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Cyber-risk next big market in captives

Jereme Ramsay, left, Muhammad Khan, Emilio Figueroa and Michelle Sivanayson at the Bermuda Captive Conference on Wednesday (Photograph by Akil Simmons)

As cyberthreats grow more sophisticated, captive insurance programmes are stepping up to fill a widening protection gap. Experts say the market for cyber-coverage remains limited and expensive, but captives are proving to be one of the most adaptable tools to manage the rising risk.

“Cyber-risk itself, and then privacy concerns ... [are] the most creative, historically speaking in insurance technology,“ said Muhammad Khan, partner at Deloitte, speaking at the Bermuda Captive Conference on Wednesday at the Hamilton Princess Hotel & Beach Club.

He added that “access of cyber-coverage in our industry [is] limited... the pricing of those coverages was [challenging]” during the industry’s shift toward tech-driven risk solutions.

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Bermuda is already playing an outsized role. In 2022, Bermuda-based insurers and groups wrote or consolidated $7.5 billion in global cyber gross written premiums.

That is more than half the worldwide total, and the local captive market is expanding. Cyber-related premiums rose 14 per cent that year to $172 million, with 33 Bermuda captives offering some form of cyber-coverage.

Why captives? Their flexibility. These specialised insurance structures can isolate digital risk, tailor coverage and offer fast access to claims and capital — advantages traditional carriers often struggle to match.

“I look at captives and cyber, because for me, cyber can be a super systemic risk on a national or global level,” said Emilio Figueroa, head of insurance at Eventual Weather. “So placing cyber-coverage, or creating your own cyberprogrammes and placing them within the captive space ... minimising exposure or additional exposure that you may have across all nations, [is] super important to do and adaptive [to be] trying to deal with.”

But protecting against cyberthreats takes more than just a policy. “These technologies require that everyone within the organisation ... needs to have good understanding of the quality,” Mr Khan said, pointing to the need for a company-wide approach to cyber-resilience.

With the global cyberinsurance market expected to grow from $10.3 billion to $17.6 billion by 2028, and the overall captive market forecast to hit $250 billion, experts said captives may be the future of cyberprotection.

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Published June 13, 2025 at 7:59 am (Updated June 13, 2025 at 7:33 am)

Cyber-risk next big market in captives

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