurer, came in 1991.[4] It bought Union des Assurances De Paris (UAP), France's largest insurer, in 1996 becoming AXA-UAP for a while before reverting to the name AXA in 1999.[5] Then in February 1999 AXA acquired Guardian Royal Exchange.[6] In May 2000 AXA acquired all shares it did not already own in Sun Life & Provincial Holdings.[7] On 14 June 2006 AXA acquired the leading Swiss insurance company Winterthur Group from Credit Suisse for approximately €9 billion.[8]
[edit]The AXA name

Despite being written in upper case, "AXA" is not an acronym, but was chosen because its name can be pronounced easily by people who speak any language. After acquiring the Drouot Group in 1982, the company hired an outside consultant to conduct a computer-aided search for a new name. The selection criteria consisted of a short and snappy name to convey vitality, a name that begins with the letter A so that it would appear near the top of all lists, and something that could be pronounced easily in every language, consistent with the group's desire for an international presence. In 1985, Chairman and CEO Claude Bébéar chose the name AXA.[9]


Axa Group global locations
[edit]Operations

[edit]In the United Kingdom
AXA trades in the United Kingdom as AXA Sun Life, AXA Insurance, AXA Investment Managers and AXA PPP Healthcare. AXA PPP Healthcare was created when AXA bought Guardian Royal Exchange (GRE), though it subsequently sold the other parts of GRE to Aegon. The company also owns the online insurer Swiftcover, dental payment plan provider Denplan, distribution business Bluefin and fund manager Architas. In January 2007 AXA was reorganised into "strategic business units" (SBU's) aimed at competing within their specific markets.
AXA run its investment branch through AXA Investment Managers (IM) which is headed by John Cook.
[edit]AXA Sun Life
AXA Sun Life was created following the merger between AXA Equity & Law and Sun Life Assurance Society PLC. In 2006 Winterthur Life in the UK was absorbed although AXA continue to use the Winterthur brand for high net worth wealth management business. The business units are:[10]
AXA Wealth – This includes AXA + Winterthur's Bonds + Individual Pensions, AXA Distribution Services who offer the Elevate wrap platform and Architas.
Corporate Business – AXA + Winterthur's Group Pensions. AXA intend to create a "Market Leading" group pension proposition using Winterthur's 'Embassy' IT platform.
Protection – This business aims to market AXA's Protection Account as AXA continues to build on its presence in this area with the intention of becoming a leading protection provider.
Traditional Business – Concentrating on policies which are still in force but no longer actively marketed.
Sunlife Direct – This business focues solely on selling protection & savings products directly to those in the UK.
Bancassurance – This business is responsible for an advisory and sales force that sell AXAs products and propositions.
AXA sold AXA Sun Life Holdings Ltd to Resolution Limited in autumn 2010.[11][12]
[edit]On the Isle of Man
AXA Isle of Man Limited was originally created as a subsidiary of AXA Sun Life in the United Kingdom, but since the Isle of Man is not a part of the United Kingdom it is regulated instead by the laws of the Isle of Man. AXA Isle of Man Limited advertises itself as a repository for citizens of the United Kingdom and the Channel Islands who seek to shelter their assets from high taxation.
While the company trades upon the AXA logo, name and group advertising which promotes the total wealth of the group, the assets of the Isle of Man company are limited to those of the Isle of Man company itself.
[edit]AXA Schengen
AXA Schengen Travel Insurance provides insurance to travelers who need a visa to enter the Schengen Area.
[edit]In Canada
AXA Canada offers insurance services through a network of affiliates operating in the different Canadian regions such as Québec, Ontario, Western Canada and Atlantic Canada. In 2009, the company had a total of approximately 2,300 employees and 4000 brokers and advisors. The head office is in Montréal, Quebec.
[edit]In the United States
The American arm of AXA is AXA Equitable. AXA Equitable consists of many subsidiaries; AXA Advisors, LLC, AXA Network, AXA Equitable Life Insurance, Mutual of New York (MONY), US Financial Life, and AllianceBernstein.
On December 15 of 2006, AXA Advisors, LLC entered into agreements with LPL (Linsco Private Ledger), the country's largest independent broker-dealer. LPL agreed to provide brokerage, clearing and custody services on a fully disclosed basis. The terms of the agreements are five years, subject to additional 24-month extensions. Services are expected to begin in August 2007.
[edit]In Mexico
In July 2008, AXA acquired ING Insurance Mexico, they are offering essentially the same services that ING offered. The Chairman in Mexico is Xavier de Bellefon.
[edit]In Asia Pacific
AXA Life Insurance operated in the Asia Pacific region as 'AXA Asia Pacific Holdings Ltd. (AXA APH) which is the former National Mutual Life Association of Australasia founded by actuary John Montgomery Templeton The AXA Collection and was listed on the Australian Securities Exchange. The head office of AXA APH was located in Melbourne, Australia, and there was a major regional office in Hong Kong. AMP acquired AXA Asia Pacific in 2011; it retained AXA APH's Australia and New Zealand operations, and sold the Asia operations to AXA.
AXA Asia - Based in Hong Kong, the AXA Asia Regional Office is responsible for supporting the Group's existing operations in Hong Kong, China and South East Asia, propelling its perpetual growth, and looking for new markets and business development opportunities for AXA in Asia.[13]
AXA General Insurance operates in the Asia Pacific region as AXA Asia P&C. The head-office of AXA Asia P&C is located in Singapore.


AXA head office in Paris
AXA has entered the Indian market through Bharti Enterprises as a joint venture. AXA has three ventures in India, Bharti AXA Life Insurance Company Ltd, Bharti AXA General Insurance Co. Ltd. and Bharti AXA investment Managers, and is also present in fusion with OYAK, as AXA OYAK, in the Turkish market since 1999.
The Metropolitan Bank and Trust Company of the Philippines subsequently entered into joint ventures with corporation the National Mutual Holdings Ltd. of Australia to create Philippine AXA Life Insurance Corporation.
[edit]Capital Ownership

U.S.A. 18.8%
France 16.5%
United Kingdom 11.5%
AXA Employees 6.5%
BNP Paribas 5.4%
Edward L. Skyward 5.1%
Sumitomo Mitsui 4.0%
Qatar Investment Authority 3.8%
Capital Ownership at December 31, 2010[14]
[edit]Head office

The head office of AXA is located in the 8th arrondissement of Paris.[15] AXA, which already owned 23 Avenue Matignon, acquired the former Hotel de La Vaupalière, an 18th century building, in the late 1990s. Architect Ricardo Bofill integrated the facade of the hotel with a modern glass building that covers the courtyard that the hotel also occupies. The complex serves as AXA's head office.[16]
[edit]Philantropic initiatives

Besides its artistic and social philanthropic initiatives (AXA Heart in action), AXA created the AXA Research Fund in 2008. Endowed with € 100 millions, it provides support for research focused on understanding and preventing the risks threatening the environment, human life and our societies.
256 basic-research projects were funded within three years, including 230 young researchers, PhDs or in postdoctoral year, working in laboratories all around the world. In addition to this support, AXA gathers every year the young fellows to meet a world-class researcher, exchange best practices and network, above any education or discipline.
The Fund has also awarded 11 endowments for several million euros supporting research institutions of excellence ( HEC Paris, NUS, University of Bristol, LSE, MetOffice, INSERM, IHES...). These Research and Education Chairs intend to attract the best scientists. For example, the AXA - Polytechnique Chair in Cellular Cardiovascular Engineering, held by Abdul Barakat, aims to promote research on cardiovascular diseases, but also to train and develop young researchers through extended educational programs.
The 256 research projects funded as of today are implemented in 22 countries with researchers of 42 different nationalities. The Scientific Board is chaired by Ezra Suleiman and composed of eminent members of the academic world and AXA Group representatives.
Website and list of supported projects: www.axa-research.org.
See also: Science;Fundamental science; Funding of science;Pascale Cossart, member of the Scientific Board; José Scheinkman, member of the Scientific Board; James Vaupel, member of the Scientific Board; Brian Hoskins, member of the Scientific Board; AXA website


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Allianz

Allianz LifeImage via Wikipedia
As of 2010, it was the world's 12th-largest financial services group and 23rd-largest company according to a composite measure by Forbes magazine.[3]
Its Allianz Global Investors division ranks as a top-five global active investment manager, having €1,443 billion of assets under management (AuM), of which €1,131 billion are third-party assets (as of 2010-09-30), with specialized asset managers such as PIMCO (Bond fund), RCM (Equity fund), Degi (Real estate fund), etc.
Allianz sold Dresdner Bank to Commerzbank in November 2008.[4] As a result of this merger, Allianz gained a 14% controlling stake in the new Commerzbank Group.
Contents [hide]
1 History
1.1 General
1.2 Controversy
2 Recent Management
3 Australia
4 Belgium
5 Canada
6 India
7 Slovakia
8 United Kingdom
9 United States
10 Sports
11 See also
12 References
13 External links
[edit]History

[edit]General
Allianz AG was founded in Berlin on 5th February 1890 by Carl von Thieme (a native of Erfurt, whose father was the director of Thuringia) and Wilhelm von Finck (co-owner of the Merck Finck & Co bank). Allianz shifted its headquarters to Munich in 1949. The first step to become an international company started with the opening of a branch office in London in the late 19th century. After World War II, global business activities were gradually resumed. Allianz opened an office in Paris in the late 1950s, and a management office for Italy in the 1960s. These expansions were followed in the 1970s by the establishment of business in Great Britain, the Netherlands, Spain, Brazil and the United States. In 1986, Allianz acquired Cornhill Insurance PLC, London, and the purchase of a stake in Riunione Adriatica di Sicurità (RAS), Milan, strengthened its presence in Western and Southern Europe in the 1980s. Recently, on February 8, 2006, RAS Shareholders approved the mergers with Allianz. In 1990, Allianz started an expansion into eight Eastern European countries with establishing a presence in Hungary. In the same decade, Allianz also acquired Fireman’s Fund, an insurer in the United States, which was followed by the purchase of Assurances Generales de France (AGF), Paris. These acquisitions were followed by the expansion into Asia with several joint ventures and acquisitions in China and South Korea. Around this time Allianz expanded its asset management business as well by purchasing for example asset management companies in California.
In 2001, Allianz acquired Dresdner Bank, a large German bank. Allianz Group and Dresdner Bank combined their asset management activities by forming Allianz Global Investors. In 2002 Michael Diekmann succeeded Henning Schulte-Noelle as CEO of Allianz AG. The Allianz Group was reincorporated under a European Company Statute and, as a result of the cross-border merger with RAS, Allianz converted into a European Company (SE - Societas Europaea) on October 13, 2006. The Allianz Group also simplified its brand strategy from 2006 and their previous emblem was replaced by the current word-picture brand.[5]
On 31. August 2008, Allianz announced that it would sell its lossmaking unit Dresdner Bank to Commerzbank for a total of 8.8 Bn Euro. Targeted date for the full sale was 2nd term 2009. After renegotiations it was announced in November 2008 that Commerzbank would acquire the 100% ownership of Dresdner Bank earlier (12 January 2009). The sale price was lowered to 5.5 Bn Euro. Shortly after this transaction completed, Commerzbank had to be partially be nationalized by the German government to prevent it from bankruptcy. Allianz is currently keeping around 14% of Commerzbank Shares. The venture into the German banking space is said to have cost the insurance giant about 30-35 Bn Euro.
Allianz is now present in more than 70 countries with over 180,000 employees. At the top of the international group is the holding company, Allianz SE, with its head office in Munich. Allianz Group provides its more than 60 million customers worldwide with a comprehensive range of services in the areas of
• property and casualty insurance,
• life and health insurance,
• asset management and banking.
[edit]Controversy

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Henning Schulte-Noelle was the first CEO of Allianz who took up the history with the Third Reich when he commissioned an Archive for Corporate History in 1993, which was opened in 1996. In 1997 Schulte-Noelle asked Gerald D. Feldman, historian from the University of California-Berkeley, if he would undertake a larger research project on Allianz's past involvement with the Third Reich. Feldman started the research in 1998 with a team of young historians. A few month later, Jewish World War II survivors and their descendants took Allianz and other European insurance companies to court, accusing them of unpaid insurance policies. Allianz and four other insurers supported the creation of the "International Commission on Holocaust Era Insurance Claims" (ICHEIC). Furthermore, Allianz became a founding member of the German Foundation "Remembrance, Responsibility and Future". Both organizations took care of payments for the victims. Feldman published the comprehensive results of his research in September 2001. Based on these results Allianz established an exhibition in the Archive for Corporate History and on the Internet.
The research concluded that Allianz, as an organization and through its corporate officers, was forced to comply with the Nazi Regime and the Third Reich, starting as early as the early 1930s and continuing all the way through to the collapse of the Third Reich.
Among the more notable examples:
Allianz managers held senior positions in the administration of national socialist Germany. Kurt Schmitt, director general of Allianz until 1933, was Hitler’s Reich Economics Minister from June 1933 until January 1935. He became a member of both the Nazi Party and the SS in 1933. Eduard Hilgard, member of the board of Allianz, became head of the "Reich Group for Insurance" in 1934. He represented the insurance industry in a conference summoned by Hermann Göring after the November Pogrom of 1938. Hilgard reported on the material damages caused during the Kristallnacht Pogrom and the estimated amounts of money insurance companies had to cover.
Feldman summarized his findings stating: "It was just one more piece of business in the Third Reich, but it demonstrated that such pieces on any large scale made contact at some point with all that is represented by the name “Auschwitz” – from slave labor to extermination – virtually inescapable.“[6]
[edit]Recent Management

CEOs to date:
2003 — Present : Michael Diekmann
1991 — 2003: Henning Schulte-Noelle
[edit]Australia



Allianz around the world
Allianz Australia Limited (ABN 21 000 006 226) operates throughout Australia and New Zealand and through its subsidiaries offers a range of insurance and risk management products and services. Subsidiaries of Allianz Australia include Club Marine, Allianz Life and Hunter Premium Funding.
[edit]Belgium

Allianz operates through Allianz Belgium, previously AGF Belgium which has been re-branded to Allianz Belgium on the 29 November 2007.
[edit]Canada

Allianz put a sudden halt to its Canadian P&C operation Allianz Canada (market share 2%) in 2004 after several years of unfavorable business results. Allianz originally entered the Canadian market in the early 1990s through an acquisition of several North American insurers, namely the American Firemans Fund and the Canadian Surety. Upon the market exit the personal and commercial lines unit was sold off to the market leader ING Canada, whereas its industrial underwriting branch was bought by Allianz US, which has retained the Toronto office.
[edit]India

In India Bajaj Allianz General Insurance Company Limited is a joint venture between Bajaj Finserv Limited (recently demerged from Bajaj Auto Limited) and Allianz SE.
Bajaj allianz is one of the fastest growing private life insurance company in india.This has more than 1200 branches across country and deals in primarily unitlinked,traditional,health,child and pension policies.
Also, Allianz Cornhill Information Services (ACIS) is a captive offshore facility of Allianz Insurance plc, operating from the Technopark in Thiruvananthapuram(Trivandrum), offering both IT and ITES services. ACIS is a CMMI Level 5 company providing world-class Application Development and Maintenance services to Allianz Insurance in the UK and some other Allianz companies. ACIS is also a pioneer of the ITeS industry in Kerala and is ISO 9001-2000 certified for its Business Process Operations.
[edit]Slovakia



Allianz - Slovenská poisťovňa headquarters, Bratislava
Allianz started its life and Property & Casualty (P&C) operation in Slovakia in 1993 but the local subsidiary was never able to achieve a relevant market share. In 2001 Allianz AG bought the majority ownership in then state-owned Slovenská poisťovňa (SP, Slovak Insurance Company), at the time suffering from political mismanagement, asset-stripping and deep under-reserving. SP however held a market share of well over 50%, which had made it an attractive privatization target, where Allianz had to compete with such insurers as AXA or Aegon. Upon the purchase the local Allianz operation was merged with SP creating a new company Allianz - Slovenská poisťovňa. Its combined market share (life and P&C) presently stands at just below 40% (about 50% in P&C business), still making it by far the market leader.
[edit]United Kingdom

Allianz owns British insurance company Cornhill Insurance plc, subsequently renamed Allianz Cornhill Insurance plc. This then simply became Allianz Insurance plc on 30 April 2007 to directly reflect its continental parentage. Their IT captive unit in India Allianz Cornhill Information Services plc is located at Technopark, Trivandrum in Kerala.
Allianz owned Kleinwort Benson which it inherited when it bought Dresdner Bank. The investment bank has subsequently been merged with the corporate bank of Dresdner Bank and rebranded as Dresdner Kleinwort. It also owns the High Net Worth insurance broker Home and Legacy.bajaj allianj has more than 1200 branches across country and deals in primarily unitlinked,traditionl,health,child and pension policies.bajaj allianz is one of the fastest growing private life insurance company in india.
[edit]United States

Allianz has a growing prevalence within the United States, notably Allianz Life Insurance Company of North America and Firemen's Fund. Allianz Life Insurance Company of North America employs close to 2000 employees. Allianz also owns Pacific Investment Management Company, commonly called PIMCO.
[edit]Sports

Allianz provided naming rights for the Allianz Arena, a football stadium in the north of Munich, Germany, which is sponsored by Allianz. The two professional Munich football clubs Bayern Munich and TSV 1860 München have played their home games at Allianz Arena since the start of the 2005–06 season. Both clubs had previously played their home games at the Munich Olympic Stadium; Bayern Munich since 1972 and 1860 München since the 1990s.
Allianz owned the Polish football team Gornik Zabrze till April 2011 when has sold shares in controversial way.
Allianz had been in negotiations with the New York Jets and the Giants to buy naming rights to the New Meadowlands Stadium in East Rutherford, NJ, but those talks ended due to opposition from Jewish groups and holocaust survivors.[7]
Allianz has been involved in Formula One since 2000, firstly as a sponsor of the AT&T WilliamsF1 Team, and since 2011 as a sponsor of the Mercedes GP Petronas team.
In early 2009, Allianz signed an agreement to become the Global Partner of the St. Andrews Links Trust.

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