Full-Time

Chief Financial Officer

Deadline 12/3/27
W.R. Berkley

W.R. Berkley

Commercial insurance underwriting, reinsurance, and investments

No salary listed

No H1B Sponsorship

Houston, TX, USA

In Person

Category
Finance & Banking (1)
Requirements
  • Ten or more years in progressively responsible financial leadership roles.
  • Property and casualty insurance experience required, including experience in statutory and GAAP insurance reporting.
  • Proficiency in Windows PC environment and strong working knowledge of financial systems, preferably Oracle and Peoplesoft, and Excel is preferred.
  • Financial reporting and planning experience; expense management skills; expert financial analysis, reporting and accounting skills necessary to meet established and stretch business goals.
  • Familiarity with direct and agency billing.
  • Able to recognize and act on reporting/accounting issues and problems.
  • Takes intelligent risks and exercises solid business judgment.
  • Proven leader who drives engagement and enables employees; will manage three direct reports.
  • Solid understanding of business objectives to drive bottom-line results; acts decisively to achieve appropriate results.
  • Strong strategic thinker and decision-maker; consistently sets clear direction by defining goals and priorities; develops trust through demonstrated personal integrity.
  • Establishes and maintains an environment that encourages everyone to act in the best interest of the company.
  • Demonstrates strong written and oral communications skills.
  • Ability to draft communications that are clear, concise, complete, and professional.
  • Ability to interact with all levels of the organization and demonstrate organizational skills while working on multiple projects.
  • Ability to travel as needed in the performance of duties.
  • Bachelor of Science in Accounting or Finance.
Responsibilities
  • Serve as a strategic finance/operations leader and active member of the Senior Leadership team.
  • Partner with the President to accelerate execution, optimize outcomes and reduce costs.
  • Provide executive management with advice and analysis on the financial implications of business activities.
  • Provide leadership in the development and continuous evaluation of short and long-term strategic financial objectives.
  • Direct the development and implementation of cost-effective financial reporting and accounting activities.
  • Formulate effective financial oversight and internal accounting standards that comply with company and regulatory requirements.
  • Contribute to the achievement of business objectives through the accurate and timely identification and resolution of accounting issues/opportunities.
  • Direct the monthly reporting process and deliver accurate/timely monthly reports through effective utilization of all management information tools to optimize revenue and minimize financial exposure.
  • Manage and direct the expense and general ledger process.
  • Monitor financial transactions to ensure that expenses are in line with company expenses and profit objectives and are consistent with company policies.
  • Drive innovation, including taking advantage of automation opportunities and new ways to streamline and make processes more efficient.
  • Development of direct and indirect reports in both behavioral and job skills is crucial and a key component of the position. This includes regular career aspiration discussions.
  • Responds to all activities related to corporate accounting/reporting requirements.
  • Ensures that effective internal controls are in place and ensures compliance with GAAP and applicable federal, state, and local regulatory laws and rules for financial and tax reporting. Provides high-level analysis and recommendations for corrective action as necessary.
Desired Qualifications
  • MBA and/or CPA desirable

W. R. Berkley provides commercial property and casualty insurance and reinsurance worldwide. It underwrites through two segments: Insurance with 53 operating units offering lines like excess and surplus, commercial auto, and workers’ compensation; and Reinsurance & Monoline Excess which writes reinsurance and excess policies for other insurers and self-insured entities. Revenue comes from premiums on insurance and reinsurance contracts and from investment income, supporting risk transfer and market capacity. The goal is to deliver steady underwriting results and financial returns for shareholders by serving a broad client base across many industries.

Company Size

N/A

Company Stage

IPO

Headquarters

Greenwich, Connecticut

Founded

1967

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Net investment income surges 12.2% to $404.3 million in Q1 2026.
  • 21.2% ROE exceeds 15% target with $336.1 million shareholder returns.
  • 7.2% average rate increases excluding workers' compensation boost premiums.

What critics are saying

  • National carriers like Chubb erode excess lines share within 6-12 months.
  • Auto liability rates fail claims inflation, forcing exposure cuts in 12 months.
  • Rising medical costs inflate workers' comp claims, deteriorating ratios in 6 months.

What makes W.R. Berkley unique

  • 53 specialized operating units deliver niche commercial insurance globally.
  • Reinsurance & Monoline Excess segment spreads risk with 78.6% combined ratio.
  • Decentralized model targets excess, surplus, and workers' compensation lines.

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Company News

Berkley Capital Partners
Apr 2nd, 2026
Diane P. Mika named chief risk management officer of Berkley Alliance Managers.

Diane P. Mika named chief risk management officer of Berkley Alliance Managers. GLASTONBURY, Conn. (April 2, 2026) - Berkley Alliance Managers, a Berkley company specializing in professional liability insurance solutions for design, construction and service professionals has announced the appointment of Diane P. Mika as chief risk management officer. Mika previously served as senior vice president, risk management officer and department head for Berkley Alliance Managers. She brings more than 30 years of professional liability insurance experience and a distinguished record in risk management and loss prevention education. In her new role, she will lead the client-facing risk management function for Berkley Construction Professional, Berkley Design Professional and Berkley Service Professionals, advancing the organization's commitment to delivering industry-leading resources and solutions. "Diane's deep expertise in professional liability risk management, paired with her leadership in developing innovative learning and loss prevention programs, makes her uniquely qualified to lead the risk management services we provide to clients," said Stephen L. Porcelli, president of Berkley Alliance Managers. "Her vision, industry insight and commitment to elevating client education will continue to strengthen the value we deliver to construction, design and service professionals." Since joining Berkley Alliance Managers in 2014, Mika has played a pivotal role in shaping the organization's client-facing risk management strategy. She led the development of the award-winning BDP Risk(R) Learning Management System and built a comprehensive portfolio of resources, including live workshops, on-demand courses and curated learning plans. Her leadership has set a high standard for innovation and excellence in client education and risk mitigation. Andrew D. Mendelson, FAIA, who previously served as chief risk management officer, will continue with Berkley Alliance Managers as executive vice president, client experience (CX) officer and a member of the executive team until his planned retirement in 2027. About Berkley Alliance Mangers Berkley Alliance Managers specializes in professional liability products and services across four key industries: design, construction, miscellaneous services and accounting. The organization is recognized for its innovative approach, deep industry expertise and commitment to excellence. Berkley Alliance Managers is a member of W. R. Berkley Corporation, a Fortune 500 company listed on the New York Stock Exchange and part of the S&P 500. Its insurance company subsidiaries are rated A+ (Superior) by A.M. Best. For more information, visit berkleyalliance.com.

Alan N. Walter, Counsel
Mar 26th, 2026
Malpractice insurance to shape lawyer AI regulation.

Malpractice insurance to shape lawyer AI regulation. SUMMARY Major insurers are already imposing absolute AI exclusions, sub-limits and intentional acts triggers that leave attorneys personally exposed, and that financial pressure will drive AI governance in legal practice far more effectively than any ethics opinion. Firms that cannot document their AI due diligence, vendor relationships and disclosure practices will find themselves uninsured, undefended and liable, and no amount of rulemaking will fix that after the fact. Malpractice litigation will almost certainly become one of the most powerful engines driving AI governance in legal practice. Civil liability operates on a more urgent timeline than bar discipline. Clients do not need to wait for a disciplinary proceeding to sue, and damages can dwarf the sanctions courts have imposed for hallucinated filings. Researcher Damien Charlotin's AI Hallucination Cases database has already catalogued over 1,000 cases worldwide involving AI-generated errors in court filings, each a potential malpractice claim waiting to be filed. The doctrinal mechanism is familiar. As AI-related malpractice cases accumulate, courts will define what a reasonably competent attorney does when deploying these tools, what verification protocols satisfy the standard of care, what vendor due diligence is required before inputting client data, and what disclosures are owed when AI materially shapes the work product. Each verdict and settlement will harden that standard, and bar associations will eventually codify what the courts have already decided. This is precisely how malpractice law shaped attorney obligations around conflicts of interest, file retention and engagement letters in earlier generations. Cases like Mata v. Avianca and Johnson v. Dunn have already established that the signing attorney owns the entire filing regardless of who used the AI tool or where the error originated, exactly the kind of standard-of-care foundation that plaintiffs' malpractice lawyers will build on. The insurance market is accelerating this reckoning in ways that ethics opinions cannot. The ABA Journal has reported that many attorneys will be surprised to learn their malpractice policies may not cover AI-related claims at all, since AI use may not satisfy policy definitions of "professional service" and individual claims may be subject to sub-limits as low as $500,000 under a policy with a $10 million face amount. The exclusions picture is hardening fast. Berkley Insurance has introduced an "absolute" AI exclusion eliminating coverage for any claim arising from AI use by the insured or any third-party vendor acting on the insured's behalf. Hamilton Insurance Group has taken a similarly sweeping approach for professional liability policies. ALPS has warnedthat blindly accepting AI output could trigger intentional acts exclusions, leaving attorneys personally exposed with no coverage whatsoever. Insurers have historically been among the most effective regulators of attorney behavior because their leverage is financial and immediate rather than disciplinary and delayed. The same pressure that drove law firms to adopt conflict check systems and engagement letter requirements will now drive AI governance through the same channel. Munich Re's dedicated AI insurance product for law firms already requires documented due diligence on AI systems as a condition of coverage, effectively mandating vendor vetting through the marketplace rather than through rulemaking. Rules and regulations will need to address the specific monetary questions this landscape creates: who bears liability when a vendor's tool fails, whether engagement letters must disclose AI use to preserve defenses, how billing practices interact with negligence claims when AI generates the work product and what indemnification arrangements between firms and AI vendors are ethically permissible. These are questions the existing Model Rules are not designed to answer. The malpractice docket, insurance market and case law are converging on the same destination and together they will force the profession's hand in ways that ethics opinions never could alone. You may also enjoy: and if you like what you read, please subscribe below or in the right-hand column.

Business Wire
Mar 9th, 2026
W. R. Berkley appoints Ryan Miller as president of Berkley Southeast

W. R. Berkley Corporation has appointed Ryan Miller as president of Berkley Southeast, effective immediately. Miller brings over 25 years of experience in commercial insurance operations, underwriting and field management. He most recently served as senior vice president and chief field operations manager at a large regional carrier, where he was responsible for growth, profitability and operational excellence. Throughout his career, Miller has focused on providing commercial insurance solutions to customers across the southeastern United States. W. Robert Berkley, Jr., chief executive officer of W. R. Berkley Corporation, described Miller as a proven leader with deep operational expertise and a disciplined approach to underwriting and profitable growth. Founded in 1967, W. R. Berkley Corporation is amongst the largest commercial lines writers in the United States.

Yahoo Finance
Feb 2nd, 2026
W. R. Berkley misses Q4 revenue estimates, warns auto liability rates unsustainable

W. R. Berkley reported fourth quarter revenue of $3.72 billion, slightly missing analyst estimates of $3.75 billion, whilst adjusted earnings per share of $1.13 met expectations. Operating margin fell to 15.4% from 19.9% in the prior year period. CEO Rob Berkley attributed performance to underwriting discipline and lower catastrophe losses, emphasising the company's diversified structure. The company faces headwinds from increased competition and shifting customer preferences. During the earnings call, analysts probed several key areas. Berkley indicated that workers' compensation faces rising medical costs after artificial suppression, whilst auto liability pricing remains inadequate. The company is pulling back from certain professional and large property lines. Management expects technology investments to deliver both cost savings and value creation, with benefits depending on market conditions.

Yahoo Finance
Jan 27th, 2026
W. R. Berkley Q4 revenue misses estimates despite improved underwriting discipline and AI investments

W. R. Berkley, a property casualty insurer, reported Q4 revenue of $3.72 billion, missing analyst estimates of $3.75 billion with 1.5% year-on-year growth. Non-GAAP profit of $1.13 per share met expectations, whilst operating margin declined to 15.4% from 19.9% a year earlier. CEO Rob Berkley attributed performance to underwriting discipline, lower catastrophe losses and operational efficiency from technology investments. The company is prioritising AI and technology investments to improve efficiency and underwriting capabilities whilst adapting distribution models to meet changing customer preferences. Management maintained selective growth strategies, deliberately reducing exposure in segments like auto liability due to unfavourable pricing. CFO Richard Baio expects the expense ratio to remain below 30% in 2026. The company continues focusing on opportunities in excess and umbrella casualty, excess and surplus markets, and medical stop loss.