Bangkok Post

Insurers gather to tally hurricane costs

- TOM SIMS

MONACO: As Hurricane Irma battered Florida, the cream of the insurance world — gathered under the Mediterran­ean sun in Monte Carlo — was assessing the costs of the storm for the global industry.

The takeaway so far: Irma and its predecesso­r Hurricane Harvey, which caused massive flooding in Texas two weeks ago, are likely to take a toll on profits in a sector struggling with thin margins, stiff competitio­n and falling prices.

But at this early stage, the damages are not expected to be so excessive that they hit insurers’ capital base in a way that would lift slumping insurance prices or hurt their credit ratings.

“Irma is a major event for Florida and also a major event for the insurance industry”, Torsten Jeworrek, member of the board of the German reinsuranc­e giant Munich Re, told journalist­s on Sunday.

Along with some 2,500 i nsurance executives, he is in Monaco for an annual conclave to haggle over reinsuranc­e prices and strike underwriti­ng deals.

The meeting typically occurs at the height of the Atlantic hurricane season, but not since Hurricane Katrina in 2005 have catastroph­es weighed so heavily.

The industry is only slowly coming to grips with Harvey’s likely costs.

Munich Re’s Jeworrek said the loss assessment was “complex” and that it would “take a long time for the necessary estimates, leaving high uncertaint­y in the market”.

He estimated that insured losses for the global industry would total between $20 billion and $30 billion, which would put the storm on a similar scale to Hurricane Sandy, whose storm surge caused flooding in New York in 2012.

For Irma, which hit Florida early on Sunday after ravaging the Caribbean, the loss estimates are more severe.

AIR Worldwide yesterday forecast total insured losses in the United States of between $20 billion and $40 billion.

“All combined, the storms are likely to translate into an underwriti­ng loss for the year,” said Robert DeRose, senior director at the insurance ratings agency A.M. Best.

His firm estimated that $75 billion in insured losses would result in an average industry-wide combined ratio, a closelywat­ched measure of expenses to premium income, of 106% compared with 95% in 2016.

Ratios greater than 100 point to losses. The big question for the industry has been whether reinsurers will see such high losses that they can then demand higher prices for their coverage.

That would be the first major reversal since Katrina, the costliest natural disaster in US history with insured losses of around $80 billion.

The verdict so far among analysts is that profit will take a hit, but the dynamics of capital and pricing will not.

“We don’t see this as a market-turning event,” said Brian Schneider of Fitch Ratings. “Pricing is not likely to respond.”

Both Hannover Re and Swiss Re, in a sign of optimism for the sector, said yesterday that they generally saw reinsuranc­e prices stabilisin­g after years of decline.

Irma’s timing is giving attendees plenty to talk about and in some cases disrupting their own travel plans.

Reinsuranc­e broker AON Benfield told some staff who had planned to travel to Monte Carlo to instead remain to deal with Florida claims, chief executive officer Eric Andersen said.

With Monte Carlo’s yacht-filled harbour and billboards advertisin­g private jets offering a contrast to the destructio­n wrought in Texas and the Caribbean, one journalist asked whether insurers might move their annual meeting to a more modest venue.

“Monte Carlo is the place to be at the end of the day,” said Munich Re’s Jeworrek. “The industry wouldn’t move to another location to get rid of the reputation­al damage to its image.”

“We will also come next year. You can write that.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Farmers Insurance claims adjuster Brent Hazen unloads a Kespry drone he will use to assess a home damaged by Hurricane Harvey, as part of the insurance company’s efforts to tackle claims related to the storm in Missouri City, Texas.
REUTERS Farmers Insurance claims adjuster Brent Hazen unloads a Kespry drone he will use to assess a home damaged by Hurricane Harvey, as part of the insurance company’s efforts to tackle claims related to the storm in Missouri City, Texas.

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