
reporting of premiums on workers' compensation policies. The civil lawsuit was filed in 2009 by Safeco Insurance of America and Ohio Casualty Insurance. Premarket: [[AIG]] +3.3% (7:00 ET). Bond insurer sues Goldman over Abacus. Bond insurer ACA Financial
and Indiana to acquire property-casualty insurer Ohio Casualty OCAS . The transaction is set to close Friday. After this date, we will no longer cover Ohio Casualty , as it will be part of Liberty Mutual, a mutual
quarter net income for property-casualty insurer Ohio Casualty OCAS . Without the claims release, the combined ratio ..... estimate, based on the agreed upon acquisition price of Ohio Casualty by Liberty Mutual, remains unchanged.
definitive agreement to acquire Ohio Casualty OCAS for $44 per share. Both companies ..... think this is a great deal for Ohio Casualty shareholders, as the offer ..... quarter, subject to approval by Ohio Casualty shareholders and various regulatory
37.7 million of favorable loss development (losses were lower than expected), property and casualty insurer Ohio Casualty OCAS reported strong first-quarter earnings Monday. We're not changing our fair value estimate because current results
Property-casualty insurer Ohio Casualty OCAS reported solid fourth-quarter ..... underwriting process. However, Ohio Casualty now confronts a difficult market ..... maintain the profitability that Ohio Casualty has worked so hard to achieve
Ohio Casualty OCAS reported third-quarter results Wednesday. Our fair value estimate is unchanged at $23 per share ..... slide. We think the soft insurance market will only get worse, which has negative implications for Ohio Casualty .
Ohio Casualty OCAS reported its second-quarter results on Wednesday. In the first half, the firm earned a 12.5% annualized return on equity
Ohio Casualty 's OCAS 14.5% annualized return on equity in the first quarter doesn't spur an adjustment to our $21 fair value estimate. Dwindling rates pushed written premium down nearly 2%. The insurance-rate environment is turning against the firm, as we expected.
On Thursday, Ohio Casualty OCAS reported a $12 million loss from Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. This loss amounts to less than 1% of its equity, so we are not changing our fair value estimate of $21 per share.