The practice of underwriting emerged in the same London coffeehouses that operated as the unofficial stock exchange for the British Empire. In the late 1600s, shipping was just beginning between the New World and the old as colonies were being established and exotic goods were ferried back. A coffeehouse owned by Edward Lloyd, later of Lloyd's of London, was the primary meeting place for merchants, ship owners and others seeking insurance.
A basic system for funding voyages to the new world was established. In the first stage, merchants and companies would seek funding from venture capitalists. The venture capitalists would help find people who wanted to be colonists, usually those from the more desperate areas of London, and would purchase provisions for the voyage. In exchange, the venture capitalists would be guaranteed some of the returns from the goods the colonists would produce or find in the Americas. It was widely believed that you couldn't take two left turns in America without finding a deposit of gold or other precious metals. When it turned out that this wasn't exactly true, venture capitalists still funded voyages for a share of the new bumper crop: tobacco.
After the voyage was secured by venture capitalists, the merchants and ship owners would go to Lloyd's and hand over a copy of the ship's cargo to be read to the investors and underwriters who gathered there. The people interested in taking on the risk for a set premium would sign at the bottom of the manifest beneath the figure indicating what share of the cargo they were taking responsibility for (hence, underwriting). In this way, a single voyage would have multiple underwriters, who would try to spread their risk as well by taking shares in several different voyages.
By 1654, Blaise Pascal, the Frenchman who gave us the first calculator, and his countryman Pierre de Fermat discovered a way to express probabilities and, thereby, understand levels of risk. Pascal's triangle led to the first actuary tables that were, and still are, used when calculating insurance rates. These formalized the practice of underwriting and made insurance more affordable.
Source: Andrew Beattie is a managing editor and contributor at Investopedia.com.
Showing posts with label smart term calculator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label smart term calculator. Show all posts
Monday, 28 February 2011
Wednesday, 9 February 2011
What Is The Smart Term Calculator?
Find out more about this question from our Frequently Asked Questions Series in the YouTube video below. If you have any further questions, please contact SmartTerm Life Insurance today at 1-866-699-TERM (8376). Our agents will be happy to assist you.
Why You Want Mortgage Insurance?
Check out the video below to find out why. The SmartTerm Insurance Company team has created these videos based on Frequently Asked Questions. Please click below for your quick tutorial. If you have any further questions, please contact SmartTerm Life Insurance today at 1-866-699-TERM (8376). Our agents will be happy to assist you.
Is Your Life Insurance Costing You Too Much?
SmartTerm Life Insurance has assembled some of our Frequently Asked Questions for you to peruse. We have recorded them for your convenience and placed them on YouTube. Please click below for a quick tutorial. If you have any further questions, please contact SmartTerm Life Insurance today at 1-866-699-TERM (8376). Our agents will be happy to assist you.
Wednesday, 26 January 2011
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)