BHSI | D&O in Asia in 2026: navigating geopolitics, insolvencies, and digital crackdowns without breaking the bank

April 8 2026

 

In 2026, Asia’s executive and professional (E&P) lines insurance market appears, at first glance, unusually accommodating.

Pricing across most segments has softened materially, with reductions of 10–20% now common in key markets, with further concessions often available for diversified, well governed organisations.

Capacity remains plentiful, supported by strong insurer balance sheets, sustained capital inflows and intense competition, particularly in excess layers. Yet, this benign pricing environment masks a far more challenging risk reality.

Commercial, financial and professional organisations are operating amid heightened geopolitical tension, renewed insolvency risk, expanding regulatory enforcement, accelerating digital scrutiny and increasingly complex cyber driven liability, placing growing strain on governance, fiduciary and professional accountability.

While soft market conditions are evident across Asia, local risk characteristics remain pronounced. Japan and South Korea continue to exhibit litigation-heavy profiles. Regulatory enforcement is intensifying across Singapore, Hong Kong, China and Southeast Asia. India remains shaped by persistent shareholder activism.

Emerging markets face rising governance expectations as capital markets deepen. Buyers retain leverage and can secure broader terms and higher limits, but the underlying exposure profile across E&P lines has become materially more volatile.

A lack of discipline

A central contributor to this disconnect between price and risk is the expanding role of managing general agents (MGAs), supported by increasingly non-traditional capital.

MGAs have grown rapidly across E&P lines, deploying capacity through agile platforms with delegated underwriting authority and a strong emphasis on growth. In soft market phases, this model enables rapid entry, product flexibility and aggressive pricing.

However, where capital is short term or return driven, underwriting discipline can erode as competition intensifies. Much of this expansion has been supported by diverse capital providers, including reinsurers, private equity and venture capital investors seeking higher yields or diversification beyond traditional insurance.

It’s no surprise that MGAs have accelerated premium compression even as exposures linked to insolvency, regulatory action, professional negligence and cyber-driven governance scrutiny continue to build.

This contrasts with carriers backed by long term, stable capital, whose underwriting models are designed to absorb market cycles rather than chase them.

Continuity of protection

In Asia’s E&P lines market, Berkshire Hathaway Specialty Insurance reflects this longer term orientation. Our emphasis on financial strength, integrated underwriting and claims management and structural protections is intended to provide continuity of protection through regulatory investigations, insolvency events, cyber-linked claims and professional liability disputes.

In the current environment, defined by aggressive rate erosion and volume-driven competition, this discipline can appear out of step with prevailing market dynamics. Intermediaries and insureds who value stability and consistency increasingly struggle to reconcile those attributes with a market flooded by flexible, price-driven capacity.

At the same time, the forces driving E&P lines claims continue to intensify. Geopolitical risk has moved firmly into the boardroom, shaping decisions around market participation, supply chains, sanctions compliance and investment strategy, often with cross-border consequences.

Insolvency pressures are reemerging as higher interest rates and tighter credit strain balance sheets, particularly in real estate, infrastructure and technology.

Regulatory frameworks governing digital assets, fintech and data governance have shifted from development to enforcement, exposing boards, financial institutions and professional advisers to retrospective scrutiny of earlier decisions.

 

 

 

Cyber incidents increasingly act as catalysts for broader E&P lines claims, redirecting focus from technical failure to oversight, disclosure and response at both institutional and individual levels.

Today’s abundance of capacity is unlikely to persist indefinitely. Capital will retreat, pricing will correct and underwriting discipline will reassert itself, often abruptly.

As Warren Buffett once famously said, “only when the tide goes out do you discover who’s been swimming naked.”

Against this backdrop, leading organisations should be using the current soft market not simply to reduce premiums, but to strengthen resilience, securing higher limits at favorable cost, reinforcing Side A and insolvency protections, clarifying investigation and regulatory language and coordinating coverage across D&O, FI, PI and transactional liability.

The central tension in Asia’s 2026 E&P lines market is clear: risk is compounding beneath the surface just as coverage appears most affordable.

Short-term capital and opportunistic underwriting may dominate the present cycle, but history suggests that durability, claims paying strength and disciplined risk selection ultimately determine which partners remain when conditions turn.

For organisations looking beyond the next renewal, the opportunity lies not in chasing the lowest price but in aligning with structures and partners capable of weathering the next phase of the cycle when stability matters most.

 

Scotland Walsh-Riddle

SVP, Head of Executive & Professional Lines, Asia Region

Berkshire Hathaway Specialty Insurance

Berkshire Hathaway Specialty Insurance Company (incorporated in Nebraska, USA) provides commercial property, casualty, healthcare professional liability, executive and professional lines, transactional liability, surety, marine, travel, programs, accident and health, employer stop loss, homeowners, and multinational insurance. The actual and final terms of coverage for all product lines may vary. In the Asia Middle East region, it underwrites on the paper of Berkshire Hathaway Specialty Insurance Company, which holds financial strength ratings of A++ from AM Best and AA+ from Standard & Poor’s. Based in Boston, Berkshire Hathaway Specialty Insurance has offices in Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Columbia, Dallas, Houston, Indianapolis, Irvine, Los Angeles, New York, Plymouth Meeting, San Francisco, San Ramon, Seattle, Stevens Point, Adelaide, Auckland, Barcelona, Brisbane, Brussels, Calgary, Cologne, Dubai (Regulated by the Dubai Financial Services Authority), Dublin, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Hong Kong, Kuala Lumpur (Licensed by Labuan FSA as a General Reinsurer – IS2016165), London, Lyon, Macau, Madrid, Manchester, Melbourne, Milan, Munich, Paris, Perth, Singapore, Stockholm, Sydney, Toronto, and Zurich.

Partner Content