Best Affirms Ratings of Eastern Insurance Holdings and Subs

A.M. Best Co. has affirmed the financial strength rating (FSR) of ‘A’ (Excellent) and issuer credit ratings (ICR) of “a” of the property/casualty subsidiaries of Eastern Insurance Holdings, Inc. (EIHI), which consists of Eastern Alliance Insurance Company, Allied Eastern Indemnity Company, Eastern Advantage Assurance Company and Indianapolis-based Employers Security Insurance Company (collectedly referred to as Eastern Alliance Insurance Group [EAIG]).

The group operates under an intercompany pooling agreement. Best also affirmed the ICR of “bbb” of EIHI. The outlook for all ratings is stable. All companies are domiciled in Lancaster, PA, unless otherwise specified.

The ratings recognize EAIG’s “strong operating results, excellent risk-adjusted capitalization, prudent reserving practices and the financial flexibility afforded by its publicly traded, debt-free parent, EIHI,” Best explained.

The report also pointed out that the “cultivation of a loyal agency base within preferred territories has produced profitable growth as evidenced by the group’s five-year average combined and operating ratios, which outperformed the workers’ compensation composite by a significant margin.

“EAIG’s strong underwriting performance reflects its management’s commitment to maintain sound pricing, a proactive return to wellness program and utilization of “compromise and release” agreements. This approach has allowed EAIG to close claims more quickly and at a lower average cost than the typical workers’ compensation writer.”

As partial offsetting factors Best cited “EAIG’s product concentration as a monoline workers’ compensation writer, which potentially exposes it to increased risk of regulatory or legislative changes, as well as the execution risk associated with continued expansion initiatives.”

Best concluded that while it “believes EIHI and its operating companies’ are well positioned at their current ratings, factors that could lead to negative rating actions include soft market conditions or lack of execution in its ongoing diversification strategies leading to a deterioration in underwriting and operating results to a level below peers for a sustained period or should there be a decline in the group’s risk-adjusted capitalization.”

Source: A.M. Best