-----BEGIN PRIVACY-ENHANCED MESSAGE----- Proc-Type: 2001,MIC-CLEAR Originator-Name: webmaster@www.sec.gov Originator-Key-Asymmetric: MFgwCgYEVQgBAQICAf8DSgAwRwJAW2sNKK9AVtBzYZmr6aGjlWyK3XmZv3dTINen TWSM7vrzLADbmYQaionwg5sDW3P6oaM5D3tdezXMm7z1T+B+twIDAQAB MIC-Info: RSA-MD5,RSA, VWnrx1wuX//J2nW1+MnDz8yEs/6boRVuFubqqsdn3c+aTlprC2NYrssnKdIV2RTk sKwHGXhO0f2RWksGwjmxjw== 0000950136-05-004649.txt : 20050808 0000950136-05-004649.hdr.sgml : 20050808 20050808171715 ACCESSION NUMBER: 0000950136-05-004649 CONFORMED SUBMISSION TYPE: 10-Q PUBLIC DOCUMENT COUNT: 6 CONFORMED PERIOD OF REPORT: 20050630 FILED AS OF DATE: 20050808 DATE AS OF CHANGE: 20050808 FILER: COMPANY DATA: COMPANY CONFORMED NAME: ENDURANCE SPECIALTY HOLDINGS LTD CENTRAL INDEX KEY: 0001179755 STANDARD INDUSTRIAL CLASSIFICATION: FIRE, MARINE & CASUALTY INSURANCE [6331] IRS NUMBER: 000000000 FISCAL YEAR END: 1231 FILING VALUES: FORM TYPE: 10-Q SEC ACT: 1934 Act SEC FILE NUMBER: 001-31599 FILM NUMBER: 051006659 BUSINESS ADDRESS: STREET 1: 4 PAR LA VILLE ROAD CITY: HAMILTON HM 08 BERMUDA STATE: D0 ZIP: 00000 BUSINESS PHONE: 441-278-0400 10-Q 1 file001.htm FORM 10-Q

UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549

FORM 10-Q

/x/ Quarterly report pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 for the period ended June 30, 2005, or

/ / Transition report pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Commission file number 1-31599

ENDURANCE SPECIALTY HOLDINGS LTD.
(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)


Bermuda 98-0392908
(State or other jurisdiction
of incorporation or organization)
(I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)

Wellesley House
90 Pitts Bay Road
Pembroke HM 08, Bermuda
(Address of principal executive offices,
including postal code)

Registrant's Telephone Number, Including Area Code: (441) 278-0400

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter periods that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.

Yes / X /    No /    /

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an accelerated filer (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act).

Yes / X /    No /    /

Indicate the number of shares outstanding of each of the issuer's classes of common stock, as of the latest practicable date.


Description of Class   Shares Outstanding
as of August 8, 2005
Ordinary Shares – $1.00 par value       59,930,687



INDEX


    Page
Part I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION  
Item 1. Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements  
  Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets at June 30, 2005 and December 31, 2004 2
  Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statements of Income and Comprehensive
    Income for the Three and Six Months Ended June 30, 2005 and 2004
3
  Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statements of Changes in Shareholders' Equity
    for the Six Months Ended June 30, 2005 and 2004
4
  Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the Six Months
    Ended June 30, 2005 and 2004
5
  Notes to the Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements 6
Item 2. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations 16
Item 4. Controls and Procedures 46
Part II. OTHER INFORMATION  
Item 1. Legal Proceedings 47
Item 2. Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds 47
Item 3. Defaults Upon Senior Securities 47
Item 4. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders 48
Item 5. Other Information 50
Item 6. Exhibits 50
SIGNATURES 51
   

1




ENDURANCE SPECIALTY HOLDINGS LTD.
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(In thousands of United States dollars except share amounts)


  JUNE 30,
2005
DECEMBER 31,
2004
  (UNAUDITED)  
ASSETS            
Cash and cash equivalents $ 457,285   $ 271,143  
Fixed maturity investments available for sale, at fair value (amortized cost: $3,676,312 and $3,570,487 at June 30, 2005 and December 31, 2004, respectively)   3,736,645     3,578,174  
Investments in other ventures, under equity method   108,703     91,036  
Premiums receivable, net (includes $20,764 and $9,439 from related parties at June 30, 2005 and December 31, 2004, respectively)   779,112     545,352  
Deferred acquisition costs   225,647     195,419  
Securities lending collateral   340,166     407,527  
Prepaid reinsurance premiums   9,772     5,248  
Losses recoverable   13,909     12,203  
Accrued investment income   30,251     28,378  
Intangible assets   51,272     47,107  
Other assets   56,951     44,251  
Total assets $ 5,809,713   $ 5,225,838  
             
LIABILITIES            
Reserve for losses and loss expenses $ 1,823,541   $ 1,549,661  
Reserve for unearned premiums   1,109,880     897,605  
Deposit liabilities   56,341      
Reinsurance balances payable   56,400     70,507  
Securities lending payable   340,166     407,527  
Debt   391,291     391,280  
Other liabilities   44,969     46,803  
Total liabilities   3,822,588     3,363,383  
             
SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY            
Common shares            
Ordinary – 59,924,687 issued and outstanding (2004 – 61,254,992)   59,925     61,255  
Additional paid-in capital   1,070,015     1,111,633  
Accumulated other comprehensive income   31,433     39,473  
Retained earnings   825,752     650,094  
Total shareholders' equity   1,987,125     1,862,455  
Total liabilities and shareholders' equity $ 5,809,713   $ 5,225,838  

See accompanying notes to unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements.

2




ENDURANCE SPECIALTY HOLDINGS LTD.
UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME
AND COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
FOR THE THREE AND SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30, 2005 AND 2004
(In thousands of United States dollars, except share and per share amounts)


  THREE MONTHS ENDED
JUNE 30,
SIX MONTHS ENDED
JUNE 30,
  2005 2004 2005 2004
Revenues                        
Gross premiums written $ 403,189   $ 350,661   $ 1,105,680   $ 1,071,292  
Net premiums written   394,590     350,599     1,093,768     1,067,606  
Change in unearned premiums   43,331     45,388     (218,249   (255,793
Net premiums earned (includes $5,225 and $680 from related parties for the six months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004, respectively)   437,921     395,987     875,519     811,813  
Net investment income   39,696     28,944     79,707     53,619  
Net realized gains (losses) on sales of investments   592     (614   (3,861   4,562  
Other underwriting (loss) income   (145       26      
Total revenues   478,064     424,317     951,391     869,994  
Expenses                  
Losses and loss expenses (includes $3,399 and $495 from related parties for the six months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004, respectively)   228,916     189,208     479,975     411,217  
Acquisition expenses (includes $1,469 and $75 payable to related parties for the six months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004, respectively)   89,334     82,667     176,109     168,185  
General and administrative expenses   40,432     32,537     73,978     64,304  
Amortization of intangibles   1,158     944     2,378     1,888  
Net foreign exchange losses   1,742     2,879     4,163     6,038  
Interest expense   5,612     834     11,083     1,662  
Total expenses   367,194     309,069     747,686     653,294  
Income before income taxes   110,870     115,248     203,705     216,700  
Income tax (expense) benefit   (853   (492   2,571     (1,072
Net income   110,017     114,756     206,276     215,628  
Other comprehensive (loss) income                  
Holding gains (losses) on investments arising during the period (2005: net of applicable deferred income taxes of $4,701 – three month period; $1,707 – six month period)   42,206     (69,164   1,263     (43,042
Foreign currency translation adjustments   (9,542   (1,995   (13,209   2,737  
Net gain (loss) on derivatives designated as cash flow hedge   23     (162   45     (209
Reclassification adjustment for net realized losses (gains) included in net income   (592   614     3,861     (4,562
Other comprehensive income (loss)   32,095     (70,707   (8,040   (45,076
Comprehensive income $ 142,112   $ 44,049   $ 198,236   $ 170,552  
Per share data                        
Weighted average number of common and common equivalent shares outstanding:                  
Basic   60,631,594     63,334,033     60,959,737     63,708,780  
Diluted   66,063,355     67,919,399     66,276,048     68,244,441  
Basic earnings per share $ 1.81   $ 1.81   $ 3.38   $ 3.38  
Diluted earnings per share $ 1.67   $ 1.69   $ 3.11   $ 3.16  

See accompanying notes to unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements.

3




ENDURANCE SPECIALTY HOLDINGS LTD.
UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN
SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
FOR THE SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30, 2005 AND 2004
(In thousands of United States dollars)


  SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30,
  2005 2004
Common shares            
Balance, beginning of period $ 61,255   $ 63,912  
Issuance of common shares   109     114  
Repurchase of common shares   (1,439   (2,037
Balance, end of period   59,925     61,989  
             
Additional paid-in capital            
Balance, beginning of period   1,111,633     1,189,570  
Issuance of common shares   976     1,671  
Issuance of restricted share units   9,252     5,788  
Repurchase of common shares   (50,319   (62,692
Settlement of equity awards   (1,639   (1,499
Public offering and registration costs   (390   (2,086
Stock-based compensation expense   502     1,331  
Balance, end of period   1,070,015     1,132,083  
             
Accumulated other comprehensive income            
Cumulative foreign currency translation adjustments:            
Balance, beginning of period   34,202     20,722  
Foreign currency translation adjustments   (13,209   2,737  
Balance, end of period   20,993     23,459  
Unrealized holding gains on investments:            
Balance, beginning of period   7,927     26,230  
Net unrealized holding gains (losses) arising during the period, net of reclassification adjustment   5,124     (47,604
Balance, end of period   13,051     (21,374
Accumulated derivative loss on cash flow hedging instruments:            
Balance, beginning of period   (2,656   (884
Net change from current period hedging transactions       (805
Net derivative loss reclassified to earnings   45     596  
Balance, end of period   (2,611   (1,093
Total accumulated other comprehensive income   31,433     992  
             
Retained earnings            
Balance, beginning of period   650,094     345,265  
Net income   206,276     215,628  
Issuance of restricted share units in lieu of dividends   (438   (160
Dividends on common shares   (30,180   (24,526
Balance, end of period   825,752     536,207  
             
Total shareholders' equity $ 1,987,125   $ 1,731,271  

See accompanying notes to unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements.

4




ENDURANCE SPECIALTY HOLDINGS LTD.
UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
FOR THE SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30, 2005 AND 2004
(In thousands of United States dollars)


  SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30,
  2005 2004
Cash flows provided by operating activities:            
Net income $ 206,276   $ 215,628  
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities            
Depreciation and amortization   17,433     17,428  
Net realized gains on sales of investments   3,861     (4,562
Deferred taxes   (9,602   (8,160
Stock-based compensation expense   4,523     2,825  
Equity in earnings of unconsolidated venture   (3,917    
Premiums receivable, net   (233,760   (192,924
Deferred acquisition costs   (30,228   (46,533
Losses recoverable   (1,706   (426
Prepaid reinsurance premiums   (4,524   (1,260
Accrued investment income   (1,873   (2,329
Other assets   (2,783   467  
Reserve for losses and loss expenses   273,880     337,138  
Reserve for unearned premiums   212,275     257,411  
Deposit liabilities   56,341      
Reinsurance balances payable   (14,107   1,590  
Other liabilities   96     12,630  
Net cash provided by operating activities   472,185     588,923  
             
Cash flows used in investing activities:            
Proceeds from sales of fixed maturity investments   1,673,542     837,383  
Proceeds from maturities and calls on fixed maturity investments   326,665     199,770  
Purchases of fixed maturity investments   (2,183,952   (1,429,724
Purchase of investments in other ventures, under equity method   (13,750    
Purchases of fixed assets   (4,918   (3,965
Net cash paid in HartRe acquisition   (9,475   (6,121
Net cash used in investing activities   (211,888   (402,657
             
Cash flows (used in) provided by financing activities:            
Issuance of common shares   1,085     1,785  
Settlement of equity awards   (1,639   (1,499
Offering and registration costs paid   (248   (694
Repurchase of common shares   (51,937   (64,729
Dividends paid   (30,180   (24,526
Net cash used in financing activities   (82,919   (89,663
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents   8,764     451  
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents   186,142     97,054  
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period   271,143     150,923  
Cash and cash equivalents, end of period $ 457,285   $ 247,977  

See accompanying notes to unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements.

5




ENDURANCE SPECIALTY HOLDINGS LTD.
NOTES TO THE UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in tables expressed in thousands of United States dollars, except share and per share amounts)

1.  General
  Endurance Specialty Holdings Ltd. ("Endurance Holdings") was organized as a Bermuda holding company on June 27, 2002. Endurance Holdings underwrites specialty lines of insurance and reinsurance on a global basis primarily through its three wholly-owned operating subsidiaries: Endurance Specialty Insurance Ltd. ("Endurance Bermuda"), based in Bermuda; Endurance Worldwide Insurance Limited ("Endurance U.K."), based in London, England; and Endurance Reinsurance Corporation of America ("Endurance U.S."), based in White Plains, New York. Endurance Holdings and its wholly-owned subsidiaries are collectively referred to herein as the "Company".
  The accompanying unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements have been prepared on the basis of accounting principles generally accepted in the United States for interim financial information and with the instructions to Form 10-Q and Article 10 of Regulation S-X. Accordingly, they do not include all of the information and footnotes required by accounting principles generally accepted in the United States for complete financial statements. In the opinion of management, all adjustments (consisting of normal recurring accruals) considered necessary for a fair presentation have been included. Results for the three month period ended June 30, 2005 are not necessarily indicative of the results that may be expected for the year ended December 31, 2005. The unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements include the accounts of Endurance Holdings and its wholly-owned subsidiaries, which are collectively referred to herein as the "Company". All intercompany transactions and balances have been eliminated on consolidation. Management is required to make estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts reported in the unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements and accompanying disclosures. Actual results could differ from those estimates. Among other matters, significant estimates and assumptions are used to record premiums written and ceded, and to record reserves for losses and loss expenses and contingencies. Estimates and assumptions are periodically reviewed and the effects of revisions are recorded in the consolidated financial statements in the period that they are determined to be necessary.
  The balance sheet at December 31, 2004 has been derived from the audited financial statements at that date but does not include all of the information and footnotes required by accounting principles generally accepted in the United States for complete financial statements. These unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements and notes thereto should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements and notes thereto for the year ended December 31, 2004 contained in Endurance Holdings' Annual Report on Form 10-K, as amended, for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2004 (the "2004 Annual Report on Form 10-K").
  Certain reclassifications have been made for 2004 to conform to the 2005 presentation.
2.  Significant events
  On April 18, 2005, the Company amended its existing Credit Agreement among the Company, various designated subsidiary borrowers, various lending institutions and JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. as Administrative Agent (the "Amended Agreement") in order to (i) allow for the issuance of multi-currency letters of credit, (ii) allow for the "fronting" of letters of credit by banks that are participants in the Amended Agreement, (iii) extend the maturity of the facility to April 18, 2010, and (iv) increase the size of the facility to $925 million from $850 million. The remaining material terms of the Company's existing Credit Agreement, described previously in the 2004 Annual Report on Form 10-K, are unchanged.

6




ENDURANCE SPECIALTY HOLDINGS LTD.
NOTES TO THE UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  — CONTINUED
(Amounts in tables expressed in thousands of United States dollars, except share and per share amounts)

3.  Securities lending
  The Company participates in a securities lending program whereby blocks of securities, which are included in fixed maturity investments available for sale, are loaned to third parties, primarily major brokerage firms. The Company retains all economic interest in the securities it lends, retains the earnings and cash flows associated with the loaned securities and receives a fee from the borrower for the temporary use of the securities. Collateral in the form of cash, government securities and letters of credit is required at a rate of 102% - 105% of the market value of the loaned securities and is monitored and maintained by the lending agent. The Company had $335.2 million in securities on loan at June 30, 2005.
4.  Earnings per share
  The Company follows Statement of Financial Accounting Standards ("SFAS") No. 128, "Earnings per Share", to account for its weighted average shares. Basic earnings per common share are calculated by dividing net income available to holders of Endurance Holdings' common shares by the weighted average number of common shares outstanding. In addition to the actual common shares outstanding, the weighted average number of common shares included in the basic earnings per common share calculation also includes the fully vested restricted share units discussed in note 5. Diluted earnings per common share are based on the weighted average number of common shares and dilutive potential common shares outstanding during the period of calculation using the treasury stock method.
  The following table sets forth the computation of basic and diluted earnings per share:

  THREE MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30,
  2005 2004
Numerator:            
Net income available to common shareholders $ 110,017   $ 114,756  
Denominator:            
Weighted average shares – basic            
Common shares outstanding   60,352,912     63,118,374  
Vested restricted share units outstanding   278,682     215,659  
    60,631,594     63,334,033  
Share equivalents            
Unvested restricted share units outstanding   213,381     49,694  
Warrants   3,612,508     3,177,852  
Options   1,605,872     1,357,820  
Weighted average shares – diluted   66,063,355     67,919,399  
Basic earnings per common share $ 1.81   $ 1.81  
Diluted earnings per common share $ 1.67   $ 1.69  

7




ENDURANCE SPECIALTY HOLDINGS LTD.
NOTES TO THE UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  — CONTINUED
(Amounts in tables expressed in thousands of United States dollars, except share and per share amounts)

4.  Earnings per share, cont'd.

  SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30,
  2005 2004
Numerator:            
Net income available to common shareholders $ 206,276   $ 215,628  
Denominator:            
Weighted average shares – basic            
Common shares outstanding   60,701,697     63,519,967  
Vested restricted share units outstanding   258,040     188,813  
    60,959,737     63,708,780  
Share equivalents            
Unvested restricted share units outstanding   203,281      
Warrants   3,533,061     3,167,775  
Options   1,579,969     1,367,886  
Weighted average shares – diluted   66,276,048     68,244,441  
Basic earnings per common share $ 3.38   $ 3.38  
Diluted earnings per common share $ 3.11   $ 3.16  
  The Company declared a dividend of $0.25 per common share on April 27, 2005. The dividend was paid on June 30, 2005 to shareholders of record as of June 16, 2005.

  THREE MONTHS
ENDED JUNE 30,
SIX MONTHS
ENDED JUNE 30,
  2005 2004 2005 2004
Dividends declared per common share $ 0.25   $ 0.21   $ 0.50   $ 0.39  
5.  Stock-based employee compensation plans
  The Company has a stock-based employee compensation plan (the "Option Plan") which provides for the grant of options to purchase the Company's ordinary shares, share appreciation rights, restricted shares, share bonuses and other equity incentive awards to key employees. Holders of restricted share units receive additional incremental restricted share units when the Company pays dividends on its ordinary shares.
6.  Segment reporting
  The determination of the Company's business segments is based on how the Company monitors the performance of its underwriting operations. The Company has six reportable business segments: property per risk treaty reinsurance, property catastrophe reinsurance, casualty treaty reinsurance, property individual risk, casualty individual risk and aerospace and other specialty lines.
  Property Per Risk Treaty Reinsurance – reinsures individual property risks of ceding companies on a treaty basis.
  Property Catastrophe Reinsurance – reinsures catastrophic perils for ceding companies on a treaty basis.
  Casualty Treaty Reinsurance – reinsures third party liability exposures from ceding companies on a treaty basis.
  Property Individual Risk – insurance and facultative reinsurance of commercial properties.

8




ENDURANCE SPECIALTY HOLDINGS LTD.
NOTES TO THE UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  — CONTINUED
(Amounts in tables expressed in thousands of United States dollars, except share and per share amounts)

6.  Segment reporting, cont'd.
  Casualty Individual Risk – insurance and facultative reinsurance of third party liability exposures.
  Aerospace and Other Specialty Lines – insurance and reinsurance of aerospace, surety, marine, energy, agricultural, personal accident, and other lines.
  Because the Company does not manage its assets by segment, investment income and total assets are not allocated to the individual segments. Management measures segment results on the basis of the combined ratio that is obtained by dividing the sum of the losses and loss expenses, acquisition expenses and general and administrative expenses by net premiums earned. General and administrative expenses incurred by segments are allocated directly. Remaining corporate overhead is allocated based on each segment's proportional share of gross premiums written. Group reinsurance protection and recoveries are allocated to segments based on the underlying exposures covered.
  For internal management reporting purposes, underwriting results by segment are presented on the basis of applying reinsurance accounting to all reinsurance contracts written. However, under the provisions of AICPA Statement of Position ("SOP") 98-7 – Deposit Accounting: Accounting for Insurance and Reinsurance Contracts That Do Not Transfer Insurance Risk ("SOP 98-7"), a small number of reinsurance contracts written during the six months ended June 30, 2005 have been accounted for as deposit liabilities.
  The following table provides a summary of the segment revenues and results for the three months ended June, 2005:

  Property Per
Risk Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Catastrophe
Reinsurance
Casualty
Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Individual
Risk
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 99,342   $ 67,574   $ 31,750   $ 35,932  
Net premiums written   99,268     67,574     31,048     32,410  
Net premiums earned   114,487     61,926     106,317     26,318  
Other underwriting income                
    114,487     61,926     106,317     26,318  
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   62,996     6,536     79,398     7,958  
Acquisition expenses   31,981     8,593     29,996     2,977  
General and administrative expenses   8,599     5,877     7,840     3,585  
    103,576     21,006     117,234     14,520  
Underwriting income (loss) $ 10,911   $ 40,920   $ (10,917 $ 11,798  
Loss ratio   55.0   10.6   74.7   30.2
Acquisition expense ratio   27.9   13.9   28.2   11.3
General and administrative expense ratio   7.5   9.5   7.4   13.6
Combined ratio   90.4   34.0   110.3   55.1

9




ENDURANCE SPECIALTY HOLDINGS LTD.
NOTES TO THE UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  — CONTINUED
(Amounts in tables expressed in thousands of United States dollars, except share and per share amounts)

6.  Segment reporting, cont'd.

  Casualty
Individual
Risk
Aerospace and
Other Specialty
Lines
Deposit
Accounting (1)
Total
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 105,079   $ 64,747   $ (1,235 $ 403,189  
Net premiums written   103,520     62,005     (1,235   394,590  
Net premiums earned   63,642     79,154     (13,923   437,921  
Other underwriting income           (145   (145
    63,642     79,154     (14,068   437,776  
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   40,233     40,425     (8,630   228,916  
Acquisition expenses   3,325     16,764     (4,302   89,334  
General and administrative expenses   7,659     6,872         40,432  
    51,217     64,061     (12,932   358,682  
Underwriting income (loss) $ 12,425   $ 15,093   $ (1,136 $ 79,094  
Loss ratio   63.2   51.1   62.0   52.3
Acquisition expense ratio   5.2   21.2   30.9   20.4
General and administrative expense ratio   12.0   8.7       9.2
Combined ratio   80.4   81.0   92.9   81.9
  (1) This column reconciles the Company's underwriting results by segment to the Company's financial statement presentation.
  The following table provides a summary of the segment revenues and results for the three months ended June 30, 2004:

  Property Per
Risk Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Catastrophe
Reinsurance
Casualty
Treaty
Reinsurance
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 92,251   $ 63,934   $ 52,668  
Net premiums written   92,251     63,934     52,640  
Net premiums earned   111,886     56,805     89,233  
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   58,815     3,499     53,849  
Acquisition expenses   30,319     6,915     24,220  
General and administrative expenses   7,654     5,722     6,854  
    96,788     16,136     84,923  
Underwriting income $ 15,098   $ 40,669   $ 4,310  
Loss ratio   52.6   6.2   60.3
Acquisition expense ratio   27.1   12.2   27.1
General and administrative expense ratio   6.8   10.1   7.7
Combined ratio   86.5   28.5   95.1

10




ENDURANCE SPECIALTY HOLDINGS LTD.
NOTES TO THE UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  — CONTINUED
(Amounts in tables expressed in thousands of United States dollars, except share and per share amounts)

6.  Segment reporting, cont'd.

  Property
Individual
Risk
Casualty
Individual
Risk
Aerospace and
Other Specialty
Lines
Total
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 30,453   $ 84,414   $ 26,941   $ 350,661  
Net premiums written   30,758     84,075     26,941     350,599  
Net premiums earned   24,458     59,594     54,011     395,987  
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   10,817     35,326     26,902     189,208  
Acquisition expenses   3,063     6,193     11,957     82,667  
General and administrative expenses   2,945     6,079     3,283     32,537  
    16,825     47,598     42,142     304,412  
Underwriting income (loss) $ 7,633   $ 11,996   $ 11,869   $ 91,575  
Loss ratio   44.2   59.3   49.8   47.8
Acquisition expense ratio   12.5   10.4   22.1   20.9
General and administrative expense ratio   12.0   10.2   6.1   8.2
Combined ratio   68.7   79.9   78.0   76.9
  The following table reconciles total segment results to consolidated income before income taxes for the three months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004, respectively:

  2005 2004
Total underwriting income $ 79,094   $ 91,575  
Net investment income   39,696     28,944  
Net foreign exchange losses   (1,742   (2,879
Net realized (losses) gains on sales of investments   592     (614
Amortization of intangibles   (1,158   (944
Interest expense   (5,612   (834
Consolidated income before income taxes $ 110,870   $ 115,248  

11




ENDURANCE SPECIALTY HOLDINGS LTD.
NOTES TO THE UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — CONTINUED
(Amounts in tables expressed in thousands of United States dollars, except share and per share amounts)

6.  Segment reporting, cont'd.

The following table provides a summary of the segment revenues and results for the six months ended June 30, 2005:


  Property Per
Risk Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Catastrophe
Reinsurance
Casualty
Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Individual
Risk
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 270,632   $ 178,264   $ 283,293   $ 59,306  
Net premiums written   270,558     178,264     280,831     55,560  
Net premiums earned   233,072     120,825     224,362     53,514  
Other underwriting income                
    233,072     120,825     224,362     53,514  
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   107,526     17,306     158,535     47,290  
Acquisition expenses   64,404     15,889     59,750     6,447  
General and administrative expenses   15,214     10,683     17,145     5,809  
    187,144     43,878     235,430     59,546  
Underwriting income (loss) $ 45,928   $ 76,947   $ (11,068 $ (6,032
Loss ratio   46.1   14.3   70.7   88.4
Acquisition expense ratio   27.6   13.2   26.6   12.0
General and administrative expense ratio   6.5   8.8   7.6   10.9
Combined ratio   80.2   36.3   104.9   111.3

  Casualty
Individual
Risk
Aerospace and
Other Specialty
Lines
Deposit
Accounting (1)
Total
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 152,769   $ 248,273   $ (86,857 $ 1,105,680  
Net premiums written   151,300     244,112     (86,857   1,093,768  
Net premiums earned   124,106     144,220     (24,580   875,519  
Other underwriting income           26     26  
    124,106     144,220     (24,554   875,545  
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   77,684     86,140     (14,506   479,975  
Acquisition expenses   7,949     29,684     (8,014   176,109  
General and administrative expenses   10,752     14,375         73,978  
    96,385     130,199     (22,520   730,062  
Underwriting income (loss) $ 27,721   $ 14,021   $ (2,034 $ 145,483  
Loss ratio   62.6   59.7   59.1   54.8
Acquisition expense ratio   6.4   20.6   32.6   20.1
General and administrative expense ratio   8.7   10.0       8.4
Combined ratio   77.7   90.3   91.7   83.3
(1) This column reconciles the Company's underwriting results by segment to the Company's financial statement presentation.

12




ENDURANCE SPECIALTY HOLDINGS LTD.
NOTES TO THE UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — CONTINUED
(Amounts in tables expressed in thousands of United States dollars, except share and per share amounts)

6.  Segment reporting, cont'd.

The following table provides a summary of the segment revenues and results for the six months ended June 30, 2004:


  Property Per
Risk Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Catastrophe
Reinsurance
Casualty
Treaty
Reinsurance
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 298,663   $ 192,473   $ 239,846  
Net premiums written   298,663     192,473     237,068  
Net premiums earned   230,011     110,179     195,287  
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   119,431     6,412     123,134  
Acquisition expenses   60,359     13,109     52,260  
General and administrative expenses   15,777     11,016     15,159  
    195,567     30,537     190,553  
Underwriting income $ 34,444   $ 79,642   $ 4,734  
Loss ratio   51.9   5.8   63.1
Acquisition expense ratio   26.2   11.9   26.8
General and administrative expense ratio   6.9   10.0   7.8
Combined ratio   85.0   27.7   97.7

  Property
Individual
Risk
Casualty
Individual
Risk
Aerospace
and Other
Specialty
Lines
Total
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 59,987   $ 134,506   $ 145,817   $ 1,071,292  
Net premiums written   59,419     134,166     145,817     1,067,606  
Net premiums earned   47,313     114,269     114,754     811,813  
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   16,971     73,898     71,371     411,217  
Acquisition expenses   5,744     12,324     24,389     168,185  
General and administrative expenses   5,267     9,934     7,151     64,304  
    27,982     96,156     102,911     643,706  
Underwriting income (loss) $ 19,331   $ 18,113   $ 11,843   $ 168,107  
Loss ratio   35.9   64.7   62.2   50.7
Acquisition expense ratio   12.1   10.8   21.3   20.7
General and administrative expense ratio   11.1   8.7   6.2   7.9
Combined ratio   59.1   84.2   89.7   79.3

13




ENDURANCE SPECIALTY HOLDINGS LTD.
NOTES TO THE UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — CONTINUED
(Amounts in tables expressed in thousands of United States dollars, except share and per share amounts)

6.  Segment reporting, cont'd.

The following table reconciles total segment results to consolidated income before income taxes for the six months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004, respectively:


  2005 2004
Total underwriting income $ 145,483   $ 168,107  
Net investment income   79,707     53,619  
Net foreign exchange losses   (4,163   (6,038
Net realized (losses) gains on sales of investments   (3,861   4,562  
Amortization of intangibles   (2,378   (1,888
Interest expense   (11,083   (1,662
Consolidated income before income taxes $ 203,705   $ 216,700  

The following table provides the reserves for losses and loss expenses by segment as of June 30, 2005 and 2004, respectively:


  2005 2004
Property Per Risk Treaty Reinsurance $ 391,239   $ 268,515  
Property Catastrophe Reinsurance   60,699     59,885  
Casualty Treaty Reinsurance   606,885     350,457  
Property Individual Risk   95,659     49,770  
Casualty Individual Risk   377,968     226,362  
Aerospace and Other Specialty Lines   304,684     215,307  
Deposit Accounting (1)   (13,593    
Total $ 1,823,541   $ 1,170,296  
(1)   This line reconciles the Company's reserves for losses and loss expenses by segment to the Company's financial statement presentation.
7.  Commitments and contingencies

Concentrations of credit risk.    As of June 30, 2005, substantially all the Company's cash and investments were held by three custodians. The Company's investment guidelines limit the amount of credit exposure to any one issuer other than the U.S. Treasury and other government obligations rated AAA.

Major production sources.    During the six month period ended June 30, 2005, the Company obtained 71.3% of its gross premiums written through four brokers: Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. – 25.2%, Aon Corporation – 24.9%, Benfield Group – 10.7% and Willis Companies – 10.5%.

Letters of credit.    As of June 30, 2005, the Company's bankers have issued letters of credit of approximately $309.7 million in favor of certain ceding companies.

Investment commitments.    As of June 30, 2005, the Company had committed cash and cash equivalents and fixed maturity investments of $210.5 million in favor of certain ceding companies to collateralize obligations. As of June 30, 2005, the Company has also pledged $352.3 million of its fixed maturity investments as collateral to secure $309.7 million in letters of credit outstanding under its credit facility. In addition, at June 30, 2005, cash and fixed maturity investments with a fair value of $3.1 million were on deposit with U.S. state regulators.

14




ENDURANCE SPECIALTY HOLDINGS LTD.
NOTES TO THE UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — CONTINUED
(Amounts in tables expressed in thousands of United States dollars, except share and per share amounts)

7.  Commitments and contingencies, cont'd.

The Company is subject to certain commitments with respect to its investments in other ventures at June 30, 2005. Of the $108.7 million balance as at June 30, 2005, $56.0 million was subject to redemption restriction provisions of two years from date of acquisition and $16.3 million was subject to redemption restriction provisions of three years from acquisition. At June 30, 2005, the Company was committed to investing a further $23.8 million in alternative investment funds. These additional investments were made on July 1, 2005.

Employment agreements.    The Company has entered into employment agreements with certain officers that provide for option awards, executive benefits and severance payments under certain circumstances.

Operating Leases.    The Company leases office space and office equipment under operating leases. Future minimum lease commitments at June 30, 2005 are as follows:


Year Ended
June 30,
Amount
2006 $ 6,964  
2007   6,918  
2008   6,970  
2009   6,956  
2010   6,423  
2011 and thereafter   22,876  
  $ 57,107  

Total rent expense under operating leases for the six month period ended June 30, 2005 was $3,409,000 (2004 – $3,005,000).

Legal Proceedings.    The Company is party to various legal proceedings generally arising in the normal course of its business. While any legal proceeding contains an element of uncertainty, the Company does not believe that the eventual outcome of any litigation or arbitration proceeding to which it is presently a party could have a material adverse effect on its financial condition or business. Pursuant to the Company's insurance and reinsurance agreements, disputes are generally required to be finally settled by arbitration.

Endurance Holdings, Endurance U.S. and three employees of one of Endurance Holdings' subsidiaries have been named in a lawsuit filed on November 18, 2004 in the Court of Common Pleas in Hamilton County, Ohio. The suit alleges misappropriation of trade secrets from the employees' former employer, Great American Insurance Company, and related entities and asserts other related claims. On December 22, 2004, the Company and the other defendants filed motions to dismiss the lawsuit for lack of personal jurisdiction over the defendants. These motions are pending.

On January 5, 2005, Endurance U.S. received a subpoena from the Office of the Attorney General of the State of New York (the "NYAG") in connection with its investigation into contingent commission arrangements with brokers. Although the subpoena was addressed to Endurance U.S., it called for the production of documents from all affiliates of Endurance Holdings. Among other things, the subpoena seeks documents concerning efforts by any insurance broker to exclude or limit an insurance company's access to the insurance market and documents concerning efforts or requests by any insurance broker to manipulate bids or price quotes, or submit false or inflated bids or price quotes in insurance markets. The Company has provided the NYAG with an initial set of documents responsive to the subpoena.

15




MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF
FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

The following is a discussion and analysis of the Company's financial condition and results of operations for the three and six month periods ended June 30, 2005. This discussion and analysis should be read in conjunction with the unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements and related notes contained in this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q and the audited consolidated financial statements and related notes for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2004, the discussions of critical accounting policies and qualitative and quantitative disclosure about market risk, contained in the 2004 Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Some of the information contained in this discussion and analysis or set forth elsewhere in this Form 10-Q, including information with respect to the Company's plans and strategy for its business, includes forward looking statements that involve risk and uncertainties. Please see the section "Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Statements" below for more information on factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from the results described in or implied by any forward-looking statements contained in this discussion and analysis. You should review the "Risk Factors" set forth in the 2004 Annual Report on Form 10-K, for a discussion of important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from the results described in or implied by the forward-looking statements contained herein.

Overview

Endurance Specialty Holdings Ltd. ("Endurance Holdings") was organized as a Bermuda holding company on June 27, 2002. Endurance Holdings underwrites specialty lines of insurance and reinsurance on a global basis primarily through its three wholly-owned operating subsidiaries: Endurance Specialty Insurance Ltd. ("Endurance Bermuda"), based in Bermuda; Endurance Worldwide Insurance Limited ("Endurance U.K."), based in London, England; and Endurance Reinsurance Corporation of America ("Endurance U.S."), based in White Plains, New York. Endurance Holdings and its wholly-owned subsidiaries are collectively referred to in this discussion and analysis as the "Company".

The Company writes specialty lines of commercial property, casualty and surety insurance and reinsurance on a global basis, and seeks to create a portfolio of specialty lines which are profitable and have limited correlation with one another. The Company's portfolio of specialty lines of business is organized into the following segments: Property Per Risk Treaty Reinsurance, Property Catastrophe Reinsurance, Casualty Treaty Reinsurance, Property Individual Risk, Casualty Individual Risk, and Aerospace and Other Specialty Lines.

The insurance lines that the Company writes are included in the property individual risk, casualty individual risk, and aerospace and other specialty lines segments. The reinsurance lines that the Company writes are included in the Property Per Risk Treaty Reinsurance, Property Catastrophe Reinsurance, Casualty Treaty Reinsurance, and Aerospace and Other Specialty Lines segments.

The Company commenced its U.S. insurance operations in October 2004, and to date has primarily focused on recruiting and implementing the systems and infrastructure necessary to support the business in advance of writing significant premium volumes. The Company's U.S. insurance operations are initially focusing on general and all risk property, difference in conditions coverage ("DIC"), and primary, umbrella and excess casualty risks. These U.S. insurance opportunities, obtained principally through traditional producer relationships, allow the Company to diversify its client base and distribution in lines of business that complement its existing specialty insurance and reinsurance business. The Company is in the process of acquiring one or more licensed and surplus lines insurance companies which are currently not underwriting business to facilitate the underwriting of its U.S. insurance business. The acquisitions are not expected to be material to the Company's financial condition or results of operations.

Property insurance and reinsurance provides coverage of an insurable interest in tangible property for property loss, damage or loss of use. The Company writes property lines through its

16




Property Per Risk Treaty Reinsurance, Property Catastrophe Reinsurance, Property Individual Risk, and Aerospace and Other Specialty Lines segments.

Casualty insurance and reinsurance is primarily concerned with the losses caused by injuries to third parties, i.e., not the insured, or to property owned by third parties and the legal liability imposed on the insured resulting therefrom. It includes, but is not limited to, employers' liability, workers' compensation, public liability, automobile liability, personal liability, marine and aviation liability insurance. The Company writes casualty lines through its Casualty Treaty Reinsurance, Casualty Individual Risk, and Aerospace and Other Specialty Lines segments.

Surety involves the issuance or reinsurance of bonds that provide financial remuneration in the event that an obligor fails to meet its contractual obligations to an obligee. Surety products include bid, performance, payment, maintenance and supply bonds, commercial surety bonds, trade surety bonds, permit bonds, court bonds and public official bonds. The Company writes surety business through its Aerospace and Other Specialty Lines segment.

Application of Critical Accounting Estimates

The Company's condensed consolidated financial statements are based on the selection of accounting policies and application of significant accounting estimates, which require management to make significant estimates and assumptions. The Company believes that some of the more critical judgments in the areas of accounting estimates and assumptions that affect its financial condition and results of operations are related to the recognition of premiums written and ceded and reserves for losses and loss expenses. For a detailed discussion of the Company's critical accounting estimates please refer to the 2004 Annual Report on Form 10-K. There were no material changes in the application of the Company's critical accounting estimates subsequent to that report. During the three and six month periods ended June 30, 2005, the Company entered into a small number of reinsurance contracts which are accounted for by the deposit method of accounting specified by AICPA Statement of Position ("SOP") 98-7 — Deposit Accounting: Accounting for Insurance and Reinsurance Contracts That Do Not Transfer Insurance Risk ("SOP 98-7"). Although management has determined that accounting for these contracts as deposits is the most appropriate treatment, the Company considers the risk of loss resulting from any one of these contracts to be more than remote, and such loss could be material. See "Deposit Accounting" below for further discussion. Management has discussed the application of these critical accounting estimates with the Company's Board of Directors and the Audit Committee of the Board of Directors.

17




Consolidated results of operations – for the three month period ended June 30, 2005

Results of operations for the three months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004 were as follows:


  2005 2004 Change (1)
  (in thousands)
Underwriting income      
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 403,189   $ 350,661     15.0
Net premiums written   394,590     350,599     12.5
Net premiums earned   437,921     395,987     10.6
Other underwriting income   (145       NM (2) 
    437,776     395,987     10.6
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   228,916     189,208     21.0
Acquisition expenses   89,334     82,667     8.1
General and administrative expenses   40,432     32,537     24.3
    358,682     304,412     17.8
Underwriting income   79,094     91,575     (13.6 %) 
Net investment income   39,696     28,944     37.1
Net foreign exchange losses   (1,742   (2,879   (39.5 %) 
Net realized gains (losses) on sales of investments   592     (614   196.4
Amortization of intangibles   (1,158   (944   22.7
Interest expense   (5,612   (834   572.9
Income tax expense   (853   (492   73.4
Net income $ 110,017   $ 114,756     (4.1 %) 
Loss ratio   52.3   47.8   4.5  
Acquisition expense ratio   20.4   20.9   (0.5
General and administrative expense ratio   9.2   8.2   1.0  
Combined ratio   81.9   76.9   5.0  
Reserve for losses and loss expenses $ 1,823,541     1,170,296     55.8
(1) With respect to ratios, changes show increase or decrease in percentage points.
(2) Not meaningful.

Premiums.    The increase in gross premiums written during the quarter ended June 30, 2005 was due to the impact of premium adjustments and new business, offset by the non renewal of certain contracts. During the quarter ended June 30, 2005, gross premiums written included $19.1 million of positive premium adjustments related to prior periods compared to $16.9 of negative premium adjustments in the quarter ended June 30, 2004. Premium adjustments arose as a result of actual premiums reported differing from the Company's original estimates. In addition, the excess general liability line of the Casualty Individual Risk segment experienced favorable conditions resulting in $13.7 million of new business written. Continued development in the agriculture, surety, marine and personal accident lines within the Aerospace and Other Specialty Lines segment combined to produce growth of $37.8 million. Partially offsetting these increases, the Company's Casualty Treaty Reinsurance segment experienced a decrease in gross premiums written, primarily due to the non-renewal of a large professional liability contract.

Premiums ceded in both the three month periods ended June 30, 2005 and 2004 were negligible.

The increased net premiums earned in the second quarter of 2005 reflected the growth of net premiums written in 2004 and 2003.

18




Net Investment Income.    Net investment income was derived primarily from interest earned on fixed maturity investments and earnings from the Company's investments in other ventures, partially offset by investment management fees and other investment expenses. The increase in net investment income in the second quarter of 2005 was principally due to an increase in invested assets from June 30, 2004 to June 30, 2005 of approximately 37.7%. The increase in invested assets resulted from positive net operating cash flows throughout the last twelve months and a general increase in investment yields. Investment expenses for the three months ended June 30, 2005 were $1.6 million compared to $0.6 million for the same period in 2004.

The annualized period book yield (which is the average yield of the invested portfolio after adjusting for accretion and amortization from the purchase price) and total return of the investment portfolio (which includes realized and unrealized gains and losses) for the three months ended June 30, 2005 were 3.79% and 7.44%, respectively. For the three months ended June 30, 2004, the annualized period book yield and total return were 3.90% and 6.89%, respectively. The Company has increased its absolute cash position from March 31, 2005 to June 30, 2005. The increase in cash and cash equivalents has decreased the portfolio's overall duration to 2.42 years from 2.91 years at March 31, 2005 and 2.77 years at December 31, 2004. Overall, the annualized period book yield of the portfolio has decreased due to the addition of lower yielding cash securities and the volatility of earnings from the Company's investments in other ventures experienced during the second quarter. This has partially been offset by the repositioning of some of the Company's portfolio from government securities into higher yielding fixed income investments.

Losses and Loss Expenses.    The reported loss ratio for the three months ended June 30, 2005 was characterized by relatively light catastrophic loss activity and favorable development on prior period loss reserves.

Some segments, particularly Property Per Risk Treaty Reinsurance, Casualty Individual Risk, Property Individual Risk and Aerospace and Other Specialty Lines, experienced lower levels of reported losses than previously anticipated thereby resulting in favorable adjustments to reserves. Offsetting these developments, the reserves in Casualty Treaty Reinsurance segment were increased as the Company's regular claims audit process identified additional potential claims related to mutual fund exposures on two treaties. Overall, the Company's previously estimated loss reserves for the 2002, 2003 and 2004 accident years were reduced by $27.7 million compared to reduction in loss reserves of $40.7 million experienced during the three month period ended June 30, 2004.

The Company participates in lines of business where claims may not be reported for many years. Accordingly, management does not believe that reported claims are the only valid means for estimating ultimate obligations. Ultimate losses and loss expenses may differ materially from the amounts recorded in the Company's consolidated financial statements. These estimates are reviewed regularly and, as experience develops and new information becomes known, the reserves are adjusted as necessary. Such adjustments, if any, are recorded in earnings in the period in which they are determined. The overall loss reserves were established by the Company's actuaries and reflect management's best estimate of ultimate losses. See "— Reserve for Losses and Loss Expenses" for further discussion.

Acquisition Expenses.    The decrease in acquisition expense ratio for the three months ended June 30, 2005 was due to normal variations in business mix.

General and Administrative Expenses.    The general and administrative expense ratio for the three months ended June 30, 2005 increased slightly due to expenses related to the development of the U.S. insurance operations. The growth of general and administrative expenses also reflected the continued development of Endurance U.S. and Endurance U.K. At June 30, 2005 the Company had 344 employees compared to 259 employees at June 30, 2004.

19




Underwriting results by operating segments

The determination of the Company's business segments was based on how the Company monitors the performance of its underwriting operations. For internal management reporting purposes, underwriting results by segment are presented on the basis of applying reinsurance accounting to all reinsurance contracts written. However, for financial statement presentation purposes, management determined that a small number of reinsurance contracts written during the period were more appropriately accounted for as deposit liabilities. See "Deposit Accounting" below for further discussion. Management measures segment results on the basis of the combined ratio, which is obtained by dividing the sum of the losses and loss expenses, acquisition expenses and general and administrative expenses by net premiums earned. The Company's historic combined ratios may not be indicative of future underwriting performance. The Company does not manage its assets by segment; accordingly, investment income and total assets are not allocated to the individual segments. General and administrative expenses incurred by segments are allocated directly. Remaining corporate overhead is allocated based on each segment's proportional share of gross premiums written. Group reinsurance protection and recoveries are allocated to segments based on the underlying exposures covered.

The following table summarizes the underwriting results, associated ratios and reserve for losses and loss expenses for the Company's six business segments for the three month period ended June 30, 2005.


  Property Per
Risk Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Catastrophe
Reinsurance
Casualty
Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Individual
Risk
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 99,342   $ 67,574   $ 31,750   $ 35,932  
Net premiums written   99,268     67,574     31,048     32,410  
Net premiums earned   114,487     61,926     106,317     26,318  
Other underwriting income                
    114,487     61,926     106,317     26,318  
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   62,996     6,536     79,398     7,958  
Acquisition expenses   31,981     8,593     29,996     2,977  
General and administrative expenses   8,599     5,877     7,840     3,585  
    103,576     21,006     117,234     14,520  
Underwriting income $ 10,911   $ 40,920   $ (10,917 $ 11,798  
Loss ratio   55.0   10.6   74.7   30.2
Acquisition expense ratio   27.9   13.9   28.2   11.3
General and administrative expense ratio   7.5   9.5   7.4   13.6
Combined ratio   90.4   34.0   110.3   55.1
Reserve for losses and loss expenses $ 391,240   $ 60,699   $ 606,885   $ 95,659  

20





  Casualty
Individual Risk
Aerospace and
Other
Specialty Lines
Company
Sub-total
Deposit
Accounting (1)
Total
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 105,079   $ 64,747   $ 404,424   $ (1,235 $ 403,189  
Net premiums written   103,520     62,005     395,825     (1,235   394,590  
Net premiums earned   63,642     79,154     451,844     (13,923   437,921  
Other underwriting income               (145   (145
    63,642     79,154     451,844     (14,068   437,776  
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   40,233     40,425     237,546     (8,630   228,916  
Acquisition expenses   3,325     16,764     93,636     (4,302   89,334  
General and administrative expenses   7,659     6,872     40,432         40,432  
    51,217     64,061     371,614     (12,932   358,682  
Underwriting income (loss) $ 12,425   $ 15,093   $ 80,230   $ (1,136 $ 79,094  
Loss ratio   63.2   51.1   52.6   (62.0 %)    52.3
Acquisition expense ratio   5.2   21.2   20.7   (30.9 %)    20.4
General and administrative expense ratio   12.0   8.7   8.9       9.2
Combined ratio   80.4   81.0   82.2   (92.9 %)    81.9
Reserve for losses and loss expenses $ 377,967   $ 304,684   $ 1,837,134   $ (13,593 $ 1,823,541  
(1) This column reconciles the Company's underwriting results by segment to the Company's financial statement presentation. See "Deposit Accounting" below for further discussion.

21




The following table summarizes the underwriting results and associated ratios for the Company's six business segments for the three month period ended June 30, 2004.


  Property Per
Risk Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Catastrophe
Reinsurance
Casualty
Treaty
Reinsurance
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 92,251   $ 63,934   $ 52,668  
Net premiums written   92,251     63,934     52,640  
Net premiums earned   111,886     56,805     89,233  
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   58,815     3,499     53,849  
Acquisition expenses   30,319     6,915     24,220  
General and administrative expenses   7,654     5,722     6,854  
    96,788     16,136     84,923  
Underwriting income (loss) $ 15,098   $ 40,669   $ 4,310  
Loss ratio   52.6   6.2   60.3
Acquisition expense ratio   27.1   12.2   27.1
General and administrative expense ratio   6.8   10.1   7.7
Combined ratio   86.5   28.5   95.1
Reserve for losses and loss expenses $ 268,515   $ 59,885   $ 350,457  

  Property
Individual
Risk
Casualty
Individual
Risk
Aerospace
and Other
Specialty
Lines
Total
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 30,453   $ 84,414   $ 26,941   $ 350,661  
Net premiums written   30,758     84,075     26,941     350,599  
Net premiums earned   24,458     59,594     54,011     395,987  
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   10,817     35,326     26,902     189,208  
Acquisition expenses   3,063     6,193     11,957     82,667  
General and administrative expenses   2,945     6,079     3,283     32,537  
    16,825     47,598     42,142     304,412  
Underwriting income (loss) $ 7,633   $ 11,996   $ 11,869   $ 91,575  
Loss ratio   44.2   59.3   49.8   47.8
Acquisition expense ratio   12.5   10.4   22.1   20.9
General and administrative expense ratio   12.0   10.2   6.1   8.2
Combined ratio   68.7   79.9   78.0   76.9
Reserve for losses and loss expenses $ 49,770   $ 226,362   $ 215,307   $ 1,170,296  

22




Property Per Risk Treaty Reinsurance

The Company's Property Per Risk Treaty Reinsurance business segment reinsures individual property risks of ceding companies on a treaty basis. The Company's property per risk reinsurance contracts cover claims from individual insurance policies written by its ceding company clients and include both personal lines and commercial lines exposures. The following table summarizes the underwriting results and associated ratios for the Property Per Risk Treaty Reinsurance business segment for the three months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004, respectively.


  THREE MONTHS ENDED
  June 30,
2005
June 30,
2004
Change (1)
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 99,342   $ 92,251     7.7
Net premiums written   99,268     92,251     7.6
Net premiums earned   114,487     111,886     2.3
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   62,996     58,815     7.1
Acquisition expenses   31,981     30,319     5.5
General and administrative expenses   8,599     7,654     12.3
    103,576     96,788     7.0
Underwriting income $ 10,911   $ 15,098     (27.7 %) 
Loss ratio   55.0   52.6   2.4  
Acquisition expense ratio   27.9   27.1   0.8  
General and administrative expense ratio   7.5   6.8   0.7  
Combined ratio   90.4   86.5   3.9  
(1) With respect to ratios, changes show increase or decrease in percentage points.

Premiums.    The increase in gross premiums written was primarily due to a large 15 month contract renewed in the second quarter of 2005. This contract was reflected in the first quarter results in 2004. Premiums written on this policy in the three months ended June 30, 2005 were approximately $24 million. Offsetting this increase was business that was not renewed because pricing, terms and conditions no longer met the Company's requirements. Premiums earned were largely unchanged from the corresponding period in the prior year.

Losses and Loss Expenses.    The loss ratio in the three months ended June 30, 2005 increased slightly from the corresponding period in the prior year due to a $5.6 million loss reported on a national carrier account. Favorable loss reserve development of $12.0 million was experienced in the quarter compared to $10.5 million of favorable loss reserve development in the quarter ended June 30, 2004.

Acquisition Expenses.    The acquisition expense ratio for 2005 was largely consistent with 2004. The slight increase was due to a moderate shift in the mix of business.

General and Administrative Expenses.    The increase in general and administrative expenses reflected a larger allocation of corporate expenses commensurate with the higher level of premiums written.

23




Property Catastrophe Reinsurance

The Company's Property Catastrophe Reinsurance business segment reinsures catastrophic perils for ceding companies on a treaty basis. The Company's property catastrophe reinsurance contracts provide protection for most catastrophic losses that are covered in the underlying insurance policies written by its ceding company clients. Protection under property catastrophe treaties is provided on an occurrence basis, allowing the Company's ceding company clients to combine losses that have been incurred in any single event from multiple underlying policies. The following table summarizes the underwriting results and associated ratios for the Property Catastrophe Reinsurance business segment for the three months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004, respectively.


  THREE MONTHS ENDED
  June 30,
2005
June 30,
2004
Change (1)
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 67,574   $ 63,934     5.7
Net premiums written   67,574     63,934     5.7
Net premiums earned   61,926     56,805     9.0
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   6,536     3,499     86.8
Acquisition expenses   8,593     6,915     24.3
General and administrative expenses   5,877     5,722     2.7
    21,006     16,136     30.2
Underwriting income $ 40,920   $ 40,669     0.6
Loss ratio   10.6   6.2   4.4  
Acquisition expense ratio   13.9   12.2   1.7  
General and administrative expense ratio   9.5   10.1   (0.6
Combined ratio   34.0   28.5   5.5  
(1) With respect to ratios, changes show increase or decrease in percentage points.

Premiums.    The increase in gross premiums written was due in large part to positive premium adjustments. The premium adjustments related to prior periods and occurred because actual reported premiums exceeded the Company's original estimates. In addition, the Company experienced modest pricing increases on programs with U.S. hurricane exposures, particularly those with significant losses in 2004. These increases were offset by business that was not renewed where pricing, terms and conditions no longer met the Company's underwriting requirements.

Losses and Loss Expenses.    The low loss ratios for the three month periods ended June 30, 2005 and 2004 reflected the generally low level of catastrophic loss emergence during both periods. The increase in loss ratio resulted from less favorable loss reserve development in the quarter. Favorable loss reserve development declined from $10.0 million in the three months ended June 30, 2004 to $2.1 million in the three months ended June 30, 2005.

Acquisition Expenses.    The increase in acquisition expense ratio in the three months ended June 30, 2005 was a result of positive premium adjustments on a large quota share contract which bears higher than average acquisition expenses.

General and Administrative Expenses.    General and administrative expenses in the three months ended June 30, 2005 were largely unchanged from the corresponding prior year period.

24




Casualty Treaty Reinsurance

The Company's Casualty Treaty Reinsurance business segment reinsures third party liability exposures from ceding companies on a treaty basis. The exposures that the Company reinsures include automobile liability, professional liability, directors' and officers' liability, umbrella liability and workers' compensation. The following table summarizes the underwriting results and associated ratios for the Casualty Treaty Reinsurance business segment for the three months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004, respectively.


  THREE MONTHS ENDED
  June 30,
2005
June 30,
2004
Change (1)
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 31,750   $ 52,668     (39.7 %) 
Net premiums written   31,048     52,640     (41.0 %) 
Net premiums earned   106,317     89,233     19.1
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   79,398     53,849     47.4
Acquisition expenses   29,996     24,220     23.8
General and administrative expenses   7,840     6,854     14.4
    117,234     84,923     38.0
Underwriting (loss) income $ (10,917 $ 4,310     (353.3 %) 
Loss ratio   74.7   60.3   14.4  
Acquisition expense ratio   28.2   27.1   1.1  
General and administrative expense ratio   7.4   7.7   (0.3
Combined ratio   110.3   95.1   15.2  
(1) With respect to ratios, changes show increase or decrease in percentage points.

Premiums.    The decrease in gross premiums written was in large part due to the non-renewal of a large professional liability contract that accounted for $28.0 million of written premium in the three months ended June 30, 2004. Total premiums from expiring contracts that were not renewed for the three months ended June 30, 2005 of $43.6 million was partially offset by new business written. Business was not renewed principally where pricing, terms and conditions no longer met the Company's requirements. The growth in premiums earned was in line with the historical growth of premiums written.

Losses and Loss Expenses.    Claims may not be reported for many years in the lines of business included in this segment. Increased uncertainty exists regarding the development of reserves due to the long tail nature of this business. The increase in loss ratio in 2005 was a result of increases in prior year loss reserves of $9.7 million compared to $4.0 million of favorable development for the corresponding period in 2004. Prior year reserves were increased in 2005 as the Company's regular claims audit process identified additional potential claims related to mutual fund exposures on two treaties.

Acquisition Expenses.    The acquisition cost ratio for the three months ended June 30, 2005 was largely consistent compared to the same period in 2004. The moderate increase was a result of a slight change in the mix of business.

General and Administrative Expenses.    General and administrative expenses for the three months ended June 30, 2005 have increased in line with the growth in underwriting activity, increased corporate expenses, and higher staffing levels.

25




Property Individual Risk

The Company's Property Individual Risk business segment is comprised of the insurance and facultative reinsurance of commercial properties. The policies written in this segment provide coverage for one insured for each policy. The types of risks insured are generally commercial properties with sufficiently large values to require multiple insurers and reinsurers to accommodate their insurance capacity needs. The following table summarizes the underwriting results and associated ratios for the Property Individual Risk business segment for the three months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004, respectively.


  THREE MONTHS ENDED
  June 30,
2005
June 30,
2004
Change (1)
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 35,932   $ 30,453     18.0
Net premiums written   32,410     30,758     5.4
Net premiums earned   26,318     24,458     7.6
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   7,958     10,817     (26.4 %) 
Acquisition expenses   2,977     3,063     (2.8 %) 
General and administrative expenses   3,585     2,945     21.7
    14,520     16,825     (13.7 %) 
Underwriting income $ 11,798   $ 7,633     54.6
Loss ratio   30.2   44.2   (14.0
Acquisition expense ratio   11.3   12.5   (1.2
General and administrative expense ratio   13.6   12.0   1.6  
Combined ratio   55.1   68.7   (13.6
(1) With respect to ratios, changes show increase or decrease in percentage points.

Premiums.    The increase in premiums written was a result of new business written by the Company's U.S. insurance operations and Endurance U.K. These increases were offset by decreases in pricing and non-renewal of contracts due to increased capacity and competition. Business was not renewed principally where pricing, terms and conditions no longer met the Company's requirements. The increase in premiums earned was a result of the earning of premiums that were written over the last twelve months.

Losses and Loss Expenses.    The decrease in loss ratio resulted from favorable prior period loss reserve development in the quarter. Loss reserve decreases were $3.5 million in the three months ended June 30, 2004 compared to $6.8 million in the three months ended June 30, 2005

Acquisition Expenses.    Acquisition expenses for the three months ended June 30, 2005 were largely consistent with the same period in 2004.

General and Administrative Expenses.    General and administrative expenses increased reflecting a larger allocation of corporate expenses commensurate with the higher level of premiums written in this segment.

26




Casualty Individual Risk

The Company's Casualty Individual Risk business segment is comprised of the insurance and facultative reinsurance of third party liability exposures. This includes third party general liability insurance, directors' and officers' liability insurance, errors and omissions insurance and employment practices liability insurance, all written for a wide range of industry groups, as well as medical professional liability insurance which is written for large institutional healthcare providers. The following table summarizes the underwriting results and associated ratios for the Casualty Individual Risk business segment for the three months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004, respectively.


  THREE MONTHS ENDED
  June 30,
2005
June 30,
2004
Change (1)
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 105,079   $ 84,414     24.5
Net premiums written   103,520     84,075     23.1
Net premiums earned   63,642     59,594     6.8
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   40,233     35,326     13.9
Acquisition expenses   3,325     6,193     (46.3 %) 
General and administrative expenses   7,659     6,079     26.0
    51,217     47,598     7.6
Underwriting income $ 12,425   $ 11,996     3.6
Loss ratio   63.2   59.3   3.9  
Acquisition expense ratio   5.2   10.4   (5.2
General and administrative expense ratio   12.0   10.2   1.8  
Combined ratio   80.4   79.9   0.5  
(1) With respect to ratios, changes show increase or decrease in percentage points.

Premiums.    The increase in premiums resulted from favorable underwriting conditions within this segment's excess casualty line. The Company underwrote $13.7 million of new business in this segment in the second quarter of 2005. In addition, this Company renewed a large healthcare contract during the second quarter of 2005 with premiums of $6.5 million that was written for a 15 month period in the first quarter of 2004. The increase in premiums earned was a result of higher premiums written in the twelve months ended June 30, 2005 against those written in the corresponding 12 month period ended June 30, 2004. All premiums written by this segment are earned ratably over the terms of the insurance policies, typically a 12-month period.

Losses and Loss Expenses.    The Company has received only a limited number of notices of potential losses for this segment, very few of which have yet reached a level that would result in the Company paying a claim. Accordingly, the reserve for losses and loss expenses established by the Company's actuaries was based on historical industry loss data and business segment specific pricing information. This segment is primarily comprised of claims made severity business. While not short tail, this business can generally be expected to report losses within three to seven years. Consequently, in the quarter ended June 30, 2005, the Company reduced reserves for expected losses related to prior underwriting periods by $9.4 million.

Acquisition Expenses.    The acquisition expense ratio for the three months ended June 30, 2005 decreased due to a reduction of commissions paid to wholesale brokers, specifically in the healthcare and excess general liability lines.

General and Administrative Expenses.    The increased general and administrative expenses reflected a higher allocation of corporate expenses commensurate with the increased level of premiums written in this segment.

27




Aerospace and Other Specialty Lines

The Company's Aerospace and Other Specialty Lines business segment is comprised primarily of the insurance and reinsurance of Aerospace lines, and a number of other specialty lines including surety, agriculture, marine, energy and personal accident. Aerospace includes aviation hull, aircraft liability and aircraft products coverage, and satellite launch and in-orbit coverage. The following table summarizes the underwriting results and associated ratios for the Aerospace and Other Specialty Lines business segment for the three months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004, respectively.


  THREE MONTHS ENDED
  June 30,
2005
June 30,
2004
Change (1)
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 64,747   $ 26,941     140.3
Net premiums written   62,005     26,941     130.2
Net premiums earned   79,154     54,011     46.6
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   40,425     26,902     50.3
Acquisition expenses   16,764     11,957     40.2
General and administrative expenses   6,872     3,283     109.3
    64,061     42,142     52.0
Underwriting income $ 15,093   $ 11,869     27.2
Loss ratio   51.1   49.8   1.3  
Acquisition expense ratio   21.2   22.1   (0.9
General and administrative expense ratio   8.7   6.1   2.6  
Combined ratio   81.0   78.0   3.0  
(1) With respect to ratios, changes show increase or decrease in percentage points.

Premiums.    The increase in gross premiums written was in large part due to the addition of agriculture and surety lines during 2004 which contributed a combined $23.4 million of gross premiums written for the three months ended June 30, 2005. Other increases in premiums written were generated by additional aerospace opportunities and an expansion in the Company's marine and energy and personal accident lines, which combined have contributed approximately $14 million to gross premiums written. The growth in premiums earned reflected the increase in premiums written.

Losses and Loss Expenses.    The losses and loss expenses experienced in the three months ended June 30, 2005 have increased proportionately with the increase in earned premium, and the loss ratio was largely consistent with the same period in 2004.

Acquisition Expenses.    The expense ratio for the three months ended June 30, 2005 was largely unchanged from the equivalent period in 2004.

General and Administrative Expenses.    General and administrative expenses have increased in line with the growth in underwriting activity, corporate staffing and increased corporate overhead allocation.

28




Consolidated results of operations – for the six month period ended June 30, 2005

Results of operations for the six months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004 were as follows:


  2005 2004 Change (1)
Underwriting income (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 1,105,680   $ 1,071,292     3.2
Net premiums written   1,093,768     1,067,606     2.5
Net premiums earned   875,519     811,813     7.8
Other underwriting income   26         NM (2) 
    875,545     811,813     7.9
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   479,975     411,217     16.7
Acquisition expenses   176,109     168,185     4.7
General and administrative expenses   73,978     64,304     15.0
    730,062     643,706     13.4
Underwriting income   145,483     168,107     (13.5 %) 
Net investment income   79,707     53,619     48.7
Net foreign exchange losses   (4,163   (6,038   (31.1 %) 
Net realized (losses) gains on sales of investments   (3,861   4,562     (184.6 %) 
Amortization of intangibles   (2,378   (1,888   26.0
Interest expense   (11,083   (1,662   566.8
Income tax benefit (expense)   2,571     (1,072   (339.8 %) 
Net income $ 206,276   $ 215,628     (4.3 %) 
Loss ratio   54.8   50.7   4.1  
Acquisition expense ratio   20.1   20.7   (0.6
General and administrative expense ratio   8.4   7.9   0.5  
Combined ratio   83.3   79.3   4.0  
Reserve for losses and loss expenses $ 1,823,541   $ 1,170,296     55.8
(1) With respect to ratios, changes show increase or decrease in percentage points.
(2) Not meaningful.

Premiums.    Gross premiums written during the six months to June 30, 2005 were relatively consistent with the same period in 2004. However, during the six months ended June 30, 2005, the Company entered into a small number of reinsurance contracts in its Property Per Risk Treaty Reinsurance, Casualty Treaty Reinsurance and Aerospace and Other Specialty Lines segments with premiums due of approximately $86.9 million that were not included in gross premiums written, but were accounted for as deposit liabilities. See "Deposit Accounting" below for further discussion. After factoring in the effects of deposit accounting, gross premiums written increased approximately 3.2%. Excluding the effects of deposit accounting, the Company's written premium would have increased by 11.3%. About half of this increase was due to favorable premium adjustments related to prior periods as actual reported premiums were higher than the Company's original premium estimates. The Company's Casualty Treaty Reinsurance and Aerospace other Specialty Lines segments experienced increases in gross premiums written from attractive opportunities in small account workers' compensation, marine, surety and agricultural treaties. Partially offsetting these increases, the Company experienced reductions of gross premiums written in its Property Catastrophe Reinsurance and Property Per Risk Treaty segments as the expected level of rate improvement following a heavy catastrophe year in 2004 was not evident due to increased competition and reinsurance capacity.

Premiums ceded in the six month period ended June 30, 2005 and 2004 were negligible.

29




Net premiums earned increased in 2005 as a result of the earning of net premiums that were written in 2004 and 2003.

Net Investment Income.    Net investment income was derived primarily from interest earned on fixed maturity investments and earnings from the Company's investments in other ventures, partially offset by investment management fees and other investment expenses. The increase in net investment income in 2005 was principally due to an increase in invested assets from June 30, 2004 to June 30, 2005 of approximately 37.7%. The increase in invested assets resulted from positive net operating cash flows throughout the last twelve months and a general increase in investment yields. Investment expenses for the six months ended June 30, 2005 were $2.9 million compared to investment expenses of $1.6 million for the same period in 2004.

The annualized period book yield (which is the average yield of the invested portfolio after adjusting for accretion and amortization from the purchase price) and total return of the investment portfolio (which includes realized and unrealized gains and losses) for the six month period ended June 30, 2005 were 3.85% and 3.02%, respectively. For the six month period ended June 30, 2004, the annualized period book yield and total return were 3.76% and 0.48%, respectively. The Company has increased its absolute cash position from December 31, 2004 to June 30, 2005. The increase in cash and cash equivalents has shortened the portfolio's overall duration to 2.42 years from 2.77 years at December 31, 2004 and 3.15 years at June 30, 2004. Overall, the annualized period book yield of the portfolio has increased due to the repositioning of some of the Company's portfolio from government securities into higher yielding fixed income securities and the positive impact of earnings from the Company's investments in other ventures during the first quarter of 2005. Earnings from the Company's investments in other ventures were $3.8 million and $0.2 million in the quarters ended March 31, 2005 and June 30, 2005, respectively, reflecting their inherent volatility.

Losses and Loss Expenses.    The reported loss ratio is characterized by various factors. Since the first quarter of 2004, the impact of premium growth in the Treaty Casualty Reinsurance segment and reduced premiums written in the Company's property segments resulted in a higher mix of casualty business. In addition, during the six month period ended June 30, 2005, the Company experienced a moderate amount of property losses from European windstorm Erwin, floods in California, Nevada and Israel and two industrial fires. While this shift in business mix and increase in property losses during the six month period ended June 30, 2005 compared to the six month period ended June 30, 2004 resulted in a slightly higher weighted average loss ratio, some business lines, particularly Property Per Risk Treaty Reinsurance, Property Catastrophe Reinsurance and Casualty Individual Risk experienced lower levels of reported losses than previously anticipated thereby resulting in favorable adjustments to loss reserves.

During the six month period ended June 30, 2005, loss reserves held by the Company for the 2002, 2003 and 2004 accident years were reduced by $73.7 million compared to a reduction of loss reserves of $60.1 million during the six month period ended June 30, 2004. These reductions were net of reserve increases related to the 2004 Florida hurricanes, Japanese typhoons and mutual fund exposures. This reduction in the Company's estimated losses for prior years was experienced in all but the Company's Casualty Treaty Reinsurance segment. The most significant reductions were experienced in the Property Per Risk Treaty Reinsurance and the Casualty Individual Risk segments.

The Company participates in lines of business where claims may not be reported for many years. Accordingly, management does not believe that reported claims are the only valid means for estimating ultimate obligations. Ultimate losses and loss expenses may differ materially from the amounts recorded in the Company's consolidated financial statements. These estimates are reviewed regularly and, as experience develops and new information becomes known, the reserves are adjusted as necessary. Such adjustments, if any, are recorded in earnings in the period in which they are determined. The overall loss reserves were established by the Company's actuaries and reflect management's best estimate of ultimate losses. See "- Reserve for Losses and Loss Expenses" for further discussion.

Acquisition Expenses.    The slight decrease in acquisition expense ratio was due to normal variations in business mix.

30




General and Administrative Expenses.    The general and administrative expense ratio for the six month period ended June 30, 2005 increased slightly due to expense related to the development of the Company's U.S. insurance operations. The growth of general and administrative expenses also reflected the continued development of Endurance U.S. and Endurance U.K. At June 30, 2005, the Company had 344 employees compared to 259 employees at June 30, 2004.

Underwriting results by operating segments

The determination of the Company's business segments was based on how the Company monitors the performance of its underwriting operations. For internal management reporting purposes, underwriting results by segment are presented on the basis of applying reinsurance accounting to all reinsurance contracts written. However, for financial statement presentation purposes, management determined that a small number of reinsurance contracts written during the six months ended June 30, 2005 were more appropriately accounted for as deposit liabilities. See "Deposit Accounting" below for further discussion. Management measures segment results on the basis of the combined ratio, which is obtained by dividing the sum of the losses and loss expenses, acquisition expenses and general and administrative expenses by net premiums earned. The Company's historic combined ratios may not be indicative of future underwriting performance. The Company does not manage its assets by segment; accordingly, investment income and total assets are not allocated to the individual segments. General and administrative expenses incurred by segments are allocated directly. Remaining corporate overhead is allocated based on each segment's proportional share of gross premiums written. Group reinsurance protection and recoveries are allocated to segments based on the underlying exposures covered.

The following table summarizes the underwriting results, associated ratios and reserve for losses and loss expenses for the Company's six business segments for the six month period ended June 30, 2005.


  Property Per
Risk Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Catastrophe
Reinsurance
Casualty
Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Individual
Risk
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 270,632   $ 178,264   $ 283,293   $ 59,306  
Net premiums written   270,558     178,264     280,831     55,560  
Net premiums earned   233,072     120,825     224,362     53,514  
Other underwriting income                
    233,072     120,825     224,362     53,514  
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   107,526     17,306     158,535     47,290  
Acquisition expenses   64,404     15,889     59,750     6,447  
General and administrative expenses   15,214     10,683     17,145     5,809  
    187,144     43,878     235,430     59,546  
Underwriting income $ 45,928   $ 76,947   $ (11,068 $ (6,032
Loss ratio   46.1   14.3   70.7   88.4
Acquisition expense ratio   27.6   13.2   26.6   12.0
General and administrative expense ratio   6.5   8.8   7.6   10.9
Combined ratio   80.2   36.3   104.9   111.3
Reserve for losses and loss expenses $ 391,240   $ 60,699   $ 606,885   $ 95,659  

31





  Casualty
Individual
Risk
Aerospace
and Other
Specialty
Lines
Company
Sub-total
Deposit
Accounting (1)
Total
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 152,769   $ 248,273   $ 1,192,537   $ (86,857 $ 1,105,680  
Net premiums written   151,300     244,112     1,180,625     (86,857   1,093,768  
Net premiums earned   124,106     144,220     900,099     (24,580   875,519  
Other underwriting income               26     26  
    124,106     144,220     900,099     (24,554   875,545  
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   77,684     86,140     494,481     (14,506   479,975  
Acquisition expenses   7,949     29,684     184,123     (8,014   176,109  
General and administrative expenses   10,752     14,375     73,978         73,978  
    96,385     130,199     752,582     (22,520   730,062  
Underwriting income (loss) $ 27,721   $ 14,021   $ 147,517   $ (2,034 $ 145,483  
Loss ratio   62.6   59.7   54.9   (59.1 %)    54.8
Acquisition expense ratio   6.4   20.6   20.5   (32.6 %)    20.1
General and administrative expense ratio   8.7   10.0   8.2       8.4
Combined ratio   77.7   90.3   83.6   (91.7 %)    83.3
Reserve for losses and loss expenses $ 377,967   $ 304,684   $ 1,837,134   $ 13,593   $ 1,823,541  
(1) This column reconciles the Company's underwriting results by segment to the Company's financial statement presentation. See "Deposit Accounting" below for further discussion.

32




The following table summarizes the underwriting results and associated ratios for the Company's six business segments for the six month period ended June 30, 2004.


  Property Per
Risk Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Catastrophe
Reinsurance
Casualty
Treaty
Reinsurance
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 298,663   $ 192,473   $ 239,846  
Net premiums written   298,663     192,473     237,068  
Net premiums earned   230,011     110,179     195,287  
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   119,431     6,412     123,134  
Acquisition expenses   60,359     13,109     52,260  
General and administrative expenses   15,777     11,016     15,159  
    195,567     30,537     190,553  
Underwriting income $ 34,444   $ 79,642   $ 4,734  
Loss ratio   51.9   5.8   63.1
Acquisition expense ratio   26.2   11.9   26.8
General and administrative expense ratio   6.9   10.0   7.8
Combined ratio   85.0   27.7   97.7

  Property
Individual
Risk
Casualty
Individual
Risk
Aerospace and
Other Specialty
Limited
Total
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 59,987   $ 134,506   $ 145,817   $ 1,071,292  
Net premiums written   59,419     134,166     145,817     1,067,606  
Net premiums earned   47,313     114,269     114,754     811,813  
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   16,971     73,898     71,371     411,217  
Acquisition expenses   5,744     12,324     24,389     168,185  
General and administrative expenses   5,267     9,934     7,151     64,304  
    27,982     96,156     102,911     643,706  
Underwriting income $ 19,331   $ 18,113   $ 11,843   $ 168,107  
Loss ratio   35.9   64.7   62.2   50.7
Acquisition expense ratio   12.1   10.8   21.3   20.7
General and administrative expense ratio   11.1   8.7   6.2   7.9
Combined ratio   59.1   84.2   89.7   79.3

33




Property Per Risk Treaty Reinsurance

The Company's Property Per Risk Treaty Reinsurance business segment reinsures individual property risks of ceding companies on a treaty basis. The Company's property per risk reinsurance contracts cover claims from individual insurance policies written by its ceding company clients and include both personal lines and commercial lines exposures. The following table summarizes the underwriting results and associated ratios for the Property Per Risk Treaty Reinsurance business segment for the six months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004, respectively.


  SIX MONTHS ENDED
  June 30,
2005
June 30,
2004
Change (1)
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 270,632   $ 298,663     (9.4 %) 
Net premiums written   270,558     298,663     (9.4 %) 
Net premiums earned   233,072     230,011     1.3
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   107,526     119,431     (10.0 %) 
Acquisition expenses   64,404     60,359     6.7
General and administrative expenses   15,214     15,777     (3.6 %) 
    187,144     195,567     (4.3 %) 
Underwriting income $ 45,928   $ 34,444     33.3
Loss ratio   46.1   51.9   (5.8
Acquisition expense ratio   27.6   26.2   1.4  
General and administrative expense ratio   6.5   6.9   (0.4
Combined ratio   80.2   85.0   (4.8
(1) With respect to ratios, changes show increase or decrease in percentage points.

Premiums.    The decrease in gross premiums written was in large part due to the Company's decision to take a reduced line on a national carrier policy due to unfavorable experience in the prior year. The premiums written on this policy in the six months ended June 30, 2005 were reduced by approximately $34 million when compared to the same period in 2004. In addition, business that has not been renewed because pricing, terms and conditions no longer met the Company's requirements outpaced new business by approximately $15 million. Offsetting these decreases, gross premiums written at Endurance U.K. increased by approximately $36 million due to new business and increased premiums on renewed contracts. Premiums earned were unchanged from the corresponding period in the prior year.

Losses and Loss Expenses.    The loss ratio in the six months ended June 30, 2005 decreased from the corresponding period in the prior year due to favorable overall development of $48.3 million, offset by unfavorable loss development of $7.4 million on the Company's 2004 Florida hurricane reserves. Favorable development for the six month period ended June 30, 2004 was $12.9 million.

Acquisition Expenses.    The acquisition expense ratio for 2005 was largely consistent with 2004. The slight increase was due to a moderate shift in the mix of business.

General and Administrative Expenses.    The decrease in general and administrative expenses reflected a reduced allocation of corporate expenses commensurate with the lower level of premiums written in this segment.

34




Property Catastrophe Reinsurance

The Company's Property Catastrophe Reinsurance business segment reinsures catastrophic perils for ceding companies on a treaty basis. The Company's property catastrophe reinsurance contracts provide protection for most catastrophic losses that are covered in the underlying insurance policies written by its ceding company clients. Protection under property catastrophe treaties is provided on an occurrence basis, allowing the Company's ceding company clients to combine losses that have been incurred in any single event from multiple underlying policies. The following table summarizes the underwriting results and associated ratios for the Property Catastrophe Reinsurance business segment for the six months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004, respectively.


  SIX MONTHS ENDED
  June 30,
2005
June 30,
2004
Change (1)
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 178,264   $ 192,473     (7.4 %) 
Net premiums written   178,264     192,473     (7.4 %) 
Net premiums earned   120,825     110,179     9.7
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   17,306     6,412     169.9
Acquisition expenses   15,889     13,109     21.2
General and administrative expenses   10,683     11,016     (3.0 %) 
    43,878     30,537     43.7
Underwriting income $ 76,947   $ 79,642     (3.4 %) 
Loss ratio   14.3   5.8   8.5  
Acquisition expense ratio   13.2   11.9   1.3  
General and administrative expense ratio   8.8   10.0   (1.2
Combined ratio   36.3   27.7   8.6  
(1) With respect to ratios, changes show increase or decrease in percentage points.

Premiums.    The decrease in gross premiums written was due to business that has not been renewed where terms and conditions have no longer met the Company's underwriting requirements. Further, a contract with premiums of $11.3 million written in the six months ended June 30, 2004 was written on an 18 month basis, thus did not renew in the six months ended June 30, 2005 but is due for renewal later in the year. In general, the property catastrophe market was somewhat less favorable than the Company expected at the beginning of 2005, and accordingly, the Company's catastrophe exposures have been reduced year over year. Programs in this segment with U.S. hurricane exposure have generally experienced moderate pricing increases, particularly those programs with significant loss activity in 2004. In contrast, programs without U.S. hurricane exposure have experienced moderate rate reductions.

Losses and Loss Expenses.    The low loss ratios for the six month periods ended June 30, 2005 and 2004 reflected the generally low level of catastrophic loss emergence during both periods. The increase in the six months ended June 30, 2005 was a result of losses related to the Japanese typhoons amounting to approximately $11 million, offset by $7.3 million of favorable loss reserve development primarily on the 2004 accident year. Favorable development for the six month period ended June 30, 2004 was $17.3 million.

Acquisition Expenses.    The slight increase in acquisition expense ratio was a result of the changing profile of business written.

35




General and Administrative Expenses.    General and administrative expenses were largely unchanged from the corresponding prior year period. The slight decrease reflected a reduced allocation of corporate expenses commensurate with the lower level of premiums written in this segment.

Casualty Treaty Reinsurance

The Company's Casualty Treaty Reinsurance business segment reinsures third party liability exposures from ceding companies on a treaty basis. The exposures that the Company reinsures include automobile liability, professional liability, directors' and officers' liability, umbrella liability and workers' compensation. The following table summarizes the underwriting results and associated ratios for the Casualty Treaty Reinsurance business segment for the six months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004, respectively.


  SIX MONTHS ENDED
  June 30,
2005
June 30,
2004
Change (1)
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 283,293   $ 239,846     18.1
Net premiums written   280,831     237,068     18.5
Net premiums earned   224,362     195,287     14.9
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   158,535     123,134     28.8
Acquisition expenses   59,750     52,260     14.3
General and administrative expenses   17,145     15,159     13.1
    235,430     190,553     23.6
Underwriting (loss) income $ (11,068 $ 4,734     (333.8 %) 
Loss ratio   70.7   63.1   7.6
Acquisition expense ratio   26.6   26.8   (0.2 %) 
General and administrative expense ratio   7.6   7.8   (0.2 %) 
Combined ratio   104.9   97.7   7.2
(1) With respect to ratios, changes show increase or decrease in percentage points.

Premiums.    The increase in gross premiums written was in large part due to several new workers compensation reinsurance contracts written at Endurance U.S. Total new business written at Endurance U.S. for the six months ended June 30, 2005 of approximately $84 million was partially offset by approximately $72 million of premiums from contracts not renewed, principally where pricing, terms and conditions have no longer met the Company's requirements. Premiums from contracts not renewed included a large professional liability contract that had premiums written of $28.0 million in the six months ended June 30, 2004. The growth in premiums earned corresponded to the historical growth of premiums written.

Losses and Loss Expenses.    Claims may not be reported for many years in the lines of business included in this segment. Increased uncertainty exists regarding the development of reserves due to the long tail nature of this business. The increased loss ratio in 2005 was a result of unfavorable loss development of $7.7 million compared to favorable development of $5.8 million in the six months ended June 30, 2004. Further contributing to the increased loss ratio was the establishment of precautionary reserves based on recent legal actions brought by the New York Attorney General and the Securities and Exchange Commission against certain insurance brokers and insurance industry participants. In addition, prior year reserves were increased in 2005 as the Company's regular claims audit process identified additional potential claims related to mutual fund exposures on two treaties.

Acquisition Expenses.    The acquisition cost ratio for the six months ended June 30, 2005 was largely consistent compared to the same period in 2004.

36




General and Administrative Expenses.    General and administrative expenses have increased in line with the growth in underwriting activity, increased corporate expenses, and higher staffing levels.

Property Individual Risk

The Company's Property Individual Risk business segment is comprised of the insurance and facultative reinsurance of commercial properties. The policies written in this segment provide coverage for one insured for each policy. The types of risks insured are generally commercial properties with sufficiently large values to require multiple insurers and reinsurers to accommodate their insurance capacity needs. The following table summarizes the underwriting results and associated ratios for the Property Individual Risk business segment for the six months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004, respectively.


  SIX MONTHS ENDED
  June 30,
2005
June 30,
2004
Change (1)
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 59,306   $ 59,987     (1.1 )% 
Net premiums written   55,560     59,419     (6.5 )% 
Net premiums earned   53,514     47,313     13.1
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   47,290     16,971     178.7
Acquisition expenses   6,447     5,744     12.2
General and administrative expenses   5,809     5,267     10.3
    59,546     27,982     112.8
Underwriting (loss) income $ (6,032 $ 19,331     (131.2 )% 
Loss ratio   88.4   35.9   52.5  
Acquisition expense ratio   12.0   12.1   (0.1
General and administrative expense ratio   10.9   11.1   (0.2
Combined ratio   111.3   59.1   52.2  
(1) With respect to ratios, changes show increase or decrease in percentage points.

Premiums.    This segment has experienced decreases in pricing due to increased insurance capacity and competition. This has resulted in reduced premiums recorded on those policies renewed and a portion of policies not being renewed due to less attractive terms. These decreases have been offset by additional premiums written by Endurance U.K. and the new U.S. insurance operations. The increase in premiums earned was a result of the earning of premiums that were written over the last twelve months.

Losses and Loss Expenses.    The increased loss ratio resulted from increased loss frequency and severity compared to the same period in 2004, due to losses from European winter storm Erwin, floods in California, Nevada and Israel and two industrial fires. Further, this segment experienced favorable loss reserve development on prior year reserves of $8.8 million offset in part by unfavorable loss reserve development of $4.5 million related to the Florida hurricanes. Favorable loss reserve development for the six month period ended June 30, 2004 was $9.8 million.

Acquisition Expenses.    The acquisition expense ratio for the six months ended June 30, 2005 was largely consistent with the same period in 2004.

General and Administrative Expenses.    General and administrative expenses increased in line with increased premiums earned.

37




Casualty Individual Risk

The Company's Casualty Individual Risk business segment is comprised of the insurance and facultative reinsurance of third party liability exposures. This includes third party general liability insurance, directors' and officers' liability insurance, errors and omissions insurance and employment practices liability insurance, all written for a wide range of industry groups, as well as medical professional liability insurance which is written for large institutional healthcare providers. The following table summarizes the underwriting results and associated ratios for the Casualty Individual Risk business segment for the six months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004, respectively.


  SIX MONTHS ENDED
  June 30,
2005
June 30,
2004
Change (1)
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 152,769   $ 134,506     13.6
Net premiums written   151,300     134,166     12.8
Net premiums earned   124,106     114,269     8.6
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   77,684     73,898     5.1
Acquisition expenses   7,949     12,324     (35.5 %) 
General and administrative expenses   10,752     9,934     8.2
    96,385     96,156     0.2
Underwriting income $ 27,721   $ 18,113     53.0
Loss ratio   62.6   64.7   (2.1
Acquisition expense ratio   6.4   10.8   (4.4
General and administrative expense ratio   8.7   8.7   0.0  
Combined ratio   77.7   84.2   (6.5
(1) With respect to ratios, changes show increase or decrease in percentage points.

Premiums.    This segment's excess general liability line experienced favorable conditions in the six months ended June 30, 2005 resulting in premium growth of $16.6 million. The increase in premiums earned was a result of higher premiums written in the twelve months ended June 30, 2005 against those written in the corresponding twelve month period ended June 30, 2004. All premiums written by this segment are earned ratably over the terms of the insurance policies, typically a twelve-month period.

Losses and Loss Expenses.    The Company has received only a limited number of notices of potential losses for this segment, very few of which have yet reached a level that would result in the Company paying a claim. Accordingly, the reserve for losses and loss expenses established by the Company's actuaries was based on historical industry loss data and business segment specific pricing information. This segment is primarily comprised of claims made severity business. While not short tail, this business can generally be expected to report losses within three to seven years. Consequently, in the six months ended June 30, 2005, the Company reduced reserves for expected losses related to prior underwriting periods by $21.6 million compared to a reduction of $6.8 million in the six months ended June 30, 2004.

Acquisition Expenses.    The acquisition expense ratio for the six months ended June 30, 2005 decreased due to a reduction of commissions paid to wholesale brokers, specifically on the healthcare and excess general liability lines.

General and Administrative Expenses.    General and administrative increased in line with increased premiums written in this segment.

38




Aerospace and Other Specialty Lines

The Company's Aerospace and Other Specialty Lines business segment is comprised primarily of the insurance and reinsurance of Aerospace lines, and a limited number of other reinsurance programs such as surety, marine, energy, personal accident, terrorism and others. Aerospace includes aviation hull, aircraft liability and aircraft products coverage, and satellite launch and in-orbit coverage. The following table summarizes the underwriting results and associated ratios for the Aerospace and Other Specialty Lines business segment for the six months ended June 30, 2005 and 2004, respectively.


  SIX MONTHS ENDED
  June 30,
2005
June 30,
2004
Change (1)
  (in thousands)
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 248,273   $ 145,817     70.3
Net premiums written   244,112     145,817     67.4
Net premiums earned   144,220     114,754     25.7
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   86,140     71,371     20.7
Acquisition expenses   29,684     24,389     21.7
General and administrative expenses   14,375     7,151     101.0
    130,199     102,911     26.5
Underwriting income $ 14,021   $ 11,843     18.4
Loss ratio   59.7   62.2   (2.5
Acquisition expense ratio   20.6   21.3   (0.7
General and administrative expense ratio   10.0   6.2   3.8  
Combined ratio   90.3   89.7   0.6  
(1) With respect to ratios, changes show increase or decrease in percentage points.

Premiums.    The increase in gross premiums written was in large part due to the addition of agriculture and surety lines during 2004 which contributed a combined $76.3 million of gross premiums written for the six months ended June 30, 2005. Other increases in premiums written were generated by an expansion in the Company's marine and energy and personal accident lines which have contributed a combined $50.6 million to premium growth. Offsetting the growth was a decrease of $8.0 million gross premiums written in the aerospace line due to the non-renewal of a major contract and a reduction of satellite business written due to unfavorable pricing, terms and conditions. The growth in premiums earned was largely due to the increase in premiums written.

Losses and Loss Expenses.    The increased losses reflected reported losses of $4.2 million related to an industrial fire in Canada which impacted a marine and energy contract and increased reserves related to the additional premiums written. Offsetting the losses was favorable loss development on prior year reserves of $7.4 million compared to favorable development of $7.5 million in the six months ended June 30, 2004.

Acquisition Expenses.    The expense ratio for the six months ended June 30, 2005 was largely unchanged from the equivalent period in 2004.

General and Administrative Expenses.    General and administrative expenses have increased as a result of increased corporate overhead allocation based on increased premiums written.

39




Deposit accounting

During the six months ended June 30, 2005, the Company entered into 17 reinsurance contracts with $86.9 million (2004: nil) of premiums that, in management's judgment, were most appropriately accounted for as deposits under the deposit accounting provisions of SOP 98-7. While not underwritten as finite risk reinsurance, these quota share contracts contain adjustable features, primarily sliding scale ceding commissions and profit share commissions, that may cause the amount or variability of risk assumed by the Company to differ from that of its ceding company counterpart. These quota share contracts often contain significant exposures, particularly catastrophic, start up and other risks, that although they have a low probability of occurrence, could produce material losses. Consequently, these quota share contracts were accounted for as contracts which either transfer only significant timing risk or transfer only significant underwriting risk. The determination of the appropriate method of accounting for these quota share contracts requires significant judgment and analysis, particularly with respect to assumptions about the variability and likelihood of potential future losses.

Under the deposit method of accounting, revenues and expenses from reinsurance contracts are not recognized as written premium and incurred losses. Instead, the profits or losses from these contracts are recognized net as other underwriting income or investment income over the contract or expected claim payment periods. Income or loss associated with contracts determined to transfer only significant timing risk is recognized as a component of net investment income over the estimated claim settlement period. Income or loss associated with contracts determined to transfer only significant underwriting risk is recognized as other underwriting income over the contract risk period.

40




For internal management reporting purposes, underwriting results by segment are presented on the basis of applying reinsurance accounting to all reinsurance contracts written. The following table reconciles the Company's underwriting results by segment and income before income taxes to the Company's financial statement presentation for the six months ended June 30, 2005.


  Underwriting
Results by
Segment
Deposit
Accounting
Totals
    (in thousands)
Underwriting income
Revenues
Gross premiums written $ 1,192,537   $ (86,857 $ 1,105,680  
Net premiums written   1,180,625     (86,857   1,093,768  
Net premiums earned   900,099     (24,580   875,519  
Other underwriting income       26     26  
    900,099     (24,554   875,545  
Expenses
Losses and loss expenses   494,481     (14,506   479,975  
Acquisition expenses   184,123     (8,014   176,109  
General and administrative expenses   73,978         73,978  
    752,582     (22,520   730,062  
Underwriting income $ 147,517   $ (2,034 $ 145,483  
Net investment income   78,444     1,263     79,707  
Interest expense   (11,083       (11,083
Amortization of intangibles   (2,378       (2,378
Net foreign exchange losses   (4,163       (4,163
Net realized losses on sales of investments   (3,861       (3,861
Income before income taxes $ 204,476   $ (771 $ 203,705  
Loss ratio   54.9   (59.1 %)    54.8
Acquisition expense ratio   20.5   (32.6 %)    20.1
General and administrative expense ratio   8.2       8.4
Combined ratio   83.6   (91.7 %)    83.3

Significant transactions and events

On May 4, 2005, Endurance Holdings entered into a purchase agreement by and among the Company, Goldman, Sachs & Co., Texas Pacific Group and Thomas H. Lee (the "Selling Shareholders") for the sale of 8,000,000 ordinary shares, par value $1.00 of Endurance Holdings (the "Ordinary Shares") held by the Selling Shareholders. The Ordinary Shares were sold under the Company's Form S-3 shelf registration statement (Reg. No. 333-116505) and represented approximately 13% of the ordinary shares then outstanding. The Company did not receive any proceeds from this offering.

On April 18, 2005, the Company amended its existing Credit Agreement among the Company, various designated subsidiary borrowers, various lending institutions and JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. as Administrative Agent (the "Amended Agreement") in order to (i) allow for the issuance of multi-currency letters of credit, (ii) allow for the "fronting" of letters of credit by banks that are participants in the Amended Agreement, (iii) extend the maturity of the facility until April 18, 2010, and (iv) increase the size of the facility to $925 million from $850 million. The remaining principal terms of the Company's existing Credit Agreement, described previously in the 2004 Annual Report on Form 10-K are unchanged.

41




Liquidity and capital resources

Endurance Holdings is a holding company that does not have any significant operations or assets other than its ownership of the shares of its direct and indirect subsidiaries, including Endurance Bermuda, Endurance U.K. and Endurance U.S. Endurance Holdings relies primarily on dividends and other permitted distributions from its insurance subsidiaries to pay its operating expenses, interest on debt and dividends, if any, on its ordinary shares. There are restrictions on the payment of dividends by Endurance Bermuda, Endurance U.K. and Endurance U.S. to Endurance Holdings, which are described in more detail below.

The ability of Endurance Bermuda to pay dividends is dependent on its ability to meet the requirements of applicable Bermuda law and regulations. Under Bermuda law, Endurance Bermuda may not declare or pay a dividend if there are reasonable grounds for believing that Endurance Bermuda is, or would after the payment be, unable to pay its liabilities as they become due, or the realizable value of Endurance Bermuda's assets would thereby be less than the aggregate of its liabilities and its issued share capital and share premium accounts. Further, Endurance Bermuda, as a regulated insurance company in Bermuda, is subject to additional regulatory restrictions on the payment of dividends or distributions. As of June 30, 2005, Endurance Bermuda could pay a dividend or return additional paid-in capital totaling approximately $416 million without prior regulatory approval based upon insurance and Bermuda Companies Act regulations.

Endurance U.S. is subject to regulation by the State of New York Insurance Department. Dividends may only be declared or distributed out of earned surplus. At June 30, 2005, Endurance U.S. did not have earned surplus; therefore Endurance U.S. is precluded from declaring or distributing any dividend during 2005 without the prior approval of the Superintendent of the State of New York Insurance Department.

Endurance U.K. is subject to regulation by the United Kingdom Financial Services Authority (the "FSA"). U.K. company law prohibits Endurance U.K. from declaring a dividend to its shareholders unless it has "profits available for distribution." The determination of whether a company has profits available for distribution is based on its accumulated realized profits less its accumulated realized losses. While the United Kingdom insurance regulatory laws impose no statutory restrictions on a general insurer's ability to declare a dividend, the FSA strictly controls the maintenance of each insurance company's solvency margin within its jurisdiction. Any such payment or proposal could result in regulatory intervention. In addition, the FSA requires authorized insurance companies to notify the FSA in advance of any significant dividend payment. At June 30, 2005, Endurance U.K. did not have profits available for distribution and could not pay a dividend.

The Company's aggregate cash and invested assets as of June 30, 2005 totaled $4.3 billion compared to $4.1 billion as of March 31, 2005. The increase in cash and invested assets since March 31, 2005 resulted from collections of premiums on insurance policies and reinsurance contracts, and investment income, offset by loss and loss expenses paid, acquisition expenses paid, reinsurance premiums paid, general and administrative expenses paid and repurchases of the Company's ordinary shares.

On an ongoing basis, the Company expects its internally generated funds, together with borrowings available under its credit facilities and capital base established by its initial public offering, its original private placement and its 7% Notes due 2034 to be sufficient to operate its business. However, there can be no assurance that the Company will not incur additional indebtedness or issue additional equity in order to implement its business strategy or pay claims.

Quantitative and qualitative information about market risk

There have been no material changes in market risk from the information provided under the caption "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations — Quantitative and Qualitative Information about Market Risk" included in the 2004 Annual Report on Form 10-K.

42




Currency

The Company's functional currency is U.S. dollars for Endurance Bermuda and Endurance U.S. and British Sterling for Endurance U.K. The reporting currency for all entities is U.S. dollars. The Company maintains a portion of its investments and liabilities in currencies other than the U.S. dollar. The Company has made a significant investment in the capitalization of Endurance U.K. Endurance U.K. is subject to the United Kingdom's Financial Services Authority rules concerning the matching of the currency of its assets to the currency of its liabilities. Depending on the profile of Endurance U.K.'s liabilities, it may be required to hold some of its assets in currencies corresponding to the currencies of its liabilities. The Company may, from time to time, experience losses resulting from fluctuations in the values of foreign currencies, which could have a material adverse effect on the Company's results of operations.

Effects of inflation

The effects of inflation could cause the severity of claims to rise in the future. The Company's estimates for losses and loss expenses include assumptions about future payments for settlement of claims and claims handling expenses, such as medical treatments and litigation costs. To the extent inflation causes these costs to increase above reserves established for these claims, the Company will be required to increase the reserve for losses and loss expenses with a corresponding reduction in its earnings in the period in which the deficiency is identified.

Reserve for losses and loss expenses

As of June 30, 2005, the Company had accrued losses and loss expense reserves of $1.8 billion. This amount represents the Company's actuarial best estimate of the ultimate liability for payment of losses and loss expenses related to loss events as of June 30, 2005. During the three and six month periods ended June 30, 2005, the Company paid losses and loss expenses of $107.2 million and $197.1 million, respectively.

As of June 30, 2005, the Company had been notified of a number of claims and potential claims under its insurance policies and reinsurance contracts. Of these notifications, management expects some of the claims to penetrate layers in which the Company provides coverage and case reserves have been established for these expected losses. In addition, the Company participates in lines of business where claims may not be reported for many years. Accordingly, management does not believe that reported claims are currently a valid means for estimating ultimate obligations. Ultimate losses and loss expenses may differ materially from the amounts recorded in the Company's consolidated financial statements. These estimates are reviewed regularly and, as experience develops and new information becomes known, the reserves are adjusted as necessary. Such adjustments, if any, are recorded in earnings in the period in which they are determined. The overall loss reserves were established by the Company's actuaries and reflect management's best estimate of ultimate losses and loss expenses. See "Critical Accounting Policies — Reserve for Losses and Loss Expenses" included in the 2004 Annual Report on Form 10-K for further details.

Incurred losses for the three months ended June 30, 2005 are summarized as follows:


  Property
per
Risk Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Catastrophe
Reinsurance
Casualty
Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Individual
Risk
Casualty
Individual
Risk
Aerospace
& Other
Specialty
Lines
Deposit
Accounting (1)
Total
  (in thousands)
Incurred related to:                                                
Current year $ 74,990   $ 8,653   $ 69,728   $ 14,746   $ 49,594   $ 47,583   $ (8,630 $ 256,664  
Prior years   (11,994   (2,117   9,670     (6,788   (9,361   (7,158       (27,748
Total Incurred Losses $ 62,996   $ 6,536   $ 79,398   $ 7,958   $ 40,233   $ 40,425   $ (8,630 $ 228,916  

43




Incurred losses for the six months ended June 30, 2005 are summarized as follows:


  Property
per Risk
Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Catastrophe
Reinsurance
Casualty
Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Individual
Risk
Casualty
Individual
Risk
Aerospace
& Other
Specialty
Lines
Deposit
Accounting (1)
Total
  (in thousands)
Incurred related to:                                                
Current year $ 148,420   $ 24,569   $ 150,794   $ 51,601   $ 99,310   $ 93,536   $ (14,506 $ 553,724  
Prior years   (40,894   (7,263   7,741     (4,311   (21,626   (7,396       (73,749
Total Incurred Losses $ 107,526   $ 17,306   $ 158,535   $ 47,290   $ 77,684   $ 86,140   $ (14,506 $ 479,975  
(1) This column reconciles the Company's incurred losses by segment to the Company's financial statement presentation. See "Deposit Accounting" above for further discussion.

Incurred losses for the three months ended June 30, 2004 are summarized as follows:


  Property
per Risk
Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Catastrophe
Reinsurance
Casualty
Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Individual
Risk
Casualty
Individual
Risk
Aerospace
& Other
Specialty
Lines
Total
  (in thousands)
Incurred related to:                                          
Current year $ 69,282   $ 13,499   $ 57,869   $ 14,303   $ 41,722   $ 33,227   $ 229,902  
Prior years   (10,467   (10,000   (4,020   (3,486   (6,396   (6,325   (40,694
Total Incurred Losses $ 58,815   $ 3,499   $ 53,849   $ 10,817   $ 35,326   $ 26,902   $ 189,208  

Incurred losses for the six months ended June 30, 2004 are summarized as follows:


  Property
per Risk
Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Catastrophe
Reinsurance
Casualty
Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Individual
Risk
Casualty
Individual
Risk
Aerospace
& Other
Specialty
Lines
Total
  (in thousands)
Incurred related to:                                          
Current year $ 132,291   $ 23,700   $ 128,980   $ 26,751   $ 80,665   $ 78,896   $ 471,283  
Prior years   (12,859   (17,288   (5,847   (9,780   (6,767   (7,525   (60,066
Total Incurred Losses $ 119,432   $ 6,412   $ 123,133   $ 16,971   $ 73,898   $ 71,371   $ 411,217  

Incurred losses for the three and six months ended June 30, 2005 include approximately $27.7 million and $73.7 million in favorable development of reserves relating to prior accident years, respectively. The favorable loss reserve development experienced during the three and six months ended June 30, 2005 benefited the Company's reported loss ratio by approximately 6.3 and 8.4 percentage points, respectively.

The reductions in estimated losses for prior accident years reflected lower than expected emergence of catastrophic and attritional losses. The favorable loss development was experienced most significantly in the Company's Property Per Risk Treaty Reinsurance and Casualty Individual Risk segments. The Property Per Risk Treaty Reinsurance segment benefited from the relatively low level of catastrophic activity in the first six months of 2005. The Casualty Individual Risk segment has received few claims which have reached a level that would result in the Company paying a claim. Unfavorable loss development was experienced in the Casualty Treaty Reinsurance segment due to the establishment of precautionary reserves based on recent legal actions brought by the New York Attorney General and the Securities and Exchange Commission against certain insurance brokers and insurance industry participants and additional potential claims related to mutual fund exposures.

44




Reserves for losses and loss expenses are comprised of the following at June 30, 2005:


  Property
per Risk
Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Catastrophe
Reinsurance
Casualty
Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Individual
Risk
Casualty
Individual
Risk
Aerospace
& Other
Specialty
Lines
Deposit
Accounting (1)
Total
  (in thousands)
Case Reserves $ 189,142   $ 33,722   $ 130,560   $ 52,511   $ 8,866   $ 89,633   $ (2,377 $ 502,057  
IBNR   202,097     26,977     476,325     43,148     369,102     215,051     (11,216   1,321,484  
Reserve for Losses and Loss Expenses $ 391,239   $ 60,699   $ 606,885   $ 95,659   $ 377,968   $ 304,684   $ (13,593 $ 1,823,541  
(1) This column reconciles the Company's reserves for losses and loss expenses by segment to the Company's financial statement presentation. See "Deposit Accounting" above for further discussion.

Reserves for losses and loss expenses are comprised of the following at June 30, 2004:


  Property
per Risk
Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Catastrophe
Reinsurance
Casualty
Treaty
Reinsurance
Property
Individual
Risk
Casualty
Individual
Risk
Aerospace
& Other
Specialty
Lines
Total
  (in thousands)            
Case Reserves $ 86,583   $ 21,279   $ 50,989   $ 20,271   $   $ 54,999   $ 234,121  
IBNR   181,932     38,606     299,468     29,499     226,362     160,308     936,175  
Reserve for Losses and Loss Expenses $ 268,515   $ 59,885   $ 350,457   $ 49,770   $ 226,362   $ 215,307   $ 1,170,296  

Cautionary statement regarding forward-looking statements

Some of the statements contained herein, and certain statements that the Company may make in press releases or that Company officials may make orally, may include forward-looking statements which reflects the Company's current views with respect to future events and financial performance. Such statements include forward-looking statements both with respect to the Company in general and the insurance and reinsurance sectors specifically, both as to underwriting and investment matters. Statements that include the words "expect," "intend," "plan," "believe," "project," "anticipate," "seek," "will," and similar statements of a future or forward-looking nature identify forward-looking statements for purposes of the federal securities laws or otherwise.

All forward-looking statements address matters that involve risks and uncertainties. Accordingly, there are, or will be, important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated in such statements. The Company believes these factors include, but are not limited to, the following:

–  the effects of competitors' pricing policies, and of changes in laws and regulations on competition, including those regarding contingent commissions, industry consolidation and development of competing financial products;
–  the impact of acts of terrorism and acts of war;
–  the effects of terrorist related insurance legislation and laws;
–  greater frequency or severity of claims and loss activity, including as a result of natural or man-made catastrophic events, than the Company's underwriting, reserving or investment practices have anticipated;
–  decreased level of demand for property and casualty insurance or reinsurance, or increased competition due to an increase in capacity of property and casualty reinsurers;
–  the inability to obtain or maintain financial strength or claims-paying ratings by one or more of the Company's subsidiaries;

45




–  uncertainties in the Company's reserving process;
–  Endurance Holdings or Endurance Bermuda becomes subject to income taxes in the United States or the United Kingdom;
–  changes in regulations or tax laws applicable to the Company, the Company's subsidiaries, brokers or customers;
–  acceptance of the Company's products and services, including new products and services;
–  the inability to renew business previously underwritten or acquired;
–  changes in the availability, cost or quality of reinsurance or retrocessional coverage;
–  loss of key personnel;
–  political stability of Bermuda;
–  changes in accounting policies or practices;
–  the impact of the investigations of the New York Attorney General, the Securities and Exchange Commission and other regulators on the insurance and reinsurance industry and the Company in particular; and
–  changes in general economic conditions, including inflation, foreign currency exchange rates and other factors which could affect the Company's investment portfolio.

The foregoing review of important factors should not be construed as exhaustive and should be read in conjunction with the other cautionary statements that are included in the 2004 Annual Report on Form 10-K. The Company undertakes no obligation to publicly update or review any forward-looking statement, whether as a result of new information, future developments or otherwise.

Item 4.    Controls and Procedures

a)    Disclosure Controls and Procedures.    The Company's management, with the participation of the Company's Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, has evaluated the effectiveness of the Company's disclosure controls and procedures (as such term is defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Exchange Act) as of the end of the period covered by this report. Based on such evaluation, the Company's Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer have concluded that, as of the end of such period, the Company's disclosure controls and procedures are effective in recording, processing, summarizing and reporting, on a timely basis, information required to be disclosed by the Company in the reports that it files or submits under the Exchange Act.

b)    Internal Control Over Financial Reporting.    There have not been any changes in the Company's internal control over financial reporting (as such term is defined in Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f) under the Exchange Act) during the Company's second fiscal quarter that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company's internal control over financial reporting.

46




PART II
OTHER INFORMATION

Item 1.    Legal Proceedings

We are party to various legal proceedings generally arising in the normal course of our business. While any proceeding contains an element of uncertainty, we do not believe that the eventual outcome of any litigation or arbitration proceeding to which we are presently a party could have a material adverse effect on our financial condition or business. Pursuant to our insurance and reinsurance agreements, disputes are generally required to be finally settled by arbitration.

Endurance Holdings, Endurance U.S. and three employees of one of Endurance Holdings' subsidiaries have been named in a lawsuit filed on November 18, 2004; in the Court of Common Pleas in Hamilton County, Ohio. The suit alleges misappropriation of trade secrets from the employees' former employer, Great American Custom Insurance Services, Inc., and related entities; and asserts other related claims. The suit seeks an unspecified amount of damages and injunctive relief against the defendants. On December 22, 2004, Endurance Holdings, Eudurance U.S. and the other defendants filed motions to dismiss the lawsuit for lack of personal jurisdiction over the defendants and based on the doctrine of forum non conveniens. These motions are pending.

On January 5, 2005, Endurance U.S. received a subpoena from the Office of the Attorney General of the State of New York (the "NYAG") in connection with its investigation into contingent commission arrangements with brokers. Although the subpoena was addressed to Endurance U.S., it called for the production of documents from all affiliates of Endurance Holdings. Among other things, the subpoena seeks documents concerning efforts by any insurance broker to exclude or limit an insurance company's access to the insurance market and documents concerning efforts or requests by any insurance broker to manipulate bids or price quotes, or submit false or inflated bids or price quotes in insurance markets. We have provided the NYAG with documents responsive to the subpoena.

Item 2.    Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds

Purchases of Equity Securities by the Issuer and Affiliated Purchasers

ISSUER PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES


Period (a) Total
Number of
Shares
Purchased (1)
(b) Average
Price Paid
per Share
(c) Total Number
of Shares Purchased
as Part of Publicly
Announced Plans or
Programs (1)(2)
(d) Maximum Number
(or Approximate
Dollar Value)
of Shares)
that May Yet Be
Purchased Under the
Plans or Programs (1)(2)
April 1, 2005 – April 30, 2005     $         2,437,386  
May 1, 2005 – May 31, 2005   409,686     36.61     409,686     2,027,700  
June 1, 2005 – June 30, 2005   273,500     36.56     273,500     1,754,200  
Total   683,186   $ 36.59     683,186     1,754,200  
(1) Ordinary shares or share equivalents.
(2) On May 24, 2004, the Company initiated a share repurchase program. Under this program, the Company will repurchase up to 2,000,000 of its ordinary shares and share equivalents. The repurchases will be accomplished in open market or privately negotiated transactions, from time to time, depending on market conditions. On February 17, 2005 the Company extended this program by a further 2,000,000 shares and authorized the program through February 2007.

Item 3.    Defaults Upon Senior Securities

None

47




Item 4.    Submissions of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders

On April 27, 2005, the Company held its Annual General Meeting of Shareholders in Pembroke, Bermuda. Represented in person or by proxy at the Annual General Meeting were 51,362,511 ordinary shares or 84% percent of the eligible ordinary shares, which was 84% of the ordinary shares then outstanding. At the Annual General Meeting, the Company's shareholders voted on the following nine proposals:

Proposal No. 1 — The election of the following to serve as Class III directors of Endurance Specialty Holdings Ltd.:

William H. Bolinder
Brendan R. O'Neill
Richard C. Perry
Robert A. Spass

The election of the following to serve as Class II directors of Endurance Specialty Holdings Ltd.:

Norman Barham
Galen R. Barnes

The election of Richard P. Schifter to serve as a Class I director of Endurance Specialty Holdings Ltd.

The following are the results of the voting:


DIRECTOR NOMINEE FOR WITHHELD
Norman Barham 51,323,907 38,604
Galen R. Barnes 51,323,763 38,748
William H. Bolinder 51,323,825 38,686
Brendan R. O'Neill 51,323,925 38,586
Richard C. Perry 51,142,452 220,059
Richard P. Schifter 51,124,829 237,682
Robert A. Spass 51,131,897 230,614

The following directors of the Company were not nominated for election to the Board of Directors because they have terms of office which continued after Annual General Meeting:

John T. Baily
Anthony J. DiNovi
Charles G. Froland
Kenneth J. LeStrange

Proposal No. 2 — The election of a slate of director designees to the Board of Directors of Endurance Specialty Insurance Ltd.

48




The following are the results of the voting:


DIRECTOR NOMINEE FOR WITHHELD
John T. Baily 51,304,114 58,397
Norman Barham 51,327,906 34,605
Galen R. Barnes 51,328,156 34,355
William H. Bolinder 51,327,906 34,605
Anthony J. DiNovi 51,150,808 211,703
Charles G. Froland 51,151,683 210,828
Kenneth J. LeStrange 51,167,556 194,955
Brendan R. O'Neill 51,327,281 35,230
Richard C. Perry 51,167,181 195,330
Richard P. Schifter 51,149,558 212,953
Robert A. Spass 51,310,264 52,247

Proposal No. 3 — The election of a slate of director designees to the Board of Directors of Endurance Worldwide Holdings Limited

The following are the results of the voting:


DIRECTOR NOMINEE FOR WITHHELD
William H. Bolinder 51,330,688 31,823
Mark. W. Boucher 51,331,063 31,448
Anthony J. DiNovi 51,159,596 202,915
Kenneth J. LeStrange 51,177,113 185,398
Simon Minshall 51,330,063 32,448
Robert A. Spass 51,160,221 202,290

Proposal No. 4 — The election of a slate of director designees to the Board of Directors of Endurance Worldwide Insurance Limited.

The following are the results of the voting:


DIRECTOR NOMINEE FOR WITHHELD
William H. Bolinder 51,330,688 31,823
Mark W. Boucher 51,330,688 31,923
Anthony J. DiNovi 51,331,063 31,448
Kenneth J. LeStrange 51,169,964 192,547
Simon Minshall 51,330,813 31,698
Robert A. Spass 51,153,071 209,440

Proposal No. 5 — The election of a slate of director designees to the Board of Directors of Endurance Services Limited.

The following are the results of the voting:


DIRECTOR NOMINEE FOR WITHHELD
William H. Bolinder 51,330,626 31,885
Steven W. Carlsen 51,331,063 31,448
Kenneth J. LeStrange 51,169,964 192,547

Proposal No. 6 — The amendment and restatement of the Company's Bye-Laws.

The following are the results of the voting:

48,014,430 ordinary shares voted FOR amending and restating the Bye-Laws

3,336,669 ordinary shares voted AGAINST amending and restating the Bye-Laws

11,412 ordinary shares ABSTAINED from amending and restating the Bye-Laws

49




Proposal No. 7 — The increase in the maximum size of the Company's Board of Directors from 12 directors to 15 directors.

The following are the results of the voting:

51,238,401 ordinary shares voted FOR increasing the size of the Board of Directors

66,543 ordinary shares voted AGAINST increasing in the size of the Board of Directors

57,567 ordinary shares ABSTAINED from increasing in the size of the Board of Directors

Proposal No. 8 — The adoption of the Company's Amended and Restated 2003 Non-Employee Director Equity Incentive Plan.

The following are the results of the voting:

30,627,952 ordinary shares voted FOR adoption of the Amended and Restated Plan

8,386,061 ordinary shares voted AGAINST adoption of the Amended and Restated Plan

65,925 ordinary shares ABSTAINED from adoption of the Amended and Restated Plan

12,282,573 did not vote on the adoption of the Amended and Restated Plan

Proposal No. 9 — The appointment of Ernst & Young as the Company's independent auditors for the year ending December 31, 2005 and the authorization of the Board of Directors, acting through the Audit Committee, to set the fees for the independent auditors.

The following are the results of the voting:

51,332,671 ordinary shares voted FOR the appointment of Ernst & Young

28,315 ordinary shares voted AGAINST the appointment of Ernst & Young

1,525 ordinary shares ABSTAINED from the appointment of Ernst & Young

Item 5.    Other Information

None

Item 6.    Exhibits

(a)  The following sets forth those exhibits filed pursuant to Item 601 of Regulation S-K:

Exhibit
Number
Description
3.1 Amended and Restated Bye-laws
31.1 Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a) of the Exchange Act.
31.2 Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a) of the Exchange Act.
32 Certification Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.

50




SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.


Date: August 8, 2005 By: /s/ Kenneth J. LeStrange
    Kenneth J. LeStrange
Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer,
President
Date: August 8, 2005 By: /s/ James R. Kroner
    James R. Kroner
Chief Financial Officer (Principal Financial Officer)

51




GRAPHIC 2 spacer.gif GRAPHIC begin 644 spacer.gif K1TE&.#EA`0`!`(```````````"'Y!`$`````+``````!``$```("1`$`.S\_ ` end EX-3.1 3 file002.htm AMENDED AND RESTATED BYE-LAWS




                         AMENDED AND RESTATED BYE - LAWS

                                       of

                        ENDURANCE SPECIALTY HOLDINGS LTD.

I HEREBY CERTIFY that the within written Bye-Laws are a true copy of the Amended
and Restated Bye-Laws of Endurance Specialty Holdings Ltd. as adopted by the
shareholders thereof at the Annual General Meeting held on 27 April 2005 in
place of those originally adopted on 19 July, 2002 as subsequently amended on 25
February 2003.







                                   Prepared by
                         Messrs Appleby Spurling Hunter
                                  Canon's Court
                               22 Victoria Street
                                Hamilton, Bermuda







                                    I N D E X
                                    ---------
<TABLE>

BYE-LAW                    SUBJECT                                                         PAGE
- -------                    -------                                                         ----


1                          Interpretation                                                     1
2                          Registered Office                                                  8
3,4                        Share Rights                                                       9
5,6                        Modification of Rights                                            10
7-11                       Shares                                                            11
12-15                      Certificates                                                      14
16-19                      Lien                                                              16
20-25                      Calls on Shares                                                   19
26-32                      Forfeiture of Shares                                              20
33                         Required Sale of Shares                                           22
34,35                      Register of Shareholders                                          23
36                         Register of Directors and Officers                                23
37-39                      Transfer of Shares                                                24
40-43                      Transmission of Shares                                            25
44-46                      Increase of Capital                                               27
47,48                      Alteration of Capital                                             28
49,50                      Reduction of Capital                                              29
51                         General Meetings and Written Resolutions                          29
52-55                      Notice of General Meetings                                        30
56-62                      Proceedings at General Meetings                                   31
63-66                      Votes of Shareholders                                             33
67                         Shareholder Disclosure                                            37



BYE-LAW                    SUBJECT                                                         PAGE
- -------                    -------                                                         ----


68-79                      Voting Procedures                                                 40
80-86                      Proxies and Corporate Representatives                             43
87-90                      Appointment and Removal of Directors                              46
91                         Resignation and Disqualification of Directors                     49
92-94                      Alternate Directors                                               50
95                         Observers                                                         51
96                         Directors' Fees and Additional
                           Remuneration and Expenses                                         51
97                         Directors' Interests                                              52
98-102                     Powers and Duties of the Board                                    53
103-105                    Delegation of the Board's Powers                                  55
106-114                    Proceedings of the Board                                          56
115                        Officers                                                          58
116                        Minutes                                                           59
117,118                    Secretary and Resident Representative                             60
119                        The Seal                                                          60
120-126                    Dividends and Other Payments                                      61
127                        Reserves                                                          63
128                        Capitalisation of Profits                                         63
130,131                    Record Dates                                                      64
132-134                    Accounting Records                                                66
135                        Audit                                                             67
136-138                    Service of Notices and Other Documents                            67
139                        Winding Up                                                        68
140-146                    Indemnity                                                         69
147                        Amalgamation                                                      72







BYE-LAW                    SUBJECT                                                         PAGE
- -------                    -------                                                         ----

148                        Continuation                                                      72
149                        Alteration of Bye-Laws                                            72
150                        Certain Subsidiaries                                              73

</TABLE>






                         AMENDED AND RESTATED BYE - LAWS
                                       of
                        ENDURANCE SPECIALTY HOLDINGS LTD.

                                 INTERPRETATION

1. (1) In these Bye-Laws unless the context otherwise requires - "AFFILIATE"
       means, with respect to any specified person, a person that directly or
       indirectly controls, is controlled by or is under common control with
       such person. For the purpose of this definition, the term "control" means
       the power to direct the management of an entity, directly or indirectly,
       whether through the ownership of voting securities, by contract or
       otherwise; and the terms "controlled" and "controlling" have meanings
       correlative to the foregoing.

       "ALTERNATE DIRECTOR" means an Alternate Director appointed in accordance
       with Bye-Law 92.

       "APPRAISED VALUE" with respect to any Ordinary Share means, as of any
       specified date, the value of such Ordinary Share as of such date as
       determined by an investment bank of nationally recognised standing
       selected by the Shareholder and reasonably acceptable to the Company. If
       the investment bank selected by the Shareholder is not reasonably
       acceptable to the Company, and the Company and the Shareholder cannot
       agree on a mutually acceptable investment bank, then the Company and the
       Shareholder shall each choose one such investment bank and the respective
       chosen firms shall jointly select a third investment bank, which shall
       make the determination. The Company shall pay the costs and fees of each





       such investment bank (including any such investment bank selected by the
       Shareholder), and the decision of the investment bank making such
       determination of Appraised Value shall be final and binding on the
       Company and the Shareholder. Such Appraised Value shall be determined as
       a pro rata portion of the value of the Company taken as a whole, based on
       the higher of (A) the value derived from a hypothetical sale of the
       Company as a going concern by a willing seller to a willing buyer
       (neither acting under any compulsion) and (B) the liquidation value of
       the Company. No discount shall be applied on account of (i) the purchased
       Shares representing a minority interest, (ii) any lack of liquidity of
       the purchased Shares, (iii) the fact that the purchased Shares may
       constitute "restricted securities" for securities law purposes, (iv) the
       existence of the Company's right, as set forth in these Bye-Laws and the
       Shareholders Agreement, to require Shareholders to sell Shares to the
       Company or to one or more third parties designated by the Company or (v)
       the existence of the possibility of a reduction in voting power pursuant
       to these Bye-Laws. The Appraised Value per Class A Share as of any
       specified date shall be identical to the Appraised Value per Ordinary
       Share on such date.

       "BERMUDA" means the Islands of Bermuda.

       "BOARD" means the Board of Directors of the Company or the Directors
       present at a meeting of Directors at which there is a quorum.

       "BUSINESS DAY" means any day except a Saturday, Sunday or other day on
       which banks in any of Hamilton, Bermuda, or New York, New York are
       authorised or obligated by law or executive order to close.

       "CLASS A SHARES" shall mean the Class A shares, par value $1.00 per
       share, of the Company.

                                        2




       "CLASS A WARRANT" means a warrant, dated July 22, 2002, granting to the
       holder thereof the right to purchase Class A Shares from the Company on
       the terms and subject to the conditions therein.

       "CODE" means the United States Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended,
       or any United States federal statute then in effect that has replaced
       such statute, and a reference to a particular section thereof shall be
       deemed to include a reference to the comparable section, if any, of any
       such replacement United States federal statute.

       "CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION" shall have meaning given to such term in
       Bye-Law 67(2).

       "COMPANIES ACTS" means every Bermuda statute from time to time in force
       concerning companies insofar as the same applies to the Company.

       "COMPANY" means the company incorporated in Bermuda under the name of
       Endurance Specialty Holdings Ltd. on 27 June 2002.

       "CONTROL GROUP" means, with respect to any person, all Shares directly
       owned by such person and all Shares directly owned by each other
       Shareholder any of whose Shares are included in the Controlled Shares of
       such person.

       "CONTROLLED SHARES" in reference to any person means all Shares that such
       person is deemed to own directly, indirectly (within the meaning of
       Section 958(a) of the Code) or, in the case of any U.S. Person,
       constructively (within the meaning of Section 958(b) of the Code).

       "CONVERSION REQUEST" shall have the meaning given such term in Bye-Law 8.

       "CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES" means evidences of indebtedness, shares
       (including without limitation the Class A Shares (notwithstanding any
       limitations on conversion thereof)), or other securities that are
       convertible into or exchangeable for, with or without payment of

                                       3




       additional consideration in cash or property, Ordinary Shares, either
       immediately or upon the occurrence of a specified date or a specified
       event.

       "CONVERTING SHAREHOLDER" shall have the meaning given such term in
       Bye-Law 7.

       "CURRENT MARKET PRICE" with respect to any Ordinary Share means, as of
       any specified date, the average of the daily market prices of the
       Ordinary Shares for the twenty (20) consecutive Business Days immediately
       preceding such date. The "daily market price" for each such Business Day
       shall be: (1) if the Ordinary Shares are then listed on a national
       securities exchange or on Nasdaq, the last sale price, regular way, on
       such day on the principal stock exchange or market system on which the
       Ordinary Shares are then listed or admitted to trading, or, if no such
       sale takes place on such day, the average of the closing bid and asked
       prices for the Ordinary Shares on such day as reported on such stock
       exchange or market system or (2) if the Ordinary Shares are not then
       listed or admitted to trading on any national securities exchange or on
       Nasdaq but are traded over-the-counter, the average of the closing bid
       and asked prices for the Ordinary Shares as reported on Nasdaq or the
       Electronic Bulletin Board or in the National Daily Quotation Sheets, as
       applicable.

       "DESIGNATED COMPANIES" shall have the meaning given such term in Bye-Law
       150.

       "DESIGNATED COMPANY DIRECTORS" shall have the meaning given such term in
       Bye-Law 150.

       "DIRECTOR" means such person or persons as shall be appointed to the
       Board from time to time pursuant to Bye-Law 87.

       "EXCHANGE ACT" means the United States Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
       as amended, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder.


                                       4



       "FAIR VALUE" with respect to any Ordinary Share means, as of any
       specified date, (1) if the Ordinary Shares are publicly traded on such
       date, the Current Market Price per Ordinary Share or (2) if the Ordinary
       Shares are not publicly traded on such date, (A) the fair market value
       per Ordinary Share as determined in good faith by the Board and set forth
       in the Purchase Notice or (B) if the Shareholder objects in writing to
       such price as determined by the Board within thirty (30) days after
       receiving notice of same, the Appraised Value per Ordinary Share as of
       such date. The Fair Value per Class A Share as of any specified date
       shall be identical to the Fair Value per Ordinary Share on such date.

       "FULLY DILUTED BASIS" means assuming the exercise, conversion or exchange
       of all Share Purchase Rights, other than unvested Options, at the time
       outstanding.

       "INDEMNIFIED PERSON" shall have the meaning given such term in Bye-Law
       140.

       "INITIAL WARRANT" means a warrant, dated as of July 22, 2002, granting to
       the holder thereof the right to purchase Ordinary Shares and/or Class A
       Shares from the Company on the terms and subject to the conditions set
       forth therein.

       "9.5% SHAREHOLDER" means a person that owns Shares (within the meaning of
       Section 958 (a) of the Code) and owns or is deemed to own Controlled
       Shares which confer votes in excess of 9.5% (or such other percentage as
       determined under Bye-Law 69(3)) of the votes conferred by all of the
       issued and outstanding Shares.

       "MEETING DATE" shall have the meaning given such term in Bye-Law 131.

       "MEMORANDUM" means the Memorandum of Association of the Company in its
       present form or as from time to time amended.

       "OBSERVER" means an Observer appointed in accordance with Bye-Law 95.

                                       5




       "OFFICER" means a person appointed by the Board pursuant to Bye-Law 115
       and shall not include an auditor of the Company.

       "OPTIONS" means options to purchase Shares, including options to purchase
       Shares that may be granted to certain directors, officers and employees
       of the Company.

       "ORDINARY SHARES" shall mean the ordinary shares, par value $1.00 per
       share, of the Company.

       "PAID UP" means paid up or credited as paid up.

       "PUBLICLY TRADED SHARES" means (i) any Shares that (A) have been issued
       pursuant to an effective registration statement under the Securities Act
       or (B) have been sold to the public pursuant to Rule 144 under the
       Securities Act or any similar successor rule; (ii) any Shares that have
       been sold to the public outside the United States pursuant to the
       statutes applicable to such sale in the country or jurisdiction in which
       such Shares were sold; or (iii) any Shares issued upon the registration
       of transfer of another Share that is a Publicly Traded Share.

       "RECORD DATE" shall have the meaning given such term in Bye-Law 131.

       "RECORD DATE HOLDER" shall have the meaning given such term in Bye-Law
       131.

       "REGISTER" means the Register of Shareholders of the Company.

       "REGISTERED OFFICE" means the registered office for the time being of the
       Company.

       "RELATED GROUP" means a group of Shareholders that are investment
       vehicles and are under common control or management.

       "RELEVANT SHARES" shall have the meaning given such term in Bye-Law 131.

       "REMOVED COMPANY DIRECTORS" share the meaning given such term in Bye-Law
       150.


                                   6




       "RESIDENT REPRESENTATIVE" means the individual (or, if permitted in
       accordance with the Companies Acts, the company) appointed to perform the
       duties of resident representative set out in the Companies Acts and
       includes any assistant or deputy resident representative appointed by the
       Board to perform any of the duties of the resident representative.

       "RESOLUTION" means a resolution of the Shareholders or, where required,
       of a separate class or separate classes of Shareholders, adopted either
       in general meeting or by written resolution, in accordance with the
       provisions of these Bye-Laws.

       "SEAL" means the common seal of the Company and includes any duplicate
       thereof.

       "SECRETARY" includes a temporary or assistant or deputy Secretary and any
       person appointed by the Board to perform any of the duties of the
       Secretary.

       "SECURITIES ACT" means the United States Securities Act of 1933, as
       amended, or any United States federal statute then in effect that has
       replaced such statute.

       "SERVICE" shall have the meaning given such term in Bye-Law 67(2).

       "SHAREHOLDER" means a shareholder or member of the Company.

       "SHAREHOLDERS AGREEMENT" means that certain Amended and Restated
       Shareholders Agreement, dated as of January 30, 2003, as amended from
       time to time, among the Company, Endurance Specialty Insurance Ltd. and
       each of the Shareholders and Warrant Holders listed on Schedule A
       thereto.

       "SHARE PURCHASE RIGHTS" means any options, warrants or other securities
       or rights to subscribe to or exercisable for the purchase of Shares or
       Convertible Securities, whether or not immediately exercisable.

       "SHARES" means any shares in the share capital of the Company.


                                     7




       "SPONSOR" has the meaning assigned such term in the Shareholders
       Agreement.

       "THESE BYE-LAWS" means these Amended and Restated Bye-Laws in their
       present form or as from time to time amended.

       "TRANSFER" when used with respect to Shares, includes granting security
       interests in Shares, pledging Shares, or otherwise transferring or
       disposing of any interest in Shares.

       "U.S. PERSON" means a "United States person" as defined in Section 957(c)
       of the Code.

       "UNITED STATES" means the United States of America and dependent
       territories or any part thereof.

       "WARRANT" means an Initial Warrant or a Class A Warrant.

       "WARRANT HOLDER" has the meaning assigned such term in the Shareholders
       Agreement.

   (2) For the purposes of these Bye-Laws a corporation shall be deemed to
       be present in person if its representative duly authorised pursuant to
       the Companies Acts is present;

   (3) Words importing only the singular number include the plural number
       and vice versa;

   (4) Words importing only the masculine gender include the feminine and neuter
       genders respectively;

   (5) Words importing persons include any individual, partnership, corporation,
       limited liability company, joint venture, joint stock company, trust,
       unincorporated organization, government (or an agency or political
       subdivision thereof) or other entity;

   (6) Reference to writing shall include typewriting, printing,
       lithography, photography, telecopy and other modes of representing or
       reproducing words in a legible and non-transitory form;

   (7) Any words or expressions defined in the Companies Acts in force at the
       date when these Bye-Laws or any part thereof are adopted shall bear the
       same meaning in these Bye-Laws or such part (as the case may be).


                                        8



                                REGISTERED OFFICE

2. The Registered Office shall be at such place in Bermuda as the Board shall
   from time to time appoint.


                                  SHARE RIGHTS

3. Subject to any special rights conferred on the holders of any Share or
   class of Shares, any Share in the Company may be issued with or have
   attached thereto such preferred, deferred, qualified or other special
   rights or such restrictions, whether in regard to dividend, voting,
   return of capital or otherwise, as the Company may by Resolution
   determine or, if there has not been any such determination or so far as
   the same shall not make specific provision, as the Board may determine.

4. (1) Subject to the Companies Acts, any redeemable  preference Shares may,
       with the sanction of a resolution of the Board, be issued on terms:

       (a) that they are to be redeemed on the happening of a specified
           event or on a given date; and/or,

       (b) that they are liable to be redeemed at the option of the
           Company; and/or,

       (c) if authorised by the Memorandum, that they are liable to be
           redeemed at the option of the holder.

       The terms and manner of redemption shall be provided for in such
       resolution of the Board and shall be attached to but shall not form part
       of these Bye-Laws.


                                        9





   (2) The Board may, at its discretion and without the sanction of a
       Resolution, authorise the purchase by the Company of its own Shares, of
       any class, at any price (whether at par or above or below par), and any
       Shares to be so purchased may be selected in any manner, upon such terms
       as the Board may in its discretion determine PROVIDED ALWAYS that such
       purchase is effected in accordance with the provisions of the Companies
       Acts. To the extent permitted by the Companies Acts, the whole or any
       part of the amount payable on any such purchase may be paid or satisfied
       otherwise than in cash.

                          MODIFICATION OF RIGHTS

5. Subject to the Companies  Acts,  all or any of the special  rights for the
   time being attached to any class of Shares for the time being issued may from
   time to time (whether or not the Company is being wound up) be altered or
   abrogated with the consent in writing of the holders of not less than
   seventy-five percent (75%) of the issued Shares of that class or with the
   sanction of a resolution passed at a separate general meeting of the holders
   of such Shares voting in person or by proxy. To any such separate general
   meeting, all the provisions of these Bye-Laws as to general meetings of the
   Company shall mutatis mutandis apply, but so that the necessary quorum shall
   be two or more persons holding or representing by proxy more than fifty
   percent (50%) of the aggregate voting power of the Shares of the relevant
   class, that every holder of Shares of the relevant class shall be entitled on
   a poll to one vote for every such Share held by him (subject to any
   adjustments made to the voting power of the Shares of any Shareholder
   pursuant to Bye-Law 64) and that any holder of Shares of the relevant class
   present in person or by proxy may demand a poll; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that if
   the Company or a class of Shareholders shall have only one Shareholder, one
   Shareholder present in person or by proxy shall constitute the necessary
   quorum.



                                     10






6. For the purpose of this Bye-Law, unless otherwise expressly provided by
   the rights attaching to or the terms of issue of such Shares or class
   of Shares, such rights or terms, as the case may be, shall not be
   deemed to be altered by:

   (1) the creation or issue of further Shares ranking pari passu therewith;

   (2) the creation or issue for full value (as determined by the Board) of
       further Shares ranking as regards participation in the profits or assets
       of the Company or otherwise in priority to them; or

   (3) the purchase or redemption by the Company of any of its own Shares.

                               SHARES

7. The share capital of the Company shall consist of Ordinary Shares and
   Class A Shares.

   (1) All Ordinary Shares shall have the voting power determined pursuant to
       Bye-Law 64.

   (2) All Class A Shares shall have all of the rights of, and shall
       be treated identically in all respects with, Ordinary Shares
       (including with respect to dividends and other distributions,
       whether of cash or other property (including securities),
       stock splits, subdivisions and combinations, reorganizations,
       reclassifications, amalgamations, mergers, consolidations,
       liquidations, distributions or the like or the granting of
       Share Purchase Rights), except that they shall carry no voting
       rights other than such voting rights as may be required from
       time to time by the Companies Acts, these Bye-Laws or the
       Shareholders Agreement.

   (3) Subject to paragraphs (4) and (5) of this Bye-Law, at any time
       and from time to time, any holder of Class A Shares (a
       "Converting Shareholder") may convert all or any portion of
       its Class A Shares


                                      11





       into Ordinary Shares on a one-for-one basis in accordance with the
       procedures set forth in Bye-Law 8, unless (i) the Board reasonably
       determines that such conversion of all or any part of such Class A Shares
       may cause adverse tax consequences, determined after giving effect to the
       reduction in voting power pursuant to the provisions of Bye Laws 64, to
       the Company, any of its subsidiaries or any U.S. Person as to which the
       Shares held by such Shareholder constitute Controlled Shares or (ii) in
       the case of Class A Shares except those initially issued upon the
       exercise of an Initial Warrant, the Ordinary Shares held by such holder
       after such a conversion would not have voting power greater than the
       Ordinary Shares, if any, held by such holder before such a conversion
       (after giving effect to any reduction in voting power imposed in
       accordance with Bye-Laws 64). The Board may elect to accept only a
       portion of the total Class A Shares requested to be converted if such
       partial conversion is acceptable to the Converting Shareholder and if the
       Board reasonably determines that the conversion of a greater amount may
       cause adverse tax consequences to the Company, any of its subsidiaries or
       any U.S. Person as to which the Shares held by such Shareholder
       constitute Controlled Shares. In the event that the Board declines to
       accept all or a portion of the total Class A Shares requested to be
       converted by multiple Shareholders, the Board will use its best efforts
       to treat similarly situated Shareholders equitably (to the extent
       possible under the circumstances).

   (4) Class A Shares obtained by a Shareholder upon exercise of an Initial
       Warrant pursuant to Section 4.1 thereof may, when held by the Warrant
       Holder that exercised such Initial Warrant or any Affiliate of such
       Warrant Holder, be converted into Ordinary Shares only if such conversion
       would not cause any Person to become a 9.5% Shareholder (without giving
       effect to any provisions of these Bye-Laws that might limit the voting
       power of such Ordinary Shares).



                                       12





   (5) Class A Shares issued by the Company other than pursuant to the exercise
       of an Initial Warrant may not be converted into Ordinary Shares by the
       Shareholder to whom such Class A Shares were originally issued nor by any
       Affiliate of such Shareholder.

8. (1) Subject to the last  sentence of this  paragraph  (1), in order to
       convert Class A Shares, a Converting Shareholder shall deliver to the
       Company a written request (a "Conversion Request") and share
       certificate(s) representing the Class A Shares to be converted. The Board
       shall determine whether to accept the Conversion Request within ten (10)
       Business Days of receipt of such request. If the Board elects to reject
       the Conversion Request which it may do only if it reasonably determines
       that the Conversion may cause adverse tax consequences as determined in
       subsection 3(i) of Bye-Law 7, or if the Converting Shareholder fails to
       meet the requirements of subsections 3(ii), (4) or (5) of Bye-Law 7, the
       Company will return the certificates promptly. The Board may delegate the
       decision whether to accept the Conversion Request to a committee of the
       Board, an Officer or other persons. In connection with the exercise of an
       Initial Warrant, a Shareholder may request a prospective conversion of
       the Class A Shares to be issued upon exercise thereof, such that the
       exercise and conversion may occur simultaneously.

   (2) Notwithstanding any other provision hereof, if a conversion of Class A
       Shares is to be made in connection with any public offering of Ordinary
       Shares or in connection with any transfer of Shares approval of which is
       required pursuant to Bye-Laws 37 through 39, at the election of the
       Converting Shareholder the conversion of Class A Shares may be
       conditioned upon the consummation of such public offering or transfer
       (with such conversion to occur simultaneously therewith).

                                   13





   (3) Within five (5) Business Days after a Conversion Request is
       accepted by the Board (or simultaneously with a public
       offering or other transfer if made in connection therewith),
       the Company shall deliver to the Converting Shareholder (or,
       if applicable, to its transferee):

       (a) a certificate representing the Ordinary Shares into which the number
           of Class A Shares accepted for conversion have been converted; and

       (b) a certificate representing the Class A Shares, if any, that were
           represented by the certificate delivered to the Company but were not
           converted.

   (4) The issuance of certificates for Ordinary Shares upon any conversion of
       Class A Shares shall be made without charge to the Converting
       Shareholders for any issuance tax in respect thereof or other cost
       incurred by the Company in connection with such conversion. The Ordinary
       Shares into which such Class A Shares shall have been converted shall be
       validly issued and fully paid.

9.  Subject to the provisions of these Bye-Laws, the unissued Shares of the
    Company (whether forming part of the original capital or any increased
    capital) shall be at the disposal of the Board, which may offer, allot,
    grant options over or otherwise dispose of them to such persons, at
    such times and for such consideration and upon such terms and
    conditions as the Board may determine.

10. Shares may be issued in fractional denominations and in such event the
    Company shall deal with such fractions to the same extent as its whole
    shares, so that a share in a fractional denomination shall have, in
    proportion to the fraction of a whole share that it represents, all the
    rights of a whole share, including (but without limiting the generality
    of the foregoing) the right to vote (subject to any adjustments made
    pursuant to Bye-Law 64), to receive dividends and distributions and to
    participate in a winding-up.


                                    14





11. Except as ordered by a court of competent jurisdiction or as required
    by law, no person shall be recognised by the Company as holding any
    Share upon trust and the Company shall not be bound by or required in
    any way to recognise (even when having notice thereof) any equitable,
    contingent, future or partial interest in any Share or any interest in
    any fractional part of a Share or (except only as otherwise provided in
    these Bye-Laws, or by law) any other right in respect of any Share
    except an absolute right to the entirety thereof in the registered
    holder.

                             CERTIFICATES

12. The preparation, issue and delivery of certificates shall be governed
    by the Companies Acts. In the case of a Share held jointly by several
    persons, delivery of a certificate to one of several joint holders
    shall be sufficient delivery to all.

13. If a Share certificate is defaced, lost or destroyed it may be replaced
    without fee but on such terms (if any) as to evidence and indemnity and
    to payment of the costs and out of pocket expenses of the Company in
    investigating such evidence and preparing such indemnity as the Board
    may think fit and, in case of defacement, on delivery of the old
    certificate to the Company.

14. All certificates for share or loan capital or other securities of the
    Company (other than letters of allotment, scrip certificates and other
    like documents) shall, except to the extent that the terms and conditions
    for the time being relating thereto otherwise provide, be in such form as
    the Board may determine and issued under the Seal. The Board may by
    resolution determine, either generally or in any particular case, that
    any signatures on


                                     15





    any such certificates need not be autographic but may be affixed to such
    certificates by some mechanical means or may be printed thereon or that
    such certificates need not be signed by any persons, and may determine
    that a representation of the Seal may be printed on any such
    certificates. If any person holding an office in the Company who has
    signed, or whose facsimile signature has been used on any certificate,
    ceases for any reason to hold his office, such certificate may
    nevertheless be issued as though that person had not ceased to hold such
    office.

15. Nothing in these Bye-Laws shall prevent title to any securities of the
    Company from being evidenced and/or transferred without a written
    instrument in accordance with regulations made from time to time in
    this regard under the Companies Acts, and (i) the Board shall have
    power to implement any arrangements which it may think fit for such
    evidencing and/or transfer which accord with those regulations and (ii)
    any such transfer shall be subject to the applicable provisions of
    Bye-Law 37.


                                  LIEN

16. The Company shall have a first and paramount lien on every Share (not being
    a fully paid Share) for all moneys, whether presently payable or not,
    called or payable, at a date fixed by or in accordance with the terms of
    issue of such Share in respect of such Share, and the Company shall also
    have a first and paramount lien on every Share (other than a fully paid
    Share) standing registered in the name of a Shareholder, whether singly or
    jointly with any other person, for all the debts and liabilities of such
    Shareholder or his estate to the Company, whether the same shall have been
    incurred before or after notice to the Company of any interest of any
    person other


                                   16






    than such Shareholder, and whether the time for the payment or discharge of
    the same shall have actually arrived or not, and notwithstanding that the
    same are joint debts or liabilities of such Shareholder or his estate and
    any other person, whether a Shareholder or not. The Company's lien on a
    Share shall extend to all dividends payable thereon. The Board may at any
    time, either generally or in any particular case, waive any lien that has
    arisen or declare any Share to be wholly or in part exempt from the
    provisions of this Bye-Law.

17. The Company may sell, in such manner as the Board may think fit, any Share
    on which the Company has a lien but no sale shall be made unless some sum
    in respect of which the lien exists is presently payable nor until the
    expiration of fourteen (14) days after a notice in writing, stating and
    demanding payment of the sum presently payable and giving notice of the
    intention to sell in default of such payment, has been served on the holder
    for the time being of the Share.

18. The net proceeds of sale by the Company of any Shares on which it has a lien
    shall be applied in or towards payment or discharge of the debt or
    liability in respect of which the lien exists so far as the same is
    presently payable, and any residue shall (subject to a like lien for debts
    or liabilities not presently payable as existed upon the Share prior to the
    sale) be paid to the person who was the holder of the Share immediately
    before such sale. For giving effect to any such sale the Board may
    authorise some person to transfer the Share sold to the purchaser thereof.
    The purchaser shall be registered as the holder of the Share and he shall
    not be bound to see to the application of the purchase money, nor shall his
    title to the Share be affected by any irregularity or invalidity in the
    proceedings relating to the sale.



                                        17





19. (1) Whenever any law for the time being of any country, state or place
        imposes or purports to impose any immediate or future or possible
        liability upon the Company to make any payment or empowers any
        government or taxing authority or government official to require the
        Company to make any payment in respect of any shares registered in any
        of the Company's registers as held either jointly or solely by any
        Shareholder or in respect of any dividends, bonuses or other monies due
        or payable or accruing due or which may become due or payable to such
        Shareholder by the Company on or in respect of any shares registered as
        aforesaid or for or on account or in respect of any Shareholder and
        whether in consequence of:

        (a)   the death of such Shareholder;

        (b)   the non-payment of any income tax or other tax by such
              Shareholder;

        (c)   the non-payment of any estate, probate, succession, death, stamp,
              or other duty by the executor or administrator of such Shareholder
              or by or out of his estate; or

        (d)   any other act or thing;

              in every such case (except to the extent that the rights conferred
              upon holders of any class of shares render the Company liable to
              make additional payments in respect of sums withheld on account of
              the foregoing):

        (i)   the Company shall be fully indemnified by such Shareholder or his
              executor or administrator from all liability;

        (ii)  the Company shall have a lien upon all dividends and other monies
              payable in respect of the shares registered in any of the
              Company's registers as held either jointly or solely by such
              Shareholder for all monies paid or payable by the Company in
              respect of such shares or in respect of any dividends or other


                                 18




              monies as aforesaid thereon or for or on account or in respect of
              such Shareholder under or in consequence of any such law together
              with interest thereon (at a rate not exceeding that permissible
              under the Interest and Credit Charges (Regulation) Act 1975 of
              Bermuda) from the date of payment to the date of repayment and may
              deduct or set off against such dividends or other monies payable
              as aforesaid any monies paid or payable by the Company as
              aforesaid together with interest as aforesaid;

        (iii) the Company may recover as a debt due from such Shareholder or his
              executor or administrator wherever constituted any monies paid by
              the Company under or in consequence of any such law and interest
              thereon at the rate and for the period aforesaid in excess of any
              dividends or other monies as aforesaid then due or payable by the
              Company; and

        (iv)  the Company may, if any such money is paid or payable by it under
              any such law as aforesaid, refuse to register a transfer of any
              shares by any such Shareholder or his executor or administrator
              until such money and interest as aforesaid is set off or deducted
              as aforesaid, or in case the same exceeds the amount of any such
              dividends or other monies as aforesaid then due or payable by the
              Company, until such excess is paid to the Company.

    (2) Subject to the rights conferred upon the holders of any class of shares,
        nothing herein contained shall prejudice or affect any right or remedy
        which any law may confer or purport to confer on the Company and as
        between the Company and every such Shareholder as aforesaid, his estate
        representative, executor, administrator and estate wheresoever
        constituted or situate, any right or remedy which such law shall confer
        or purport to confer on the Company shall be enforceable by the Company.



                                      19




                        CALLS ON SHARES

20.  The Board may from time to time make calls upon the Shareholders in
     respect of any moneys unpaid on their Shares (whether on account of the
     par value of the Shares or by way of premium) and not by the terms of
     issue thereof made payable at a date fixed by or in accordance with
     such terms of issue, and each Shareholder shall (subject to the Company
     serving upon him at least fourteen (14) days' notice specifying the
     time or times and place of payment) pay to the Company at the time or
     times and place so specified the amount called on his Shares. A call
     may be revoked or postponed as the Board may determine.

21.  A call may be made payable by instalments and shall be deemed to have
     been made at the time when the resolution of the Board authorising the
     call was passed.

22.  The joint holders of a Share shall be jointly and severally liable to
     pay all calls in respect thereof.

23.  If a sum called in respect of the Share shall not be paid before or on
     the day appointed for payment thereof the person from whom the sum is
     due shall pay interest on the sum from the day appointed for the
     payment thereof to the time of actual payment at such rate as the Board
     may determine, but the Board shall be at liberty to waive payment of
     such interest wholly or in part.

24.  Any sum which, by the terms of issue of a Share, becomes payable on
     allotment or at any date fixed by or in accordance with such terms of
     issue, whether on account of the nominal amount of the Share or by way
     of


                                   20




     premium, shall for all the purposes of these Bye-Laws be deemed to be a
     call duly made, notified and payable on the date on which, by the terms of
     issue, the same becomes payable and, in case of non-payment, all the
     relevant provisions of these Bye-Laws as to payment of interest, forfeiture
     or otherwise shall apply as if such sum had become payable by virtue of a
     call duly made and notified.

25.  The Board may on the issue of Shares differentiate between the
     allottees or holders as to the amount of calls to be paid and the times
     of payment.

                          FORFEITURE OF SHARES

26.  If a Shareholder fails to pay any call or instalment of a call on the
     day appointed for payment thereof, the Board may at any time thereafter
     during such time as any part of such call or instalment remains unpaid
     serve a notice on him requiring payment of so much of the call or
     instalment as is unpaid, together with any interest which may have
     accrued.

27.  The notice shall name a further day (not being less than fourteen (14)
     days from the date of the notice) on or before which, and the place
     where, the payment required by the notice is to be made and shall state
     that, in the event of non-payment on or before the day and at the place
     appointed, the Shares in respect of which such call is made or
     instalment is payable will be liable to be forfeited. The Board may
     accept the surrender of any Share liable to be forfeited hereunder and,
     in such case, references in these Bye-Laws to forfeiture shall include
     surrender.

28.  If the requirements of any such notice as aforesaid are not complied
     with, any Share in respect of which such notice has been given may at
     any time thereafter, before payment of all calls or instalments and
     interest due in respect thereof has been made, be forfeited by a
     resolution of the Board to that effect. Such forfeiture shall include
     all dividends declared in respect of the forfeited Shares and not
     actually paid before the forfeiture.


                                  21






29.  When any Share has been forfeited, notice of the forfeiture shall be
     served upon the person who was before forfeiture the holder of the
     Share; but no forfeiture shall be in any manner invalidated by any
     omission or neglect to give such notice as aforesaid.

30.  A forfeited Share shall be deemed to be the property of the Company and
     may be sold, re-offered or otherwise disposed of either to the person
     who was, before forfeiture, the holder thereof or entitled thereto or
     to any other person upon such terms and in such manner as the Board
     shall think fit, and at any time before a sale, re-allotment or
     disposition the forfeiture may be cancelled on such terms as the Board
     may think fit.

31.  A person whose Shares have been forfeited shall thereupon cease to be a
     Shareholder in respect of the forfeited Shares but shall,
     notwithstanding the forfeiture, remain liable to pay to the Company all
     moneys which at the date of forfeiture were presently payable by him to
     the Company in respect of the Shares with interest thereon at such rate
     as the Board may determine from the date of forfeiture until payment,
     and the Company may enforce payment without being under any obligation
     to make any allowance for the value of the Shares forfeited.

32.  An affidavit in writing that the deponent is a Director of the Company
     or the Secretary and that a Share has been duly forfeited on the date
     stated in the affidavit shall be conclusive evidence of the facts
     therein stated as against all persons claiming to be entitled to the
     Share. The Company may receive the consideration (if any) given for the
     Share on the sale, re-allotment or disposition thereof and the Board
     may authorise some person to transfer the Share to the person to whom
     the same is sold, re-allotted or disposed of, and


                                       22




     he shall thereupon be registered as the holder of the Share and shall not
     be bound to see to the application of the purchase money (if any) nor shall
     his title to the Share be affected by any irregularity or invalidity in the
     proceedings relating to the forfeiture, sale, re-allotment or disposal of
     the Share.

                         REQUIRED SALE OF SHARES

33.  If the Board reasonably  determines,  upon the written advice of counsel,
     that Share ownership by any person may result in any non-de minimis adverse
     tax, legal or regulatory consequences to the Company, any subsidiary of the
     Company, or any other holder of Shares (including if such consequence
     arises as a result of any Person owning Controlled Shares of 9.5% or more
     of the value of the Company or the voting Shares (after giving effect to
     any adjustment to voting power required by Bye-Law 64)), the Company will
     have the option but not the obligation to purchase or assign to a third
     party or one or more other Shareholders the right to purchase the minimum
     number of Shares held by such person which is necessary to eliminate such
     non-de minimis adverse tax, legal or regulatory consequence at a price
     determined in the good faith discretion of the Board to represent such
     Shares' fair market value; provided that if the Shares are traded on a
     securities exchange in or outside the United States, the fair market value
     per Share shall be determined by the Board based on the average of the last
     sales price per Share or if there is none, the average of the bid and asked
     price per Share, in each case for the ten business days prior to the
     repurchase date. The determinations by the Board pursuant to this Bye-Law
     33 shall be final and binding. The Board will use reasonable efforts to
     ensure equal treatment to similarly situated Shareholders to the extent
     possible under the circumstances in connection with the application of this
     Bye-Law 33.



                                      23




                        REGISTER OF SHAREHOLDERS

34.  The Register shall be kept at the Registered Office or at such other
     place in Bermuda as the Board may from time to time direct, in the
     manner prescribed by the Companies Acts. Subject to the provisions of
     the Companies Acts, the Company may keep one or more branch registers
     in any place, and the Board may make, amend and revoke any resolutions
     as it may think fit respecting the keeping of such registers.

35.  The Register or any branch register may be closed at such times and for
     such period as the Board may from time to time decide, subject to the
     Companies Acts. Except during such time as it is closed, the Register and
     each branch register shall be open to inspection in the manner prescribed
     by the Companies Acts between 10:00 a.m. and 12:00 noon (or between such
     other times as the Board from time to time determines) on every working
     day. Unless the Board so determines, no Shareholder or intending
     Shareholder shall be entitled to have entered in the Register or any branch
     register any indication of any trust or any equitable, contingent, future
     or partial interest in any Share or any interest in any fractional part of
     a Share and if any such entry exists or is permitted by the Board it shall
     not be deemed to abrogate any of the provisions of Bye-Law 11.


                       REGISTER OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS

36.  The Secretary shall establish and maintain a register of the Directors
     and Officers of the Company as required by the Companies Acts. The
     register of Directors and Officers shall be open to inspection in the
     manner prescribed by the Companies Acts between 10:00 a.m. and 12:00
     noon on every working day.




                                       24





                               TRANSFER OF SHARES

37.  (1)  Subject to the Companies Acts and to such of the restrictions
          contained in these Bye-Laws as may be applicable, including,
          without limitation, the provisions of this Bye-Law, any Shareholder
          may transfer all or any of his Shares by an instrument of transfer
          in the usual common form, or in any other form or by any other
          method permissible under applicable law, in either case as may be
          approved by the Board.

     (2)  The instrument of transfer of a Share shall be signed by or on
          behalf of the transferor and, where any Share is not fully-paid,
          the transferee.

     (3)  The Board may, in its absolute discretion and without
          assigning any reason therefor, decline to register any
          transfer of any Share which is not a fully paid Share.

     (4)  The Board may refuse to recognise an instrument of transfer
          unless the instrument of transfer is duly stamped and lodged
          with the Company, at such place as the Board shall appoint for
          the purpose, accompanied by the certificate for the Shares to
          which it relates and such other evidence as the Board may
          reasonably require to show the right of the transferor to make
          the transfer.

     (5)  The Board may refuse to recognise an instrument of transfer unless
          the instrument of transfer is in respect of only one class of
          Share.

     (6)  The Board may decline to register any transfer unless the
          instrument of transfer is in favour of less than five persons
          jointly.

     (7)  The Board may also decline to register any transfer unless it
          is satisfied that all applicable consents, authorisations,
          permissions or approvals of any governmental body or agency in
          Bermuda or any other applicable jurisdiction required to be
          obtained under relevant law prior to such transfer have been
          obtained.


                                        25


     (8)  All instruments of transfer when registered may be retained by
          the Company.

     (9)  No fee shall be charged by the Company for registering any
          transfer, probate, letters of administration, certificate of
          death or marriage, power of attorney, distringas or stop
          notice, order of court or other instrument relating to or
          affecting the title to any Share, or otherwise making an entry
          in the Register relating to any Share.

     (10) Subject to any directions of the Board from time to time in
          force, the Secretary may exercise the powers and discretions
          of the Board under this Bye-Law and under Bye-Law 38.

38.  If the Board declines to register a transfer it shall, within thirty
     (30) days after the date on which the notice or instrument of transfer
     was delivered to the Board, send to the transferee notice of such
     refusal.

39.  The transferor of a Share shall be deemed to remain the holder of the
     Share until the name of the transferee is entered in the Register in
     respect thereof. Any purported transfer of any Share in contravention
     of any of the restrictions on transfer contained in these Bye-Laws
     shall be void and of no effect and shall not be entered in the
     Register.

                         TRANSMISSION OF SHARES

40.  In the case of the death of a Shareholder,  the survivor or survivors,
     where the deceased was a joint holder, and the estate representative, where
     he was sole holder, shall be the only person recognised by the Company as
     having any title to his Shares; but nothing herein contained shall release
     the estate of a deceased holder (whether the sole or joint) from any
     liability in respect of any Share held by him solely or jointly with other
     persons. For the purpose of this Bye-Law, estate representative means the
     person to whom probate or letters of administration has or have been
     granted in Bermuda or,



                                      26




     failing any such person, such other person as the Board may in its absolute
     discretion determine to be the person recognised by the Company for the
     purpose of this Bye-Law. For greater certainty, where two or more persons
     are registered as joint holders of a Share or Shares, then in the event of
     the death of any joint holder or holders the remaining joint holder or
     holders shall be absolutely entitled to the said Share or Shares and the
     Company shall recognise no claim in respect of the estate of any joint
     holder except in the case of the last survivor of such joint holders.

41.  Any person becoming entitled to a Share in consequence of the death of
     a Shareholder or otherwise by operation of applicable law may, subject as
     hereafter provided and upon such evidence being produced as may from time
     to time be required by the Board as to his entitlement, either be
     registered himself as the holder of the Share or elect to have some person
     nominated by him registered as the transferee thereof. If the person so
     becoming entitled elects to be registered himself, he shall deliver or send
     to the Company a notice in writing signed by him stating that he so elects.
     If he shall elect to have his nominee registered, he shall signify his
     election by signing an instrument of transfer of such Share in favour of
     his nominee. All the limitations, restrictions and provisions of these
     Bye-Laws relating to the right to transfer and the registration of transfer
     of Shares shall be applicable to any such notice or instrument of transfer
     as aforesaid as if the death of the Shareholder or other event giving rise
     to the transmission had not occurred and the notice or instrument of
     transfer was an instrument of transfer signed by such Shareholder. The
     rights of any person becoming entitled to a Share under Bye-Laws 40 through
     42 shall be subject to the Company's right to require a Shareholder to sell
     Shares in accordance with Bye-Law 33.

42.  A person becoming entitled to a Share in consequence of the death of a
     Shareholder or otherwise by operation of applicable law shall (upon such




                                      27




     evidence being produced as may from time to time be required by the Board
     as to his entitlement) be entitled to receive and may give a discharge for
     any dividends or other moneys payable in respect of the Share, but he shall
     not be entitled in respect of the Share to receive notices of or to attend
     or vote at general meetings of the Company or, save as aforesaid, to
     exercise in respect of the Share any of the rights or privileges of a
     Shareholder until he shall have become registered as the holder thereof.
     The Board may at any time give notice requiring such person to elect either
     to be registered himself or to transfer the Share and, if the notice is not
     complied with within sixty days, the Board may thereafter withhold payment
     of all dividends and other moneys payable in respect of the Shares until
     the requirements of the notice have been complied with.

43.  Subject to any directions of the Board from time to time in force, the
     Secretary may exercise the powers and discretions of the Board under
     Bye-Laws 40 through 42.


                           INCREASE OF CAPITAL

44.  The Company may from time to time increase its capital by such sum to
     be divided into Shares of such par value as the Company by Resolution
     shall prescribe and in any manner permitted by the Companies Acts.

45.  The Company may, by the Resolution increasing the capital, direct that
     the new Shares or any of them shall be offered in the first instance
     either at par or at a premium or (subject to the provisions of the
     Companies Acts) at a discount to all the holders for the time being of
     Shares of any class or classes in proportion to the number of such
     Shares held by them respectively or make any other provision as to the
     issue of the new Shares.



                                  28





46.  The new Shares shall be subject to all the provisions of these Bye-Laws
     with reference to lien, the payment of calls, forfeiture, transfer,
     transmission and otherwise.


                          ALTERATION OF CAPITAL

47. The Company may from time to time by Resolution and in any manner permitted
    by the Companies Acts:-

    (1)  divide its Shares into several classes and attach thereto
         respectively any preferential, deferred, qualified or special
         rights, privileges or conditions;

    (2)  consolidate and divide all or any of its share capital into Shares
         of larger par value than its existing Shares;

    (3)  sub-divide its Shares or any of them into Shares of smaller par value
         than is fixed by the Memorandum, so, however, that in the sub-division
         the proportion between the amount paid and the amount, if any, unpaid
         on each reduced Share shall be the same as it was in the case of the
         Share from which the reduced Share is derived;

    (4)  make provision for the issue and allotment of Shares which do not carry
         any voting rights;

    (5)  cancel Shares which, at the date of the passing of the Resolution in
         that behalf, have not been taken or agreed to be taken by any person,
         and diminish the amount of its share capital by the amount of the
         Shares so cancelled; and

    (6)  change the currency denomination of its share capital.

         Where any difficulty arises in regard to any division, consolidation,
         or sub-division under this Bye-Law, the Board may settle the same as it
         thinks expedient and, in particular, may arrange for the sale of the
         Shares representing fractions and the distribution of the net proceeds
         of sale in due proportion amongst the Shareholders who would have been
         entitled to the fractions, and for this purpose the Board may authorise
         some person to transfer the Shares representing fractions to the



                                      29



         purchaser thereof, who shall not be bound to see to the application of
         the purchase money nor shall his title to the Shares be affected by any
         irregularity or invalidity in the proceedings relating to the sale.

48. Subject to the Companies Acts and to any confirmation or consent
    required by law or these Bye-Laws, the Company may by Resolution from
    time to time convert any preference Shares into redeemable preference
    Shares.


                              REDUCTION OF CAPITAL

49. Subject to the Companies Acts, the Memorandum and any confirmation or
    consent required by law or these Bye-Laws, the Company may from time to
    time by Resolution authorise the reduction of its issued share capital
    or any share premium or contributed surplus account in any manner.

50. In relation to any such reduction, the Company may by Resolution
    determine the terms upon which such reduction is to be effected
    including, in the case of a reduction of part only of a class of
    Shares, those Shares to be affected.


               GENERAL MEETINGS AND WRITTEN RESOLUTIONS

51. (1)  The Board shall convene and the Company shall hold general
         meetings as Annual General Meetings in accordance with the requirements
         of the Companies Acts at such times and places as the Board shall
         appoint. The Board or the President of the Company may, whenever it or
         he thinks fit, and shall, when required by the Companies Acts, convene
         general meetings other than Annual General Meetings which shall be
         called Special General Meetings.






                                 30








    (2)  Except in the case of the removal of auditors or Directors,
         anything which may be done by resolution in general meeting may,
         without a meeting and without any previous notice being required, be
         done by resolution in writing, signed by all of the Shareholders or any
         class thereof or their proxies, or in the case of a Shareholder that is
         a corporation (whether or not a company within the meaning of the
         Companies Acts) on behalf of such Shareholder, being all of the
         Shareholders of the Company or any class thereof who at the date of the
         resolution in writing would be entitled to attend a meeting and vote on
         the resolution. Such resolution in writing may be signed in as many
         counterparts as may be necessary.

    (3)  For the purposes of this Bye-Law, the date of the resolution
         in writing is the date when the resolution is signed by, or on
         behalf of, the last Shareholder to sign and any reference in
         any enactment to the date of passing of a resolution is, in
         relation to a resolution in writing made in accordance with
         this section, a reference to such date.

    (4)  A resolution in writing made in accordance with this Bye-Law
         is as valid as if it had been passed by the Company in general
         meeting or, if applicable, by a meeting of the relevant class
         of Shareholders of the Company, as the case may be. A
         resolution in writing made in accordance with this section
         shall constitute minutes for the purposes of the Companies
         Acts and these Bye-Laws.


                      NOTICE OF GENERAL MEETINGS

52. An Annual General Meeting shall be called by not less than ten (10) days'
    notice in writing and a Special General Meeting shall be called by not less
    than ten (10) days' notice in writing. The notice shall be exclusive of the
    day on which it is served or deemed to be served and of the day for which it
    is given, and shall specify the place, day and time of the meeting, and, the




                                      31





    nature of the business to be considered. Notice of every general meeting
    shall be given in any manner permitted by Bye-Laws 136 and 137 to all
    Shareholders other than such as, under the provisions of these Bye-Laws or
    the terms of issue of the Shares they hold, are not entitled to receive such
    notice from the Company and to any Director or Resident Representative who
    or which has delivered a written notice upon the Registered Office requiring
    that such notice be sent to him or it.

53. A Shareholder present, either in person or by proxy, at any meeting of
    the Company or of the holders of any class of Shares of the Company
    present in person or by proxy shall be deemed to have received notice
    of the meeting and, where requisite, of the purposes for which it was
    called.

54. Subject to the Companies Acts, the Board may cancel or postpone a
    meeting of the Shareholders after it has been convened and notice of
    such cancellation or postponement shall be served in accordance with
    Bye-Law 136 upon all Shareholders entitled to notice of the meeting so
    cancelled or postponed setting out, where the meeting is postponed to a
    specific date, notice of the new meeting in accordance with Bye-Law 52.

55. The accidental omission to give notice of a meeting or (in cases where
    instruments of proxy are sent out with the notice) the accidental
    omission to send such instrument of proxy to, or the non-receipt of
    notice of a meeting or such instrument of proxy by, any person entitled
    to receive such notice shall not invalidate the proceedings at that
    meeting.


                    PROCEEDINGS AT GENERAL MEETINGS

56. No business shall be transacted at any general meeting unless a quorum
    is present when the meeting proceeds to business, but the absence of a
    quorum shall not preclude the appointment, choice or election of a
    chairman which







                                   32






    shall not be treated as part of the business of the meeting. Save as
    otherwise provided by these Bye-Laws, at least four Shareholders present in
    person or by proxy and representing more than fifty percent (50%) of the
    aggregate voting power of the Company shall be a quorum for all purposes;
    PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that if the Company or a class of Shareholders shall have
    only one Shareholder, one Shareholder present in person or by proxy shall
    constitute the necessary quorum.

57. If within fifteen (15) minutes (or such longer time as the chairman of
    the meeting may determine to wait) after the time appointed for the
    meeting, a quorum is not present in person or by proxy, the meeting, if
    convened on the requisition of Shareholders, shall be dissolved. In any
    other case, it shall stand adjourned to such other day and such other
    time and place as the chairman of the meeting may determine. The
    Company shall give not less than ten (10) days' notice of any meeting
    adjourned through want of a quorum.

58. A meeting of the Shareholders or any class thereof may be held by means
    of such telephone, electronic or other communication facilities as
    permit all persons participating in the meeting to communicate with
    each other simultaneously and instantaneously and participation in such
    a meeting shall constitute presence in person at such meeting.

59. Each Director upon giving the notice referred to in Bye-Law 52, and the
    Resident Representative, if any, shall be entitled to attend and speak
    at any general meeting of the Company.

60. The Chairman (if any) of the Board or, in his absence, the President
    shall preside as chairman at every general meeting. If there is no such
    Chairman or President, or if at any meeting neither the Chairman nor
    the President is present within five (5) minutes after the time
    appointed for holding the



                                    33






    meeting, or if neither of them is willing to act as chairman, the Directors
    present shall choose one of their number to act or if one Director only is
    present he shall preside as chairman if willing to act. If no Director is
    present, or if each of the Directors present declines to take the chair, the
    persons present and entitled to vote on a poll shall elect one of their
    number to be chairman.

61. The chairman of the meeting may, with the consent of any meeting at which a
    quorum is present (and shall if so directed by the meeting), adjourn the
    meeting from time to time and from place to place but no business shall be
    transacted at any adjourned meeting except business which might lawfully
    have been transacted at the meeting from which the adjournment took place.
    Subject to the Companies Acts, in addition to any other power of adjournment
    conferred by law the chairman of the meeting may at any time without consent
    of the meeting adjourn the meeting (whether or not it has commenced or a
    quorum is present) to another time and/or place if, in his opinion, it would
    facilitate the conduct of the business of the meeting to do so or if he is
    so directed (prior to or at the meeting) by the Board. When a meeting is
    adjourned for three months or more, notice of the adjourned meeting shall be
    given as in the case of an original meeting.

62. Save as expressly provided by these Bye-Laws, it shall not be necessary
    to give any notice of an adjournment or of the business to be
    transacted at an adjourned meeting.


                         VOTES OF SHAREHOLDERS

63. Subject to the provisions of Bye-Laws 64 and 65, and subject to any rights
    and restrictions for the time being attached to any class or classes of
    Shares, every Shareholder and every person representing a Shareholder by
    proxy shall have one vote for each Share carrying the right to vote on the




                                        34





    matter in question of which he or the person represented by proxy is shown
    in the Register as the holder. All matters in these Bye-Laws that are
    subject to a vote or approval of Shareholders shall be based upon the voting
    power of such Shareholders' Shares as determined pursuant to Bye-Laws 63
    through 66. For the avoidance of doubt, in applying the provisions of these
    Bye-Laws, a Share may carry a fraction of a vote.

64. (1) If, as a result of giving effect to the provisions of Bye-Law 63 or
        otherwise, the votes conferred by the Controlled Shares of any person
        would otherwise cause such person to be treated as a 9.5% Shareholder,
        the votes conferred by the Shares of such person's Control Group are
        hereby reduced (and shall be automatically reduced in the future) by
        whatever amount is necessary so that after any such reduction the votes
        conferred by the Controlled Shares of such person shall not exceed 9.5%
        (or such other percentage as determined under Bye-Law 64(3)) of the
        total voting power of all of the Shares entitled to vote on the matter
        in question.

    (2) The reduction in votes pursuant to Bye-Law 64(1) shall be determined as
        follows:

        (a) Beginning with the Control Group of the person whose Controlled
            Shares have the largest number of votes and continuing, as required,
            with the Control Group of each person whose Controlled Shares
            successively have a smaller number of votes (after giving effect to
            prior reductions), the reduction in votes conferred by the Shares of
            a Control Group shall be effected proportionately among all the
            Shares of such Control Group in accordance with the relative voting
            power of such Shares, provided, however, that the votes conferred by
            the Shares directly owned by Capital Z Financial Services Fund II,
            L.P. and Capital Z Financial Services Private Fund II, L.P. shall
            not be reduced below one vote per share pursuant to this Bye-Law
            64(2).


                                      35





        (b) After all required reductions to Shares of Control Groups are
            effected pursuant to subparagraph (a), the amount of any reduction
            in the votes of the Shares held by each Shareholder effected by
            application of subparagraph (a) above shall be (i) reallocated among
            and conferred on the Shares held directly by such Shareholder,
            proportionately in accordance with the reduction in voting power of
            such Shares pursuant to subparagraph (a) above, to the extent that
            so doing does not cause any person to be treated as a 9.5%
            Shareholder and (ii) the amount of any remaining reduction in votes
            shall then be allocated and conferred proportionately among the
            Shares held directly by all other Shareholders in accordance with
            the relative voting power of such Shares; provided, however, that no
            Shares shall be conferred votes to the extent that so doing shall
            cause any person to be treated as a 9.5% Shareholder.

    (3) Upon written notification by a Shareholder to the Board,

        (a) such Shareholder shall be entitled to direct that the Board (x)
            treat it (and/or any specified Affiliate to whom Shares owned by
            such Shareholder could be attributed pursuant to Section 958(a) of
            the Code) as a U.S. Person, and/or (y) treat it, together with other
            related Shareholders so designated by such Shareholder, as one
            person for purposes of determining such Shareholder's Control Group;
            or

        (b) the number of votes conferred by the total number of Shares held by
            such Shareholder shall be reduced to that percentage of the total
            voting power of the Company, as so designated by such Shareholder
            (subject to acceptance of such reduction by the Board in its sole
            discretion) so that



                                       36




            (and to the extent that) such Shareholder may satisfy any applicable
            insurance or other regulatory requirement (including tax regulatory)
            or voting threshold or limitation that may be applicable to such
            Shareholder.

   (4)  If, after giving effect to the provisions of Bye-Laws 64(1) and (2),
        the votes conferred by the Shares directly held by any Related Group
        would otherwise represent more than 9.5% of the votes conferred by all
        of the issued and outstanding Shares, the votes conferred by such Shares
        are hereby reduced (and shall be automatically reduced in the future)
        proportionately among all the Shares directly held by such Related Group
        in accordance with the relative voting power of such Shares, by whatever
        amount is necessary so that after any such reduction the votes conferred
        by the Shares directly held by such Related Group shall not exceed 9.5%
        of the votes conferred by all of the issued and outstanding Shares. The
        amount of any reduction in votes pursuant to this Bye-Law 64(4) shall
        then be allocated and conferred proportionately among the Shares held
        directly by all Shareholders who are not in such Related Group in
        accordance with the relative voting power of such Shares; provided,
        however, that no Shares shall be conferred votes to the extent that so
        doing shall cause any person to be treated as a 9.5% Shareholder.

    (5) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Bye-Law 64, the votes
        conferred by the Controlled Shares of any Shareholder shall not exceed
        such amount as would result in any U.S. Person that owns Shares of the
        Company (within the meaning of Section 958(a) of the Code) being treated
        as owning (within the meaning of Section 958 of the Code) more than 9.5%
        (or such lower percentage designated by a Shareholder pursuant to
        Bye-Law provision 64(3) hereof) of the aggregate voting power of the
        votes conferred by all the Shares of the Company entitled to vote on a
        particular matter in question.



                                      37




    (6) The Board shall implement the foregoing in the manner set forth in this
        Bye-Law. In addition to any other provision of this Bye-Law 64, any
        Shares shall not carry rights to vote or shall have reduced voting
        rights to the extent that the Board reasonably determines in good faith
        that it is necessary that such Shares should not carry the right to vote
        or shall have reduced voting rights in order to avoid adverse tax
        consequences or materially adverse legal or regulatory treatment to the
        Company, any subsidiary of the Company or any Shareholder or its
        affiliates; provided, that the Board will use reasonable efforts to
        exercise such discretion equally among similarly situated Shareholders
        to the extent possible under the circumstances and provided further,
        that the Board shall reallocate the amount of any reduction in vote in
        the manner described in Bye-Law 64(2)(b).

65. The determination by the Board, made in good faith, upon the written
    advice of counsel, as to any adjustments to voting power of any Share
    made pursuant to Bye-Law 64 shall be final and binding.

66. Prior to any vote being cast on a resolution proposed at a meeting, the
    Board of Directors shall notify the Shareholders of the voting power
    conferred by their Shares at such meeting determined in accordance with
    Bye-Laws 63 and 64 hereof.


                        SHAREHOLDER DISCLOSURE

67. (1) Subject to the  provisions of this Bye-Law 67, the Company shall
        have the authority to request from any Shareholder, and such Shareholder
        shall provide to the Company, such information as the




                                  38





        Company may reasonably request for the purpose of (i) determining
        whether any Shareholder's voting rights are to be adjusted pursuant to
        Bye-Law 64, (ii) conducting the analysis required by Bye-Law 33, (iii)
        determining whether the Company would realize any income that would be
        included in the income of any Shareholder (or any interest holder,
        whether direct or indirect, of any Shareholder) by operation of Section
        953(c) of the Code and (iv) determining whether the Company or any of
        its subsidiaries would be entitled to the benefits of a tax treaty.

    (2) Any information provided by each Shareholder to the Company pursuant to
        this Bye-Law 67 shall be deemed "confidential information" (the
        "Confidential Information") and shall be used by the Company solely for
        the purposes contemplated by this Bye-Law (except as may be required
        otherwise by applicable law or regulation). The Company shall hold such
        Confidential Information in strict confidence and shall not disclose any
        Confidential Information that it receives, except (i) to the Internal
        Revenue Service (the "Service") if and to the extent the Confidential
        Information is required by the Service, (ii) to any outside legal
        counsel or accounting firm engaged by the Company to make determinations
        regarding the relevant Bye-Laws (iii) to officers and employees of the
        Company or its Affiliates, subject to Bye-Law 67(3), or (iv) as
        otherwise required by law or regulation.

    (3) The Company shall take all measures practicable to ensure the
        continued confidentiality of the Confidential Information and
        shall grant the persons referred to in Bye-law 67(2)(ii) and
        (iii) above access to the Confidential Information only to the
        extent necessary to allow them to assist the Company in any
        analysis required by Bye-Law 33, or 64, to determine whether
        the Company would realize any income that would be included in
        the income of any Shareholder (or any interest holder, whether
        direct or indirect, of


                                     39




        any Shareholder) by operation of Section 953(c) of the Code or to
        determine whether the Company or any of its subsidiaries would be
        entitled to the benefits of a tax treaty. Prior to granting access to
        the Confidential Information to such persons, the Company shall inform
        them of its confidential nature and of the provisions of this Bye-Law
        and shall require them to abide by all the provisions hereof. The
        Company shall not disclose the Confidential Information to any Director
        (other than a Director that is also either the Chief Executive Officer,
        Chairman, Deputy Chairman, President or Vice President, except as
        required by law or regulation, upon request to the Company). For the
        avoidance of doubt, the Company shall be permitted to disclose to the
        Shareholders and others the relative voting percentages of the
        Shareholders after application of Bye-Law 64. At the written request of
        a Shareholder, the Confidential Information of such Shareholder shall be
        destroyed or returned to such Shareholder after the later to occur of
        (i) such Shareholder no longer being a Shareholder or (ii) the
        expiration of the applicable statute of limitations with respect to any
        Confidential Information obtained for purposes of engaging in any tax
        related analysis.

    (4) The Company shall (i) notify a Shareholder immediately of the
        existence, terms and circumstances surrounding any request made to the
        Company to disclose any Confidential Information provided by or with
        respect to such Shareholder and, prior to such disclosure, shall permit
        such Shareholder a reasonable period of time to seek a protective order
        or other appropriate remedy and/or waive compliance with the provisions
        of this Bye-Law, and (ii) if, in the absence of a protective order, such
        disclosure is required in the opinion of counsel to the Company, the
        Company shall make such disclosure without liability hereunder, provided
        that the Company shall furnish only that portion of the Confidential



                                      40





        Information which is legally required, shall give such Shareholder
        notice of the information to be disclosed as far in advance of its
        disclosure as practicable and, upon the request of such Shareholder and
        at its expense, shall use best efforts to ensure that confidential
        treatment will be accorded to all such disclosed information.

    (5) If a Shareholder fails to respond to a request for information
        from the Company pursuant to this Bye-Law or submits incomplete or
        inaccurate information in response to such a request, the Company may in
        its reasonable discretion (after considering the circumstances described
        in any response to the request by the Shareholder and providing such
        Shareholder with a cure period of such length, if any, as the Company in
        its reasonable discretion shall determine to be reasonable under the
        circumstances) determine that such Shareholder's Shares shall carry no
        or reduced, as the case may be, voting rights until otherwise determined
        by the Company in its reasonable discretion.

    (6) The Board may rely exclusively on the analysis, deliberation,
        reports and other communications of those persons specified in (i)-(iii)
        of Bye-Law 67(2) above with respect to the collection, disclosure or use
        of the Confidential Information, including, but not limited to
        determining whether the Company would realize any income that would be
        included in the income of any Shareholder (or any interest holder,
        whether direct or indirect, of any Shareholder) by operation of Section
        953(c) of the Code, implementing Bye-Law 33, or 64, or determining
        whether the Company or any of its subsidiaries would be entitled to the
        benefits of a tax treaty.















                                    41







                       VOTING PROCEDURES

68. Save where a greater majority is required by the Companies Acts or
    these Bye-Laws, any question proposed for consideration at any general
    meeting shall be decided on by a simple majority of votes cast.

69. Subject to any rights or restrictions for the time being lawfully
    attached to any class of Shares and subject to the provisions of these
    Bye-Laws including any adjustments made to the voting power of the
    Shares of any Shareholder pursuant to Bye-Law 64, at any general
    meeting, a resolution put to the vote of the meeting shall be decided
    on a show of hands unless (before or on the declaration of the result
    of the show of hands or on the withdrawal of any other demand for a
    poll) a poll is demanded by:

    (1) the chairman of the meeting; or

    (2) at least three Shareholders present in person or represented
        by proxy; or

    (3) any Shareholder or Shareholders present in person or
        represented by proxy and holding between them not less than
        one eleventh of the total voting rights of all the
        Shareholders having the right to vote at such meeting; or

    (4) a Shareholder or Shareholders present in person or represented
        by proxy holding Shares conferring the right to vote at such
        meeting, being Shares on which an aggregate sum has been paid
        up equal to not less than one eleventh of the total sum paid
        up on all such Shares conferring such right.

    The demand for a poll may be withdrawn by the person or any of the
    persons making it at any time prior to the declaration of but only with
    the consent of the chairman and a demand so withdrawn shall not be
    taken to have invalidated the result of a show of hands declared before
    the demand for a poll was made. Unless a poll is so demanded and the
    demand is not




                                     42





    withdrawn, a declaration by the chairman that a resolution has, on a show of
    hands, been carried or carried unanimously or by a particular majority or
    not carried by a particular majority or lost shall be final and conclusive,
    and an entry to that effect in the minute book of the Company shall be
    conclusive evidence of the fact without proof of the number or proportion of
    votes recorded for or against such resolution.

70. If a poll is duly demanded, the result of the poll shall be deemed to be the
    resolution of the meeting at which the poll is demanded.

71. A poll demanded on the election of a chairman, or on a question of
    adjournment, shall be taken forthwith. A poll demanded on any other
    question shall be taken in such manner and either forthwith or at such
    time later in the meeting as the chairman shall direct. It shall not be
    necessary (unless the chairman otherwise directs) for notice to be
    given of a poll.

72. The demand for a poll shall not prevent the continuance of a meeting
    for the transaction of any business other than the question on which
    the poll has been demanded and it may be withdrawn at any time before
    the close of the meeting or the taking of the poll, whichever is the
    earlier.

73. On a poll, votes may be cast either personally or by proxy.

74. A person entitled to more than one vote on a poll need not use all his votes
    or cast all the votes he uses in the same way.

75. In the case of an equality of votes at a general meeting, whether on a
    show of hands or on a poll, the chairman of such meeting shall not be
    entitled to a second or casting vote and the resolution shall fail.















                                      43




76. In the case of joint holders of a Share, the vote of the senior who
    tenders a vote, whether in person or by proxy, shall be accepted to the
    exclusion of the votes of the other joint holders, and for this purpose
    seniority shall be determined by the order in which the names stand in
    the Register in respect of the joint holding.

77. A Shareholder who is a patient for any purpose of any statute or
    applicable law relating to mental health or in respect of whom an order
    has been made by any Court having jurisdiction for the protection or
    management of the affairs of persons incapable of managing their own
    affairs may vote, whether on a show of hands or on a poll, by his
    receiver, committee, curator bonis or other person in the nature of a
    receiver, committee or curator bonis appointed by such Court and such
    receiver, committee, curator bonis or other person may vote on a poll
    by proxy, and may otherwise act and be treated as such Shareholder for
    the purpose of general meetings.

78. No Shareholder shall, unless the Board otherwise determines, be
    entitled to vote at any general meeting unless all calls or other sums
    presently payable by him in respect of Shares in the Company have been
    paid.

79. If:

    (1) any objection shall be raised to the qualification of any voter;
    or,

    (2) any votes have been counted which ought not to have been counted or
    which might have been rejected; or,

    (3) any votes are not counted which ought to have been counted, the
    objection or error shall not vitiate the decision of the meeting or
    adjourned meeting on any resolution unless the same is raised or pointed out
    at the meeting or, as the case may be, the adjourned meeting at which the
    vote objected to is given or tendered or at which the error occurs. Any
    objection or error shall be referred to the chairman of the meeting and
    shall only vitiate the decision of the meeting on any resolution if the
    chairman decides that the same may have affected the decision of the
    meeting. The decision of the chairman on such matters shall be final and
    conclusive.



                                      44





                 PROXIES AND CORPORATE REPRESENTATIVES

80. A Shareholder may appoint one or more persons as his proxy, with or
    without the power of substitution, to represent him and vote on his
    behalf in respect of all or some of his shares at any general meeting
    (including an adjourned meeting). A proxy need not be a Shareholder.

81. The instrument appointing a proxy shall be in writing executed by the
    appointor or his attorney authorised by him in writing or, if the
    appointor is a corporation, either under its seal or executed by an
    officer, attorney or other person authorised to sign the same.

82. Any Shareholder may appoint a proxy or(if a corporation) representative
    for a specific general meeting, and adjournments thereof, or may appoint a
    standing proxy or (if a corporation) representative, by serving on the
    Company at the Registered Office, or at such place or places as the Board
    may otherwise specify for the purpose, a proxy or (if a corporation) an
    authorisation. For the purposes of service on the Company pursuant to this
    Bye-Law, the provisions of Bye-Law 136 as to service on Shareholders shall
    mutatis mutandis apply to service on the Company. Any standing proxy or
    authorisation shall be valid for all general meetings and adjournments
    thereof or resolutions in writing, as the case may be, until notice of
    revocation is received at the Registered Office or at such place or places
    as the Board may otherwise specify for the purpose. Where a standing proxy
    or authorisation exists, its operation shall be deemed to have been
    suspended at any general meeting or adjournment thereof at which the
    Shareholder is present or in respect to which the Shareholder has specially
    appointed a proxy or representative. The Board



                                       45




    may from time to time require such evidence as it shall deem necessary as to
    the due execution and continuing validity of any such standing proxy or
    authorisation and the operation of any such standing proxy or authorisation
    shall be deemed to be suspended until such time as the Board determines that
    it has received the requested evidence or other evidence satisfactory to it.

83. Subject to Bye-Law 82, the instrument appointing a proxy or authorisation,
    as the case may be, together with such other evidence as to its due
    execution as the Board may from time to time require, shall be delivered at
    the Registered Office (or at such place as may be specified in the notice
    convening the meeting or in any notice of any adjournment or, in either case
    or the case of a written resolution, in any document sent therewith) by such
    date and time specified in the notice prior to the holding of the relevant
    meeting or adjourned meeting at which the person named in the instrument
    proposes to vote or, in the case of a poll taken subsequently to the date of
    a meeting or adjourned meeting, before the time appointed for the taking of
    the poll, or, in the case of a written resolution, prior to the effective
    date of the written resolution and in default the instrument of proxy or
    authorisation, as the case may be, shall not be treated as valid.

84. Instruments of proxy or authorisation, as the case may be, shall be in any
    common form or in such other form as the Board may approve and the Board
    may, if it thinks fit, send out with the notice of any meeting or any
    written resolution forms of instruments of proxy or authorisation, as the
    case may be, for use at that meeting or in connection with that written
    resolution. The instrument of proxy or authorisation, as the case may be,
    shall be deemed to confer authority to demand or join in demanding a poll
    and to vote on any amendment of a written resolution or amendment of a
    resolution put to the meeting for which it is given as the proxy thinks fit.
    The instrument of proxy or authorisation, as the case may be, shall unless
    the contrary is stated therein be valid as well for any adjournment of the
    meeting as for the meeting to which it relates.





                                      46




85. A vote given in accordance with the terms of an instrument of proxy or
    authorisation, as the case may be, shall be valid notwithstanding the
    previous death or unsoundness of mind of the principal, or revocation of the
    instrument of proxy or authorisation, as the case may be, or of the
    authority under which it was executed, provided that no intimation in
    writing of such death, unsoundness of mind or revocation shall have been
    received by the Company at the Registered Office (or such other place as may
    be specified for the delivery of instruments of proxy or authorisation, as
    the case may be, in the notice convening the meeting or other documents sent
    therewith) one hour at least before the commencement of the meeting or
    adjourned meeting, or the taking of the poll, or the day before the
    effective date of any written resolution at which the instrument of proxy or
    authorisation, as the case may be, is used.

86. Subject to the Companies Acts, the Board may at its discretion waive
    any of the provisions of these Bye-Laws related to proxies or
    authorisations, as the case may be, and, in particular, may accept such
    verbal or other assurances as it thinks fit as to the right of any
    person to attend and vote on behalf of any Shareholder at general
    meetings or to sign written resolutions.


                 APPOINTMENT AND REMOVAL OF DIRECTORS

87. (1) The number of Directors constituting the Board shall be not less than
        two (2) nor more than twenty (20), the exact number to be determined
        from time to time by the Company by Resolution; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that
        if no such Resolution shall be in effect the number of Directors shall
        be twelve (12).



                                 47




    (2)  The Board shall be divided into three classes, with the term
         of the office of one class expiring each year. Each class
         shall consist, as nearly as possible, of one-third of the
         total number of Directors constituting the entire Board. There
         is no distinction in the voting or other powers and
         authorities of Directors of different classes; the
         classifications are solely for the purposes of the retirement
         by rotation provisions set out in this Bye-Law 87. All
         Directors will be designated as either class I, class II or
         class III Directors. The Board shall from time to time by
         resolution determine the respective numbers of class I
         Directors, class II Directors and class III Directors.

    (3)  Each class I Director shall (unless his office is vacated in
         accordance with these Bye-Laws) serve until the conclusion of
         the Annual General Meeting of the Company held in the calendar
         year 2006 and subsequently shall (unless his office is vacated
         in accordance with these Bye-Laws) serve for three-year terms,
         each concluding at the third Annual General Meeting after the
         class I Directors together were last appointed or
         re-appointed.

    (4)  Each class II Director shall (unless his office is vacated in
         accordance with these Bye-Laws) serve until the conclusion of
         the Annual General Meeting of the Company held in the calendar
         year 2007 and subsequently shall (unless his office is vacated
         in accordance with these Bye-Laws) serve for three-year terms,
         each concluding at the third Annual General Meeting after the
         class II Directors together were last appointed or
         re-appointed.

    (5)  Each class III Director shall (unless his office is vacated in
         accordance with these Bye-Laws) serve until the conclusion of
         the Annual General Meeting of the Company held in the calendar
         year 2005 and subsequently shall (unless his office is vacated
         in accordance with these Bye-Laws) serve for three-year terms,
         each concluding at the third Annual General Meeting after the
         class III Directors together were last appointed or
         re-appointed.





                                  48




    (6)  If the number of Directors is altered by Resolution pursuant
         to this Bye-Law, such Resolution shall apportion any increase
         or decrease among the classes so as to maintain the number of
         Directors in each class as equal as possible, but in no case
         shall a decrease in the number of Directors shorten the term
         of any incumbent Director. All Directors, upon election or
         appointment (except upon election at an Annual General
         Meeting), must provide written acceptance of their
         appointment, in such form as the Board may think fit, by
         notice in writing to the Registered Office within thirty days
         of their appointment.

88. The Company shall at the Annual General Meeting and may by Resolution
    determine the minimum and the maximum number of Directors and may by
    Resolution determine that one or more vacancies in the Board shall be deemed
    casual vacancies for the purposes of these Bye-Laws. Without prejudice to
    the power of the Company by Resolution in pursuance of any of the provisions
    of these Bye-Laws to elect any person to be a Director, the Board, so long
    as a quorum of Directors remains in office, shall have power at any time and
    from time to time to appoint any individual to be a Director so as to fill a
    casual vacancy. A Director so appointed shall fill the vacancy arising and
    shall, for the purposes of these Bye-Laws, constitute a member of the class
    of Directors represented by the person that he replaces and shall hold
    office for the balance of the term of such vacant Board position or until
    such Director's successor is elected or appointed or such Director's office
    is otherwise vacated.

89. The Company may in a Special General Meeting called for that purpose
    remove a Director provided notice of any such meeting shall be served
    upon the Director concerned not less than fourteen (14) days before the
    meeting



                                49




    and he shall be entitled to be heard at that meeting. Notice of every
    general meeting shall be given in any manner permitted by Bye-Law 136 and
    137. Any vacancy created by the removal of a Director at a Special General
    Meeting may be filled at the Meeting by the election of another Director in
    his place or, in the absence of any such election, by the Board. A Director
    so elected or appointed shall hold office for the balance of the term of
    such vacant Board position or until such Director's successor is elected or
    appointed or such Director's office is otherwise vacated.

90. If a Shareholder desires to nominate one or more individuals for election as
    Directors at any general meeting duly called for the election of Directors,
    written notice of such Shareholder's intent to make such a nomination must
    be received by the Company at the Registered Office (or at such other place
    or places as the Board may otherwise specify from time to time for this
    purpose) not less than 120 days nor more than 150 days before the first
    anniversary of the date of the notice convening the Company's annual general
    meeting of shareholders for the prior year. Such notice shall set forth (i)
    the name and address, as it appears in the Register, of the Shareholder who
    intends to make such nomination; (ii) a representation that the Shareholder
    is a holder of record of Shares entitled to vote at such meeting and intends
    to appear in person or by proxy at the meeting to make such nomination;
    (iii) the class and number of Shares which are held by the Shareholder; (iv)
    the name and address of each individual to be nominated; (v) a description
    of all arrangements or understandings between the Shareholder and any such
    nominee and any other person or persons (naming such person or persons)
    pursuant to which such nomination is to be made by the Shareholder; (vi) a
    description of all material personal and business relationships between the
    Shareholder and any such nominee during the preceding ten (10) years; (vii)
    such other information regarding any such nominee that would be required to
    be included in a proxy statement filed pursuant to Regulation




                               50




    14A under the Exchange Act, whether or not the Company is then subject to
    such Regulation; (viii) the consent of any such nominee to serve as a
    Director, if so elected; and (ix) the certification of any such nominee as
    to the accuracy and completeness of the information set forth in such
    notice. The Company will send copies of such notice to all Shareholders with
    the notice of the Annual General Meeting at which Directors will be elected.
    The chairman of such meeting shall, if the facts reasonably warrant, refuse
    to acknowledge a nomination that is not made in compliance with the
    procedure specified in this Bye-Law, and any such nomination not properly
    brought before the meeting shall not be considered.


             RESIGNATION AND DISQUALIFICATION OF DIRECTORS

91. The office of a Director shall be vacated upon the happening of any of the
    following events:

    (1) if he resigns his office by notice in writing delivered to the
        Registered Office or tendered at a meeting of the Board;

    (2) if he becomes of unsound mind or a patient for any purpose of any
        statute or applicable law relating to mental health and the Board
        resolves that his office is vacated;

    (3) if he becomes bankrupt under the laws of any country or compounds
        with his creditors;

    (4) if he is prohibited by law from being a Director;

    (5) if he ceases to be a Director by virtue of the Companies Acts or is
        removed from office pursuant to these Bye-Laws.


                          ALTERNATE DIRECTORS

92. A Director may appoint and remove his own Alternate Director. Any
    appointment or removal of an Alternate Director by a Director shall be
    effected by depositing a notice of appointment or removal with the




                                   51



    Secretary at the Registered Office, signed by such Director, and such
    appointment or removal shall become effective on the date of receipt by
    the Secretary. Any Alternate Director may be removed by resolution of
    the Board. Subject as aforesaid, the office of Alternate Director shall
    continue until the next annual election of Directors or, if earlier,
    the date on which the relevant Director ceases to be a Director. An
    Alternate Director may also be a Director in his own right and may act
    as alternate to more than one Director.

93. An Alternate Director shall be entitled to receive notices of all
    meetings of Directors, to attend, be counted in the quorum and vote at
    any such meeting at which any Director to whom he is alternate is not
    personally present, and generally to perform all the functions of any
    Director to whom he is alternate in his absence.

94. Every person acting as an Alternate Director shall (except as regards
    powers to appoint an alternate and remuneration) be subject in all respects
    to the provisions of these Bye-Laws relating to Directors and shall alone be
    responsible to the Company for his acts and defaults and shall not be deemed
    to be the agent of or for any Director for whom he is alternate. An
    Alternate Director may be paid expenses and shall be entitled to be
    indemnified by the Company to the same extent mutatis mutandis as if he were
    a Director. Every person acting as an Alternate Director shall have one vote
    for each Director for whom he acts as alternate (in addition to his own vote
    if he is also a Director). The signature of an Alternate Director to any
    resolution in writing of the Board or a committee of the Board shall, unless
    the terms of his appointment provides to the contrary, be as effective as
    the signature of the Director or Directors to whom he is alternate.





                                    52




                               OBSERVERS

95. Pursuant to the provisions of the Shareholders Agreement, certain
    Shareholders may have the right to designate or remove an Observer who shall
    (1) have the right to receive due notice of and to attend and participate in
    (but not vote at) all meetings of the Board and all meetings of committees
    of the Board other than the Nominating Committee, (2) have the right to
    receive copies of all documents and other information furnished to Directors
    and to members of committees of the Board other than the Nominating
    Committee, (3) have the same rights as any Director to review the books and
    records of the Company and to make inquiries of and meet with its Officers
    and employees, (4) have the same rights that a Director has pursuant to
    Bye-Law 92 mutatis mutandis to appoint and remove a person to act as an
    Observer in the alternative to himself and (5) be entitled to be indemnified
    by the Company pursuant to Bye-Laws 140 through 145 to the same extent
    mutatis mutandis as if he were a Director.


       DIRECTORS' FEES AND ADDITIONAL REMUNERATION AND EXPENSES

96. The  amount, if any, of Directors' fees shall from time to time be
    determined by the Board and in the absence of a determination to the
    contrary such fees shall be deemed to accrue from day to day. Each Director
    may be paid his reasonable travel, hotel and incidental expenses in
    attending and returning from meetings of the Board or committees constituted
    pursuant to these Bye-Laws or general meetings and shall be paid all
    expenses properly and reasonably incurred by him in the conduct of the
    Company's business or in the discharge of his duties as a Director. Any
    Director who, by request, goes or resides abroad for any purposes of the
    Company or who performs services which in the opinion of the Board go beyond
    the ordinary duties of



                                53




    a Director may be paid such extra remuneration (whether by way of salary,
    commission, participation in profits or otherwise) as the Board may
    determine, and such extra remuneration shall be in addition to any
    remuneration provided for by or pursuant to any other Bye-Law.


                         DIRECTORS' INTERESTS

97. (1)  A Director may hold any other office or place of profit with the
         Company (except that of auditor) in conjunction with his office of
         Director for such period and upon such terms as the Board may
         determine, and may be paid such extra remuneration therefor (whether by
         way of salary, commission, participation in profits or otherwise) as
         the Board may determine, and such extra remuneration shall be in
         addition to any remuneration provided for by or pursuant to any other
         Bye-Law.

    (2)  A Director may act by himself or his firm in a professional
         capacity for the Company (otherwise than as auditor) and he or his firm
         shall be entitled to remuneration for professional services as if he
         were not a Director.

    (3)  Subject to the provisions of the Companies Acts, a Director may
         notwithstanding his office be a party to, or otherwise interested in,
         any transaction or arrangement with the Company or in which the Company
         is otherwise interested; and be a director or other officer of, or
         employed by, or a party to any transaction or arrangement with, or
         otherwise interested in, any body corporate promoted by the Company or
         in which the Company is interested. The Board may also cause the voting
         power conferred by the shares in any other company (except to the
         extent provided in Bye-Law 150 with respect to a Designated Company)
         held or owned by the Company to be exercised in such manner in all
         respects as it thinks fit, including the exercise thereof in favour of
         any resolution appointing




                                  54




         the Directors or any of them to be directors or officers of such other
         company, or voting or providing for the payment of remuneration to the
         directors or officers of such other company.

    (4)  So long as, where it is necessary, he declares the nature of his
         interest at the first opportunity at a meeting of the Board or by
         writing to the Directors as required by the Companies Acts, a Director
         shall not by reason of his office be accountable to the Company for any
         benefit which he derives from any office or employment to which these
         Bye-Laws allow him to be appointed or from any transaction or
         arrangement in which these Bye-Laws allow him to be interested, and no
         such transaction or arrangement shall be liable to be avoided on the
         ground of any interest or benefit.

    (5)  Subject to the Companies Acts and any further disclosure required
         thereby, a general notice to the Directors by a Director or Officer
         declaring that he is a director or officer or has an interest in a
         person and is to be regarded as interested in any transaction or
         arrangement made with that person, shall be a sufficient declaration of
         interest in relation to any transaction or arrangement so made.


                    POWERS AND DUTIES OF THE BOARD

98. Subject to the provisions of the Companies Acts and these Bye-Laws and
    to any directions given by the Company by Resolution, the Board shall
    manage the business of the Company and may pay all expenses incurred in
    promoting and incorporating the Company and may exercise all the powers
    of the Company. No alteration of these Bye-Laws and no such direction
    shall invalidate any prior act of the Board which would have been valid
    if that alteration had not been made or that direction had not been
    given. The powers given by this Bye-Law shall not be limited by any
    special power given to the Board by these Bye-Laws and a meeting of the
    Board at which a quorum is present shall be competent to exercise all
    the powers, authorities and discretions for the time being vested in or
    exercisable by the Board.





                                    55




99.  The Board may exercise all the powers of the Company to borrow money
     and to mortgage or charge all or any part of the undertaking, property
     and assets (present and future) and uncalled capital of the Company and
     to issue debentures and other securities, whether outright or as
     collateral security for any debt, liability or obligation of the
     Company or of any other persons.

100. All cheques, promissory notes, drafts, bills of exchange and other
     instruments, whether negotiable or transferable or not, and all
     receipts for money paid to the Company shall be signed, drawn,
     accepted, endorsed or otherwise executed, as the case may be, in such
     manner as the Board shall from time to time by resolution determine.

101. The Board on behalf of the Company may provide benefits, whether by the
     payment of gratuities or pensions or otherwise, for any person
     including any Director or former Director who has held any executive
     office or employment with the Company or with any body corporate which
     is or has been a subsidiary or affiliate of the Company or a
     predecessor in the business of the Company or of any such subsidiary or
     affiliate, and to any member of his family or any person who is or was
     dependent on him, and may contribute to any fund and pay premiums for
     the purchase or provision of any such gratuity, pension or other
     benefit, or for the insurance of any such person.

102. The Board may from time to time appoint one or more of its body to be a
     managing director, joint managing director or an assistant managing
     director or to hold any other employment or executive office with the
     Company for such period and upon such terms as the Board may determine and
     may revoke or terminate any such appointments. Any such revocation





                                       56




     or termination as aforesaid shall be without prejudice to any claim for
     damages that such Director may have against the Company or the Company may
     have against such Director for any breach of any contract of service
     between him and the Company which may be involved in such revocation or
     termination. Any person so appointed shall receive such remuneration (if
     any) (whether by way of salary, commission, participation in profits or
     otherwise) as the Board may determine, and either in addition to or in lieu
     of his remuneration as a Director.


                    DELEGATION OF THE BOARD'S POWERS

103. The Board may by power of attorney appoint any company, firm or person
     or any fluctuating body of persons, whether nominated directly or
     indirectly by the Board, to be the attorney or attorneys of the Company
     for such purposes and with such powers, authorities and discretions
     (not exceeding those vested in or exercisable by the Board under these
     Bye-Laws) and for such period and subject to such conditions as it may
     think fit, and any such power of attorney may contain such provisions
     for the protection and convenience of persons dealing with any such
     attorney and of such attorney as the Board may think fit, and may also
     authorise any such attorney to sub-delegate all or any of the powers,
     authorities and discretions vested in him.

104. The Board may entrust to and confer upon any Director, Officer or,
     without prejudice to the provisions of Bye-Law 105, other individual
     any of the powers exercisable by it upon such terms and conditions with
     such restrictions as it thinks fit, and either collaterally with, or to
     the exclusion of, its own powers, and may from time to time revoke or
     vary all or any of such powers but no person dealing in good faith and
     without notice of such revocation or variation shall be affected
     thereby.






                                       57




105. When required under the requirements from time to time of any stock
     exchange on which the Shares of the Company are listed, the Board shall
     appoint an Audit Committee, Compensation Committee, and Nominating and
     Corporate Governance Committee in accordance with the requirements of such
     stock exchange. The Board may also delegate any of its powers, authorities
     and discretions to any other committees, consisting of such person or
     persons (whether a member or members of its body or not) as it thinks fit.
     Any committee so formed shall, in the exercise of the powers, authorities
     and discretions so delegated, and in conducting its proceedings conform to
     any regulations which may be imposed upon it by the Board. If no
     regulations are imposed by the Board the proceedings of a committee with
     two or more members shall be, as far as is practicable, governed by the
     Bye-Laws regulating the proceedings of the Board.


                        PROCEEDINGS OF THE BOARD

106. The Board may meet for the despatch of business, adjourn and
     otherwise regulate its meetings as it thinks fit, unless
     otherwise required by these Bye-Laws. Questions arising at any
     meeting shall be determined by a majority of votes. In the
     case of an equality of votes the motion shall be deemed to
     have been lost. A Director may, and the Secretary on the
     requisition of a Director shall, at any time summon a meeting
     of the Board.

107. Notice of a meeting of the Board shall be deemed to be duly
     given to a Director if it is given to him personally or sent
     to him by post, cable, telex, telecopier, email, or other mode
     of representing or reproducing words in a legible and
     non-transitory form at his last known address or any other
     address given by him to the Company for this purpose. A
     Director may retrospectively waive the requirement for notice
     of any meeting by consenting in writing to the business
     conducted at the meeting.












                               58




108. (1) The quorum necessary for the transaction of the business
         of the Board may be fixed by the Board and, unless so fixed at
         any other number, shall be a majority of Directors in office
         from time to time and in no event shall be less than two
         Directors. Any Director who ceases to be a Director at a
         meeting of the Board may continue to be present and to act as
         a Director and be counted in the quorum until the termination
         of the meeting if no other Director objects and if otherwise a
         quorum of Directors would not be present.

    (2)  A Director who to his knowledge is in any way, whether
         directly or indirectly, interested in a contract or proposed
         contract, transaction or arrangement with the Company and has
         complied with the provisions of the Companies Acts and these
         Bye-Laws with regard to disclosure of his interest shall be
         entitled to vote in respect of any contract, transaction or
         arrangement in which he is so interested, and he shall be
         taken into account in ascertaining whether a quorum is
         present, but the resolution with respect to the contract,
         transaction or arrangement will fail unless it is approved by
         a majority of the disinterested Directors voting on the
         resolution.

    (3)  The Resident Representative shall, upon delivering written
         notice of an address for the purposes of receipt of notice, to
         the Registered Office, be entitled to receive notice of,
         attend and be heard at, and to receive minutes of all meetings
         of the Board.

109. So long as a quorum of Directors remains in office, the continuing
     Directors may act notwithstanding any vacancy in the Board but, if no
     such quorum remains, the continuing Directors or a sole continuing
     Director may act only for the purpose of calling a general meeting.

110. The Chairman (or President) or, in his absence, the Deputy Chairman (or
     Vice-President), shall preside as chairman at every meeting of the
     Board. If at any meeting the Chairman or Deputy Chairman (or the
     President or Vice-





                                     59



     President) is not present within five minutes after the time appointed for
     holding the meeting, or is not willing to act as chairman, the Directors
     present may choose one of their number to be chairman of the meeting.

111. The meetings and proceedings of any committee consisting of two or more
     members shall be governed by the provisions contained in these Bye-Laws
     for regulating the meetings and proceedings of the Board so far as the
     same are applicable and are not superseded by any regulations imposed
     by the Board.

112. A resolution in writing signed by all the Directors for the time being
     entitled to receive notice of a meeting of the Board or by all the
     members of a committee for the time being shall be as valid and
     effectual as a resolution passed at a meeting of the Board or, as the
     case may be, of such committee duly called and constituted. Such
     resolution may be contained in one document or in several documents in
     the like form each signed by one or more of the Directors or members of
     the committee concerned.

113. A meeting of the Board or a committee appointed by the Board may be
     held by means of such telephone, electronic or other communication
     facilities as permit all persons participating in the meeting to
     communicate with each other simultaneously and instantaneously and
     participation in such a meeting shall constitute presence in person at
     such meeting.

114. All acts done by the Board or by any committee or by any person acting
     as a Director or member of a committee or any person duly authorised by
     the Board or any committee, shall, notwithstanding that it is
     afterwards discovered that there was some defect in the appointment of
     any member of the Board or such committee or person acting as aforesaid
     or that they or any of them were disqualified or had vacated their
     office, be as valid as if every such person had been duly appointed and
     was qualified and had continued to be a Director, member of such
     committee or person so authorised.





                                    60




                                OFFICERS

115. The Officers of the Company shall include a President and a  Vice-President
     or a Chairman and a Deputy Chairman who shall be Directors and shall be
     elected by the Board as soon as possible after the statutory meeting and
     each Annual General Meeting. In addition, the Board may appoint any person
     whether or not he is a Director to hold such office as the Board may from
     time to time determine. Any person elected or appointed pursuant to this
     Bye-Law shall hold office for such period and upon such terms as the Board
     may determine and the Board may revoke or terminate any such election or
     appointment. Any such revocation or termination shall be without prejudice
     to any claim for damages that such Officer may have against the Company or
     the Company may have against such Officer for any breach of any contract of
     service between him and the Company which may be involved in such
     revocation or termination. Save as provided in the Companies Acts or these
     Bye-Laws, the powers and duties of the Officers of the Company shall be
     such (if any) as are determined from time to time by the Board.


                                 MINUTES

116. The Board shall cause minutes to be made and books kept for the purpose
     of recording -

     (1) all appointments of Officers made by the Board;

     (2) the names of the Directors and other persons (if any) present at
         each meeting of the Board and of any committee;

     (3) of all proceedings at meetings of the Company, of the holders of any
         class of Shares in the Company, of the Board and of committees
         appointed by the Board or the Shareholders;




                               61




     (4) of all proceedings of its managers (if any).

         Shareholders shall only be entitled to see the Register of Directors
         and Officers, the Register, the financial information provided for in
         Bye-Law 141 and the minutes of meetings of the Shareholders of the
         Company.


                  SECRETARY AND RESIDENT REPRESENTATIVE

117. The Secretary (including one or more deputy or assistant secretaries)
     and, if required, the Resident Representative, shall be appointed by
     the Board at such remuneration (if any) and upon such terms as it may
     think fit and any Secretary and Resident Representative so appointed
     may be removed by the Board. The duties of the Secretary and the duties
     of the Resident Representative shall be those prescribed by the
     Companies Acts together with such other duties as shall from time to
     time be prescribed by the Board.

118. A provision of the Companies Acts or these Bye-Laws requiring or
     authorising a thing to be done by or to a Director and the Secretary
     shall not be satisfied by its being done by or to the same person
     acting both as Director and as, or in the place of, the Secretary.


                                THE SEAL

119. (1) The Seal shall consist of a circular metal device with the
     name of the Company around the outer margin thereof and the
     country and year of incorporation across the centre thereof.
     Should the Seal not have been received at the Registered
     Office in such form at the date of adoption of this Bye-Law
     then, pending such receipt, any document requiring to be
     sealed with the Seal shall be sealed by affixing a red wafer
     seal to the document with the name of the Company, and the
     country and year of incorporation type written across the
     centre thereof.




                                 62




     (2) The Board shall provide for the custody of every Seal. A Seal
         shall only be used by authority of the Board or of a committee
         constituted by the Board. Subject to these Bye-Laws, any
         instrument to which a Seal is affixed shall be signed by
         either two Directors, or by the Secretary and one Director, or
         by the Secretary or by any one person whether or not a
         Director or Officer, who has been authorised either generally
         or specifically to affirm the use of a Seal; PROVIDED that the
         Secretary or a Director may affix a Seal over his signature
         alone to authenticate copies of these Bye-Laws, the minutes of
         any meeting or any other documents requiring authentication


                      DIVIDENDS AND OTHER PAYMENTS

120. The Board may from time to time declare dividends, or distributions out
     of contributed surplus, to be paid to the Shareholders according to
     their rights and interests including such interim dividends as appear
     to the Board to be justified by the position of the Company. The Board,
     in its discretion, may determine that any dividend shall be paid in
     cash or shall be satisfied, subject to Bye-Law 128, in paying up in
     full Shares in the Company to be issued to the Shareholders credited as
     fully paid or partly paid or partly in one way and partly the other.
     The Board may also pay any fixed cash dividend which is payable on any
     Shares of the Company half yearly or on such other dates, whenever the
     position of the Company, in the opinion of the Board, justifies such
     payment.

121. Except insofar as the rights attaching to, or the terms of issue of,
     any Share otherwise provide:

     (1) all dividends, or distributions out of contributed surplus,
         may be declared and paid according to the amounts paid up on
         the Shares in respect of which the dividend or distribution is
         paid, and an amount paid up on a Share in advance of calls may
         be treated for the purpose of this Bye-Law as paid-up on the
         Share;



                                  63




     (2) dividends, or distributions out of contributed surplus, may be
         apportioned and paid pro rata according to the amounts paid-up
         on the Shares during any portion or portions of the period in
         respect of which the dividend or distribution is paid.

122. The Board may deduct from any dividend, distribution or other moneys
     payable to a Shareholder by the Company on or in respect of any Shares
     all sums of money (if any) presently payable by him to the Company on
     account of calls or otherwise in respect of Shares of the Company.

123. No dividend, distribution or other moneys payable by the Company on or
     in respect of any Share shall bear interest against the Company.

124. Any dividend, distribution or interest, or part thereof payable in cash,
     or any other sum payable in cash to the holder of Shares may be paid by
     cheque or warrant sent through the post addressed to the holder at his
     address in the Register or, in the case of joint holders, addressed to the
     holder whose name stands first in the Register in respect of the Shares at
     his registered address as appearing in the Register or addressed to such
     person at such address as the holder or joint holders may in writing
     direct. Every such cheque or warrant shall, unless the holder or joint
     holders otherwise direct, be made payable to the order of the holder or, in
     the case of joint holders, to the order of the holder whose name stands
     first in the Register in respect of such Shares, and shall be sent at his
     or their risk and payment of the cheque or warrant by the bank on which it
     is drawn shall constitute a good discharge to the Company. Any one of two
     or more joint holders may give effectual receipts for any dividends,
     distributions or other moneys payable or property distributable in respect
     of the Shares held by such joint holders.






                                  64



125. Any dividend or distribution out of contributed surplus unclaimed for a
     period of six years from the date of declaration of such dividend or
     distribution shall be forfeited and shall revert to the Company and the
     payment by the Board of any unclaimed dividend, distribution, interest
     or other sum payable on or in respect of the Share into a separate
     account shall not constitute the Company a trustee in respect thereof.

126. The Board may also, in addition to its other powers, direct payment or
     satisfaction of any dividend, or distribution out of contributed surplus,
     wholly or in part by the distribution of specific assets, and in particular
     of paid-up shares or debentures of any other company, and where any
     difficulty arises in regard to such distribution or dividend the Board may
     settle it as it thinks expedient, and in particular, may authorise any
     person to sell and transfer any fractions or may ignore fractions
     altogether, and may fix the value for distribution or dividend purposes of
     any such specific assets and may determine that cash payments shall be made
     to any Shareholders upon the footing of the values so fixed in order to
     secure equality of distribution and may vest any such specific assets in
     trustees as may seem expedient to the Board PROVIDED that such dividend or
     distribution may not be satisfied by the distribution of any partly paid
     shares or debentures of any company without the sanction of a Resolution.


                                RESERVES

127. The Board may, before recommending or declaring any dividend, or
     distribution out of contributed surplus, set aside such sums as it
     thinks proper as reserves which shall, at the discretion of the Board,
     be applicable for any purpose of the Company and pending such
     application may, also at such discretion, either be employed in the
     business of the Company or be invested in such investments as the Board
     may from time to time think fit. The Board may also without placing the
     same to reserve carry forward any sums which it may think it prudent
     not to distribute.




                                   65




                        CAPITALISATION OF PROFITS

128. The Board may, from time to time resolve to capitalise all or any part of
     any amount for the time being standing to the credit of any reserve or fund
     which is available for distribution or to the credit of any share premium
     account and accordingly that such amount be set free for distribution
     amongst the Shareholders or any class of Shareholders who would be entitled
     thereto if distributed by way of dividend and in the same proportions, on
     the footing that the same be not paid in cash but be applied either in or
     towards paying up amounts for the time being unpaid on any Shares in the
     Company held by such Shareholders respectively or in payment up in full of
     unissued Shares, debentures or other obligations of the Company, to be
     allotted and distributed credited as fully paid amongst such Shareholders,
     or partly in one way and partly in the other, PROVIDED that for the purpose
     of this Bye-Law, a share premium account may be applied only in paying up
     of unissued Shares to be issued to such Shareholders credited as fully paid
     and PROVIDED, FURTHER, that any sum standing to the credit of a share
     premium account may only be applied in crediting as fully paid Shares of
     the same class as that from which the relevant share premium was derived.

129. Where any difficulty arises in regard to any distribution under the
     last preceding Bye-Law, the Board may settle the same as it thinks
     expedient and, in particular, may authorise any person to sell and
     transfer any fractions or may resolve that the distribution should be
     as nearly as may be practicable in the correct proportion but not
     exactly so or may ignore fractions altogether, and may determine that
     cash payments should be made to any Shareholders in order to adjust the
     rights of all parties, as may seem




                                   66




     expedient to the Board. The Board may appoint any person to sign on behalf
     of the persons entitled to participate in the distribution any contract
     necessary or desirable for giving effect thereto and such appointment shall
     be effective and binding upon the Shareholders.


                              RECORD DATES

130. Notwithstanding any other provisions of these Bye-Laws, the Company may
     by Resolution or the Board may fix any date as the record date for any
     dividend, distribution, allotment or issue and for the purpose of
     identifying the persons entitled to receive notices of general
     meetings. Any such record date may be on or at any time before or after
     any date on which such dividend, distribution, allotment or issue is
     declared, paid or made or such notice is despatched.

131. In relation to any general meeting of the Company or of any class of
     Shareholder or to any adjourned meeting or any poll taken at a meeting
     or adjourned meeting of which notice is given, the Board may specify in
     the notice of meeting or adjourned meeting or in any document sent to
     Shareholders by or on behalf of the Board in relation to the meeting, a
     time and date (a "Record Date") prior to the date fixed for the meeting
     (the "Meeting Date") and, notwithstanding any provision in these
     Bye-Laws to the contrary, in such case:

     (1) each person entered in the Register at the Record Date as a
         Shareholder, or a Shareholder of the relevant class (a "Record
         Date Holder") shall be entitled to attend and to vote at the
         relevant meeting and to exercise all of the rights or
         privileges of a Shareholder, or a Shareholder of the relevant
         class (in each case subject to Bye-Law 64), in relation to
         that meeting in respect of the Shares, or the Shares of the
         relevant class, registered in his name at the Record Date;








                                   67




    (2)  as regards any Shares, or Shares of the relevant class, which
         are registered in the name of a Record Date Holder at the
         record date but are not so registered at the meeting date
         ("Relevant Shares"), each holder of any Relevant Shares at the
         meeting date shall be deemed to have irrevocably appointed
         that Record Date Holder as his proxy for the purpose of
         attending and voting in respect of those relevant Shares at
         the relevant meeting (with power to appoint, or to authorise
         the appointment of, some other person as proxy), in such
         manner as the Record Date Holder in his absolute discretion
         may determine; and

    (3)  accordingly, except through his proxy pursuant to paragraph
         (2) of this Bye-Law, a holder of relevant Shares at the
         meeting date shall not be entitled to attend or to vote at the
         relevant meeting, or to exercise any of the rights or
         privileges of a Shareholder, or a Shareholder of the relevant
         class, in respect of the relevant Shares at that meeting.

    The entry of the name of a person in the Register as a Record Date
    Holder shall be sufficient evidence of his appointment as proxy in
    respect of any relevant Shares for the purposes of this paragraph, but
    all the provisions of these Bye-Laws relating to the execution and
    deposit of an instrument appointing a proxy or any ancillary matter
    (including the Board's powers and discretions relevant to such matter)
    shall apply to any instrument appointing any person other than the
    record date holder as proxy in respect of any relevant Shares.


                          ACCOUNTING RECORDS

132. The Board shall cause to be kept accounting records sufficient to give
     a true and fair view of the state of the Company's affairs and to show
     and explain its transactions, in accordance with the Companies Acts.









                                    68



133. The records of account shall be kept at the Registered Office or at
     such other place or places as the Board thinks fit, and shall at all
     times be open to inspection by the Directors: PROVIDED that if the
     records of account are kept at some place outside Bermuda, there shall
     be kept at an office of the Company in Bermuda such records as will
     enable the Directors to ascertain with reasonable accuracy the
     financial position of the Company at the end of each three month
     period. No Shareholder (other than an Officer) shall have any right to
     inspect any accounting record or book or document of the Company except
     as conferred by law or authorised by the Board, Resolution.

134. A copy of every balance sheet and statement of income and expenditure,
     including every document required by law to be annexed thereto, which
     is to be laid before the Company in general meeting, together with a
     copy of the auditors' report, shall be sent to each person entitled
     thereto in accordance with the requirements of the Companies Acts.


                                  AUDIT

135. Save and to the extent that an audit is waived in the manner permitted
     by the Companies Acts, auditors shall be appointed and their duties
     regulated in accordance with the Companies Acts, any other applicable
     law and such requirements not inconsistent with the Companies Acts as
     the Board may from time to time determine.


                SERVICE OF NOTICES AND OTHER DOCUMENTS

136. Any notice or other document (including a Share certificate) may be served
     on or delivered to any Shareholder by the Company either personally or by
     sending it through the post (by airmail where applicable) in a pre-paid
     letter addressed to such Shareholder at his address as





                                        69



     appearing in the Register or by sending it by courier to such registered
     address, or by sending it by email to an address supplied by such
     Shareholder for the purpose of the receipt of notices or documents in
     electronic form, or by delivering it to or leaving it at such address as
     appears in the Register for such Shareholder. In the case of joint holders
     of a Share, service or delivery of any notice or other document on or to
     one of the joint holders shall for all purposes be deemed as sufficient
     service on or delivery to all the joint holders. Any notice or other
     document if sent by post shall be deemed to have been served or delivered
     forty-eight (48) hours after it was put in the post, and when sent by
     courier, twenty-four (24) hours after sending or, when sent by email,
     twelve (12) hours after sending and in proving such service or delivery, it
     shall be sufficient to prove that the notice or document was properly
     addressed and stamped and put in the post, sent by courier or sent by
     email, as the case may be.

137. Any notice of a general meeting of the Company shall be deemed to be
     duly given to a Shareholder, or other person entitled to it, if it is
     sent to him by courier, cable, telex, telecopier, email or other mode
     of representing or reproducing words in a legible and non-transitory
     form at his address as appearing in the Register or any other address
     given by him to the Company for this purpose. Any such notice shall be
     deemed to have been served twenty-four (24) hours after its despatch,
     when sent by courier, cable, telex or telecopier and twelve (12) hours
     after its despatch when sent by email.

138. Any notice or other document delivered, sent or given to a Shareholder
     in any manner permitted by these Bye-Laws shall, notwithstanding that
     such Shareholder is then dead or bankrupt or that any other event has
     occurred, and whether or not the Company has notice of the death or
     bankruptcy or other event, be deemed to have been duly served or
     delivered in respect of





                                  70



     any Share registered in the name of such Shareholder as sole or joint
     holder unless his name shall, at the time of the service or delivery of the
     notice or document, have been removed from the Register as the holder of
     the Share, and such service or delivery shall for all purposes be deemed as
     sufficient service or delivery of such notice or document on all persons
     interested (whether jointly with or as claiming through or under him) in
     the Share.


                              WINDING UP

139. If the Company shall be wound up, the liquidator  may, with the sanction of
     a Resolution of the Company and any other sanction required by the
     Companies Acts, divide amongst the Shareholders in specie or kind the whole
     or any part of the assets of the Company (whether they shall consist of
     property of the same kind or not) and may for such purposes set such values
     as he deems fair upon any property to be divided as aforesaid and may
     determine how such division shall be carried out as between the
     Shareholders or different classes of Shareholders. The liquidator may, with
     the like sanction, vest the whole or any part of such assets in trustees
     upon such trust for the benefit of the contributories as the liquidator,
     with the like sanction, shall think fit, but so that no Shareholder shall
     be compelled to accept any shares or other assets upon which there is any
     liability.


                               INDEMNITY

140. Subject to the proviso below, every Director, Officer of the Company and
     member of a committee constituted under Bye-Law 105 and any Resident
     Representative and their respective heirs, executors and administrators
     (any of the foregoing, an "Indemnified Person") shall be indemnified and
     held harmless out of the assets of the Company against all actions, costs,
     charges, liabilities, loss, damage or expense to the full extent permitted
     by law (including but not limited to liabilities under contract, tort,
     fiduciary duties



                                 71




     and statute or any applicable foreign law or regulation and all reasonable
     legal and other costs and expenses properly payable) incurred or suffered
     by him by or by reason of any act done, conceived in or omitted in the
     conduct of the Company's business or in the discharge of his duties and the
     indemnity contained in this Bye-Law shall extend to any Indemnified Person
     acting in any office or trust in the reasonable belief that he has been
     appointed or elected to such office or trust notwithstanding any defect in
     such appointment or election PROVIDED ALWAYS that the indemnity contained
     in this Bye-Law shall not extend to any matter which would render it void
     pursuant to the Companies Acts.

141. No Indemnified Person shall be liable to the Company for the acts,
     neglects, defaults or omission of any other Indemnified Person PROVIDED
     ALWAYS that the indemnity contained in this Bye-Law shall not extend to
     any matter which would render it void pursuant to the Companies Acts.

142. Every Indemnified Person shall be indemnified out of the funds of the
     Company against all liabilities incurred by him by or by reason of any
     act done, conceived in or omitted in the conduct of the Company's
     business or in the discharge of his duties, in defending any
     proceedings, whether civil or criminal, in which judgment is given in
     his favour, or in which he is acquitted, or in connection with any
     application under the Companies Acts in which relief from liability is
     granted to him by the court.

143. To the extent that any Indemnified Person is entitled to claim an
     indemnity pursuant to these Bye-Laws in respect of amounts paid or
     discharged by him, the relative indemnity shall take effect as an
     obligation of the Company to reimburse the person making such payment
     or effecting such discharge.







                                  72



144. Each Shareholder and the Company agree to waive any claim or right of
     action he or it may at any time have, whether individually or by or in
     the right of the Company, against any Indemnified Person on account of
     any action taken by such Indemnified Person or the failure of such
     Indemnified Person to take any action in the performance of his duties
     with or for the Company PROVIDED HOWEVER that such waiver shall not
     apply to any claim or right of action which would render the waiver
     void pursuant to the Companies Acts and shall not apply to any claims
     or rights of action arising out of the fraud or dishonesty of such
     Indemnified Person or to recover any gain, personal profit or advantage
     to which such Indemnified Person is not legally entitled.

145. Subject to the Companies Acts, expenses incurred in defending any civil or
     criminal action or proceeding for which indemnification is required
     pursuant to Bye-Laws 140, 141 and 144 shall be paid by the Company in
     advance of the final disposition of such action or proceeding (including
     any cost or expense incurred in obtaining such advance or indemnification)
     upon receipt of an undertaking by or on behalf of the Indemnified Person to
     repay such amount if it shall ultimately be determined that the Indemnified
     Person is not entitled to be indemnified pursuant to Bye-Laws 140, 141 and
     144 PROVIDED THAT no monies shall be paid hereunder unless payment of the
     same shall be authorised in the specific case upon a determination that
     indemnification of the Director or Officer would be proper in the
     circumstances because he has met the standard of conduct which would
     entitle him to the indemnification thereby provided and such determination
     shall be made:

     (1) by the Board, by a majority vote at a meeting duly constituted by a
         quorum of Directors not party to the proceedings or matter with regard
         to which the indemnification is, or would be, claimed; or






                                   73




    (2) in the case such a meeting cannot be constituted by lack of a
        disinterested quorum, by independent legal counsel in a written
        opinion; or

    (3) by a majority vote of the Shareholders (after giving effect to any
        adjustments to the voting power imposed pursuant to Bye-Law 64).

     Each Shareholder of the Company, by virtue of its acquisition and continued
     holding of a Share, shall be deemed to have acknowledged and agreed that
     the advances of funds may be made by the Company as aforesaid, and when
     made by the Company under this Bye-Law are made to meet expenditures
     incurred for the purpose of enabling such Indemnified Person to properly
     perform his or her duties to the Company.

146. The purpose of Bye-laws 140-145 as a whole is to provide the broadest
     indemnity allowable at law, and to the extent any indemnification
     hereunder is prohibited, unenforceable or not authorized under
     applicable law, it is the intent of these Bye-Laws that such
     indemnification be interpreted as broadly as possible without
     invalidating the remaining provisions hereof. Specifically, to the
     extent prohibited by Bermuda law, these Bye-laws shall not result in
     indemnification of any person, including an Indemnified Person, to the
     extent he engaged in fraud or dishonesty.

                              AMALGAMATION

147. Any resolution proposed for consideration at any general meeting to
     approve the amalgamation of the Company with any other company,
     wherever incorporated, shall require the approval of a simple majority
     of votes cast at such meeting and the quorum for such meeting shall be
     that required in Bye-Law 56 and a poll may be demanded in respect of
     such resolution in accordance with the provisions of Bye-Law 69.







                                   74



                              CONTINUATION

148. Subject to the Companies Acts, the Board may approve the discontinuation
     of the Company in Bermuda and the continuation of the Company in a
     jurisdiction outside Bermuda. The Board, having resolved to approve the
     discontinuation of the Company, may further resolve not to proceed with any
     application to discontinue the Company in Bermuda or may vary such
     application as it sees fit.


                        ALTERATION OF BYE-LAWS

149. (1) These Bye-Laws may be revoked or amended by the Board, which may from
         time to time revoke or amend them in any way by a resolution of the
         Board passed by a majority of the Directors then in office and eligible
         to vote on that resolution, but no such revocation or amendment shall
         be operative unless and until it is approved at a subsequent general
         meeting of the Company by the Shareholders (a) by Resolution passed by
         a majority of votes cast (after giving effect to any adjustments to
         voting power imposed pursuant to Bye-Law 64) whenever it is proposed by
         the Board to repeal, alter or amend any of the Bye-Laws except Bye-Laws
         140-146 or (b) by Resolution of eighty five percent (85%) of the total
         votes cast (after giving effect to any adjustments to voting power
         imposed pursuant to Bye-Law 64) whenever it is proposed by the Board to
         repeal, alter or amend Bye-Laws 140-146 or adopt any provision
         inconsistent therewith .

     (2) Any repeal, alteration or amendment of Bye-Laws 140-146 or adoption of
         any provision inconsistent therewith shall not adversely affect any
         rights to indemnification and to the advancement of expenses thereunder
         existing at the time of such






                                     75




         repeal, alteration, amendment or adoption with respect to any acts or
         omissions occurring immediately prior to such repeal, alteration,
         amendment or adoption.


                          CERTAIN SUBSIDIARIES

150. (1) Except to the extent otherwise provided in Bye-Law 150(3), with respect
         to any subsidiary of the Company that is not a U.S. corporation or that
         is not treated as a pass-through or disregarded entity for U.S. federal
         income tax purposes (unless such disregarded entity owns, directly or
         indirectly, any subsidiary that is organized under the laws of a
         jurisdiction outside of the United States that is treated as a
         corporation for U.S. federal income tax purposes) (together, the
         "Designated Companies"), subject to any applicable mandatory law of the
         relevant jurisdiction (i) the board of directors of each such
         Designated Company shall consist of the persons, a majority of whom are
         Directors of the Company, who have been elected as director designees
         with respect to such Designated Company by the Shareholders of the
         Company ("Designated Company Directors") in a general meeting of the
         Shareholders by resolution, which resolution directs the Company to
         vote its shares in such Designated Company to ensure that the board of
         directors of such Designated Company consists of the Designated Company
         Directors designated with respect to such Designated Company, and (ii)
         the Shareholders of the Company in a general meeting may designate the
         persons to be removed as directors of any Designated Company (the
         "Removed Company Directors") by resolution, which resolution directs
         the Company to vote its shares in the Designated Company to effect the
         removal of the Removed Company Directors from the board of directors of
         the applicable Designated Company, subject to the requirement that a
         majority of the directors of each Designated Company are directors of
         the Company.













                                   76




    (2)  Notwithstanding the general authority of the Board set out in
         Bye-Law 97(3), the Company shall vote all shares owned by the Company
         in each Designated Company (i) to elect the Designated Company
         Directors with respect to each Designated Company as the directors of
         such Designated Company and to remove the Removed Company Directors
         with respect to each Designated Company as directors of such Designated
         Company and (ii) to ensure that the constitutional documents of such
         Designated Company require such Designated Company Directors to be
         elected and such Removed Company Directors to be removed as provided in
         this Bye-Law. The Board and the Company shall ensure that the
         constitutional documents of each such Designated Company shall
         effectuate or implement this Bye-Law and, subject to any applicable
         mandatory law of the relevant jurisdiction, contain a provision
         substantially similar to this Bye-Law 150 governing the election,
         appointment and removal of its direct subsidiaries' directors. The
         Company shall also enter into agreements with each such Designated
         Company to effectuate or implement this Bye-Law and take such other
         actions as are necessary to effectuate or implement this Bye-Law.

    (3)  The provisions set forth in Bye-Law 150 shall not apply with respect to
         any subsidiary of the Company that is not a U.S. corporation if a
         substantial portion of the income of such corporation is from U.S.
         sources and is effectively connected with the conduct by such
         corporation of a trade or business or permanent establishment within
         the United States (unless either (a) such income is exempt from
         taxation, or otherwise subject to a





                                      77



         reduced rate of tax, pursuant to a treaty obligation of the United
         States or (b) such corporation owns, directly or indirectly, any
         subsidiary that is not a U.S. corporation that does not earn a
         substantial portion of its income from U.S. sources or the income is
         not effectively connected with the conduct by such subsidiary of a
         trade or business or permanent establishment within the United States)
         and any other income of such corporation does not, and is not expected
         to, constitute subpart F income as defined in Section 952(a) of the
         Code.



                                     ******
                                       ***





















                                       78


EX-31.1 4 file003.htm EX-31.1

Exhibit 31.1

Endurance Specialty Holdings Ltd.
Certification of Chief Executive Officer
Pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a)

I, Kenneth J. LeStrange, certify that:

1.  I have reviewed this quarterly report on Form 10-Q of Endurance Specialty Holdings Ltd.;
2.  Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;
3.  Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;
4.  The registrant's other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and we have:
  a) Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;
  b) Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;
  c) Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation;
  d) Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant's most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant's fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal control over financial reporting; and
5.  The registrant's other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the registrant's auditors and the audit committee of registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):
  a) All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal controls over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and
  b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting.

Date: August 8, 2005 By: /s/ Kenneth J. LeStrange
    Chief Executive Officer



EX-31.2 5 file004.htm EX-31.2

Exhibit 31.2

Endurance Specialty Holdings Ltd.
Certification of Chief Financial Officer
Pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a)

I, James R. Kroner, certify that:

1.  I have reviewed this quarterly report on Form 10-Q of Endurance Specialty Holdings Ltd.;
2.  Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;
3.  Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;
4.  The registrant's other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and we have:
  a) Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;
  b) Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;
  c) Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation;
  d) Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant's most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant's fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal control over financial reporting; and
5.  The registrant's other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the registrant's auditors and the audit committee of registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):
  a) All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal controls over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and
  b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting.

Date: August 8, 2005 By: /s/ James R. Kroner
    Chief Financial Officer



EX-32 6 file005.htm EX-32

Exhibit 32

Endurance Specialty Holdings Ltd.

CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO SECTION 906
OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

In connection with the Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q of Endurance Specialty Holdings Ltd. (the "Company") for the quarterly period ended June 30, 2005 as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on the date hereof (the "Report"), the undersigned, in the capacities and on the dates indicated below, each hereby certify pursuant to 18 U.S.C. section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that (1) to the best of his knowledge the Report fully complies with requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and (2) the information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Company.


Date: August 8, 2005 By: /s/ Kenneth J. LeStrange
    Kenneth J. LeStrange
Chief Executive Officer
Date: August 8, 2005 By: /s/ James R. Kroner
    James R. Kroner
Chief Financial Officer

This certification accompanies the Report pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and shall not, except to the extent required by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, be deemed filed by the Company for purposes of Section18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.




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