The U.S. insurance industry’s exposure to securities issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, two government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs), is substantial for a handful of companies. Nevertheless, A.M. Best Co. does not foresee substantial write-downs, as much of the industry’s exposure represents fixed-income securities, which should benefit from added financial backing of the government.
Concerns over the capital positions of the two GSEs led in late July to a broad housing package in Congress. The law provides the Treasury Secretary with authority to buy an unlimited amount of GSE obligations and securities through 2009.
A.M. Best concluded the following:
- The U.S. insurance industry’s investments in securities issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac totaled about $371 billion as of year-end 2007.
- Investments in fixed-income securities at $366.4 billion represented the industry’s primary exposure to the two GSEs; $4.0 billion was invested in preferred stock and only $265 million in common stock.
- The U.S. property/casualty industry’s total exposure to securities issued by the two GSEs represented 23 percent of year-end 2007 policyholder surplus.
- The P/C industry’s exposure totaled about $115.5 billion year-end 2007, with $112.4 billion invested in fixed-income securities, $2.9 billion in preferred stock and $223.4 million in common stock.
- The U.S. life/health industry’s total exposure represented about 75 percent of year-end 2007 capital and surplus. The exposure totaled about $255 billion year-end 2007, but $254 billion was invested in fixed-income securities issued by the two GSEs.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
How Niche Insurance Shielded Bad Bunny From Bad Weather
Florida Mobile Home Insurance Market Still Struggling With Premiums, Coverage
AI Ruling Prompts Warnings From Lawyers: Your Chats Could Be Used Against You
State Farm Agrees to $15M Settlement for Underpaid Vehicle Claims 

