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Cyber Ranks as Top Peril for Companies Globally for 1st Time: Allianz Survey

January 15, 2020

Cyber incidents rank for the first time as the most important business risk globally, pushing the perennial top peril, business interruption (BI), into second place, according to the ninth Allianz Risk Barometer 2020.

Cyber incidents were named by 39% of survey respondents from more than 2,700 risk management experts in over 100 countries and territories, said the annual survey from Allianz Global Corporate & Specialty (AGCS). Seven years ago, the survey report revealed, cyber incidents ranked only 15th with just 6% of responses.

“Awareness of the cyber threat has grown rapidly in recent years, driven by companies’ increasing reliance on data and IT systems and a number of high-profile incidents,” AGCS explained in the survey report.

While business interruption has moved down to second place after seven years at the top, AGCS affirmed, it remains a key challenge with digitalization and civil unrest creating new causes of disruption and loss of income.

Nevertheless, the trend for larger and more complex BI losses continues unabated, AGCS said, noting that causes are becoming ever more diverse, ranging from fire, explosion or natural catastrophes to digital supply chains or even political violence.

“Digital supply chains and platforms today allow for full transparency and traceability of goods but a fire at a data center, a technical glitch or a hack could bring large BI losses for multiple companies that all rely and share the same system and which cannot switch back to manual processes,” said Raymond Hogendoorn, global head of Property and Engineering Claims at AGCS, who was quoted in the report.

The survey also found that changes in legislation and regulation (at number three from four in 2019) and climate change (at number seven from eight in 2019) are the biggest climbers globally as a result of concerns relating to the U.S.-China trade war, Brexit and global warming.

The top 10 risks identified by survey respondents were:

  1. Cyber incidents (e.g., cyber crime, IT failure/outage, data breaches, fines and penalties)
  2. Business interruption (including supply chain disruption)
  3. Changes in legislation and regulation (e.g., trade wars and tariffs, economic sanctions, protectionism, Brexit, Euro-zone disintegration)
  4. Natural catastrophes (e.g., storm, flood, earthquake)
  5. Market developments (e.g., volatility, intensified competition/new entrants, M&A, market stagnation, market fluctuation)
  6. Fire, explosion
  7. Climate change (increasing volatility of weather)
  8. Loss of reputation or brand value
  9. New technologies (e.g., impact of artificial intelligence, autonomous vehicles, 3D printing, Internet of Things, nanotechnology, blockchain)
  10. Macroeconomic developments (e.g., monetary policies, austerity programs, commodity price increase, deflation, inflation).

The full AGCS Risk Barometer 2020 can be .

Source: Allianz Global Corporate & Specialty (AGCS)

Topics Trends Cyber Legislation

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Latest Comments

  • January 22, 2020 at 12:57 pm
    Jon says:
    Just for reference, here are some things hackers actually are doing: npr.org/2019/05/14/723215498/florida-governor-says-russian-hackers-breached-two-florida-counties-in-2016 b... read more
  • January 22, 2020 at 11:45 am
    Jon says:
    Can you ever just talk about insurance without turning things into your conservative conspiratorial ramblings? It seems to be all you do these days, other than whining about h... read more
  • January 16, 2020 at 7:27 am
    PolarBeaRepeal says:
    This is an article I recently referenced on IJ in another article's comment page. False info spread by Climate Hoaxers was the motive for my reference to the list, which indic... read more

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