Commercial Insurance Markets Looking Favorable in 2014: Marsh

February 24, 2014

The ample capacity and competition that helped temper firming of U.S. commercial insurance rates in 2013 is expected to continue into 2014, unless catastrophe losses turn out higher than expected, according to a report by insurance broker Marsh.

U.S. commercial property insurance prices stabilized for many organizations in 2013 as a significant surplus of capital among insurers and reinsurers kept competition high, Marsh said in its U.S. Insurance Market Report 2014.

In addition, despite average year-over-year total directors and officers liability (D&O) program rate increases reaching as high as 3.6 percent in 2013, price hikes steadily lost momentum through the fourth quarter and are expected to continue softening in 2014 driven by excess insurer competition. Coverage in all areas of D&O insurance is expanding, according to the report.

The casualty insurance markets also tempered in 2013, as rate increases were generally lower than had been anticipated at the beginning of the year. This shift in the casualty markets is expected to continue in 2014, with rates generally poised to renew flat or with increases in the low single digits for insureds in desirable classes of business with good loss experience.

Employers typically experienced workers’ compensation rate increases in the low single digits in 2013 depending on program type. However, attempts by carriers to push for further rate increases in 2014 will likely be tempered by the ongoing competitive environment and by insureds differentiating their risk profiles, according to Marsh.

“Organizations of all sizes and across all industries should generally expect favorable market conditions in 2014 as long as capacity and competition remain plentiful and catastrophe losses remain relatively low,” said Dave Bidmead, Marsh’s US CEO.

According to the report, uncertainty about whether Congress will renew the Terrorism Risk Insurance Program Reauthorization Act (TRIPRA) is being reflected in the marketplace. Many organizations with large employee concentrations in big cities are already experiencing “significant pressure in terms of availability and pricing of workers’ compensation coverage.”

The cost of property terrorism insurance also could become volatile if TRIPRA is not reauthorized, Marsh warns. TRIPRA is set to expire on Dec. 31, 2014.

At the same time, some specialty lines of coverage, most notably marine liability, continue to firm. Premium increases of between 5 percent and 20 percent for marine insureds with good loss histories are typically expected in 2014.

Marsh also predicts modest rate firming in the employment practices liability insurance market in 2014, especially for small to midsize employers.

Topics Trends USA Commercial Lines Business Insurance

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