Title: Personal Lines Insurance: Overview
1Personal Lines InsuranceOverview
OutlookPillars of Profitability Drivers of
Revenue, Cost,Profit Competition
- Insurance Information Institute
- March 2006
Robert P. Hartwig, Ph.D., CPCU, Senior Vice
President Chief Economist Insurance Information
Institute ? 110 William Street ? New York, NY
10038 Tel (212) 346-5520 ? Fax (212) 732-1916
? bobh_at_iii.org ? www.iii.org
2Presentation Outline
- P/C Profit Overview
- Auto Home
- Public Perceptions of the P/C Insurance Industry
- The Six Pillars of P/C Profitability
- Underwriting
- Pricing
- Investments
- Expenses
- Leverage (Capacity)
- P/C Operating Environment Tort Focus
- Catastrophe Loss Management
- Auto Insurance Drivers of Success
- Homeowners Insurance The Jurys Still Out
- Insurance-to-Value
3P/C PROFIT OVERVIEW2006 Outlook is Good
4Highlights Property/Casualty,9-Mos. 2005 vs.
9-Mos. 2004
Growth rate barely 1/2 that of CY2004
Investment Income Rebound?
Lowest in many years
Source ISO, Insurance Information
Institute Comparison is with year-end 2004 value.
5P/C Net Income After Taxes1991-2005Q3 (
Millions)
- 2001 ROE -1.2
- 2002 ROE 2.2
- 2003 ROE 8.9
- 2004 ROE 9.4
- 2005E ROAS 9.0
2005 NIAT will probably be on par with 2004
ROE figures are GAAP 2005 figure is annualized
based on 9-month results. Return on avg.
surplus. Sources A.M. Best, ISO, Insurance
Information Institute.
6Strength of Recent Hard Markets by NWP Growth
1975-78
1984-87
2001-04
2006-2010 (post-Katrina) period will resemble
1993-97 (post-Andrew)
2005 biggest real drop in premium since early
1980s
Note Shaded areas denote hard market
periods. Source A.M. Best, Insurance
Information Institute
2005-10 figures are III forecasts/estimates.
7Advertising Expenditures by P/C Insurance
Industry, 1999-2004
Ad spending by P/C insurers is at a record high,
signaling increased competition
Source Insurance Information Institute from
consolidated P/C Annual Statement data.
8ROE P/C vs. All Industries 19872006F
2006 Estimate 13
2005H1 P/C ROAS 15.3
2005 P/C ROAS 9 after adjusting for 2005
Hurricanes
GAAP ROEs except 2005 P/C figure return on
average surplus. 2005/6E figure is III full-year
estimate. Source Insurance Information
Institute Fortune for all industry figures
9ROE P/C vs. All Industries 19872005E
2004/5 ROEs excl. hurricanes
Sept. 11
Hugo
Katrina, Rita, Wilma
Lowest CAT losses in 15 years
Andrew
Northridge
4 Hurricanes
Source Insurance Information Institute Fortune
10RETURN ON EQUITY (Fortune)Stock Mutual vs.
All Companies
Stock insurer ROEs consistently above mutuals
Some mutual insurers sell/market the mutuality
concept effectively
Fortune 1,000 group. Source Fortune Magazine,
Insurance Information Institute.
11RNW for Major P/C Lines,1994-2003 Average
10-Year returns for some major p/c lines
surprisingly good, but HO is a major laggard
Source NAIC Insurance Information Institute
12WALL STREETGENERALLY STRONG GAINS
13P/C Insurers Stocks Up in 2005, Brokers Up Too,
Reinsurers Down
Total 2005 Returns
P/C insurer stocks outperforming the market
despite hurricanes
Brokers up on tight market hopes
Reinsurers lagging on record CAT losses
Source SNL Securities, Standard Poors,
Insurance Information Institute
14Change in YTD Stock Performance by Sector Pre-
Post-Katrina/Rita/Wilma
P/C reinsurer stocks hurt but now fully
recovered. Brokers rose on expectation of tighter
conditions and demand for broker services
closure of Spitzer issues.
Katrina Aug. 29
Rita comes ashore Sept. 24
Wilma landfall Oct. 24
Source SNL Securities Insurance Information
Institute
15Insurance Stocks Off to a Slow Start in 2006
Total YTD Returns Through February 17, 2006
Source SNL Securities, Standard Poors,
Insurance Information Institute
16PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS OF INSURANCE INDUSTRYHave
Public Perceptions of the Industry Been Affected
by Mega-Disasters and Scandals
17Percent of Public Rating Industry as Very or
Mostly Favorable, 1968-2005
Favorable ratings of insurers dropped just 1
point after Katrina
Source Insurance Information Institute Pulse
Survey, December 2005.
18Public Perceptions of Hurricane Katrina Response
Adequacy
Dont Know
Best
Worst
Source Insurance Information Institute Pulse
Survey, December 2005.
19Who Should be Responsible for Dealing With
Katrina?
House Special Committee Chertoff performed his
duties late, inefficiently or not at all.
-2/15/05.
Most people believe governments, not insurers,
are primarily responsible for dealing with Katrina
Source Insurance Information Institute Pulse
Survey, December 2005.
20Profit Pillar 1UNDERWRITING Surprisingly
Strong in 2005, Stage is Set for a Good 2006
21P/C Industry Combined Ratio
January survey of analysts called for a 101.8
combined ratio in 2005, hurt by CATs and reserve
charges. Actual 9-month results came in at
100.0.
Expectation is for an underwriting profit in 2006
Sources A.M. Best ISO, III. III
estimate/forecast for 2005/6
22Personal LinesCombined Ratio, 1993-2006E
A very strong 2006 is expected in personal lines
assuming normal catastrophe loss activity
Source A.M. Best Insurance Information
Institute. 2006 forecast from Fitch Ratings as of
12/7/05.
23A 100 Combined Ratio Isnt What it Used to Be 95
is Where Its At
Combined ratios today must be below 95 to
generate Fortune 500 ROEs
2005 figure is return on average statutory
surplus based in first 9 monhts data Source
Insurance Information Institute from A.M. Best
and ISO data.
24Underwriting Gain (Loss)1975-2006F
Billions
Before Katrina, p/c insurers were on track for
only the second underwriting profit in 27 years
U/W profit in 2006 likely.
2005 estimate is III estimate. Source A.M.
Best, Insurance Information Institute
25Combined Ratio Reinsurance vs. P/C Industry
Sept. 11
2004/5 Hurricanes
HurricaneAndrew
All lines figure is full-year III estimate.
RAA figure for 20059 mos. Source A.M. Best,
ISO, Reinsurance Association of America,
Insurance Information Institute
26UNDERWRITING AFFECTS FINANCIAL STRENGTHIs There
Causefor Concern?
27P/C Company Insolvency Rates,1993 to 2004
- Insurer insolvencies are increasing
- 12-yr industry failure rate 0.71
- Failure rating for B or better rating 0.49
- Failure rate for D through B rating 1.29
12-yr Failure Rate 0.71
38
30
30
21
10
Source A.M. Best Insurance Information
Institute 1993-2003
28Reason for P/C Insolvencies(218 Insolvencies,
1993-2002)
Reserve deficiencies account for more than half
of all p/c insurers insolvencies
So far, Katrina appears to have claimed just 1
victimRosemont Reexpected to go into run-off
Source A.M. Best, Insurance Information
Institute
29Ratings Agencies Tightening Requirements for CATs
- 2006 SRQ CAT Model Reqs.
- All Property Exposure
- Auto Physical Damage
- Reinsurance Assumed
- Pools Assessments
- All Flood Exposure
- WC Losses from Quake
- Fire Following
- Storm Surge
- Demand Surge
- Secondary Uncertainty
- ALSO A.M. Best will perform additional
stress-tested risk-adjusted capital analysis
for a second event in order to determine the
potential financial condition of an entity post a
severe event. - IMPLICATION Some insurers may be required to
carry more capital to maintain the same rating.
Best currently estimates PML for 100-yr. wind
250-yr. quake to determine capital adequacy
SRQ Supplemental Rating Questionnaire Source
A.M. Best Review Preview, January 2006.
30Historical Ratings Distribution,US P/C Insurers,
2000 vs. 2005
2000
2005
A/A shrinkage
Ratings agencies increasing emphasis on multiple
events?require more capital
Source A.M. Best Rating Downgrades Slowed but
Outpaced Upgrades for Fourth Consecutive Year,
Special Report, November 8, 2004 for 2000 2006
Review Preview for 2005 distribution.
Ratings B and lower.
31P/C Insurers Maintaining Rating of A or Better
Rating for 50 Years
- P/C Company
- AIU Insurance Co.
- Alfa Mutual Ins. Co.
- Amica Mutual Ins. Co.
- Church Mutual Ins. Co.
- Federal Insurance Co.
- General Reinsurance Corp.
- Great Northern Ins. Co.
- Lititz Mutual Ins. Co.
- Nationwide Mutual Fire Co.
- Otsego Mutual Fire
- Quincy Mutual Fire Ins. Co.
- State Automobile Mutual Ins. Co.
- State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co.
- Vigilant Insurance Co.
- Group Affiliation
- American International Group
- Alfa Insurance Group
- Amica Mutual Group
- None
- Chubb Group of Ins Cos.
- Berkshire Hathaway Ins. Group
- Chubb Group of Ins Cos.
- Lititz Mutual Group
- Nationwide Mutual Group
- None
- Quincy Mutual Group
- State Auto Ins. Group
- State Farm Group
- Chubb Group of Ins Cos.
Source Bests Review, January 1, 2004.
32Underwriting Matters Because Pricing is Often
Undisciplined
33Private Passenger AutoCombined Ratios, 1993-2005E
Somebody remembered
Somebody forgot theres a relationship between
price and underwriting performance
Sources Insurance Information Institute from
A.M. Best and NAIC data 2004/5 expenditure
estimates from III.
34CATASTROPHE LOSS MANAGEMENTFailure to
Adequately Manage this Risk Has Been Devastating
35Most of US Population Property Has Major CAT
Exposure
36U.S. InsuredCatastrophe Losses ( Billions)
Billions
100 Billion CAT year is coming soon
2005 was by far the worst year ever for insured
catastrophe losses in the US, but the worst has
yet to come.
Excludes 4B-6b offshore energy losses from
Hurricanes Katrina Rita. Note 2001 figure
includes 20.3B for 9/11 losses reported through
12/31/01. Includes only business and personal
property claims, business interruption and auto
claims. Non-prop/BI losses 12.2B. Source
Property Claims Service/ISO Insurance
Information Institute
37Insured Property Catastrophe Losses as Net
Premiums Earned, 19832005E
US CAT losses were a record 14.3 of net premiums
earned in 2005 and were 4.3 times the 1984-2004
average of 3.3
Insurance Information Institute estimate of
14.3 for 2005 based estimated 2005 DPE of
418.8B and estimated insured CAT losses of
60B. Sources ISO, A.M. Best, Swiss Re Economic
Research Consulting Insurance Information
Institute.
382005 Was a Busy, Destructive, Deadly Expensive
Hurricane Season
All 21 names were used for the first time ever,
so Greek letters were used for the final 6
storms Alpha though Zeta
2005 set a new record for the number of
hurricanes tropical storms at 27, breaking the
old record set in 1933.
Source WeatherUnderground.com, January 18, 2006.
39Number of Major (Category 3, 4, 5) Hurricanes
Striking the US by Decade
1930s mid-1960s Period of Intense Tropical
Cyclone Activity
Mid-1990s 2030s? New Period of Intense Tropical
Cyclone Activity
10
Tropical cyclone activity in the mid-1990s
entered the active phase of the multi-decadal
signal that could last into the 2030s
Already as many major storms in 2000-2005 as in
all of the 1990s
Figure for 2000s is extrapolated based on data
for 2000-2005 (6 major storms Charley, Ivan,
Jeanne (2004) Katrina, Rita, Wilma
(2005)). Source Tillinghast from National
Hurricane Center http//www.nhc.noaa.gov/pastint.
shtm.
40Top 10 U.S. Cities for Hurricane Risk
Source AIR Worldwide
41Number of Hurricanes Directly and Indirectly
Affecting the Northeast United States Since 1900
Hurricanes affect Northeast more commonly than
presumed
Source New Hampshire Office of Emergency
Management
42Inflation-Adjusted U.S. Insured Catastrophe
Losses By Cause of Loss, 1985-2004¹
Insured disaster losses totaled 221.3 billion
from 1984-2004 (in 2004 dollars). After 2005
season, tropical cyclones will account for about
45 of the total.
1 Catastrophes are all events causing direct
insured losses to property of 25 million or more
in 2004 dollars. Catastrophe threshold changed
from 5 million to 25 million beginning in 1997.
Adjusted for inflation by the III. 2 Excludes
snow. 3 Includes hurricanes and tropical storms.
4 Includes other geologic events such as volcanic
eruptions and other earth movement. 5 Does not
include flood damage covered by the federally
administered National Flood Insurance Program. 6
Includes wildland fires.
Source Insurance Information Institute estimates
based on ISO data.
43Number of Tornados Associated Deaths, 1985-2005p
There appears to be an upward trend in the number
of tornados, though not deaths. Detection
Increase?
Source III from National Weather Service data.
44Total Value of Insured Coastal Exposure (2004,
Billions)
Source AIR Worldwide
45Value of Insured Residential Coastal Exposure
(2004, Billions)
Source AIR
46Insured Coastal Exposure as a of Statewide
Insured Exposure (2004, Billions)
Source AIR Worldwide
47The 2006 Hurricane SeasonPreview to Disaster?
48Outlook for 2006 Hurricane Season
Average over the period 1950-2000. As of
December 4, 2005. Source Dr. William Gray,
Colorado State University, December 6, 2005.
49Probability of Major Hurricane Landfall (CAT 3,
4, 5) in 2006
Average over past century. Source Dr. William
Gray, Colorado State University, December 6, 2005.
50Hurricanes Katrina, Rita WilmaTheir Place in
History
51Insured Loss Claim Count for Major Storms of
2005
Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, Wilma Dennis produced
a record 3.2 million claims
Property and business interruption losses only.
Excludes offshore energy marine losses. Source
ISO/PCS as of February 8, 2006 Insurance
Information Institute.
52Top 10 Most Costly Hurricanes in US History,
(Insured Losses, 2005)
Seven of the 10 most expensive hurricanes in US
history occurred in the 14 months from Aug. 2004
Oct. 2005 Katrina, Rita, Wilma, Charley, Ivan,
Frances Jeanne
Sources ISO/PCS Insurance Information
Institute.
53Hurricane Katrina Insured Loss Distribution by
State ( Millions)
Louisiana accounted for 64 of the insured losses
paid and 56 of the claims filed
Total Insured Losses 38.111 Billion
As of February 8, 2006 Source PCS division of
ISO.
54Hurricane Katrina Claim Count Distribution by
State
Louisiana accounted for 64of insured losses paid
and 56 of claims filed
Total Claims 1,751,800
As of February 8, 2006 Source PCS division of
ISO.
55Hurricane Katrina Loss Distribution by Line (
Billions)
Total insured losses are estimated at 38.1
billion from 1.7518 million claims. Excludes
2-3B in offshore energy losses
As of February 8, 2006 Source PCS division of
ISO.
56Hurricane Katrina Insured Loss and Claim
Distribution by State
As of February 8, 2006. Source PCS division of
ISO.
57Hurricane Rita Insured Loss Distribution by State
( Millions)
Louisiana accounted for 59 of the insured
losses, Texas 40. Total claims
381,000. Excludes offshore energy losses of 2-3B
Total Insured Losses 4.9762 Billion
As of February 8, 2006 Source PCS division of
ISO.
58Hurricane Rita Claim Count Distribution by State
Louisiana accounted for 48.6 of the insured
losses, Texas 44.4. Excludes offshore energy
losses of 2-3B
Total Claims 381,000
As of February 8, 2006 Source PCS division of
ISO.
59Hurricane Rita Loss Distribution, by Line (
Millions)
Total insured losses are estimated at 5.0
billion (excl. offshore energy of 2-3B) from
381,000 claims.
As of February 8, 2006 Source PCS division of
ISO.
60Hurricane Rita Insured Loss and Claim
Distribution by State
As of February 8, 2006. Source PCS division of
ISO.
61Government Aid After Major Disasters (Billions)
Hurricane Katrina aid will dwarf aid following
all other disasters. Congress may authorize
150-200 billion ultimately (about 400,000 for
each of the 500,000 displaced families). Is the
incentive to buy insurance and insure to value
diminished?
Within 3 weeks of Katrinas LA landfall, the
federal government had authorized 75B in
aidmore than all the federal aid for the 9/11
terrorist attacks, 2004s 4 hurricanes and
Hurricane Andrew combined! 29B more was
authorized in Dec. 2005. At least 80B more is
sought.
In 2005 dollars. Source United States Senate
Budget Committee, Insurance Information Institute
as of 12/31/05.
62Distribution of Katrina Losses by Market
(Billions)
Source Hurricane Katrina Analysis of the Impact
on the Insurance Industry, Tillinghast, October
2005.
63Overview of Plans for a National Catastrophe
Insurance Plan
64NAICs Comprehensive National Catastrophe Plan
- Proposes Layered Approach to Risk
- Layer 1 Maximize resources of private insurance
reinsurance industry - Includes All Perils Residential Policy
- Encourage Mitigation
- Create Meaningful, Forward-Looking Reserves
- Layer 2 Establishes system of state catastrophe
funds (like FHCF) - Layer 3 Federal Catastrophe Reinsurance Mechanism
Source Insurance Information Institute
65Comprehensive National Catastrophe Plan Schematic
1500 Event
National Catastrophe Contract Program
150 Event
State Regional Catastrophe Fund
Private Reinsurance
State Attachment
Personal Disaster Account
Private Insurance
Source NAIC, Natural Catastrophe Risk Creating
a Comprehensive National Plan, Dec. 1, 2005
Insurance Information. Inst.
66Legislation Comprehensive National Catastrophe
Plan
- H.R. 846 Homeowners Insurance Availability Act
of 2005 - Introduced by Representative Ginny Brown-Waite
(R-FL) - Requires Treasury to implement a reinsurance
program offering contracts sold at regional
auctions - H.R. 4366 Homeowners Insurance Protection Act of
2005 - Also worked on by Rep. Brown-Waite
- Establishes national commission on catastrophe
preparation and protection - Authorizes sale of federally-backed reinsurance
contracts to state catastrophe funds - H.R. 2668 Policyholder Disaster Protection Act
of 2005 - Backed by Rep. Mark Foley (R-FL)
- Amends IRS code to permit insurers to establish
tax-deductible reserve funds for catastrophic
events - 20-year phase-in for maximum reserve
- Use limited to declared disasters
Source NAIC, Insurance Information Institute
67Profit Pillar 2PRICINGCan Discipline be
Maintained?
68Average Expenditures on Homeowners Insurance
Countrywide home insurance expenditures are
expected to rise at least 4 in 2006
Homeowners in CAT zones will see much larger
increases
69Average Expenditures on Auto Insurance
Countrywide auto insurance expenditures are
expected to rise 1.5 in 2006
Will the big guys stay disciplined? So far, so
good. Tiering adopted to avoid adverse selection
70Profit Pillar 3INVESTMENTSDoes Investment
Performance Affect Discipline?
71Property/Casualty Insurance Industry Investment
Gain
Investment gains are rising but will still fall
short of their 1998 peak. CAT losses will reduce
investable assets.
Investment gains consist primarily of interest,
stock dividends and realized capital gains and
losses. Annualized 2005 figure based on data as
of 9/30/05, adjusted for special dividend of
3.1B. Source Insurance Services Office
Insurance Information Institute.
72Profit Pillar 4EXPENSESWill Expense Ratio
Rise as Premium Growth Slows?
73Personal Lines Underwriting Expense Ratio,
1994-2005E
Can the downward trend in PPA and HO expenses
ratios be sustained as premium growth slows?
Ratio of expenses incurred to net premiums
written. 2005 figures are III estimates. Source
A.M. Best Insurance Information Institute
74Profit Pillar 5LEVERAGECan the Industry
Efficiently Employ Its Increasing Capital?
75U.S. Policyholder Surplus 1975-2005
Capacity TODAY is 414.3B, 5.2 above year-end
2004, 45 above its 2002 trough and 22 above its
mid-1999 peak. Sufficient capacity exists to pay
all hurricane claims.
Billions
Foreign reinsurance and residual market
mechanisms absorbed 27-32B (57-67) of 9-month
2005 CAT losses of 47.6B
Surplus is a measure of underwriting capacity.
It is analogous to Owners Equity or Net Worth
in non-insurance organizations
Source A.M. Best, ISO, Insurance Information
Institute As of 9/30/05.
76Announced Insurer Capital Raising( Millions,
as of December 1, 2005)
As of Dec. 1, 19 insurers announced plans to
raise 9.95 billion in new capital. Twelve
start-ups plan to raise as much as 8.65 billion
more for a total of 18.65B. Likely at least 20B
raised eventually.
Existing companies will continue to find it
relatively easy to raise cash
Existing (re) insurers. Announced amounts may
differ from sums actually raised. Sources
Morgan Stanley, Lehman Brothers, Company Reports
Insurance Information Institute.
77Announced Capital Raising by Insurance
Start-Ups( Millions, as of December 11, 2006)
As of Dec. 11, 13 start-ups plan to raise as much
as 8.75 billion.
so will start-ups
Chubb, Trident are funding Harbor Point.
Announced amounts may differ from sums actually
raised. Stated amount is 750 million to 1
billion. XL Capital/Hedge Fund venture. Arrow
Capital formed by Goldman Sachs. Sources Morgan
Stanley, Company Reports Insurance Information
Institute.
78Profit Pillar 6P/C OPERATING ENVIRONMENTHave
Things Changed for the Better?
79TORT SYSTEM
80Personal, Commercial Self (Un) Insured Tort
Costs
Total 219.2 Billion
State Farm is a leader is drawing the line on
litigation (e.g., Avery Campbell decisions, MS
litigation)
Total 157.7 Billion
Billions
Total 120.2 Billion
Total 39.5 Billion
Excludes medical malpractice Source
Tillinghast-Towers Perrin
81Tort System Costs, 2000-2006E
After a period of rapid escalation, tort system
costs as of GDP appear to be stabilizing
Source Tillinghast-Towers Perrin
82Other Operational Challenges
- Insurance Scoring Challenges Based on Disparate
Impact - Territorial Rating Race-Based Issues Loom Large
- CAT Modeling Need Greater Acceptance by
Regulators - Regulatory Environment Still Antiquated
83AUTO HOMEA SUCCESSFUL SHIFT TO THE
UNDERWRITING CULTURE?
84Private Passenger Auto
85Private Passenger Auto is Enormous Part of P/C
Industry
Private passenger auto accounted for 34.7 or
162.2B in DPW in 2004
95.8B
66.4B
251.6B
53.2B
Source A.M. Best Insurance Information
Institute
86Auto InsuranceDirect Premiums Written
162.2B 11.9
145.1B 9.8
132.1B 8.1
122.2B 1.3
120.6B 1.4
118.9B 2.4
116.1B 5.0
110.5B 4.3
106.0B 5.3
100.7B 5.2
95.7B
Billions
Source A.M. Best Insurance Information Institute
87Motor Vehicle Retail Sales (Millions of Units)
New Motor Vehicle Sales Sales of automobiles
are being hurt by high gas prices and rising
interest rates Likely some shift away from SUVs
to cars
Source US Department of Commerce Insurance
Information Institute Blue Chip Economic
Indicators as of January 2006 through 2007 III
forecast thereafter.
88Private Passenger Auto Combined Ratio
PPA is the profit juggernaut of the p/c insurance
industry today
Average Combined 1993 to 2004 102.7 Many auto
insurers have shown sig-nificant improvements in
underwriting performance since mid-2002
Sources A.M. Best III
89RNW Private Passenger Auto, United States,
1992-2006F
Segmentation should help profitability
Private passenger auto profitability deteriorated
throughout the 1990s but has improved dramatically
Source NAIC Insurance Information Institute
90Private Passenger AutoIncurred Loss Ratios,
1999-2005Q3
Loss ratios for all major coverages trending
down Comp is CAT impacted
Source ISO Fast Track Insurance Information
Institute. Direct
basis
91Pure Premium Spread Personal Auto PD Liability,
2000-2005Q3
Margin necessary to maintain PPA profitability
Inversion of pure premium spread is a warning sign
2004 PPA Combined94
2000 PPA Combined110
Source Insurance Information Institute
calculations based ISO Fast Track and US BLS data.
92Bodily Injury Severity Trends Now Offset
Declining Claim Freq.
Medical inflation a powerful cost driver
Four quarters ending 2005Q3. Source ISO Fast
Track data.
93PD Liability Frequency Trend Swamps Rising
Claim Severity
Fewer accidents, but more damage when they occur
Higher Deductibles?
Four quarters ending 2005Q3. Source ISO Fast
Track data.
94PIP Frequency Trend Now Offsets Rising Claim
Severity
Fraud caused problems from 1999-2001
Four quarters ending 2005Q3. Source ISO Fast
Track data.
95Collision Frequency Trend Swamps Rising Claim
Severity
Four quarters ending 2005Q3. Source ISO Fast
Track data.
96Comprehensive Favorable Frequency and Severity
Trends
Four quarters ending 2005Q3. Source ISO Fast
Track data.
97Homeowners
98Private Passenger Auto is Enormous Part of P/C
Industry
Private passenger auto accounted for 34.7 or
162.2B in DPW in 2004
95.8B
66.4B
251.6B
53.2B
Source A.M. Best Insurance Information
Institute
99Homeowners InsuranceDirect Premiums Written
Homeowners premium growth has been strong,
tracking the US real estate boom and higher rates
53.2B 9.2
48.7B 13.3
43.0B 14.4
37.6B 8.7
34.6B 6.5
32.5B 5.2
Billions
30.9B 5.8
29.1B 6.2
26.0B 6.6
27.4B 5.4
24.4B 6.6
22.9B
Source A.M. Best Insurance Information Institute
100New Private Housing Starts(Millions of Units)
Exposure growth forecast for HO insurers is
excellent, though new building is expected to
slow modestly
Source US Department of Commerce Blue Chip
Economic Indicators (1/06), Insurance Info.
Institute
101Homeowners Insurance Combined Ratio
Average 1990 to 2005E 114 Insurers have paid out
an average of 1.14 in losses for every dollar
earned in premiums over the past 16 years
Sources A.M. Best III
102Rates of Return on Net Worth for Homeowners Ins
US
Averages 1993 to 2005E US HO Insurance 3.4
Source NAIC 2004/5 figures are Insurance
Information Institute estimates.
103INSURANCE-TO-VALUEEnding the Blame Game is
aWin-Win Situation Deal
104Insurance-to-Value in HO is a National Problem,
Improved Recently
Less than ITV means homeowners insurers left 8
billion on the table in 2003
According MS/B. Source Marshall Swift/Boeckh
105Whos Responsibility Is It to Keep Homeowners
Policy Up-to-Date?
- Nearly 3 out 4 people, even fire-weary
Californians, believe it is the homeowners
responsibility to keep insurance up-to-date - BUT 26 believe its the agents or insurers
responsibility - This substantial minority is wrong, but gets
heard (CA, FL) and comments reflect badly on
insurers - Media, regulators and legislators join fray
Source September 2004 poll of 800 Californians
conducted for the Insurance Information Network
of California by Public Opinion Strategies.
Margin of error /- 3.46.
106Time Since Homeowner Last Updated HO Policy
- Nearly 40 of people havent updated their
homeowners policy within the last 3 years - Huge potential for problems, especially in
disaster-prone states - Leads automatically to large under-insurance
problems
Source September 2004 poll of 800 Californians
conducted for the Insurance Information Network
of California by Public Opinion Strategies.
Margin of error /- 3.46.
107Why People Dont Increase Homeowners Coverage
- 22 cite expense as reason they dont adjust
theyre HO coverage - 25 dont realize they need to
- 30 say theyre too busy (to think about
protecting their most valuable asset) - 25 say their agent said theres nothing to worry
about
Source Harris interactive poll conducted for
Firemans Fund, July 2004. See
http//www.firemansfund.com/dcmssites/about/pdf/fi
remansfundtoplinerev2.pdf
108Summary
- Home/Auto picture is bright for 2006, assuming
normal CAT loss activity - Concern about pricing discipline, esp. if
freq/severity trends turn adverse - Rising investment returns insufficient to support
deep soft market in terms of price, terms
conditions - Clear need to be more underwriting focused
- Major Challenges
- Maintaining price/underwriting discipline
- Managing variability/volatility of results
109Insurance Information Institute On-Line
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