NAICS 52 - Finance and Insurance

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Related NAICS Codes for NAICS 52

Click on any NAICS code to explore that specific industry within NAICS 52

NAICS Code Industry Title
521110 Monetary Authorities-Central Bank
522110 Commercial Banking
522130 Credit Unions
522180 Savings Institutions and Other Depository Credit Intermediation
522210 Credit Card Issuing
522220 Sales Financing
522291 Consumer Lending
522292 Real Estate Credit
522299 International, Secondary Market, and All Other Nondepository Credit Intermediation
522310 Mortgage and Nonmortgage Loan Brokers
522320 Financial Transactions Processing, Reserve, and Clearinghouse Activities
522390 Other Activities Related to Credit Intermediation
523150 Investment Banking and Securities Intermediation
523160 Commodity Contracts Intermediation
523210 Securities and Commodity Exchanges
523910 Miscellaneous Intermediation
523940 Portfolio Management and Investment Advice
523991 Trust, Fiduciary, and Custody Activities
523999 Miscellaneous Financial Investment Activities
524113 Direct Life Insurance Carriers
524114 Direct Health and Medical Insurance Carriers
524126 Direct Property and Casualty Insurance Carriers
524127 Direct Title Insurance Carriers
524128 Other Direct Insurance (except Life, Health, and Medical) Carriers
524130 Reinsurance Carriers
524210 Insurance Agencies and Brokerages
524291 Claims Adjusting
524292 Pharmacy Benefit Management and Other Third Party Administration of Insurance and Pension Funds
524298 All Other Insurance Related Activities
525110 Pension Funds
525120 Health and Welfare Funds
525190 Other Insurance Funds
525910 Open-End Investment Funds
525920 Trusts, Estates, and Agency Accounts
525990 Other Financial Vehicles

What is NAICS 52

NAICS code 52 covers the Finance and Insurance sector, encompassing establishments primarily engaged in financial transactions and facilitating financial services. This sector includes businesses involved in raising funds through deposits and securities issuance, underwriting insurance and annuities, and providing specialized financial services that support these activities. Entities within this sector perform critical roles such as financial intermediation, risk pooling, and managing employee benefit programs. Government agencies contract with these businesses for services ranging from monetary control to financial management, risk mitigation, and investment advisory. The sector’s complexity and specialization require expert providers to support government financial operations, ensure fiscal stability, and manage public funds effectively.

Industry Classification for NAICS 52

The Sector as a Whole

The Finance and Insurance sector comprises establishments primarily engaged in financial transactions (transactions involving the creation, liquidation, or change in ownership of financial assets) and/or in facilitating financial transactions. Three principal types of activities are identified:1. Raising funds by taking deposits and/or issuing securities and, in the process, incurring liabilities. Establishments engaged in this activity use raised funds to acquire financial assets by making loans and/or purchasing securities. Putting themselves at risk, they channel funds from lenders to borrowers and transform or repackage the funds with respect to maturity, scale, and risk. This activity is known as financial intermediation.2. Pooling of risk by underwriting insurance and annuities. Establishments engaged in this activity collect fees, insurance premiums, or annuity considerations; build up reserves; invest those reserves; and make contractual payments. Fees are based on the expected incidence of the insured risk and the expected return on investment.3. Providing specialized services facilitating or supporting financial intermediation, insurance, and employee benefit programs.

In addition, monetary authorities charged with monetary control are included in this sector.

The subsectors, industry groups, and industries within the Finance and Insurance sector are defined on the basis of their unique production processes. As with all industries, the production processes are distinguished by their use of specialized human resources and specialized physical capital. In addition, the way in which these establishments acquire and allocate financial capital, their source of funds, and the use of those funds provides a third basis for distinguishing characteristics of the production process. For instance, the production process in raising funds through deposit-taking is different from the process of raising funds in bond or money markets. The process of making loans to individuals also requires different production processes than does the creation of investment pools or the underwriting of securities.

Most of the Finance and Insurance subsectors contain one or more industry groups of (1) intermediaries with similar patterns of raising and using funds and (2) establishments engaged in activities that facilitate, or are otherwise related to, that type of financial or insurance intermediation. Industries within this sector are defined in terms of activities for which a production process can be specified, and many of these activities are not exclusive to a particular type of financial institution. To deal with the varied activities taking place within existing financial institutions, the approach is to split these institutions into components performing specialized services. This requires defining the units engaged in providing those services and developing procedures that allow for their delineation. These units are the equivalents for finance and insurance of the establishments defined for other industries.

The output of many financial services, as well as the inputs and the processes by which they are combined, cannot be observed at a single location and can only be defined at a higher level of the organizational structure of the enterprise. Additionally, a number of independent activities that represent separate and distinct production processes may take place at a single location belonging to a multilocation financial firm. Activities are more likely to be homogeneous with respect to production characteristics than are locations, at least in financial services. The classification defines activities broadly enough that it can be used both by those classifying by location and by those employing a more top-down approach to the delineation of the establishment.

Establishments engaged in activities that facilitate, or are otherwise related to, the various types of intermediation are included in multiple subsectors, rather than in a separate subsector dedicated to services alone, because these services are performed by intermediaries, as well as by specialist establishments, and the extent to which the activity of the intermediaries can be separately identified is not clear.

Financial industries are extensive users of electronic means for facilitating the verification of financial balances, authorizing transactions, transferring funds to and from transactors' accounts, notifying banks (or credit card issuers) of the individual transactions, and providing daily summaries. Since these transaction processing activities are integral to the production of finance and insurance services, establishments that principally provide a financial transaction processing service are classified in this sector, rather than in the data processing industry in the Information sector.

Legal entities that hold portfolios of assets on behalf of others are significant and data on them are required for a variety of purposes. Thus, for NAICS, these funds, trusts, and other financial vehicles are the fifth subsector of the Finance and Insurance sector. These entities earn interest, dividends, and other property income, but have little or no employment and no revenue from the sale of services. Separate establishments and employees devoted to the management of funds are classified in Industry Group 5239, Other Financial Investment Activities.

Breakdown for NAICS 52

  • Includes establishments engaged in raising funds through deposits and securities issuance.
  • Covers insurance underwriting and annuity services to pool and manage risk.
  • Encompasses specialized services supporting financial intermediation and employee benefits.
  • Incorporates monetary authorities responsible for monetary control.
  • Focuses on activities defined by unique production processes and financial capital management.
  • Includes financial transaction processing integral to finance and insurance services.

Included Activities for NAICS 52

  • Raising capital through deposit-taking and issuing securities.
  • Underwriting and managing insurance policies and annuity contracts.
  • Providing financial advisory and investment management services.
  • Processing financial transactions and authorizing fund transfers.
  • Pooling and managing risk through insurance and employee benefit programs.
  • Managing public and private pension funds and retirement plans.
  • Conducting regulatory compliance and financial reporting services.
  • Operating monetary control functions and related financial activities.

Business Types for NAICS 52

  • Commercial banks and credit unions.
  • Insurance carriers and underwriters.
  • Investment fund managers and financial advisors.
  • Monetary authorities and regulatory agencies.
  • Pension funds and employee benefit plan administrators.
  • Financial technology service providers.

Government Buyers for NAICS 52

Government agencies at various levels, including federal, state, and local, are primary purchasers of finance and insurance services under NAICS 52. Agencies such as the Department of Treasury, Social Security Administration, and state pension funds require financial intermediation, risk management, and investment services to manage public funds, insurance programs, and employee benefits. Additionally, regulatory bodies and monetary authorities contract these services to maintain financial system stability and oversee compliance. The government’s need to secure investments, manage liabilities, and efficiently process financial transactions drives ongoing demand for expert financial and insurance service providers.

Contract Types & Procurement for NAICS 52

Contracts in the Finance and Insurance sector typically include fixed-price, cost-reimbursement, and indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity (IDIQ) arrangements, depending on the scope and complexity of services. Procurement methods often involve competitive bidding, requests for proposals (RFPs), and sole-source contracts for specialized expertise. Typical contract values vary widely, from modest contracts for consulting and advisory services to multi-million-dollar agreements for managing large-scale investment portfolios, insurance programs, or financial transaction processing systems. Performance-based contracting and service-level agreements are common to ensure accountability and measurable outcomes.

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