Global Peer2peer Insurance Market Report: Background, Potential, Problems, and Regulations with Profiles of Every Known Peer-to-Peer Platform


Dublin, Feb. 27, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "Peer2peer Insurance" report to their offering.

The insurance ecosystem is undergoing transformation and innovation like never before, and what we have seen is only the beginning. From distribution to pricing, product development to underwriting claims servicing to compliance - no part of the insurance value chain is safe from change.

Insurance companies will need to work hard to transform their core operations to become agile and low cost and customer centric. Some will meet a Blockbuster/Kodak type fate by failing to transform properly. Those that succeed in their transformation will have both scale and agility and will thrive. FinTech is a spectrum of technology innovations and start -ups that demonstrate disruptive potential in applications, processes, products, or business models in the financial industry.

As FinTech continues to develop and evolve, providing solutions to insurance, it faces a problem of balancing consumer protection with innovation. Unlike other areas of technology, FinTech requires a certain degree of fiduciary duty to their users - bringing questions of regulation, security, and compliance to the forefront.

The sharing economy is developing peer-to-peer insurance. Peer to peer lending was laughed at by bankers- now they scramble to offer loans and buy loan books. Will insurers and brokers regret ignoring peer-to-peer insurance? Some platforms are built to work with insurers and re-insurers, but others have built them out of the mix. There are over 40 platforms globally and others on the way. Lemonade has just launched in New York to be the first peer to peer insurer in the USA.

Peer to peer insurance is a new form of technology driven by a social insurance model. Some platforms are well thought out, others are by techie dreamers with no understanding of regulation, law or insurance. Most peer-to- peer platforms are - or wrongly claim to be - neither broker nor insurer, so how do they work and how to they make money? Why is a mutual promise to pay not insurance? How does Blockchain technology and Bitcoin fit into this mix?

The basis is creating a series of separate pools, unconnected to each other, so each pool only pays its claims, with none of the traditional cross subsidisation of traditional insurance. Some require payment but others are just promises to pay. The regulation in most countries is often unclear and several regulators are
already looking at the implications.

This report looks at the background, potential, problems, and regulation, as well as profiles of every known peer-to-peer platform.

The author of 'Peer2peer Insurance' comments- Peer to peer insurance is very new and often misunderstood: with even many platform founders confused if they are an insurer, broker, techie idea- and whether they are legal or illegal. Regulators are taking notice- with some being very supportive and others preparing to close platforms they consider to be illegal. Peer to peer will stimulate change and make insurance quicker, simpler and more transparent. As in direct insurance decades ago, one or two of the newcomers will become national or international successes; while others will be taken over by existing insurers, and those insurers who ignore the lessons will die."

Key Topics Covered:

1. Introduction

2. Global overview

3. Customer centricity

4. History

5. Key trends


7. Regulation overview

8. Country by country regulation

9. Active insurers

10. Not yet active insurers

11. Active brokers and agents

12. Not yet active brokers and agents

13. Active platforms

14. Not yet active platforms

15. What they insure or plan to insure

16. Business Models overview

17. Business models as insurers

18. Business models as brokers

19. Business models as platforms only

20. How insurers make money

21. How brokers make money

22. How platforms make money

23. Payment systems

24. Claims

25. Customers

26. Costs

27. Mutuals

28. Reinsurance

29. Innovation

30. Sharing economy

31. Social media

32. Reputation economy

33. Crowd funding

34. Crowd funded banks

35. Crowd funded insurers

36. Peer to peer lending

37. How peer to peer lending works

38. Peer to peer property rental

39. Peer to peer car sharing

40. New payment models

41. Bitcoin

42. Technology

43. Blockchain technology

44. Blockchain and insurance

45. Smart insurance contracts

46. Decentralised autonomous organisations

47. Ethereum

48. Innovation labs

49. Role of Governments and NGOs

50. Future

Companies Mentioned

- Allied Peers
- Amalfi
- Axieme
- besure
- BitPark
- BoughtByMany
- Broodfunds
- CommonEasy
- Cycle Syndicate
- DarWinsurance
- DeductibleShield
- Dynamis
- First Club Insurance
- Friendsurance
- Gaggel
- Gather
- Glow
- Guevara
- Huddle Money
- Insbee
- Inspool
- InsPeer
- Intercare
- Jetty
- Jointly
- KarmaCoverage
- Ledger Investing
- Lemonade
- Lfn
- Otherwise
- P2P Protect
- PeerCover
- PeersMutual Protection
- PeerSure
- Quark Alliance
- Quilt
- Riovic
- SHAcom
- so -sure
- Teambrella
- TongJu Bao
- TribeCha
- Tribe Friendship Insurance
- Tribe Cover\
- Uvamo
- Versicherix
- Wecover
- WeKeep
- Wesura
- WorldCover
- Zero

For more information about this report visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/r5mb8r/peer2peer



            

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