Rehab Plan Didn’t Suffice. Southern Fidelity Sinks into Insolvency

Two weeks after it lost its financial stability rating, Southern Fidelity Insurance Co. has been ordered into receivership and is being liquidated, making it the fourth Florida property insurer this year to bite the dust.

A Leon County Circuit Court judge on Wednesday ordered the state Department of Financial Services to act as the receiver for the carrier, which was unable to complete its reinsurance program ahead of hurricane season.

The petition from DFS quotes from an affidavit submitted by Virginia Christy, director of P&C financial oversight for the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation, noting that the firm’s “catastrophe reinsurance program expired on May 31, 2022 and respondent ‘currently has no catastrophe reinsurance to cover its existing policyholders during the 2022-2023 Atlantic hurricane season.'”

Some in the industry had expressed hope that the company, which reported 98,000 policies in force at the end of 2021, may be able to avoid insolvency with some type of rehabilitation plan submitted to the Office of Insurance Regulation – especially after rate increases of 84% and 111% early this year and the infusion of $200 million in capital.

But the company’s June 8 rehab plan did not satisfy regulators or provide enough protection to policyholders, the consent order petition reads.

Christy’s affidavit explains that trouble had been brewing for several years. She listed the many steps company has been through:

The consent order petition notes that SFIC’s condition was critical in April, when it reported just a $26 million surplus.

The order did not explain if the Florida Insurance Guaranty Association will now be forced to raise the surcharge on other carriers to cover outstanding claims.