Modern Captive Insurance: A Legal Guide to Formation, Operation, and Exit Strategies

$139.95
by Matthew Queen

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Insurance is a sophisticated financial vehicle that can be best understood through the lens of risk management. Experiencing dramatic growth, captive insurance is owned and controlled by its insureds, pooling the risks of its owners. Captive insurance provides businesses with unmatched flexibility regarding coverage, claims, premium, and control, while also offering advantages such as lucrative dividends and innovative financing techniques. This state-of-the-art guide traces the development of small captive insurance and addresses how to set up and properly manage a captive. Modern Captive Insurance: A Legal Guide to Formation, Operation, and Exit Strategies , begins with an overview of what captive insurance is and detail the advantages in setting up a captive for a range of different business situations. Chapters explain how to incorporate and start up a new captive insurance program, including basic terminology and the roles different professionals play in running captive programs. Captive insurance is an intricate yet effective risk management strategy. For guidance in properly establishing a captive, the authors address critical issues evaluated by the IRS, such as risk shifting and distribution, and explore ethical considerations arising out of off-shore captive management, such as how to identify money laundering red flags and how to properly manage the investments of reserves. Modern Captive Insurance takes an in-depth look at the topics and issues that are common in insurance and in businesses, but are often handled differently for captives, such as: Financial statements, investments, and financial ratings - Policy drafting and coverage - Risk pools and structuring the pooling arrangement to be valid - Federal, state and local taxation - Tax-exempt organizations - Risk retention groups (RRP) - Reinsurance, and more Table of Contents Chapter 1: Captive Company Formation Chapter 2: Captives and Capitalists Chapter 3: Risk Pools Chapter 4: Financial Statements, Investments, and Financial Ratings Chapter 5: Policy Drafting and Coverage Chapter 6: Underwriting and Claims Reserving Chapter 7: Federal Income Tax and Captives Chapter 8: State and Local Captive Insurance Issues Chapter 9: Tax-Exempt Organizations and Captive Insurance Chapter 10: Risk Retention Groups and How They Work Chapter 11: Reinsurance Chapter 12: Workers' Compensation and the Grand Bargain Chapter 13: Employee Benefits Conclusion Table of Cases and Index Matthew Queen serves as General Counsel for Venture Captive Management, LLC, and is a regular speaker at domestic and international captive insurance and alternative risk financing conferences. He consults with middle market CEOs and business owners regarding taxation, risk financing, insurance defense litigation, and international business transactions. His practice focuses on corporate regulatory and transactional matters for a variety of captive insurance companies and risk retention groups. In addition to this treatise, Matthew has authored several technical articles exploring applications of captive insurance to emerging markets and navigating captive insurance companies through changes to the tax code. A band nerd at heart (trombone), Matthew graduated from the Georgia Institute of Technology with a Bachelor of Science in Business Management and then completed his Juris Doctorate and Masters of Taxation at Georgia State University. He is happily married and enjoys Olympic weightlifting as well as hiking through the Georgia mountains. Light Townsend is an attorney with the firm Drummond Wehle Yonge, LLP, in Tampa, Florida. Light’s clients include small to medium-sized businesses— and the individuals who own and run them. He focuses his practice on assisting these clients in understanding and complying with complex federal tax planning, particularly as it relates to estate planning, business planning, succession planning, wealth preservation, risk management, and asset protection. In addition to his work on this treatise, Light is an active member in the Florida Bar Tax Section, helping to write technical advice memoranda and comments regarding changes in the tax code.  As a graduate research assistant for Philip Postlewaite, Light edited the eighth edition of Professor Postlewaite’s West-published treatise Partnership Taxation. Light received his LLM in Taxation with Honors from Northwestern University Pritzker College of Law, his Juris Doctorate from Florida State University, and his Bachelor of Science from Auburn University. He enjoys fishing, cooking, and playing the guitar in his free time.

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