Skip to main content

Analysis: Insurers face big losses from weather disasters


Devastating tornadoes, floods, earthquakes overseas and a busier-than-usualhurricane season have U.S. insurance companies bracing for record losses in 2011.

Insurers could suffer as much as $10 billion from weather-related losses in the United States in 2011, which is up from the average of $2 billion to $4 billion, according to EQECAT Inc, which provides disaster and risk models to insurance companies.

On top of the potential U.S. losses, insurers are also reeling from disasters overseas, including large earthquakes across the Pacific Rim. And as if that was not enough, analysts now expect an above-average Atlantic hurricane season.

"This is not a black swan year that is an absolute worst case, but it is significant and it is close to that," said Jose Miranda, director of client advocacy at EQECAT Inc, which provides disaster and risk models to insurance companies.




Globally -- including the major earthquakes in New Zealand and Japan -- U.S. and overseas insurers could post up to $55 billion in losses, EQECAT projects.

Some insurers have already posted large losses due to the Japan and New Zealand quakes.

Berkshire Hathaway Inc (BRKa.N)(BRKb.N) lost $1.07 billion from the Japan earthquake and $412 million from the quake in New Zealand.

During the annual meeting in Omaha, Nebraska on April 30, CEO Warren Buffet said the company would likely post its first full-year loss in insurance underwriting in nine years.

And insurance stocks have lagged the broader market because of investor worries about catastrophic losses.

The S&P Insurance Index .IUX is flat since the beginning of the year, lagging the broader S&P 500 Index .SPX, which has risen 4.7 percent.

ROUGH WEATHER

In the United States, spring storms -- and the billions of dollars in damage left behind -- were the result of a rare confluence of more violent weather hitting densely populated areas, said James Aman, a senior meteorologist with Earth Networks Inc - Weatherbug.

"It has been a particularly devastating year," said Aman.

Over a six-week period this spring, tornadoes ripped through Southeastern and Midwestern states flattening neighborhoods in large Southern cities such as Raleigh, North Carolina and Tuscaloosa, Alabama.

So far, tornadoes have killed 365 people in the United States, a figure nearly six times higher than the three-year average of 64 deaths, according to the National Weather Service.

Already, 1,151 tornadoes have occurred in the United States this year, nearing the 1,282 reported in all of 2010, but below the all-time high of 1,820 in 2004.

The increase in Spring storms has insurers preparing for the worst.

In a recent interview with Reuters, Hartford Financial Services Group Inc (HIG.N) Chief Executive Liam McGee said the company expected second quarter catastrophic losses to rise.

"I don't think there's any question that there will be a bit more to handle," McGee said on May 2 after Hartford reported first quarter results.

Others are increasing the disclosure of their losses. The nation's largest home insurer, Allstate Corp (ALL.N), said last week it would take the unusual step of disclosing any monthly catastrophic loss estimates that exceed $150 million. The company projected the April storms would cost $1.4 billion and totaled more than 100,000 claims.

As tornado season slows this summer, insurers will have to contend with a busy hurricane season, although less active than last year.

The National Weather Service projects as many as 18 named storms this year, compared with the long-term historical average of about 11.

Miranda said insurers avoided large losses last year, despite a record number of hurricanes, because none made landfall in the United States, a lucky break that is unlikely to be repeated.

"Chances of that happening again are definitely slim," he added.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Ukrainians injured as police dismantle Kiev 'tent city'

At least 10 demonstrators have been injured in clashes with Ukrainian police and another 100 detained in the capital Kiev after authorities began dismantling a makeshift "tent city" protesting against corruption. The tent city was set up in October by supporters of Mikheil Saakashvili, a former president of Georgia who has become an opposition politician in Ukraine. Saakashvili, a critic of corruption in Ukraine, was deported to Poland in February. He said he was "kidnapped" by Ukrainian authorities and removed from the country against his will. Andriy Kryshchneko, police chief of police, said at the camp on Saturday that "two court decisions" allowed authorities to search and dismantle the camp. Police said that explosives and other weapons were found at the scene

ASSIGNING OF PREFERENTIAL NUMBERS FOR LG POLLS COMPLETED

The Election Secretariat announced that assigning preferential numbers for candidates of the Local Government election to be held for 67 bodies has been completed. Preparations are currently underway to hold the polls under the 2010 electoral register, Additional Elections Commissioner W.P. Sumanasiri said. The electoral register of the year 2010 is scheduled to be certified on June 31.

In abrupt turnaround, Olympus admits it hid losses

Japan's Olympus admitted on Tuesday it hid losses on securities investments dating back two decades, bowing to weeks of pressure to explain a series of baffling transactions that have put the future of the firm in doubt. The revelations by the 92-year-old company appear to vindicate ex-CEO Michael Woodford, who has staged a campaign since being sacked on October 14 to force the firm to come clean on nearly $1.5 billion in questionable payments. Olympus President Shuichi Takayama blamed Tsuyoshi Kikukawa, who quit as president and chairman on October 26, Vice-President Hisashi Mori and internal auditor Hideo Yamada for the cover-up, saying he would consider criminal complaints against them. The admission after weeks of denials shocked investors, sending shares in the endoscope and camera maker skidding almost 30 percent and prompting the biggest non-Japanese shareholder to demand the replacement of the entire board. "Ignorance is no defense," said Jo...