All The Latest Insurance Company Estimates: Hurricane Ian Losses

Just a few days into earnings season for the third quarter, a number of carriers have published loss estimates for insurance claims from Hurricane Ian, or prewarned investors about loss figures that will dent their bottom lines.

A recap of individual company estimates, net of reinsurance, summing to over $7.5 billion is presented below.

Hurricane Ian Loss Estimates By Carrier ($ Millions)

Date Company Net Reference article
10/5/2022 Citizens Property Insurance Corp. 2,600.0 Will Ian Consume Florida Cat Fund, Forcing More Back-Breaking Reinsurance? (insurancejournal.com)
10/12/2022 United Insurance Holdings Corp. 36.4 Universal Predicts $1B in Losses from Ian; HCI’s Wind Exposure Less than Irma’s (insurancejournal.com)
10/13/2022 Progressive Corp. 785.0 Progressive Loses A Bundle: Nearly $2.0B Gross Ian Losses; $760M Net (carriermanagement.com)
10/13/2022 Heritage Insurance Holdings # 40.0 Heritage Provides Estimated Impact of Hurricane Ian – Oct 13, 2022 (heritagepci.com)
10/14/2022 RLI Corp.* 40.0 RLI Announces Hurricane Ian Loss Estimates | Business Wire
10/18/2022 Swiss Re 1,300.0 Swiss Re Expects Hurricane Ian Claims to Bring Q3 Loss (carriermanagement.com)
10/19/2022 Travelers Corp. 326.0 Travelers Q3 Net Income Falls 31% (insurancejournal.com)
10/19/2022 Arch Capital ** 545.0 Arch Capital Group Ltd. Announces Catastrophe Loss Estimates | Business Wire
10/19/2022 RenaissanceRe 540.0 RenaissanceRe Announces Estimated Net Negative Impact on Third Quarter 2022 Results of Operations | Business Wire
10/19/2022 Everest Re 600.0 Everest Announces Preliminary Impact of Third Quarter 2022 Catastrophe Events | Business Wire
10/19/2022 Allstate 360.0 Allstate Sees Q3 Net Loss; Auto Reserve Boosts More Damaging Than Ian (carriermanagement.com)
10/20/2022 The Hanover 28.0 The Hanover Estimates Third Quarter Catastrophe Losses and Preliminary Results (prnewswire.com)
10/20/2022 Cincinnati Financial 220.0 Cincinnati Financial Corporation Announces Preliminary Estimate for Third-Quarter Storm Losses (prnewswire.com)
10/20/2022 AXIS Capital 160.0 AXIS Capital Comments on Impact of Catastrophe and Other Weather-Related Losses on Third Quarter 2022 Financial Results | Business Wire
as of 10/20/2022 Total 7,580.4

* Range of net losses provided by company; CM used the midpoint

** Includes catastrophes other than Ian, U.S. convective storms, Typhoon Nanmadol and the June French hailstorms.

Note: Loss figure of $2.6 billion used for Citizens assumes no reinsurance recoveries

Only a handful of these firms reported both gross and net of reinsurance loss estimates. The difference between gross and net losses for those carriers, or ceded losses, amount to $3 billion from: United Insurance Holdings Corp., $1 billion; Progressive Corp., $1.985 billion; Heritage Insurance Holdings, $550 million; Allstate, $671 million.

Adding the $3 billion in ceded losses lifts the total to $10.5 billion—a figure that is less than 20 percent of the industrywide estimates that modelers and rating agencies have published in recent weeks, averaging around $55 billion ($55 billion is the straight average of all modelers’ estimates; median estimate is roughly $50 billion.)

Separately, on Wednesday, Gallagher Re published a “Hurricane Assessment,” with various facts and figures about the storm, stating that the total financial cost from Ian is anticipated to result in total economic losses approaching or exceeding $100 billion. Included in the $100 billion are direct physical damage losses, direct non-physical financial loss, and net-loss business interruption, Gallagher Re said. According to the report, the total was derived from publicly available insured loss estimates from various catastrophe model vendors and initial loss data published by Florida’s Office of Insurance Regulation.

“This would make Ian not only one of the costliest U.S. hurricanes on record, but one of the costliest U.S. natural hazard events regardless of peril,” the report said.

As for the insurance portion of the economic losses, Gallagher Re said only that private and public insurance entities are facing claims payouts reaching well into the “tens of billions,” without providing a more precise estimate. “This would place Ian among the costliest natural catastrophe events ever recorded for the insurance industry,” the report said, stating that 2005’s Hurricane Katrina is the costliest at $96 billion (inflation-adjusted, including NFIP).

“Hurricane Ian will be remembered as Southwest Florida’s ‘Andrew.’ The widespread and substantial damage across the hardest-hit areas were marked by regionally historic storm surge, high winds, and inland flooding which will lead to high loss costs for the insurance industry and beyond,” commented Steve Bowen, Chief Science Officer, Gallagher Re.

“If not for numerous examples of building code success stories with newer constructed properties, the financial toll may have been even higher. While we cannot fully eliminate physical catastrophe risk, Ian proved that we can make meaningful steps to greatly reduce it,” he said.

A team of Gallagher Re scientists and engineers traveled to Florida during the first week of October 2022 to assess damage, offering these additional takeaways from their damage survey:

Like Gallagher Re, Impact Forecasting, Aon’s catastrophe model development team listed North America’s losses from Hurricane Ian in the “10s of billions” when they were tallying global economic losses from all third-quarter natural disaster events at $227 billion. In the report titled “Q3 Global Catastrophe Recap—October 2022,” Aon said that $99 billion of that $227 billion was covered by public and private insurers, which means that insured losses will surpass $100 billion for the third year in a row.

Anticipated insured losses from Hurricane Ian constitute a significant portion of global insured losses, making tropical cyclone as the costliest peril for the insurance industry this year, said Aon, noting that U.S. losses now take up more than 70 percent of the total insured losses year-to-date.

On Monday, Fitch updated the rating agency’s earlier estimates of insurance losses from Hurricane Ian, now putting the range at $35-$55 billion. Earlier this month, Fitch had estimated a range of $25-$40 billion.

The main point of the Fitch report, however, was not the updated estimates. Instead, the rating agency called attention to the fact that reinsurers may face less supports from insurance-linked securities investors, who have been helping them manage risk, because Hurricane Ian losses will test the appetites of ILS investors.

Grouping catastrophe bonds, collateral reinsurance, sidecars and industry loss warranties under the ILS definition, Fitch said these represent around 20 percent, or $100 billion, of global reinsurance capacity, with cat bonds making up roughly 30 percent of the ILS market.

Since 2017, as a result of insured losses from Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria, the number of cat bonds not returning full principal to investors totals 55 individual tranches with either a full or partial loss to investors, Fitch said, noting that this compares to 75 tranches in totality since 1990.

Nearly a third, roughly $10 billion, of outstanding cat bonds have some exposure to Florida wind damage. ILS investments exclusively or predominantly exposed to Florida wind or the southeast region and Hurricane Ian are $2.9 billion, Fitch said, concluding that without proper compensation, investors will look elsewhere.

IJ and CM staff reports. Aon report summarized by Insurance Journal’s L.S. Howard

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