Ben Dyson - insurance reporter covering the EMEA region at S&P Global Market Intelligence

Ben Dyson – insurance reporter covering the EMEA region at S&P Global Market Intelligence

Ben Dyson is an insurance reporter covering the EMEA region at S&P Global Market Intelligence. He has been a financial journalist for 23 years, and has covered insurance and reinsurance for 20 of those years.

Before joining S&P Global Market Intelligence in November 2017 Ben was finance editor at Insurance Times, a publication focusing on the U.K. general insurance market. He started his journalism career at Reactions, a magazine covering the global reinsurance market.

Latest reviews by Ben Dyson
Losses of Earthquakes in Turkey: Residential vs Commercial Insurance Claims & Premiums " class="attachment-csco-thumbnail size-csco-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="Losses of Earthquakes in Turkey: Residential vs Commercial Insurance Claims & Premiums">
Losses of Earthquakes in Turkey: Residential vs Commercial Insurance Claims & Premiums
The estimated insurance claims bill from the sequence of earthquakes that hit Turkey and Syria earlier in February appears to be growing
Re/insurance Rate Hikes Should Spur Investor Interest in Reinsurance Sector " class="attachment-csco-thumbnail size-csco-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="Re/insurance Rate Hikes Should Spur Investor Interest in Reinsurance Sector">
Re/insurance Rate Hikes Should Spur Investor Interest in Reinsurance Sector
While insurers may have winced at the spike in property-catastrophe prices at the Jan. 1 renewals, the resulting rate hikes and new policy terms should spur investor interest
How High Reinsurance Costs Will Impact for European Insurers Operating Margins? " class="attachment-csco-thumbnail size-csco-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="How High Reinsurance Costs Will Impact for European Insurers Operating Margins?">
How High Reinsurance Costs Will Impact for European Insurers Operating Margins?
The "key focus" will be on how high reinsurance costs will impact their operating margins and how much risk exposure they keep on their own balance sheets