Life insurers adapt pandemic risk models after claims jump
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[January 13, 2022] By
Carolyn Cohn and Noor Zainab Hussain
LONDON (Reuters) - A coronavirus pandemic
which lasts five years, another pandemic in a decade, and ever more
transmissible variants are among the scenarios life insurers are
predicting after COVID-19 claims jumped more than expected in 2021.
The global life insurance industry was hit with reported claims due to
COVID-19 of $5.5 billion in the first nine months of 2021 versus $3.5
billion for the whole of 2020, according to insurance broker Howden in a
report on Jan 4, while the industry had expected lower payouts due to
the rollout of vaccines.
"We definitely paid out more than I had anticipated at the beginning of
last year," said Hannover Re board member Klaus Miller.
The increase in claims was largely down to the emergence of the Delta
variant, twice as transmissible, and more likely to cause
hospitalisation than the original coronavirus strain.
Claims rose most in the United States, India and South Africa due to the
more lethal variants and a rise in fatalities or illness among younger
and unvaccinated groups.
Dutch insurer Aegon, which does two-thirds of its business in the United
States, said its claims in the Americas in the third quarter were $111
million, up from $31 million a year earlier. U.S. insurers MetLife and
Prudential Financial also said life insurance claims rose. South
Africa's Old Mutual used up more of its pandemic provisions to pay
claims and reinsurer Munich Re raised its 2021 estimate of COVID-19 life
and health claims to 600 million euros from 400 million. The long-term
nature of life insurance products – often lasting 20 years or more –
means premiums are not yet capturing the risk that deaths or long-term
illness from COVID-19 will likely remain higher than previously
estimated. Competition in the industry is also keeping a lid on
premiums.
Actuaries say rising claims will be eating into the capital which
insurers set aside to ensure solvency.
In the initial "shock" period of the pandemic in 2020, the insured U.S.
population suffered 12% more deaths than average, according to research
from life insurance trade association LIMRA shared with Reuters. "For
the insurance industry, that's not huge because we have reserves," said
Marianne Purushotham, LIMRA's chief actuary.
"We're always trying to compare the new variant to the initial shock,"
she said.
The impact for insurers in 2020 was more muted because deaths were
mainly among older people who typically do not take out life insurance.
CRYSTAL BALL-GAZING As the pandemic continues to surprise with the
Omicron variant now becoming dominant, insurers, reinsurers and
specialist risk modelling firms are looking to the future.
"We take into account the possibilities of more transmissible and less
transmissible (variants)," Narges Dorratoltaj, scientist at modelling
firm AIR said. "We cannot say specifically which path we are going to
follow but we are trying to come up with the possible ranges to at least
narrow down the possible outcomes."
[to top of second column] |
Medical staff treat a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) patient in
their isolation room on the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) at Western
Reserve Hospital in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, U.S., January 4, 2022.
REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File Photo
AIR is factoring in periodic lockdowns around the world and is also considering
factoring in more uncertainty over whether governments will continue to impose
restrictions to keep transmission rates low, and over individuals' willingness
to obey them, Narges said.
Risk modelling firm RMS said its updated COVID-19 projection model allowed for
variants, such as Omicron, which show elements of vaccine escape, as well as for
variants which might evade vaccines.
Reinsurer Swiss Re said its pandemic model takes more than 20,000 different
scenarios into account. It has been updating its risk model regularly with the
latest data on testing, vaccination, infection, hospitalisation and fatality
rates.
HOW LONG, WHAT'S NEXT? With the emergence of the even more transmissible
Omicron, COVID-19 vaccine manufacturer Pfizer has said it does not expect the
pandemic to subside to an endemic state globally until 2024.
AIR's model anticipates that the pandemic, caused by a virus first identified in
China in December 2019, could last five years.
Excess deaths could continue as the virus becomes endemic, similar to influenza
which causes many deaths each year despite vaccines.
"We would expect to see some medium-term (impact on claims) of five to 10
years," LIMRA’s Purushotham said.
More deaths or long-term illnesses will require insurers to set aside more
reserves to pay claims, and may force them to raise premiums.
Insurance risk experts also say the opportunities for transmission between
humans and animals, high levels of global travel, increased urbanisation and
climate change impacts such as deforestation and disease-carrying mosquitoes
mean pandemics could become more frequent. "A new coronavirus outbreak is indeed
likely in the near future -- within the next 10 years," said Brice Jabo,
principal modeller, life risks, at RMS, referring to the severe acute
respiratory syndrome (SARS) and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS)
outbreaks in the last two decades as early warnings.
The potential for any future corovanirus outbreak to again become a pandemic
would depend on its transmissibility and the strength of measures to fight it,
Jabo said.
Bruno Latourrette, chief knowledge officer of reinsurer SCOR Global Life, said
he did not expect the next pandemic to be as devastating as COVID-19. "COVID
is...the perfect storm with pre-symptomatic contagiousness, a lethality that is
not too high to lead to super-strong zero tolerance measures, a waning of
immunity and high transmissibility".
(Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)
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