Cyber and Health and Safety Lead D&O Concerns, as Geopolitical Risk Breaks Into Rankings
Directors, officers, and risk managers worldwide cite health and safety, data loss, and cyberattack as their most pressing exposures, while geopolitical risk makes its first appearance among the top seven threats, according to WTW and Reed Smith’s 2026 Global Directors’ & Officers’ Liability Insurance Survey.
Health and safety held the leading position among D&O risks in 2026, closely followed by data loss and cyberattack, according to the survey. The findings capture perspectives from directors, officers, and risk managers across industries, regions, and company sizes. A notable shift from prior years was the entry of geopolitical risks into the global top seven for the first time, which the report links to continued global instability and boardroom attention to balancing risk with growth objectives.
Underwriters quoted in the report offered context for the geopolitical finding. “The first appearance of geo-political risks in the top seven risks emphasises the heightened focus of boards of directors on global instability and the need to balance this with a desire for continued growth and profitability,” said William Thoms, an underwriter at AWAC.
Cyber Risk and AI Drive Board Scrutiny
Cyber and data risks remained a dominant theme across revenue bands, regions, and industries. Among financial institutions specifically, cyberattacks, data loss, systems and controls failures, and regulatory breaches ranked as the leading concerns. Notably, artificial intelligence risks climbed nine places in the financial institutions rankings compared with the 2025 survey results, making AI a top-five risk for directors of banking institutions, the report said.
Across all survey participants, the report noted that misrepresentation of AI capabilities ranked relatively low as a stated concern, which some D&O underwriters described as significant given litigation trends. AI-related securities claims accounted for approximately 8% of all U.S. filings in 2025, with allegations typically focusing on overstatement of capabilities, inadequate risk controls, or insufficient readiness, the report said.
Zurich Insurance underwriter Luca Ravazzolo noted in the report that while early AI-related D&O litigation primarily involved technology companies, “we are now observing a broader trend across health care and life sciences, financial services, consumer sectors and industrial companies.”
Operational Resilience and Regulatory Pressure
Operational resilience emerged as a growing area of board concern, with regulatory frameworks such as DORA (Digital Operational Resilience Act) and CSRD (Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive) cited as increasing pressure on directors. These frameworks are driving a more controls-based approach to director accountability and elevating risk exposure for board members, according to underwriter commentary included in the report. Data integrity and reporting accuracy were identified as increasingly prominent areas of concern for insureds as a result.
The report also noted that operational risk and resilience professionals face rising complexity, with simultaneous demands from both emerging and familiar risk types accelerating the shift from reactive risk management to proactive resilience.
D&O Coverage Confidence and M&A Activity
On the insurance side, HDI Global underwriter Martin Stewart noted in the report that only 30% of clients are confident their current D&O policy provides both the coverage and limits adequate for their business. With the D&O soft market now firmly established, Stewart observed, “now would be a good time to discuss with brokers and insurers on both coverage concerns and sense checking pricing for additional limits.”
M&A-related findings pointed to continued momentum in deal activity, with WTW citing a quarter-to-quarter increase in policies placed of more than 42% as M&A activity from 2025 continues into 2026. However, the report indicated that macroeconomic risks — including volatility in growth, interest rates, and inflation — could disrupt M&A activity over the next 12 months.
Among financial institutions, diversity, equality, and inclusion and climate change have reduced in the priority of risk rankings faced by boards, the report said.
View the full report here. &

