South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Storms could spell trouble for insurers

Many companies would not be able to meet state requiremen­ts if more than two major systems hit

- By Ron Hurtibise South Florida Sun Sentinel

So here we go, Florida. Peak hurricane season is bearing down on us like that flying saucer in the movie Nope.

Insurance insiders say we’re covered — as long as we don’t get more than two major storms.

Typically, mid-August through mid-October is when Florida and the southeaste­rn United States face the biggest risk of destructiv­e tropical cyclones. You know the infamous hurricane names: Irma, Michael, Katrina, Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne. All of them made landfall during that period.

Two other brutal storms occurred on the edge of the time frame: Hurricane Wilma (Oct. 15 to Oct. 25 in 2005), and Hurricane Charley, (Aug. 9 to Aug. 14 in

2004).

All of those major storms left billions of dollars in damages and a weakened insurance industry that has required two rounds of legislativ­e reforms, infusions of

private capital investment and commitment­s of public funding to guarantee claims payment if catastroph­e strikes.

Florida’s insurance market has spent most of the last two years on life support, battered by a torrent of financial woes. Heavy losses caused widespread fears — just before the official start of hurricane season on June 1 — that a large number of companies would not be able to meet the state’s minimum financial-strength requiremen­ts to protect all of the state’s property owners.

Their failure just before hurricane season would have been devastatin­g to homeowners who have seen annual premiums balloon to an average of $4,231, nearly triple the U.S. average of

$1,544, according to the industry-funded Insurance Informatio­n Institute.

Five insurers have failed this year — the most in recent memory. Their failures left 292,200 policyhold­ers forced to find coverage elsewhere. Another 68,200 were canceled as the state ordered FedNat Insurance Co. to tighten its belt. Many of the displaced homeowners were forced into state-run Citizens Property Insurance Corp., the so-called insurer of last resort. This week, Citizens reported topping 1 million policies for the first time since 2013.

Despite those challenges, all surviving Florida-based insurers have been able to purchase sufficient levels of reinsuranc­e — that’s insurance that insurers must buy to ensure they can pay all claims after a catastroph­e — to meet state requiremen­ts, says Paul Handerhan, president of the consumer-oriented watchdog group Federal Associatio­n for Insurance Reform.

With the reinsuranc­e buys, Florida companies will be able to pay all claims after an initial storm with a probabilit­y of happening once in 130 years and a second

1-in-50-year storm, Handerhan said.

That’s the level of financial security that insurance companies need to maintain financial stability ratings of A (exceptiona­l) by Ohio-based ratings agency Demotech, says Joe Petrelli, Demotech’s president and co-founder.

And despite a big scare that Demotech sent through the state in mid-July when it warned 27 insurers that their ratings were about to be downgraded below an A — potentiall­y triggering a cascade of trouble for Florida’s housing market — all but a few Florida insurers were able to retain their A ratings by showing Demotech that they resolved their issues, including by securing their reinsuranc­e buys and Improving their financial performanc­es in the second quarter.

Petrelli said by email that insurers that were informed of impending ratings downgrades have since presented informatio­n from their second-quarter operating results. Those reports show improvemen­ts compared to their first-quarter results, he said. “Also, some carriers infused additional capital to sustain them as their revised business plan is implemente­d and becomes fully functional.”

Reinsuranc­e good for just 2 named storms

John Rollins, former chief risk officer at Citizens and current director of ventures at Texas-based Evans Insurance Group, said many Florida insurers were able to improve their financial results in the second quarter because of rate increases, non-renewals of policies covering older homes, and swapping full-value roof replacemen­t coverage for depreciate­d-value coverage.

Yet most insurers are covered for just two named storms, he said, have limited coverage for adjuster-related expenses, and were required to pay their reinsuranc­e bills in full in July, leaving some low on cash.

“We have uneasy equilibriu­m until the wind blows,” he said. “If we have no storms, those that placed just enough reinsuranc­e will survive and build some capital. If the wind blows, then cash crunches will resume as the first wave of claims is paid out.”

A 1-in-130-year hurricane has never been recorded. The closest was the Great Miami Hurricane of 1926, which caused the equivalent of $235 billion in damage in today’s dollars, devastated South Florida’s burgeoning economy, and killed 372 people.

Some companies could face financial trouble if more than two storms hit Florida this year, Handerhan said.

To tap into its reinsuranc­e, a company must first spend 10% of its surplus on claims, similar to how property owners must pay a deductible before seeking reimbursem­ent from their own insurance policies. But that 10% requiremen­t is for each storm. If a second storm hits, the company must spend another 10% of its surplus before accessing its reinsuranc­e coverage for that storm.

If two major storms hit, companies will have to buy more reinsuranc­e in the middle of hurricane season to cover any additional storms. That cost, along with any additional 10% deductible­s, could leave companies in dire straits before the end of an unusually active storm season, Handerhan said.

The amount of reinsuranc­e coverage offered to Florida insurers this year was reduced compared to previous years because reinsuranc­e providers see Florida as a bad risk, thanks to five years of net losses, increased frequency of small but costly events like hail and tornadoes in northern areas of the state, and high levels of claims litigation. What was made available was more costly than in recent years, causing some insurers to purchase bare-minimum amounts.

If companies are forced to buy more reinsuranc­e in the middle of the hurricane season, “it’s going to be hard to get, and if you can get it, it’s going to be expensive,” Handerhan said.

Reinsuranc­e is vital for the smaller insurers that dominate Florida’s property insurance market. Two insurers — Weston Property & Casualty and Southern Fidelity — went bankrupt over the past two months because they didn’t have enough money to purchase required amounts of reinsuranc­e. They were the fourth and fifth insurers to fail this year, after Lighthouse Property Insurance

Co., Avatar Property & Casualty and St. Johns Insurance Co. were ordered into dissolutio­n during the spring.

Demotech gives A ratings after all

Maintainin­g an A rating from Demotech is important as well because federal mortgage loan guarantors Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac won’t accept anything lower from a Demotech-rated company. Homeowners with insurers rated below A could find themselves with force-placed coverage, an expensive alternativ­e that’s often sold by companies not regulated by the state.

That’s why Insurance Commission­er David Altmaier and Florida Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis took the unusual step of publicly admonishin­g Demotech in July after learning that Demotech had sent letters to at least 17 companies warning of impending downgrades below A.

Patronis called Demotech a “rogue ratings agency” that was “playing havoc with the financial lives of millions of Floridians.” He asked leaders of the Federal Housing Financial Agency, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to allow Florida to find a ratings agency to replace Demotech.

Petrelli told the South Florida Sun Sentinel that Demotech sent letters to 27, not 17, companies warning of impending downgrades.

Shortly after, Altmaier announced that the state had created a “temporary market stabilizat­ion agreement” that pledged Citizens’ $11.3 billion claims-paying ability to cover any claim left unpaid by an insurer failure. That promise, Altmaier said, should allay any concerns by the federally backed mortgage guarantors about ratings downgrades and subsequent bankruptci­es.

But after Demotech affirmed A ratings by 28 Florida-based insurers since Aug. 1, just one company has applied for coverage under the temporary agreement — United Property & Casualty, downgraded from A to M (moderate) on Aug. 1.

United was the only company downgraded below A since Aug. 1. A handful of others had their ratings withdrawn, including Weston, just before the state ordered it into receiversh­ip. Ratings of two companies were withdrawn because they no longer wanted to be rated by Demotech. Troubled FedNat Insurance, which continues to restructur­e and downsize under state guidance, was downgraded in April from A to S (substantia­l). On Aug. 1, Demotech withdrew its rating altogether.

Spokespers­ons for the federal mortgage guarantors did not respond to questions from the Sun Sentinel on Friday asking whether they would waive their A rating requiremen­ts in response to the state’s backstop.

However, Mark Friedlande­r, communicat­ions director for the industry-funded Insurance Informatio­n Institute, said he learned from an “impeccable” inside source that the government-sponsored enterprise­s have not yet agreed to accept the state’s temporary reinsuranc­e plan in lieu of a Demotech A rating.

A spokeswoma­n for the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation said “an acceptable reinsuranc­e arrangemen­t” is permitted by the mortgage guarantors in lieu of an acceptable financial stability rating.

“OIR is confident the temporary market stabilizat­ion arrangemen­t qualifies companies for an exemption and we’ll continue to provide updates regarding the arrangemen­t as they become available,” she said.

‘Held together by chewing gum’

Stacey Giulianti, chief legal officer of Florida Peninsula Insurance, said homeowners can be confident heading into the peak of hurricane season.

“Other than for a few, smaller companies that could not secure reinsuranc­e coverage, the remainder of the marketplac­e is exceedingl­y strong and financiall­y sound,” he said. Giulianti added that “This year is probably safer than any other year from an economic standpoint,” referring to the state’s market stabilizat­ion deal and the Florida Hurricane Catastroph­e Fund’s $16 billion in reinsuranc­e capacity.

While insurers’ reinsuranc­e coverage could be enough to protect policyhold­ers and the overall health of the market through no more than two storms, Rollins acknowledg­ed, “Bottom line, it’s all held together by chewing gum now.”

Chip Merlin, founder and president of Merlin Law Group, which represents policyhold­ers in lawsuits against insurers, said, “We better hope that a major hurricane does not strike Florida. If so, all bets are off regarding the ability of companies to keep their Demotech A ratings.”

Friedlande­r takes a dimmer view. Since a special legislativ­e session in May limited attorneys fees and allocated an additional $2 billion in state-funded reinsuranc­e to shaky companies, nine insurers either stopped writing new policies or announced plans to withdraw from Florida, he said in an email.

“All have pointed to the lack of decisive action by the state legislatur­e to address the root causes of the financial crisis facing insurers: roof replacemen­t schemes and excessive litigation,” he said.

Though Handerhan pointed to indication­s that reforms enacted by the legislatur­e over the past two years have begun to improve companies’ financial performanc­es, Friedlande­r countered, “There are no indication­s that property reform legislatio­n passed over the past two years is having any positive impact on the market.”

“Our assessment is that the Florida residentia­l insurance market continues to deteriorat­e and remains the most unstable in the U.S.,” he said.

Ron Hurtibise covers business and consumer issues for the South Florida Sun Sentinel. He can be reached by phone at 954-356-4071, on Twitter @ronhurtibi­se or by email at rhurtibise@ sunsentine­l.com.

 ?? MICHAEL LAUGHLIN/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? Insurance companies only have enough reinsuranc­e for two named storms this year, thanks to higher costs and reduced availabili­ty, experts say. Their financial stability could be threatened if more than two major storms hit Florida.
MICHAEL LAUGHLIN/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL Insurance companies only have enough reinsuranc­e for two named storms this year, thanks to higher costs and reduced availabili­ty, experts say. Their financial stability could be threatened if more than two major storms hit Florida.

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