Insurance Business ReviewOCTOBER - NOVEMBER 20256Copyright © 2025 ValleyMedia, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or part of any text, photography or illustrations without written permission from the publisher is prohibited. The publisher assumes no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts, photographs or illustrations. Views and opinions expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the magazine and accordingly, no liability is assumed by the publisher thereof.Managing EditorRaven Mcguire*Some of the Insights are based on the interviews with respective CIOs and CXOs to our editorial staffEditorial StaffAaron Pierce Ava GarciaAlex D'Souza Abhinov PunnakkalJoshua ParkerSarah FernandesEditorialRaven McguireManaging Editoreditor@insurancebusinessreview.comCredit insurance once operated quietly in the background, safeguarding manufacturers and exporters. No longer. Today, it stands as a frontline instrument in European business resilience. Late payments and insolvency risks are surging across various sectors, and firms are seeking more than just simple indemnity. They demand intelligence, agility, and foresight. These insurers have shed their passive role to become strategic partners who navigate volatile markets alongside their clients.Digitalisation and geopolitical flux are transforming the sector at breakneck speed. Real-time risk assessment is replacing static coverage. AI powers the underwriting. APIs embed protection directly into enterprise systems. This structural shift isn't merely technological. Small businesses suddenly find doors opening. Policies adapt and evolve in response to market conditions. Decisions that once took weeks happen in hours. Trade wars, sanctions, and conflict have meanwhile shattered the old boundaries between political and commercial risk, compelling insurers to rebuild their entire policy architecture.What's emerging is a data-rich, strategically vital service that mirrors the full complexity of global commerce. Uncertainty has become the norm, and with it, the industry's relevance only deepens. The market tells its own story through projections of $12.084 billion by 2032, with a 2.1 percent CAGR. One thing is unmistakable. Credit insurance has travelled from the back office straight to the boardroom.This magazine features thought leadership articles from Marina Billinge-Jones, Group Insurance Manager at Severn Trent [LON: SVT], and Yasmine Li, Head of EMEA Surveillance at Macquarie Group, who share insights on how claims management and integrated risk data are reshaping the future of insurance and compliance.We also highlight the firms transforming how businesses approach credit risk. One such firm, Gesellschaft für Kreditversicherungsservice (GfK), stands out as a trusted guide, crafting tailored credit insurance and factoring strategies that help businesses secure receivables and strengthen liquidity. In this edition, featuring leaders redefining credit insurance as a strategic lever for resilience and growth, we hope you find the right partner to meet your organisation's needs.Let us know your thoughts!Credit Insurance Evolving to Strengthen Business Resilience and GrowthVisualizersKevin Parker Chris LynnOCTOBER - NOVEMBER 2025, Vol 04 Issue 13 (ISSN 2837-1763) Published by ValleyMedia, Inc. To subscribe to Insurance Business ReviewVisit www.insurancebusinessreview.com Email:sales@insurancebusinessreview.comeditor@insurancebusinessreview.commarketing@insurancebusinessreview.comEUROPE
< Page 5 | Page 7 >