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Insurance Rules Shape World Baseball Classic Participation

Insurance Rules Shape World Baseball Classic Participation

A new insurance provision for the 2026 World Baseball Classic has limited player participation across several national teams, making contract insurability central to tournament preparation.

Under the updated provision, player contracts cannot be insured after a player turns 37. Insurance coverage is required to protect major league teams from financial risk if a player is injured during the tournament. Although player contracts remain fully guaranteed, insurance shifts that financial exposure away from clubs.

Los Angeles Dodgers infielder Miguel Rojas became one of the most visible examples of how the provision affects roster decisions. Rojas, who turns 37 on Feb. 24, was denied insurance coverage and therefore could not receive approval to play for Venezuela. Rojas said the timing and structure of the rule prevented him from remaining available, even as a reserve option, during what he expects to be his final season.

Insurance approval has increasingly influenced roster construction ahead of the tournament. Several high-profile players have also been denied participation because their contracts were not insured. Those players include Venezuela’s Jose Altuve and Puerto Rico’s Francisco Lindor. Puerto Rico is also expected to be without Carlos Correa, Victor Caratini, Emilio Pagan, Jose Berrios, and Alexis Diaz.

As a result, Dr. Jose Quiles, president of the Puerto Rico Baseball Federation, publicly considered withdrawing Puerto Rico from the tournament. Puerto Rico is scheduled to host Pool A from March 6 to March 11 at Hiram Bithorn Stadium in San Juan.

Insurance for the World Baseball Classic is arranged by NFP, which has insured multiple iterations of the tournament through agreements with Major League Baseball and the MLB Players Association. The tournament itself pays the insurance policy. In prior tournaments, insurance coverage has directly affected club obligations. In 2023, for example, the New York Mets did not have to pay Edwin Diaz after he suffered a season-ending knee injury while representing Puerto Rico.

Players face varying levels of insurability based on injury classifications. According to sources familiar with the process, players are labeled as chronic, intermediate, or low risk. A player may be classified as chronic if they spent at least 60 days on the injured list the previous season, missed two of their team’s final three games due to injury, underwent surgery after the season, had more than one surgery during their career, or landed on the injured list on the final day of August.

Contract size also influences insurability. Despite Rojas being on a one-year, $5.5 million contract and not spending time on the injured list last season, his age alone disqualified his contract from coverage. The new provision states that once a player turns 37, their contract cannot be insured. If a player turns 37 midseason, coverage only applies through June.

Teams may still allow players to participate without insurance by assuming the risk themselves. The Detroit Tigers previously took that approach with Miguel Cabrera. It remains unclear whether the Dodgers will do the same for Rojas. With World Baseball Classic rosters due Tuesday and announcements scheduled for Thursday night, decisions must be made on a tight timeline.

Rojas said he received a HIPAA authorization form that would have allowed NFP to further review his medical history, but he received the request too late to pursue alternate solutions.

As preparations continue, insurance requirements remain a determining factor for player availability, shaping national rosters and influencing participation across the tournament.

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Florida Approves More Auto Insurance Rate Cuts for 2026

Florida Approves More Auto Insurance Rate Cuts for 2026

Florida Insurance Commissioner Mike Yaworsky has approved additional auto insurance rate cuts heading into 2026. USAA filed an average 7% decrease in auto insurance rates, which will take effect by May 2026. The reduction is expected to generate more than $125 million in estimated annual savings for USAA’s Florida members.

The Florida Office of Insurance Regulation (OIR) continues to approve auto insurance rate cuts across the state. Over the past year, 42 personal auto insurance companies have filed for rate decreases. Of those, 32 filings occurred within the last six months.

“Going into the new year, the Office of Insurance Regulation is not slowing down on approving rate decreases or 0% increases from insurance companies,” said Commissioner Mike Yaworsky. “USAA is just one of many auto insurance companies that OIR is having productive conversations with to ensure reductions for policyholders. We are thrilled with the progress in the home and auto insurance market since the critical legislative reforms were passed. It is very clear that tort reform was the right thing to do, and we will continue to build on this success.”

USAA leadership emphasized the impact of the rate decrease for military members and their families.

“Every dollar counts for our active-duty service members, veterans, and their families — now more than ever,” said Randy Termeer, USAA P&C President. “This rate decrease reflects improving conditions in Florida’s insurance market and our ability to price competitively while maintaining the financial strength to support our members when they need us. Florida leaders have done great work to strengthen the insurance system and support a more stable, competitive market for Floridians.”

USAA attributes the rate decrease to Florida’s legislative reforms, which have helped stabilize the insurance market.

Earlier this month, Commissioner Yaworsky joined Governor Ron DeSantis to announce broader rate relief for Florida’s auto and home insurance markets. That announcement highlighted several recent auto insurance rate decreases, including:

  • Florida Farm Bureau: Average decrease of 8.7%
  • Progressive: Average decrease of 8%, in addition to refunding policyholders more than $1 billion
  • State Farm: Average decrease of 10.1%. This marks State Farm’s third rate reduction since 2024, totaling more than 20% and exceeding $1 billion in statewide savings
  • AAA: Three separate rate reductions during the year, lowering premiums by 15%. A fourth round of reductions will take effect in early 2026
  • Allstate: Average decrease of 4% for 13.1 thousand drivers

Florida’s auto insurance market continues to show strong stability following tort reform. In 2024, Florida ranked first in the nation for the lowest personal auto liability loss ratio at 53.3%. This was the lowest recorded level for the state in the past 15 years.

Florida personal auto insurers also recorded the nation’s fifth-lowest incurred loss ratio at 57.5% in 2024. This represents a significant improvement from 73.2% in 2023 and 89.7% in 2022. Auto physical damage loss ratios also declined, falling from 112.0% in 2022 and 70.3% in 2023 to 66.7% in 2024.

The home insurance market in Florida is also stabilizing. Since the legislative reforms, 17 new insurance companies have entered the marketplace. OIR has received more than 185 residential filing requests for rate decreases or 0% increases.

Since January 2024, 39 companies have filed for home insurance rate decreases, while 48 companies have requested no change or a 0% increase. The 30-day average request for homeowners insurance rates is now a 2.3% decrease, compared to a 0.5% increase one year ago. The 180-day average request is down 0.7%, compared with a 7.9% increase one year ago.

About the OIR The Florida Office of Insurance Regulation (OIR) has primary responsibility for regulating, enforcing, and monitoring statutes related to the business of insurance and industry markets. For more information about OIR, please visit our website or follow us on X @FLOIR_comm. Get the latest insurance market updates and discover exclusive program opportunities at ProgramBusiness.com
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Cyber Risk Enters 2026 as a Board-Level Priority

Cyber Risk Enters 2026 as a Board-Level Priority

Cyber risk continues to rise on corporate agendas as organizations move into 2026. Advances in artificial intelligence, expanding regulatory requirements, and persistent ransomware activity have elevated cyber risk beyond the technology function and into executive leadership and board oversight.

The global average cost of a data breach reached nearly $5 million in 2024, underscoring the financial exposure tied to cyber events. Aon’s Global Risk Management Survey reinforces this reality, identifying cyber attacks and data breaches as the top enterprise risk through 2026, with expectations that this ranking will persist into 2028.

Supply Chain and Third-Party Exposure Intensifies

Third-party and supply chain risks remain significant drivers of cyber losses. Supply chain disruption ranks among the top 10 global risks, according to Aon’s survey, and high-profile incidents in recent years have demonstrated how a single cyber event can cascade across thousands of dependent organizations.

Third-party involvement accounted for 30% of all data breaches in 2024, up from 15% the year prior. Both malicious attacks and non-malicious technology outages have resulted in widespread business interruption, highlighting the challenges organizations face in maintaining visibility into supplier security practices as ecosystems grow more complex.

AI Expands the Cyber Attack Surface

AI adoption has introduced new dimensions of cyber risk. While AI supports operational efficiency, it also enables threat actors to automate and scale attacks with limited resources. AI-driven cyberattacks now rank among the top 10 global risks for business leaders.

Research conducted in 2025 showed that altering as little as 0.1% of an AI model’s training data could cause targeted misclassification. Despite these risks, only 37% of organizations currently assess the security of third-party AI tools before deployment.

AI-related threats also extend beyond digital systems, as attackers increasingly use open-source intelligence, autonomous tools, and synthetic identities to exploit physical and cyber security gaps.

Ransomware Activity Rebounds

Ransomware severity increased in 2025 following a period of decline. While global ransomware frequency dropped 44% in the fourth quarter of 2025, average ransomware payment amounts rose 95%, and global ransomware claims increased 74%. New ransomware groups contributed to heightened aggression and financial impact.

Regulatory Pressure and Market Conditions Shift

Regulatory and legal risk ranks fourth among enterprise concerns globally. New disclosure requirements from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and expanded cyber regulations in the European Union are raising expectations for incident reporting and governance.

Meanwhile, the cyber insurance market remains broadly buyer-friendly, supported by significant new capacity since 2022. However, signs of tightening emerged in late 2025 as insurers responded to rising losses and set minimum pricing thresholds for capacity deployment.

Stay informed and ahead of the curve — explore more industry insights and program opportunities at ProgramBusiness.com.
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Below-Freezing Temperatures Persist Around Philadelphia as Two Snow Chances Emerge This Week

Below-Freezing Temperatures Persist Around Philadelphia as Two Snow Chances Emerge This Week

Temperatures across the Philadelphia region remained below freezing on Sunday, extending a prolonged cold stretch as a coastal storm brought gusty winds, coastal flooding concerns, and the possibility of light snow showers, according to CBS Philadelphia.

A NEXT Weather Alert remains in effect through Monday due to bitter cold and dangerous wind chills. While the strongest impacts from the coastal storm were expected along the shore, conditions inland remained significant. Winds in Philadelphia were forecast to gust up to 30 mph on Sunday, keeping wind chills in the single digits despite actual air temperatures in the mid-20s.

Several advisories were in place as of Sunday. A wind advisory was issued for Cape May County until 4 p.m., as well as for Carbon and Monroe Counties until 1 a.m. Monday. Additionally, a coastal flood advisory was active for Atlantic and Cape May Counties until noon Sunday.

The region continues to experience an extended deep freeze. Sunday marked the ninth consecutive day with high temperatures below 32 degrees. Philadelphia has not seen temperatures rise above freezing since 7 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 23. This stretch matches the longest run of subfreezing days since 2004 and represents only the eighth time on record that the city has experienced nine or more consecutive days below freezing.

If temperatures remain below freezing on Monday, the region will reach 10 consecutive subfreezing days, officially making it the longest such stretch since 1979. Only two periods on record exceeded 10 days, both lasting 15 days, in February 1979 and February 1961.

Looking ahead, forecasters are tracking two opportunities for measurable snow this week. The first system is expected late Tuesday night into early Wednesday morning. A storm passing just south of the region may shift far enough north to bring a quick coating to several inches of snow. Tuesday also represents the best chance for temperatures to rise above freezing, although highs are expected to reach only around 33 degrees.

A second system is possible late Friday evening into early Saturday morning. A clipper system moving out of Canada could bring additional snowfall, potentially totaling several inches. Forecasters cautioned that it remains too early to determine whether conditions will fully align for significant accumulation.

Neither system currently appears as impactful as last weekend’s storm. However, the NEXT Weather team continues to monitor developments closely. Unseasonably cold conditions are expected to persist through next week and possibly beyond, keeping winter weather risks elevated across the region.

Stay informed and ahead of the curve — explore more industry insights and program opportunities at ProgramBusiness.com.
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