Cyber and Economic Uncertainty Top Concerns as Business Leaders Brace for a More Complex Risk Environment

Business leaders at midsize and large U.S. companies rank cybersecurity and economic pressures as their foremost concerns heading into 2026, according to The Hartford's annual Risk Monitor.
By: | May 28, 2026
business risk concerns

Cyberattacks and economic trends, such as inflation, ranked as the leading concerns among more than 500 U.S. business leaders surveyed for The Hartford’s 2026 Risk Monitor.

Cyber and economic concerns were tied, each cited by 77% of respondents as a top concern. Regulatory compliance and supply chain disruption followed, also tied with each cited by 67%, while worker injury (63%) and the role of artificial intelligence (53%) rounded out the top six concerns identified in the report.

Cyber Threats Drive Insurance Action

Cyber risk continues to dominate the risk landscape, and for many organizations the concern is translating directly into insurance and operational decisions. Fifty-six percent of respondents identified cyber liability and data breaches as a top insurance product focus, and 53% said they plan to enhance their cyber policies in the coming year, the report found.

Despite the elevated concern, a meaningful gap in preparedness remains. While 67% of business leaders said they have cybersecurity policies and procedures in place, nearly one-third do not — a finding that signals continued exposure across the midsize and large business segment.

Economic Pressure and Legal Exposure Add to the Burden

Beyond cyber, business leaders are contending with a shifting economic environment that has grown more complicated in recent months. Concern about tariffs emerged as a significant flashpoint, with 63% of respondents citing it as a worry, which was a notable increase from the prior year’s survey, The Hartford said. Geopolitical conflicts registered as a key concern for 43% of respondents, the report said.

Still, economic anxiety has not eroded business confidence. Eighty-five percent of respondents said they remain optimistic about growth over the next three years, with many investing in technology, innovation and workforce expansion, according to the report.

Legal system abuse is adding another layer of financial risk to an already pressured operating environment. As litigation costs rise and nuclear verdicts become more common, business leaders are responding by strengthening risk controls, documentation and safety practices to reduce both the frequency and severity of claims, the report said.

The report found that 64% of business leaders are concerned about risks to their company’s reputation, and 11% identified staying compliant with regulations and new laws as the primary risk they are most focused on.

Business interruption also registered prominently as an economic concern, with 66% of respondents citing it as a top risk. Supply chain disruptions — and the potential inability to meet project deadlines — were identified as the primary risk concern by 16% of open-ended respondents. The report noted that while some companies are pulling back from international operations due to high costs, regulatory complexity and geopolitical instability, others are managing through the disruption by expanding into new markets and improving continuity plans.

Worker Safety and AI Adoption Present Distinct Challenges

Worker safety remains a central priority, particularly in industries with elevated jobsite exposure. Fifty-five percent of respondents identified workers’ compensation as a primary area of focus, and 37% flagged workplace violence as a significant risk. Sixty-one percent said they are placing strong emphasis on workplace safety policies and procedures, reflecting a forward-looking approach to workforce protection, the report found.

Artificial intelligence presents a more ambiguous challenge. While 95% of business leaders said they have begun integrating AI into their operations, 53% of that same group still view the technology as a potential risk. Twenty percent identified negative AI impacts, such as misinformation or unethical use, as a rising risk over the next five to 10 years, according to the report. Adoption remains uneven: among companies that have not yet integrated AI, 40% said they consider it unnecessary or irrelevant to their business.

View the full report here. &

The R&I Editorial Team can be reached at [email protected].

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