Archive for September 5th, 2023

From clicks to claims: emerging trends and risks of big techs’ foray into insurance

September 5, 2023
Denise Garcia Ocampo, Jatin Taneja, Jeffery Yong and Julie Zhu in this BIS article discuss how BigTechs are foraying into insurance:

Big techs have entered the insurance business due to the rapid growth of the digital economy and the increased adoption of technological innovations in the insurance value chain. Big techs’ entry into the insurance market can bring benefits but also poses a number of supervisory challenges, similar to those arising from their involvement in other financial sectors.

This paper provides an overview of big techs’ involvement in insurance in 14 jurisdictions, analysing their involvement from three main perspectives according to the activity they perform: as risk carriers, intermediaries or service providers. Currently, big techs’ regulated insurance activities as risk carriers or insurance intermediaries are limited. Nonetheless, similar to their presence in other financial sectors, big techs have a large footprint in the insurance sector as technology service providers (eg cloud computing).

Due to the potential for big techs to rapidly scale, and the additional risks they entail compared with incumbent players, insurance supervisors should remain vigilant. The insurance activities of big techs are covered under existing insurance regulatory requirements, though none are specific to big techs. As such, from a broader system-wide perspective, big techs’ entry into financial services including insurance may require regulatory frameworks, based on suitable international standards, that encompass all these activities and the risks they entail, including those beyond the remit of sectoral regulations.

Scholars at risk: Professional networks and escape from persecution in Nazi Germany

September 5, 2023

Sascha O. Becker, Volker Lindenthal, Sharun Mukand and Fabian Waldinger in this voxeu article:

Scholars around the world are increasingly at risk of persecution for their political views, ethnicity, and religion. This column studies the role of professional networks in the emigration of Jewish academics who fled Nazi Germany. Academics with ties to colleagues who had emigrated before 1934 were more likely to emigrate themselves, as early émigrés functioned as a bridge, facilitating emigration to their new homes. Weighing the relative importance of different networks, the authors find that social ties decay over time while, for highly skilled migrants, professional networks eclipse community networks.

Keep calm and bank on: panic-driven bank runs and the role of public communication

September 5, 2023
Damiano Sandri, Francesco Grigoli, Yuriy Gorodnichenko and Olivier Coibion in this BIS research analyse collapse of Silicon Valley Bank:

Using a survey with information treatments conducted in the aftermath of SVB’s collapse, we study households’ perspectives on bank stability, the potential for panic-driven bank runs, and the role of public communication. When informed about SVB’s collapse, households become more likely to withdraw deposits, due to both a higher perceived risk of bank failure and higher expected losses on deposits in case of bank failure.

Leveraging hypothetical questions and the exogenous variation in beliefs generated by the information treatments, we show that households reallocate deposit withdrawals primarily into other banks and cash, with little passthrough into spending.

Information about FDIC insurance and communication about bank stability by the Federal Reserve can reassure depositors, while communication from political leaders only influences their electoral base.


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