Invest, but at your own peril

The US$2 billion in catastrophe bond issues in late 2010 – which brought total issuance for the year to US$4.8 billion, making it the second strongest year on record – saw the return of these diversifiers, or “non-US peak cat” instruments, according to Willis Capital Markets & Advisory. The return of diversification was welcomed by the market, Willis stated. A soft traditional reinsurance market, supported by an excess of capital, was able to absorb most global catastrophe risks at prices well below those in the catastrophe bond market. “As a consequence, ILS supply has been dominated by the peak US perils of hurricane and earthquake, where traditional reinsurance supply is more limited,” the brokerage stated. But for superannuation funds, catastrophe risk is uncorrelated to equity and credit risk, so diversification within the catastrophe bond universe is not really needed.

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Why UniSuper’s John Pearce thinks the data centre party is winding down 

The demand for AI driving data centre construction might be “insatiable”, but the chief investment officer of the $166 billion UniSuper thinks that investors could be taking on technology debt and misreading the regulatory tea leaves as they rush to buy digital infrastructure.

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