Insurance by Industry
Insurance Built for Financial Institutions and the Risks They Carry
From directors and officers liability to cyber and commercial crime, Bittick places the specialized coverage your firm needs.
Financial institution insurance is a combination of specialized policies designed to protect banks, credit unions, investment advisors, and similar firms from the liability, fraud, cyber, and reputational risks that general business coverage does not adequately address. Your clients hand you their money and their trust. One employee fraud scheme, one data breach, or one D&O lawsuit can erode both faster than most firms expect. Bittick is an independent agency, so we shop your risk across multiple carriers and build a policy package around your actual operations, whether you run a community bank in the Treasure Valley or a private equity firm in the San Antonio metro.
What this coverage includes
Directors and Officers Liability
Directors and officers (D&O) liability insurance protects the individuals who lead your institution when they face personal lawsuits alleging mismanagement, breach of duty, or regulatory violations. A claim against a board member or executive does not have to succeed to be expensive. Legal defense costs alone can reach into the hundreds of thousands of dollars. D&O coverage pays defense costs and covered settlements for the individuals named and, in many structures, for the institution itself when it indemnifies them.
Commercial Crime Coverage
Commercial crime insurance covers direct financial losses your institution suffers because of employee dishonesty, forgery, check fraud, and computer fraud. Even a rigorously screened workforce carries residual risk. A teller skimming over time, an authorized user manipulating wire transfers, or a third-party vendor exploiting system access are all scenarios this coverage is built to address. Financial institutions typically need higher limits here than most commercial accounts, and the policy language matters. We review the specifics before binding.
Cyber Liability
Financial institutions hold more sensitive personal and financial data per customer than almost any other industry, which makes them a high-priority target for ransomware, phishing, and account-takeover attacks. Cyber liability coverage picks up the costs your institution bears after a breach: forensic investigation, mandatory regulatory notifications, credit monitoring for affected customers, legal defense, and first-party losses from system restoration. The exposure grows quickly once notification requirements kick in, so coverage limits and sublimits deserve a close look at every renewal.
Lending and Lender Liability Coverage
Lending activities carry their own category of legal exposure. Class-action demands related to lending practices, borrower counteractions against foreclosures, and fair lending disputes all generate defense costs that standard general liability policies exclude. Lender liability coverage is purpose-built to defend these actions and cover settlements that fall within policy terms. Credit unions and community banks with active consumer lending portfolios need this coverage as a baseline, not an optional add-on.
Core Business Coverages Adapted for Financial Institutions
Beyond the specialized lines, your institution still needs the foundational policies every commercial account requires, configured for your industry. General liability, commercial property (with broadened ATM coverage where applicable), employment practices liability, workers' compensation, and commercial auto all belong in the stack. These are often the lines that get a perfunctory renewal instead of a real review. Gaps in standard coverage can leave the institution exposed even when the specialized lines are solid.
Pairs well with
Errors and Omissions (Professional Liability)
Investment advisors and financial planners face client claims that a recommendation caused measurable loss. E&O coverage pays defense costs and damages when a client alleges a professional error or oversight.
Learn more ›Employment Practices Liability Insurance (EPLI)
Discrimination, wrongful termination, and harassment claims from current or former employees are excluded from general liability. EPLI fills that gap, which matters especially as institutions grow headcount.
Learn more ›Commercial Property Insurance
Branch buildings, IT infrastructure, vault contents, and on-site ATMs all need property coverage. A standard commercial property policy can be broadened to include ATM-specific perils that a basic form misses.
Learn more ›Workers' Compensation Insurance
Idaho law requires workers' compensation for virtually every employer, and Texas has its own distinct requirements for covered and non-subscribing employers. Both situations need careful attention at setup.
Learn more ›Commercial Umbrella Insurance
The liability limits on a D&O, cyber, or general liability policy can be exhausted by a single serious claim. A commercial umbrella extends those limits for a fraction of the underlying premium.
Learn more ›What this coverage protects against
Common risks and how this coverage addresses them. Tap any scenario to expand.
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A longtime employee systematically diverts funds over two years.
The risk
A trusted operations manager at a community bank gradually redirects small wire transfers into a personal account. The total loss reaches $380,000 before an internal audit surfaces the pattern. No single transaction was large enough to trigger automated alerts.
How this coverage helps
Commercial crime coverage reimburses the institution for the verified employee theft loss, up to policy limits, and covers the forensic accounting work needed to document the claim. The institution avoids absorbing the full loss out of operating capital.
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A ransomware attack locks the loan-origination system during a high-volume closing week.
The risk
A credential-stuffing attack gives an outside actor access to a loan officer's credentials over a weekend. By Monday morning, the core loan-origination system is encrypted and offline. Closings are delayed, customers are calling, and the institution faces mandatory breach-notification timelines.
How this coverage helps
Cyber liability coverage pays for the incident response firm, the forensic investigation, customer notification costs, and business interruption losses tied to the system outage. The policy also covers regulatory defense costs if a notification failure triggers a regulatory inquiry.
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Shareholders sue board members after a merger falls through.
The risk
A regional bank pursues an acquisition that ultimately collapses. Minority shareholders file suit against board members personally, alleging they approved the deal without adequate due diligence and breached their fiduciary duty to shareholders.
How this coverage helps
D&O coverage funds the legal defense for each named board member and, where the institution indemnifies them, for the entity itself. Coverage kicks in before any determination of fault, which is critical given how long securities litigation typically runs.
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A borrower files a class-action claim alleging discriminatory lending practices.
The risk
A group of applicants claims the credit union's underwriting criteria produced disparate outcomes for minority borrowers. The credit union believes its standards are defensible, but the claim is certified as a class action, meaning legal costs will escalate quickly regardless of outcome.
How this coverage helps
Lender liability coverage provides defense counsel and covers settlements or judgments within policy limits. Standard general liability excludes this category of claim entirely, so institutions without specialized lending coverage bear those costs directly.
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A data breach exposes account numbers and Social Security numbers for 4,000 customers.
The risk
A phishing email tricks a bank employee into entering credentials on a spoofed internal portal. The attacker harvests customer records over the following 72 hours before the intrusion is detected. The institution now faces mandatory notification under state law and anxious customers calling branch lines.
How this coverage helps
Cyber liability coverage funds the notification letters, the credit monitoring service offered to affected customers, and the public relations firm helping manage messaging. It also covers the regulatory defense costs if the state financial regulator requests a compliance review of the breach response.
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An off-site ATM is broken into and the cash cassettes are stolen.
The risk
A freestanding ATM the bank operates at a convenience-store location is targeted overnight. The thieves cause significant physical damage to the cabinet and remove the cash cassettes. Repair costs and the cash loss together top $45,000.
How this coverage helps
Commercial property coverage with broadened ATM language reimburses both the physical repair costs and the stolen cash, treating the ATM as scheduled equipment rather than an afterthought. Institutions with multiple off-site ATMs benefit from reviewing whether their property form explicitly covers remote locations.
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A former loan officer files a wrongful termination claim after a RIF.
The risk
A credit union reduces staff following a branch consolidation. A terminated loan officer files an EPLI claim alleging the selection process was discriminatory and that their protected class was a factor in the decision. The institution believes the selection was lawful, but the claim moves forward.
How this coverage helps
Employment practices liability coverage provides defense counsel and covers any settlement or judgment within policy limits. General liability explicitly excludes employment claims, so EPLI is the policy that actually responds when this situation arises.