Global insurers look to raise rates after catastrophic
quarter
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[October 27, 2017]
By Suzanne Barlyn
(Reuters) - Insurers and reinsurers around
the globe are looking to raise rates after what looks set to be their
most costly quarter on record.
Hurricanes Irma and Maria alone caused as much as $135 billion in
insured losses, according to modeling firm AIR Worldwide. Earthquakes in
Mexico could cost billions more.
As insurers report the full extent of the damage in their third-quarter
results in coming weeks, investors will be looking for signs they can
claw back some of those losses by raising premiums for customers.
"Having the chance of rate increases is quite attractive," said Mark
Stoeckle, senior portfolio manager of Baltimore-based Adams Funds, which
owns shares of Chubb Ltd, set to report earnings later on Thursday.
Over the next two weeks, other leading insurers and reinsurers are
scheduled to report, including American International Group Inc,
Allstate Corp, Swiss Re, Munich Re < MUVGn.DE >, Hiscox Ltd and Beazley
Plc.
"The largest focus is on the pricing outlook," said Wells Fargo
Securities analyst Elyse Greenspan.
Investors already appear to be banking on higher premium rates halting a
gradual slide over the past few years.
The S&P 500 property and casualty insurance index fell about 10 percent
between mid-August and the end of the first week of September, as the
scale of damage from Hurricane Harvey in Texas became apparent.
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A recreational vehicle (RV) that caught fire is pictured following
Hurricane Irma in Cudjoe Key, Florida, U.S., September 24, 2017.
REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
Since then, the index has recovered those losses and is now up about 5.5 percent
since Aug. 17, on a par with the S&P 500. European insurance stocks followed a
similar path: the STOXX Europe 600 Insurance index is up 4 percent since Aug.
17.
In the United States, Travelers Cos Inc and Hartford Financial Services Group
Inc, which reported results ahead of their peers, have already said they will
look to raise rates after big losses in the quarter.
In Europe, Hannover Re said it is considering a 40 percent to 50 percent
increase in rates for North American regions recently hit by disasters.
A turnaround in prices would be the first major reversal since Hurricane Katrina
in 2005, the costliest natural disaster in U.S. history.
Aberdeen Standard Investments is looking to benefit from possible rate hikes,
said Russell Barlow, head of hedge fund investments at the Scottish firm.
Reinsurers which take on risk from other reinsurers, known as retrocessionaires,
are "one of the most attractive routes to access the uplift in premiums," Barlow
said.
(Reporting by Suzanne Barlyn in New York; Additional reporting by Carolyn Cohn
and Maiya Keidan in London and Noor Zainab Hussain in Bengaluru; Editing by Bill
Rigby)
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