7 April 2020Insurance

AXIS Re taps Tokio Millennium Re's Julian as first chief pricing actuary

AXIS Re, the reinsurance business segment of Bermuda-based AXIS Capital Holdings, has appointed Mark Julian to the newly created position of chief pricing actuary.

Julian will oversee AXIS Re’s actuarial pricing and catastrophe modeling teams, which have been combined into a new reinsurance pricing operational division. He will be based in the company’s London office and will be a member of the reinsurance leadership team. He will report to AXIS Re CEO Steve Arora.

Julian joins AXIS Re from Tokio Millennium Re, where he was most recently CEO and head of branch for its UK business. Previously, he served as group head of pricing, leading a global team of 45 pricing actuaries and catastrophe modelers, and prior to that he was the company’s UK chief actuary and chief risk officer. Julian joined Tokio Millennium Re from SVB/Novae where he was deputy group actuary. He began his P&C re/insurance career as an actuary at PwC and Equitas.

“Mark is an accomplished reinsurance leader, possessing both breadth in experience and depth in the actuarial and catastrophe modeling functions,” said Arora. “His technical leadership will make us stronger, and I am excited about the elevation of this function within our organisation.”

Already registered?

Login to your account

To request a FREE 2-week trial subscription, please signup.
NOTE - this can take up to 48hrs to be approved.

Two Weeks Free Trial

For multi-user price options, or to check if your company has an existing subscription that we can add you to for FREE, please email Adrian Tapping at atapping@newtonmedia.co.uk


More on this story

Insurance
24 December 2025   From London to Bermuda, the market watched exits jolt the industry, teams reshuffle and others fall into place with far less fanfare.
Insurance
22 December 2025   Brokerage complaints spin tawdry tales to frame defections as low-rent theft & espionage.
Insurance
19 December 2025   If profits slip too far, insurers may cut coverage, hike premiums, squeezing affordability.