Hurricanes may cause more pain for pandemic-hit insurers
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[June 01, 2020] By
Carolyn Cohn
LONDON (Reuters) - The official start of
the Atlantic hurricane season on Monday could signal more steep losses
for insurers and reinsurers, already battered by the impact of the
coronavirus pandemic on their underwriting and investment positions.
However, recent years of hefty damage from hurricanes and high claims
due to the pandemic mean property rates at a key June 1 renewal date are
expected to get pushed up by as much as 50%, providing an income boost.
Meteorologists are forecasting that the Atlantic 2020 hurricane season,
which officially finishes on Nov. 30, will be above average.
"What we've seen over the past couple of years is an increase of (storm)
losses from a frequency and severity perspective," said Susan Fallon,
Global Head of Property at Zurich Insurance Group.
"There's an expectation we will see increased rates."
Lloyd's of London this month forecast more than $100 billion in
underwriting losses from the pandemic in 2020, with those losses coming
before the hurricane season even gets going.
The specialist insurance market said the pandemic losses were similar in
size to the loss year of 2005 - when Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans -
and 2017 - when Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria hit Florida, Puerto
Rico and Texas.
Those hurricane years were exceptional but this year could also be
costly.
(For an interactive graphic on evacuation, displacements from recent
hurricanes click
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/editorcharts/azgpobkajvd/index.html)
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) sees 13-19
named storms of which 6-10 could become hurricanes.
The average hurricane season produces 12 named storms and six
hurricanes, three of which are major.
The exact impact of hurricanes is always difficult to determine as many
do not make landfall.
But the average for insured losses from natural catastrophes globally is
$75 billion over the past 10 years, according to reinsurer Swiss Re.
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Houses sit in floodwater caused by Hurricane Florence, in this
aerial picture, in Lumberton, North Carolina, U.S. September 17,
2018. REUTERS/Jason Miczek/File Photo
Climate change has led to greater flood damage from hurricanes, and
increased building of expensive properties in states such as Florida has
also added to the size of claims, industry sources say.
KBW analysts said in a note that reinsurance rates in Florida could rise
25-45% on June 1, with the underwriting and investment losses from
COVID-19 "heightening risk sensitivities" and contributing to the rise.
Reinsurers share the burden of large losses like hurricanes in return
for part of the premium. Insurers typically pass at least part of the
reinsurance rates they pay onto policyholders.
"We've seen rates for Florida renewals accelerate quite a bit," said
Chris Grimes, a director at Fitch Ratings. Rate increases were in the
20-40% range, or up to 50% for some insurers, Grimes said. Analysts at
JMP Securities expect rate rises of 25-35%.
The rate rises could sweeten the pill for insurers and reinsurers, which
also face $100 billion in investment losses this year, according to
Lloyd's' estimates.
But the impact of the pandemic is also expected to exacerbate hurricane
losses.
Medical facilities and other businesses might take more precautions in
advance of a storm, adding to the cost of claims, Karen Clark,
co-founder and CEO of catastrophe modelling firm Karen Clark & Company
said.
Reinsurer Munich Re highlighted added risks from the pandemic to
response and recovery, supply chains and coastal evacuations.
The Bahamas would be particularly vulnerable, Munich Re said, as it
continues to deal with last year's Hurricane Dorian, while the pandemic
has also hit its tourist industry.
(Additional reporting by Noor Zainab Hussain in Bengaluru; editing by
David Evans)
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