Depending on the context, this usually refers to the insurance company's "home office", which can be a generic term for any of the following departments: the underwriting department, the new business deartment, the customer service department, etc.
Without arguing the above answer, HO may signify Head Office of an insurance company when there are several branch offices throughout the country.
What do you mean "private company" If you have HO insurance the bank can not canel it. Only you can.
ho ho ho has no meaning it is just how Santa claus laughs
It a standard homeowners insurance policy, for a detached single family home (as opposed condominium -- which is HO-6), and the HO3 distinction also indicates the policyholder is the homeowner as opposed a tenant.
U mean ho-oh. U cNt catch it without hacks.
J'ai ho means "victory to thee."
If you mean the city of Ho Chi Minh, it's in Vietnam. If you mean the ruler Ho Chi Minh, he was born in Vietnam and he died in Vietnam.
Ho4 means it's a renters policy ho3 is a homeowners policy ho6 is a condo policy dp3 is a rental property (landlord coverage)
HO insurance does not like Those dogs or Pit Bulls amongst others. Why? Because they are baby chewers!
it means good
Every "homeowners" insurance policy in State of Florida is designated HO. The number after it indicates what type of policy it is. H0-1 typically indicates it is a Dwelling policy, which usually provides the most basic coverage. HO-3 indicates whats called "Special Form" coverage, which is typically the most inclusive and comprehensive. HO-6 indicates that it is a Condominium coverage type policy. Please read your policy for any further detail/explaination. This is a broad explaination that may not apply to all specific policies. If you do not understand your policy, call your agent and have them explain it to you.
It means that it was jamal who succeed in his mission and that's why it is called as HO JAMALO....
In most states the answer to this question is "yes". Sudden and accidental water damage is covered by most HO-3 policies (the TX equivalent to the HO-3 is the HO-B, and sometimes the HO-A+). Although the insurance company will repair the water damage, they will not cover the appliance that covered this damage. The reason the appliance is not covered is because "appliance malfunction" isn't a covered peril.