Four deals. $370M. Satellites, India, and a $99 claims advocate. The carriers building data infrastructure now will define who wins in 2029.
Seven transactions. AI governance hit $1.2 billion with two insurance carriers inside the cap table. IAG Firemark completed its five-layer disaster resilience architecture. Mile Auto crossed $100M in premium through acquisition. Zurich cleared the EU on its path to becoming the world's largest specialty underwriter. A French AI broker platform raised its seed. And brokerage consolidation ran at structural velocity from two opposite directions simultaneously.
Three deals. $780M. A catastrophe property MGU gets $460M in institutional conviction at the moment admitted carriers are exiting its markets. A Lloyd's data-driven MGA attracts US growth equity after tripling premium in three years. Liberty Mutual lent $320M to a restaurant app — and explained exactly how insurance float works.
Six deals. $3.1B deployed. Bill Ackman built his Berkshire. PayPay bought a life insurer for 74 million users. Abu Dhabi backed insurance software. The world noticed insurance this week.
## Week of May 10–16, 2026
$1.75B+ disclosed | 7 transactions | Largest capital week of 2026
The week's headline number is $1.75 billion — but the composition is more important than the total. Three distinct capital themes converged simultaneously: AI is being embedded into the distribution layer of insurance (Novella, Outmarket AI, Vapi), carriers are moving upstream into physical risk reduction rather than just pricing for it (Mercury/BurnBot), and the global insurance-asset management convergence is producing its largest single transaction of the year (MS&AD/Barings). The brokerage consolidation machine continues in the background — Shepherd and ALPS both added scale quietly. This is not a week of isolated deals. It is a week where three structural shifts in insurance all moved at once.
$820M disclosed | 4 transactions | Heaviest week of 2026 by capital deployed
Every deal this week is AI-native. Every deal attacks a different layer of the insurance infrastructure stack: claims administration, carrier underwriting, software modernization, and catastrophe capital. Gallagher Re's Q1 2026 report, released simultaneously, confirms the macro: global insurtech funding reached $1.63B in Q1, with AI-focused firms capturing 95% of all capital deployed. This week alone represents half of that quarterly total in five days. The insurance industry is not experimenting with AI. It is funding the companies that will make the current operating model obsolete.