Insurers Look Vulnerable If Hurricane Season Turns Active
August 25 2009 - 1:21PM
Dow Jones News
Hurricane Bill steered clear of the U.S. coast, but property
insurers can't relax yet.
Though the hurricane season has been quiet so far, the
traditional peak lasts through the end of September. A big storm
now, which remains possible even amid forecasts for a relatively
mild hurricane season, could drain already-reduced insurance
industry capital, and make it harder to raise more.
Insurers are already battling recession and poor financial
markets. Customers have cut back on insurance coverage, hurting
revenues and pricing. Insurer investment portfolios are earning
less than in past years, while insurers are paying more for
reinsurance to cover some of their own exposure. It all keeps
insurers' profit margin thin.
A huge storm could upset this delicate balance. Big losses could
help end a long downward trend in insurance pricing, but insurers
could still be squeezed if the cost of replenishing capital is too
high.
Then there's the case of Florida, where state-run Citizens
Property Insurance Corp. dominates the personal lines market since
Allstate Corp. (ALL) and other major homeowners insurers have
reduced their business in the state. As a result, Florida, already
suffering the effects of a battered housing market and weakened
tourism, could be particularly vulnerable to major losses if storms
are big.
This is a different scenario than in late August 2005, when
insurers were hit with more than $40 billion in insured losses from
Hurricane Katrina. They minimized the financial impact by raising
prices sharply, buying more reinsurance to spread their risk and
cutting back coverage in some storm-exposed areas. It could be
tougher to do that successfully this year.
Rating agencies are stepping up their scrutiny of insurers,
which makes their situation more difficult, said William Lonchar,
vice president and Atlanta operations manager for FM Global, a
commercial property insurer that covers many storm-exposed
properties. You get into this 'cash is king'" mindset, he said,
adding "the increased scrutiny will drive up the amount you need to
have."
Share prices of insurers covered by research firm Fox-Pitt,
Kelton are down about 14% in the past year, with concern over weak
insurance prices a major factor holding back shares. "Year to date
lackluster performance of the stocks has not been helped by the
anticipation of cat(astrophe) season," the firm said in a recent
report.
John DeMartini, executive vice president and catastrophe
management practice leader with Towers Perrin's Reinsurance
brokerage business, estimates that insurers can handle one
"significant event" on the scale of Hurricane Katrina without too
much difficulty.
"We run into challenges with multiple events," such as what
occurred in the 2004 and 2005 seasons, which each had four big
storms, he said. A scenario of multiple storms would, DeMartini
said, have an impact on pricing and on reinsurance capacity.
One bright spot is that the U.S. storm season has gotten off to
its slowest start since 1992.
Steve Bowen, a meteorologist with Impact Forecasting LLC, a
subsidiary of insurance broker Aon Corp. (AOC), said the so-called
El Nino weather phenomenon developed in the Pacific Ocean in June,
which usually reduces the severity of the Atlantic hurricane
season.
But the overall incidence of natural catastrophes seems to be
rising, especially for energy installations in the Gulf, said
Anthony Carroll, executive vice president for global energy and
property at Liberty International Underwriters, a unit of insurer
Liberty Mutual Group.
That's bad news for insurers and the energy industry: "If
Hurricane Bill had turned into the Gulf, it could have had a
significant impact on the industry," he said.
-By Lavonne Kuykendall, Dow Jones Newswires; (312) 750 4141;
lavonne.kuykendall@dowjones.com