The surety bond market is healthy and ample capacity exists across the spectrum from small contractors to the very largest multinational contractors. Over the past 15 years, the insurance and surety industries have experienced considerable consolidation. As a result, there are fewer companies, but these larger companies are strong and more diversified. Liberty Mutual, State Auto, ACSTAR, American Southern, ACE, Capital Indemnity, CBIC, CNA/Western, First Sealord, Merchants Bonding, HCC Surety, Hartford, INSCO DICO, and Zurich are active markets that work with one or more of our experts.
Roland Richter, vice president–marketing at Liberty Mutual Surety, explains how Liberty Mutual, as the second largest surety in the United States, approaches agents and customers. “Following Liberty Mutual’s acquisition of Ohio Casualty in 2007, and Safeco in 2008, we listened to our agents and responded to their need for dedicated and separate underwriting expertise for the small to middle market and for the upper middle market to mega capacity market. We merged the small market capabilities of Ohio Casualty bonding and, Safeco’s First National surety program with Liberty Mutual’s sizable small surety portfolio to provide agents with a single, blended underwriting unit solely dedicated to serving small to lower middle contractors and commercial surety capacity needs.”
In 2010, Liberty Mutual Surety launched a new small to middle market surety division called Liberty SuretyFirst. Lloyd Geary, senior vice president and chief underwriting officer of Liberty SuretyFirst, explains, “Our market focus ranges from the first bond for very small contractors to middle market contractors with work programs up to $25 million. Contractors that outgrow Liberty SuretyFirst are seamlessly transitioned to the large-capacity capabilities of our parent division, Liberty Mutual Surety.”
This new division and the increasing appetite of many surety markets is good news for agents and their smaller contractor clients. Helen Parker, bond specialist–manager at Arlington/Roe, explains, “In our marketing territory of Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, and Tennessee, smaller contractors represent of the majority of our business.”
Underwriting smaller contractors can be considerably different from underwriting larger contractors because only limited financial information is required when using small contractor credit-based surety programs. According to Susan A. Sallada, CIC, president of Universal Service Agency, smaller contractors are primarily underwritten using personal credit scores. Changes in personal credit scores caused by unpaid medical bills, divorce, disputed charges, loan co-signing, etc., can be significant. These, in turn, directly affect the ability of contractors to use small contractors surety programs.
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