Multinational corporations are inserting clauses related to China-Taiwan tensions into commercial contracts as fears rise regarding possible Chinese action around the democratically ruled island.
London's marine insurance market has added Sudan to its of areas deemed high risk this week amid further fighting in the conflict-ridden African country, reported Reuters citing an advisory note from the Joint War Committee.
Nine out of 10 companies have suffered a political risk loss in the past year, transforming political risk from a low frequency, high severity peril into 'everyone's risk' according to the sixth annual political risk survey produced by WTW.
2022 saw the first global hardening of the Terrorism & Political Violence market in over 15 years, says Mr James Borrie, global head of Broking-Terrorism & Political Violence Practice, at WTW.
Most of SMEs in Singapore are not supplementing their digitalisation strategies with adequate protection measures nor tapping into the support available to them according to a new survey conducted by QBE Singapore.
Companies may face 'heightened' and growing risk of political violence and civil protests driving losses through damage to buildings or business disruption according to a new report by Allianz Global Corporate & Specialty (AGCS).
Experts at the credit rating firm Agusto & Co sees the political environment in Nigeria as shaping insurance activities this year.
Geopolitical uncertainties and instability and slow global economic recovery will drive global risk higher for Chinese companies' overseas investments.
Consumers now attach greater importance to factors such as local production, climate protection, and fair working conditions, forcing manufacturers to act according to a new survey by Oliver Wyman and GFU Maschinenbau GmbH.
Organisations have been put into 'perma-crisis' mode with global risks from geopolitics to the cost of living threatening productivity going into 2023 according to a new report from International SOS.