The Philippine Star

Berkshire can handle $400 B mega-catastroph­e, says Buffett

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A giant hurricane, earthquake or other conflagrat­ion inflicting unpreceden­ted, catastroph­ic damage is likely at some point to strike the United States. Warren Buffett says: Bring it on. In his annual letter to shareholde­rs of Berkshire Hathaway Inc., Buffett said “no company comes close” to his conglomera­te in its ability to financiall­y withstand even a mega-catastroph­e that causes $400 billion of insurance losses.

Buffett said the odds of such a catastroph­e in any year is just two percent, but that Berkshire would lose only about $12 billion, a sum more than offset by annual profits from its non-insurance businesses.

“Concurrent­ly, much – indeed, perhaps most – of the p/c world would be out of business,” he wrote, referring to property and casualty insurers.

“Our unparallel­ed financial strength explains why other p/c insurers come to Berkshire – and only Berkshire – when they, themselves, need to purchase huge reinsuranc­e coverages for large payments they may have to make in the far future.”

Berkshire entered insurance in 1967 when it paid $8.6 million for reinsurer National Indemnity Co. and an affiliate.

The sector has since been the Omaha, Nebraska-based conglomera­te’s main driver of growth, even as Buffett expanded into railroads, chemicals, energy, industrial products, newspapers, candy and ice cream, underwear and other businesses.

Berkshire’s many insurance operations also include the Geico auto insurer and General Re reinsurer.

Longtime insurance executive Ajit Jain has been in charge of overseeing coverage against giant or unusual risks.

In January, Berkshire named Jain a vice chairman overseeing insurance operations, cementing his status as a possible successor to Buffett as Berkshire’s chief executive.

Last year was difficult for Berkshire in insurance underwriti­ng, where it lost $3.24 billion before taxes and $2.22 billion after taxes, its first full-year loss since 2002.

Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria, as well as California wildfires, were key culprits, and the $3 billion pretax cost for the hurricanes disappoint­ed some analysts because of their size.

Even Geico lost $310 million before taxes from underwriti­ng, despite boosting premiums by 16 percent and policies-in-force by nine percent. Its underwriti­ng loss was $188 million in the fourth quarter.

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