Insurance costs too steep? Try writing your own
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[October 23, 2020] By
Carolyn Cohn
LONDON (Reuters) - Fed up with rising
prices and more stringent terms and conditions for their insurance
policies as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, companies are turning
to in-house insurance firms.
These so-called "captive" insurers are already common among large firms,
with most FTSE 100 and Fortune 100 firms owning one, industry sources
say.
But billions of dollars in pandemic claims have led traditional
commercial insurers to ratchet up insurance rates, driving firms to use
their captives for more classes of business, or set up new ones.
"For many, insurance has become or is becoming more expensive, so people
are turning to captives," said Rodney Bonnard, insurance leader for EY
UK Financial Services.
"We are seeing a massive uptick."
Seventy-six new captives were formed this year globally, a 200%
year-on-year growth, according to insurance broker Marsh <MMC.N>. That
level of growth is "unprecedented", Michael Serricchio of Marsh Captive
Solutions told a recent webinar.
Captives are set up as an insurance company with their own underwriters,
though industry sources said regulatory requirements were slightly less
onerous. Most captives do not write business for other firms.
This insurer status enables them to buy reinsurance - insurance for
insurers.
Company insurance buyers feel unhappy about the current situation, with
commercial insurance prices up 19% on average in the second quarter,
according to Marsh, while policies have also seen more exclusions, for
instance for pandemics.
This combination of events is described by insurers as a "hard" market,
but British insurance buyers' association Airmic has renamed it "harsh".
"Insurance companies are pricing themselves out of the market," said
Julia Graham, deputy CEO of Airmic.
"If you can't buy fire insurance or flood insurance for a sensible
price, it may well be you choose to underwrite that yourself."
Half the respondents in an Airmic survey of members already use
captives, and another 20% are considering setting one up.
Laurent Nihoul, group head of insurance at steel producer ArcelorMittal
<MT.LU>, said businesses were facing a "triple crunch" from insurers,
who were raising prices, reducing the amount of cover they offered and
putting in tougher conditions.
"The relationship with the client is not the same as before - servicing
quality is going down," he told a recent webinar organised by European
risk managers' trade body Ferma, adding that ArcelorMittal was using its
captive "more and more".
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A car is submerged after
a water supply pipe burst in the Hackney district of London,
Britain, October 3, 2018. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls
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Insurers, however, say that recent price rises, which started before the
pandemic but accelerated through it, follow years of falling rates. Despite the
recent rises, premium rates have generally not returned to levels seen a decade
or more ago.
Insurers also say they face greater risks due to the pandemic.
One of the classes of business to see steep rises, encouraging a move to
captives, is director's and officer's insurance, bought by corporates against
litigation costs.
This has rocketed as a result of COVID-19, by as much 2,000% for particularly
exposed companies, according to insurance broker Gallagher.
More than 200 claims have been filed in U.S. courts against companies allegedly
responsible for introducing and spreading COVID-19 in the United States,
according to risk modelling firm Praedicat.
Other classes of business written increasingly by captives include cyber
insurance, according to a Marsh survey of regulators, while 25 captives are
already writing pandemic insurance, a sector Marsh expects to grow.
Pharma and energy firms are among those seen as likely to make use of captives,
given the risk of damage from their products.
But all types of firms are using captives, industry sources said.
Aluminium company Norsk Hydro <NHY.OL> told Reuters it had the world's oldest
running captive, formed in 1920. A captive can cut insurance costs and any
profit stays in the company, it said by email.
Captives are often based in off-shore locations like Bermuda and Guernsey, which
may bring tax advantages.
But for some companies, the prospect of setting up an in-house financial
institution does not appeal, due to tough capital rules, particularly in Europe.
"The disadvantage is that it's an insurance company, (European Union) Solvency
II regulated," said Brian Kirwan, head of structured solutions at insurance
broker McGill.
"You need to have the regulatory structure."
(Additional reporting by Barbara Lewis; editing by David Evans)
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