brown & brown plants its flag in the united kingdom
TRANSCRIPT
Brown & Brown Plants Its Flag in the
United Kingdom
Presentation Agenda• Industry Profile•Company Profile• Why Expand Internationally?
–Bermuda
–Ireland
–United Kingdom
• Lloyd’s of London• UK Expansion• Mode of Entry• Finance• Impact Assessment
Industry Profile
• Diversified Insurance Agency, Brokerage and Services Organization (“Broker”)
• Intermediary – Not the Risk-Bearer (Insurer)
• Paid Commissions (% of Premiums) and Fees
Industry Profile
Industry ProfileRank Company 2008
Brokerage Revenues
% Change 2008Employees
2008Offices
1 Marsh and Mclennan Co’s Inc.
11,516,000,000 3.80% 54,400 700
2 Aon Corp. 7,310,000,000 4.50% 37,700 397
3 Willis Group Holding’s Ltd.
3,362,000,000 36.50% 17,000 397
4 Wells Fargo Insurance Services
Inc.
1,743,062,000 35.95% 7,905 213
5 Arthur J. Gallagher and Co.
1,611,302,000 5.76% 9,863 200
6 Jardine Lloyd Thompson Group
P.L.C.
992,843,665 4.80% 5,488 76
7 Brown &Brown Inc. 965,982,617 5.61% 5,398 132
8 BB&T Insurance Services
962,134,200 9.66% 4,462 109
9 Gras Savoye & Cie 786,368,400 15.58% 3,650 102
10 Lockton Co’s LLC 778,345,000 6.89% 3,840 48
Company Profile
• Founded in 1939 in Daytona Beach, FL
• Brown & Brown is currently ranked as the 6th largest insurance broker in the U.S. and 7th largest in the world (based on the July 2009 ranking by Business Insurance magazine)
• 170+ Offices, in 40 States and (now) UK
• $977.6 Million in Revenues in 2008
Company Profile
Brown & Owen
19391939 1980-19821980-1982
Changed name back to
Brown & Brown
19931993
AcquiredRiedman Insurance
agency with$54 millionin revenue
2004200419551955
Brown & Owen foundedin Daytona Beach, FL
19991999 20022002
Raised $150million of equity for
acquisitions
20012001 20082008
AcquiredHull & Co.
with$63 millionin revenue
20052005
-2-
Revenue - $45,821
OP $ - $6,511
OP % - 14.2%
“2nd Defining Moment”
Becoming a publiccompany.
Merger with Poe & Assoc. to form
Poe & Brown; revenue$86.1 million
2008 Revenue of 977.6M
Raised 200M for new
acquisitions
“1st Defining Moment”Focus on operating profits
not revenues1980 - $2mm @ 16% OP%1982 - $4mm @ 8% OP%
Company Profile
4 Business Segments:
Company Profile
• Intermediate Goal: “B-40”
– $1 Billion in Revenues
– 40% Margin (about twice industry average)
– Should be reached in 2009-2010
• Next Goal: “DA” (Double Again)
– $2 Billion in Revenues
– Maintain 40% Margin
Company Profile
Long-Term Strategy - FOUR PILLARS:
• We’re in the Money-Making Business
• We’re in the Recruiting and Enhancing of People Business
• We’re in the Selling and Servicing of Insurance Business
• We’re in the Make-No-BIG-Mistakes Business
Why Expand Internationally?4 GENERAL OBJECTIVES:
• Acquire Resources from foreign countries
• Minimize Competitive Risk – counter advantages competitors might gain in foreign markets that could hurt you domestically
• Expand Sales to foreign markets
• Diversify Sources of Sales and Supplies – take advantage of business cycle differences among countries
B&B OBJECTIVES:
• Key Consideration: access to global insurance market
• Secondary Consideration: establish presence in global brokerage industry, divert business from competitors
• Not an objective - US markets provide best laws, taxes, margins
• Not a consideration
Why Expand Internationally?
SHOW ME THE MONEY!
Why Expand Internationally?
• Insurance Brokers place risks with insurers located inside and outside U.S.
• Difficult/unusual coverages
• Reinsurance
• Captive insurance companies
• Usually placed through local brokers
• UK, Bermuda, Ireland top 3 non-US markets
Bermuda
ADVANTAGES: DISADVANTAGES:
• Proximity to US
• Politically Stable
• Educated Workforce
• Cooperative Regulatory Environment
• 1 of Top 3 Reinsurance Jurisdictions
• Efficient, Innovative
• No Income Tax
• US targeting “tax havens”
• Protective labor laws
• Current business inflow from B&B lower than to Lloyd’s
Ireland
ADVANTAGES: DISADVANTAGES:
• EU Member
• Politically Stable
• Educated Workforce
• Tax Benefits for Brokers– 5% on Foreign Dividends
(vs. 30% for Bermuda)
– Tax Treaties with Other Countries
• Growing Insurance Center
• EU Member – More Pro-Employee Labor
Laws than US, UK
• Still relatively small market for US risks
• Current business inflow from B&B lower than to Lloyd’s
United Kingdom
ADVANTAGES:
• Politically Stable
• Educated Workforce
• Lloyd’s of London
• Currently doing business in the market
DISADVANTAGES:
• May Join EU
Lloyd's of London
One of World’s Largest Insurance & Reinsurance Markets
Lloyd’s of London
What is Lloyd's of London An insurance Market – not an insurance company Deals in Reinsurance and Insurance for large and
complex risks Spreads Risk to limit liability to single entity Increases capacity of direct insurer Contract between insurer and reinsurer
No direct link to client
Lloyd’s of London• Who does Business with Lloyd's
– 93% of Dow Jones Industrial Average Companies
– 92% of FTSE 100 Companies
– 86% of Fortune Top 50 European Companies
– 81% of Fortune 500 US Companies
– Top 7 Pharmaceutical Companies
– Top 20 Banks
– Insurance/Reinsurance Solutions in over 200 Territories worldwide; US is largest market
– 2008 Global Written Premiums: £16.9BN (US$24.7BN)
Lloyd’s of London
• How Lloyd's is Organized– The Society of Lloyd’s
•Made up of Members
– Syndicates
– Managing Agents
– Brokers
Lloyd’s of London Society of Members
Capital Providers Not Owners/Shareholders of Lloyd's
Underwrite in Syndicates
Compete for business within Lloyd's market
Offers choice
Controls pricing
Professional Underwriters accept risk on behalf of Syndicates
Members are not responsible for each others losses
Lloyd’s of London Syndicates
Groups of Society Members Pools capital of members Assumes the risk of underwritting Spreads risk among members in group
Lloyd’s of London Managing Agents
Companies established specifically to oversee Syndicates Sponsor and Manage Syndicates on members behalf Determine Members capacity for commitments Employ Underwriters to write contracts Communicate directly with Brokers Can rapidly assume or decline contracts
Lloyd’s of London
• Brokers
– act as gatekeepers– Intermediary between clients and
Syndicates– Negotiate competitive terms– Get immediate access to decision
makers– Accredited by Lloyd's– Retain part of commissions for
placing business into Lloyd’s market
Lloyd’s of London
Why Be a Lloyd’s Broker?
Vertical Integration: Direct access to Managing Agents Obtain brokerage commissions paid to current (non-B&B)
Lloyd’s Brokers B&B currently does business with
(“Second (third?) bite at the apple”)
Lloyd’s of London How to become a Lloyd's Broker
Regulatory Approval from Appropriate body Support from at least one Managing Agent
•Terms of Business Agreement Adequate knowledge and systems to conduct business at
Lloyd's Professional Indemnity Insurance
UK Expansion
DECUS INSURANCE BROKERS, LTD.:• Organized as England & Wales company September
2007• Indirect Subsidiary of Brown & Brown, Inc.• Created to place specialty lines of insurance
business including Property, Professional Liability and Binding Authority programs
• Authorized with FSA February 2008• Appointed as Lloyd’s Broker February 2008
UK Expansion
UK Expansion
Decus Market Strategy: • Capture Commissions currently being retained by
Lloyd’s brokers for little/no actual work (2 -3 bites at apple)
• Beachhead: Start with B&B-placed business– E.g., Move Force-Placed Hazard Insurance Program
previously placed with Lloyd’s Broker owned by US competitor Arthur J. Gallagher
• Extend to other agents/brokers placing business into Lloyd’s market
UK Expansion
What does “Decus” mean anyway?• Latin inscription on British coins: “Decus Et
Tutamen” (“An Ornament and a Safeguard”)
– Refers to milling/lettering on coin, and to Monarch depicted on coin
Mode of Entry• Modes of Entry
– Acquisition
• No asset acquisitions in UK; only stock – taking the good, the bad and the ugly
• Tried – and (luckily) failed – in 2006; “winning” bidder took huge loss due to overpayment for business and employee benefit plan wind-down costs
• Will still (carefully) consider acquisition opportunities; more one-off hires
– Joint Venture
• JV = partnership between two entities
• Joint control
• Split profits
• Shared legal liability
Mode of Entry– Foreign Subsidiary (Foreign Direct Investment) -
• Advantages =
– Control
– 100% ownership of Profits
• Challenges =
– Establishing UK subsidiary – process more complex than in US
– Regulatory approval from Financial Services Authority – more involved than State insurance departments in US
– Broker Appointment from Lloyd’s – greater scrutiny for foreign-owned brokers; local direct management required (in reading, a “multidomestic” or “locally responsive” company approach)
– Higher Operating Costs, Operating Complexity
» Rents, salaries, taxes higher than in US
» Establish, administer separate UK benefit plans
» Tax repatriation
• Labor laws more pro-employee (e.g., no at-will employment; restrictive covenants
more difficult to enforce)
Finance
• COST OF ACQUISITION / START UP : $1 MM
• FUNDED INTERNALLY VIA CAPITAL RAISED IN 2004
• PROFITABLE IN FIRST AND SECOND YEAR FOLLOWING START UP.
Finance
2009 Through Sep 30 Budget Actual Total 09
Revenues $19.5M $20.4M $26M
Operating Profits $100K $900K $1.2M
Impact Assessment
Questions?
Comments?