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PSC Move Signals Stronger Competition in Transport Insurance Broking

What the MA Insurance Brokers deal could mean for truck operators, fleets and renewals

PSC Move Signals Stronger Competition in Transport Insurance Broking?w=400

The information on this website is general in nature and does not take into account your objectives, financial situation, or needs. Consider seeking personal advice from a licensed adviser before acting on any information.

PSC Insurance Brokers’ investment in MA Insurance Brokers is a timely reminder that specialist transport insurance advice is becoming increasingly valuable in a tighter, more complex market.
The deal, announced in late June 2026, sees MA begin operating as PSC Transport Insurance Brokers, while founders Barry Mathison and Mariann Illyes retain an equity stake and continue leading the business as managing principals.

For truck operators, owner drivers and fleet businesses, the transaction matters because transport cover is rarely a simple, off-the-shelf purchase. Heavy vehicle insurance often needs to account for vehicle type, routes, driver experience, fatigue systems, cargo exposures, contractual obligations, depot arrangements, claims history and downtime risk. A larger broking network can potentially bring broader insurer relationships and stronger placement options, while a specialist team can preserve the practical understanding needed for transport risks.

The Queensland focus is also important. The state is a major freight corridor linking ports, regional producers, resources operations and interstate linehaul work. Operators in these segments often face different risk profiles to metro-only delivery businesses, particularly when prime movers, tippers, bulk haulage units or mixed fleets are involved. A specialist transport broking platform with national backing may be better placed to negotiate terms, explain underwriting expectations and support operators through claims or renewals.

This development also extends a broader theme already visible across the transport insurance sector: specialist capability is consolidating. Earlier market activity involving fleet and heavy motor insurance platforms showed that scale, data, claims expertise and insurer access are becoming key points of competition. For insureds, that does not automatically mean lower premiums, but it may improve the quality of advice, the range of available markets and the ability to structure cover around real operating conditions.

The practical takeaway is not to wait until renewal week to review your programme. Truck businesses should keep updated vehicle schedules, driver records, maintenance evidence, claims summaries and safety procedures ready well before negotiations begin. These details help underwriters understand the risk and can reduce the chance of blunt pricing assumptions.

It is also worth speaking with experienced transport insurance brokers about whether current limits, excesses, cargo extensions, downtime protection and liability settings still match the way the business operates. As broking groups expand their transport capability, operators should use the moment to ask sharper questions, compare options and ensure their cover is built for both compliance and commercial resilience.

Published:Tuesday, 7th Jul 2026
Author: Paige Estritori

Please Note: We do not endorse any specific products or companies. Some content is sourced from third parties, including press releases, and may not be independently verified for accuracy or completeness.

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Knowledgebase
Elimination Period:
The time period between an injury and the receipt of benefit payments from an insurer, particularly in disability insurance.