4 October 2017Insurance

Q3 insured losses could be costliest in history

Insured catastrophe losses in the third quarter of 2017 could exceed $100 billion and become the costliest in history, according to an Oct. 3 Morgan Stanley research note.

In a span of 26 days, Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, Maria and two powerful earthquakes devastated Texas, Florida, the Caribbean, and Mexico. Industry estimates put insured losses to ~$10-25billion for Harvey (ex. ~$10 billion+ NFIP flood losses), ~$30-55billion for Irma, ~$15-85 billion for Maria, and multiple billions for Mexico earthquakes. The total industry losses range from $70-150 billion. Adding ~$20 billion from the first half of 2017 catastrophes, 2017 could surpass 2005 (Katrina) and 2011 (Japan earthquake) as the costliest year from natural catastrophes.

Among Morgan Stanley’s coverage, global reinsurers AXIS, Renaissance, XL Group, and Everest Re could be hit the hardest. While the risk of capital raise for the companies is low, buybacks could be on hold through 2018 as the reinsurers rebuild their excess capital positions.

Morgan Stanley expects a hit to book value for its covered P&C carriers of between 1 and 12 percent from cat events. Record losses point to rising property cat re/insurance pricing, which could lead to improving fundamentals for global reinsurers for the first time in 5 years.

A confluence of factors will lead to a cycle turn, according to the analysts. For one, record losses significantly impact earnings and weaken industry capital cushion. Also, the market is experiencing very low price levels. In addition, alternative capital could face material losses or be "tied up" in protracted claim process.

“We expect double-digit rate increases in property cat reinsurance, with more in the 'retro' market,” the analysts said. Consequently, global reinsurers could see improving fundamentals for the first time in 5 years.

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More on this story

Insurance
4 October 2017   Bernstein analysts expect US nat cat prices to increase by an average of 10 percent and US commercial property to go up by on average 5 percent as a result of insured losses caused by Hurricane Irma, Harvey and Maria.
Insurance
10 October 2017   American International Group (AIG) said on Oct. 9 that it expects to report third quarter 2017 pre-tax catastrophe losses net of reinsurance of $2.9 billion to $3.1 billion ($1.9 billion to $2.0 billion after-tax).
Insurance
12 October 2017   Bermuda-based XL Group said on Oct. 11 that it expects net losses of approximately $1.33 billion relating to Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria, with total catastrophe losses including smaller loss events at approximately $1.48 billion in the third quarter.