Attacks on Western cities
prompt insurers to adapt
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[June 15, 2017]
By Carolyn Cohn, Suzanne Barlyn and Noor Zainab Hussain
LONDON/NEW
YORK (Reuters) - The changing nature of attacks in Western cities has
led insurers to offer new policies, from straightforward cover for
business lost due to police cordons to more risky compensation for
declines in tourism.
Terrorism insurance policies were developed after the 9/11 attacks on
the United States, but until recently covered only businesses that had
been physically damaged.
The deaths of two hostages taken at a cafe in Sydney in Dec 2014 and
attacks in Paris in Nov 2015 that killed 130 people were catalysts for
new types of cover taking into account the impact of heavy loss of life
on businesses not directly hit.
Recent deadly attacks in London and Manchester underlined the need.
"The focus of terrorism has shifted to loss of life, rather than money,
which can cause devastating loss of revenues to industries like
hospitality," said Chris Folkman, director of product management at risk
modeling firm RMS.
Some of these newer policies are difficult to price and hard to model,
but insurers are developing them to meet demand and maintain market
share in a highly competitive market which has suffered several years of
falling premiums.
Insurance against attacks is typically offered as a standalone policy or
add-on to property insurance and is underwritten by specialists such as
Lloyd's of London insurers Beazley <BEZG.L>, Hiscox <HSX.L> and Talbot
and U.S. insurers like AIG <AIG.N>.
Additions to the standard policies have begun to include "denial of
access" policies to compensate for loss of business as a result of a
police cordon following an attack, as well as "loss of attraction"
policies to cover loss of revenue due to potential customers staying
away from businesses further from the attack.
A new-style policy including physical damage and business interruption
cover for a hotel in central Manhattan which may have suffered from or
merely been close to an attack, for example, would cost around $500 for
$100,000 of cover, said Steven Tebbutt, political violence underwriter
at Talbot.
LONDON BRIDGE
Insurers say the global market for terrorism insurance can now cope with
potential claims totaling more than $3 billion as the industry responds
to growing demand.
For instance, Chubb <CB.N> said this week it had increased the risk by
300 percent that it is willing to take on for each client account
through terrorism and political violence insurance in the last two
years, citing "growing client demand for certainty and comprehensive
cover".
AIG has expanded its global capacity to cover attacks on property to $1
billion, in part by employing engineering experts to help clients make
their buildings less of a target, said George Stratts, AIG's President
of Property and Special Risk.
David Abrahamovitch, chief executive of a chain of coffee shops
including London Grind, which is near the scene of this month's London
Bridge attacks, has begun the process of claiming from his insurer.
London Grind was closed for a few days as it was inside a police cordon.
The chain switched insurance companies last year which gave it suitable
cover, Abrahamovitch said, adding: "It will take a little while for
footfall to recover."
In order for such insurance to be triggered, a government needs to
declare an event an act of terrorism.
But in the United States, a strict legal definition of terrorism for
insurance purposes does not apply to many acts, or threats, of violence,
said Bruce Smiley-Kaliff, senior underwriter for specialized programs at
Kaliff Insurance and Lloyd’s North American underwriter, which focuses
on events coverage.
[to top of second column] |
A cup of coffee is seen in the London Grind coffee shop, near the
scene of the recent London Bridge attacks, in central London,
Britain June14, 2017. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
For example, the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing did not meet criteria for
the U.S. Treasury to determine it an act of terrorism under the
Terrorism Risk Insurance Act.
"The terrorism statute was a congressional kneejerk to 9/11," Smiley-Kaliff
said. "It never entered anyone’s minds that we’d have to worry about the
county fair."
Kaliff Insurance, based in San Antonio, Texas, is now developing
coverage that would more broadly cover “violent acts” such as bombs,
shootings, or multiple stabbings, at concerts and other events, such as
concerts and outdoor festivals.
OPPORTUNITIES, RISKS
Insurance broker Arthur J Gallagher said it had seen growing interest in
its crisis resilience policy, underwritten by AIG, which costs small
businesses around 500 pounds and includes post-incident trauma
counseling and "24/7 access to experienced response consultants".
While insurers develop some policies with an eye to new business, other
claims for compensation may be forced upon them.
In Britain, a rule change earlier this year means people injured by a
vehicle, like those targeted in the Westminster and London Bridge
attacks, can now seek compensation from insurers or the industry-backed
Motor Insurers' Bureau. Previously, the vehicle's insurer would probably
not have been liable.
The policy riskiest for insurers, though of growing interest to
customers, is loss of attraction, provided to a business nowhere near an
attack which loses revenue as a result.
Paul Bassett, managing director of crisis management at AJ Gallagher,
said its "denial of access" policies have a 2.5-mile radius, while "loss
of attraction" has a 10-mile radius. Those distances vary among
insurers.
Jessica Johnson, underwriting manager malicious acts at Lloyd's insurer
Barbican, said a loss of attraction policy could provide cover, for
example, to a hotel group with hotels in four UK cities. A physical
attack on a hotel in one city could also allow the group to claim for
loss of revenue in the other three.
Insurers use forensic accountants to judge whether a business has lost
attraction as a result of an attack which did not affect it directly.
This type of policy could have helped hotels in Paris, for example,
where revenue per available hotel room (RevPAR) plunged 14.6 percent in
2016 compared to 2015, according to research firm MKG Consulting.
"It’s an emerging, volatile type of coverage," said Gordon Woo,
catastrophist at RMS, adding: "We’re thinking of modeling it. Our
clients are interested in this.”
But insurers are cautious about offering too much of this and other such
cover to avoid breaching the levels of risk that they have calculated
are safe to have on their books.
"Loss of attraction is something we're looking into...it's been asked
about a lot by clients – especially in the entertainment area," said
Christof Bentele, global head of crisis management, at Allianz Global
Corporate & Specialty.
"As an underwriter, you have to make sure that you’re not
oversubscribing yourself."
(Additional reporting by Maya Nikolaeva and Dominique Vidalon in Paris;
editing by Philippa Fletcher)
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