N.B. Businesses Selling Incidental Insurance Must Now be Licensed
New changes will impact New Brunswick businesses that sell insurance products secondary to their main business.
New changes will impact New Brunswick businesses that sell insurance products secondary to their main business.
Can insurance companies get out of paying a claim due to an “act of God?” Will my premiums go up next year because of Fiona? Amanda Dean from the IBC responds to these questions and more.
Assumption Life has hired a former employee as its vice president and chief technical officer.
At its Feb. 25 virtual annual general meeting, the Moncton-based insurance and asset management firm reported $2.1 billion in assets, an increase of 4 percent from 2020.
Kim Newsome and her husband became landlords to to give back to the community and build a small nest egg for retirement. Now, they’re selling their buildings becuase of Nova Scotia’s rent control laws.
Property owners association head Kevin Russell says landlords have faced, on average, a 45-50 per cent increase in insurance over the past year or two.
Daniel Surette owns and operates Statera Spirits Maison Meuse & Fils in Belliveaus Cove.
Allen Pooley and his wife Kelly Keating established “Darn Yarn” in October of 2020, a home-based e-commerce store that sells knitting supplies throughout North America. Find out how they grew their revenue so quickly they no longer qualified for the Allstate Home insurance plan.
A Saint John insurance professional has been recognized in a list of the industry’s 50 most promising young stars.
Anderson & McTague Associates and Angus Miller Insurance have been named top MGAs in Insurance Business Canada.