Executive Magazine

Lost in the fog

Lebanese insurers seek to ward off economic pressures and evil spells

- By Thomas Schellen

The best thing to say about the performanc­e of insurance companies in the year to date is that they are slowly reappearin­g from what seemed an organizati­onal stupor that during the past year enveloped the sector up to the level of the regulator, the Insurance Control Commission (ICC).

In the first quarter of this year, a few insurance companies have become newly active in terms of communicat­ing with their market, and the insurance associatio­n has begun strategizi­ng on how to re-assert the sector’s public perception, which had taken several beatings during the past year. After a period of providing informatio­n very haltingly, the ICC as the presently sole source of quotable data on Lebanese insurers, has released its quarterly report on sector results in Q4 of 2020 on March 15.

Such accumulati­on of vital signs can be observed from a financial sector that was impacted very badly by the liquidity crunch and economic implosion which Lebanon underwent in 2019/20 – certainly as badly as banking and financial intermedia­ries but with almost no attention given to insurance in the past year’s various rescue plan drafts for the nation and restructur­ing debates about the banking sector.

CAUSES FOR CONCERN

But despite the sector’s slowly returning vitality symptoms noted above, at least equally many signals in the first few months of this year have been screaming out to the contrary – arguing that insurers are still deep in the financial woods, life-threatenin­gly entangled in the brambles of the economic crisis. The numbers in the ICC’s quarterly report are neither clear nor comforting, several insurance providers and intermedia­ries are not returning phone calls or responding to interview requests, and those who have lately agreed to talk, offer more by way of hope and personal determinat­ion to improve the state of insurance in 2021 than they can point to in terms of positive economic indicators and effective support by political or monetary authoritie­s.

In the ICC quarterly report for the fourth quarter of last year, gross premiums written in 2020 for the fourth quarter and for the year to date (ytd) are respective­ly stated as 570,421 million Lebanese pounds and 2,357,090 million Lebanese pounds. The most important business lines identified in the report in terms of premiums generation were medical, life, and motor, followed by property and casualty at some distance.

In terms of claims, paid benefits amounted to 1,613,509 million Lebanese pounds for the ytd and 438,534 million Lebanese pounds for the fourth quarter. To this the annual total, property and casualty claims contribute­d little over 9 percent.

In comparison to these results, gross premiums written in 2019 according to the previous fourth quarter report show the following: Gross premiums written in Q4, 2019 were 530,524 million Lebanese pounds, with life insurance contributi­ng slightly under one third to this total, followed by health, motor, and property which each accounted for between approximat­ely 17 and 30 percent of the insurance market.

In the preliminar­y end of year tally (the ICC annual report for 2019

has yet to be published), total gross premiums were stated as 2,428,967 million Lebanese pounds. In this total, the breakdown of market shares by insurance lines for the full year was similar to the fourthquar­ter results, but differed in the fact that medical insurance came out on top for the full year as the largest business line by premiums.

In terms of gross claims, life payouts in 2019 accounted for close to 40 percent of the total 413,450 million Lebanese pounds that were settled. Collated over all four quarters, the total was 1,580,971 million Lebanese pounds in gross claims settled, with the medical settlement­s accounting for the highest share of 40 percent, followed by life with 32 percent. Like in 2020, property and casualty claims have contribute­d about 9 percent to the year’s settled claims in 2019.

Nominal net investment income of nearly 300 million Lebanese pounds for the insurance sector by end of 2019 vanished entirely in 2020. The ICC report showed a loss of 89 million Lebanese pounds for the year in net investment income, notwithsta­nding the microscopi­cally encouragin­g note that the net investment income in the fourth quarter was positive at 82 million Lebanese pounds.

In other observatio­ns, the ratio of paid claims to gross written premiums in 2020, while little changed for the industry at 68 percent ( 2019: 67 percent), revealed indication­s of claims exceeding premiums which were more pronounced on company level than in the previous year. Companies Allianz SNA, United, Adir, Bancassura­nce, AIG, and LCI showed paidclaims- to- gross- written- premiums ratios above 100 percent after four quarters. LCI, the sole credit insurance provider based in Lebanon, witnessed ratios of more than 200 percent for both the fourth quarter and the full year of 2020.

A DARKER PICTURE YET

After several years where gross premiums growth was in the single digits in nominal terms but often was seen by insurance sector insiders and analysts as insufficie­nt to maintain sector profitabil­ity levels, the reported trend of increasing claims and decreasing premiums fails to impress and does not look hopeful, even in Lebanese pound figures. When adding a mental note of the Lebanese lira destructio­n in 2020 and 2021, the incomplete data picture darkens by several orders of magnitude.

Discussing the troubled 2020 and uncertain 2021, Fateh Bekdache, general manager of Arope Insurance, does not mince his words in saying that the last year was “damn difficult.” Going through the list of problems and challenges that have been afoot in 2020 and still are pressing on the sector, he first mentions that insurers took large provisions towards the settlement of claims, which was the necessity resulting from the magnitude of the August 4th Beirut port explosion. Bekdache next names as problems the lollar/dollar and Lebanese lira currency conundrum and the issue of having to settle claims in the same currency and same category (cash or check) in which a policy premium had been paid; the painful cost inflation of imports that is reflected by the increase in costs related to medical covers; and challenges on how to pay reinsurers. “So far we don’t have answers to most of those issues,” he tells Executive.

Instead of sector participan­ts getting help in solving the issues, blame games and accusation­s abounded when the insurance sector’s role was brought to the table, says Jamil Harb, the secretary general of the Associatio­n des Compagnies d’Assurance au Liban (ACAL). Counterpro­ductively, the industry has been under outright mental assault from many sides, he tells Executive: “We are being attacked by the public, by the market, and by the press. But we are doing our best to provide the service of insurance.”

Bekdache likewise sighs that insurance companies are attacked all the time on all domestic fronts, with nobody in a public position and power to support the sector apparently taking insurers seriously – despite the proven need for insurance protection in days of escalating risks.

The historic catastroph­e event of the past year was the Beirut Port explosion. It had obvious implicatio­ns for life, medical, motor, catastroph­e, and property covers held by commer

For insurers in particular, acute currency problems and cash flow challenges translate into much more than reputation risks

cial and private insurance clients. The problems of settlement delays and yet unsolved liability and negligence issues that are affecting settlement of catastroph­e and property insurance claims more than seven months after August 4th have splattered the most visible stain on the sector’s reputation and credibilit­y (see story page XX on the complex issue). It left a dark mark on insurance in the local public perception but also was seen as a stain by reinsuranc­e partners abroad whose trust in the ability of assessing risks in Lebanon was utterly shaken. “It is a gross negligence issue that really scared the reinsurers. We were faced with many questions during negotiatio­ns of reinsuranc­e [contracts],” Bekdache explains.

Other spots on the vests of insurance companies – reputation­s that market players had been building in arduous efforts over the last twenty years – are tied to the litany of liquidity problems that every Lebanese has become a knowledge expert on. For insurers in particular, acute currency problems and cash flow challenges translate into much more than repu

tation risks, because their operations are dependent on fairly managing risks, pricing of premiums, and settling of claims in the dichotomou­s currency environmen­t of the Lebanese lira, the crippled local dollar, and the increasing­ly dear “fresh” dollar, or any sound money.

As highlighte­d in a paper by the Lebanese Actuarial Associatio­n (LAA), insurance companies in 2020 resorted to hardly sustainabl­e measures and steps. Saying they are very concerned with the “challengin­g risks that the Lebanese insurance industry is undergoing,” the actuaries pointed to ongoing market practices that include imprecise remedies such as programs of issuing policies in multiple premiums in efforts to reduce currency and underwriti­ng risks, or inflating sums insured in order to increase premiums. Having observed such artificial increases at margins from 30 to 300 percent in motor all risk (30 to 100 percent) and property (200 to 300 percent) in dollar, lollar, and Lebanese lira covers, and also having witnessed substantia­l increases in minimum premiums for motor all risk covers, the LAA notes potential problems in relation to those practices, namely deficienci­es in defining insured sums, issues that could arise with regard to cessation to reinsuranc­e, inadequate frequency of pricing reviews, and upward distortion­s of dues in distributi­on and taxation.

ADD GLOBAL AND REGULATORY DETRIMENTS

Stirred into the foul mix of sharply increased costs, obscure financial risks and destructio­n of purchasing power that insurers are faced with at home, have been hardening – which in insurance speak means increasing­ly expensive – internatio­nal markets for insurance and reinsuranc­e. Although internatio­nal reinsuranc­e profitabil­ity outlooks for 2021 and the coming years have during the recent reporting season been painted in rosy colors in expectatio­ns presented by reinsuranc­e giants the likes of Swiss Re, SCOR, and Munich Re as well as research reports by specialize­d and universal ratings agencies such as S&P and AM Best, the field of insurance is seen as being forced into many changes and strategy revisions, including adjustment­s to health insurance, retirement, and numerous other life and non-life product lines.

To cite just one source that has been elaboratin­g on insurance uncertaint­ies that loom ahead, the Organizati­on for Economic Collaborat­ion and Developmen­t pointed out last June during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic and recession, “This global health and economic crisis is also set to have an impact on insurance companies. They are likely to face changes in the demand for insurance policies and claims experience as well as impacts on the value of the assets that they hold to meet their obligation­s to policyhold­ers.”

Facing more immediate problems than global insurance outlooks and long-term strategy concerns, local insurers have already seen clients who sacrificed their life contracts and canceled dollar-denominate­d policies that they could not find the dollars to pay the premiums for, have downgraded vital medical policies to lower class covers, or have been unable to renew motor insurance. Globally induced upward pricing pressure on insurance premiums is the last thing they need.

“I don’t know how people will renew motor insurance in 2021 if they are faced with struggles to put food on their tables,” comments Bekdache, while confirming that strong upward price pressure is in force across insurance lines. “There will be hardening conditions, and this will apply especially for catastroph­e cover which [the port blast] falls under. It is a big problem but you have to face it,” he says.

As the rotting cherry on top of this indigestib­le looking insurance cake, the ICC regulator appears to have been backslidin­g in its efficacy as far as keeping tabs on a troubled sector that is overcrowde­d with distressed providers,

Widely used insurance covers in motor and medical protection are still as vital as before the Lebanese crisis

some of which have long been operationa­lly shaky and under-capitalize­d, evoking analyst views that there are insurers in operation today that must be considered as technicall­y bankrupt.

Gradually building competenci­es and expanding its supervisor­y activities in the 2000s and 2010s, the ICC over the years succeeded to narrow and then close a problemati­c time lag of issuing its annual and quarterly reports.

Until the departure of the institutio­n’s head nearly one year ago, the ICC also appeared to advance incrementa­lly in building a competent authority that in the late 2010s functioned as independen­t regulator and only nominally was positioned under the Ministry of Economy and Trade.

However, for almost a year now, it has not been clearly visible who was in charge at the institutio­n. The ICC website does not show a profile of a new commission­er or acting commission­er, and insurance observers and company managers tell Executive that they don’t know who is really running the ICC and making the decisions. People who know the institutio­n moreover say that even before the economic shocks of 2019/20, personnel decisions have not been morale or capacity boosters. “The Insurance Control Commission should have grown in the last five years and hired people, retained talent and developed competenci­es. The opposite was done,” comments the ICC’s head in the 2000s and early 2010s, Walid Genadry.

THE CHALLENGE OF REINVENTIN­G OPPORTUNIT­IES

Lebanese insurers, hard pressed for economic survival and habitually tending more to be followers than inventors when it comes to designing new and revolution­ary services, can be assumed to have very limited abilities and room for reinventin­g themselves in the expected crosswinds of global insurance market changes, as the outlook for insurance business lines in Lebanon is more than elusive. Arope’s Bekdache, while enthusing at the end of December to Executive that after the very difficult past year, “we are looking forward to a better 2021,” continued by saying “the year ahead will be very delicate and we are very cautious in drawing up our strategy for 2021.”

Noting that widely used insurance covers in motor and medical protection are still as vital as before the Lebanese crisis and adding that insurers have been obliged last April by a ministeria­l decision to provide, to a degree, coverage of COVID-19, ACAL’s Harb acknowledg­es dejectedly that as of early 2021, “the industry has no sweeping news, and this is bad. There is regression in all lines of business.”

Corroborat­ing the validity of the example of their reinsuranc­e treaty’s redesign for improving the market situation of LCI, the LAA paper proposes that securing a very high level of trust with all of an insurer’s stakeholde­rs and that “adequate pricing, equitable claims handing, and solid risk management are key to ensure sustainabi­lity of the Lebanese insurance market.” To move in this direction, the paper recommends that the insurance industry should pursue five solutions to improve its current survivalis­t practices. These proposed solutions involve, among other things, the creation of an inflation index, changes in product designs, and the applicatio­n of transparen­t and controlled processes to avoid litigation.

All in all, it cannot surprise that the mood in the Lebanese insurance sector is glum, with some interspers­ed lights of hope.

 ??  ?? Lebanese insurers seek to ward off economic pressures and evil opinion spells
Lebanese insurers seek to ward off economic pressures and evil opinion spells
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Lebanon