Archive for the 'Insurance & Reinsurance' Category

04
Jan
12

My top five headaches for the UK insurance industry

For those running brokers and insurance companies in the UK non-life market, 2012 promises to be a challenging year with reputation topping my list of worries for the industry.

Issues ranging from closure of a £500m tax loophole to  how major property exposures can be managed once a decades-old pact to insure buildings at risk of flooding comes to an end; these and more will all vie for directors’ attention alongside the day to day running of businesses typically located at the grudge purchase end of the high street.

With concerns both legislative and market-driven requiring considerable thought, here’s my top five insurance industry headscratchers.

Continue reading ‘My top five headaches for the UK insurance industry’

28
Jul
11

Results and repetition

The first half financial reporting season is upon us and as always it will be a challenge for reporters to make the story behind each firm’s numbers sound different.

This is because as certain major themes make an impact across the board the results of one company can appear almost interchangeable with other similar underwriters and sometimes it appears that only the names and exact figures differ.

This reporting season the key phrases to watch out for will be ‘major claims’, ‘first half catastrophes’, ‘soft market conditions’ and ‘North Atlantic hurricane season’.

For those with a firm eye on the bottom line the key expression will likely be either ‘fell to a loss’ or ‘profits down’.

Amongst the early reporters in the London Market were Brit Insurance and The Insurance Insider noted that the company “reported a first-half net profit of £6.8mn, down from £77.5mn in H1 2010, in the firm’s first results posted under new private equity owners Apollo and CVC”.

Things were worse over at Beazley, its $24.2mn half-year loss getting “a mixed reception from analysts… as the company reported a 108 percent combined ratio on major disaster losses of $183mn”, according to The Insurance Insider.

The publication also reported that Hardy – which has yet to post its results – had “increased its loss estimates for the Q1 natural catastrophes after receiving new information from ceding companies”.

And had “bought more reinsurance in preparation for the North Atlantic hurricane season”.

On the bright side for (re)insurers the company also reported that it had achieved rate rises of 4.1% across its portfolio during the renewals that have taken place in 2011, so it looks as if the market cycle may be beginning to turn.

Things in Europe and Bermuda took a similar turn as Business Insurance reported that “ACE Ltd. and RenaissanceRe Holdings Ltd. had weaker earnings between January and June, and PartnerRe Ltd. announced its losses related to recent events”.

ACE’s earnings may have been more than respectable at $866mn in the first half of the year, but that’s down from $1.43 billion during the same period in 2010.

In fact BI was being kind to RenRe, which had made a Q2 profit of $24.8mn, compared with a profit of $210.2mn last year, but this was overshadowed by a loss of $223.3mn during the first half of this year.

BI reported: “Tornadoes in the U.S. caused RenRe $70.8mn of losses in the second quarter. The company estimated in April that it also lost $328.6mn from the March 11 earthquake and tsunami in Japan, $197.1mn from the New Zealand earthquake, and $39.6mn from Australian floods.”

PartnerRe’s loss from US tornadoes in April and May are estimated at $89mn in losses while it also increased its previous loss estimate for the New Zealand earthquake to $59mn.

Elsewhere, Arch Capital reported a first-half profit of $111.2mn, down 75.2% from $447.5mn for the first half of 2010.

It will be interesting to see how many more companies follow these patterns and which terms the press use to describe the results as they come in. I may even make myself a bingo card with some of the favourites and play as I read.

01
Jun
11

Referral fees – cash in while you can

Like any risk taking market, there are a lot of things which get up the insurance industry’s nose; young irresponsible drivers, everyone paving over their front drives, burglars tripping over a fold in the carpet at the end of a heist and suing the homeowner – you name it, there’s been a campaign to fight every scurge.

But few have been faught with the collective vehemence of the battle against the payment of referral fees by personal injury lawyers in exchange for a case. Since their introduction in 2004, the claimant legal sector has built up a thriving industry on payment of these charges to accident management companies, insurance brokers and insurers. On the basis that when an individual is innocently injured by a negligent third party (rear-end shunt, slip, trip fall etc) they are entitled to compensation from the latter, this has burnt a halo onto the heads of innocents everywhere in the now familiar; “oh you’ve been injured, we can help you” sent by text or advertised on TV.

Because costs are recoverable from the third party at the point of settlement, it’s been worth pursuing claims in the knowledge that liability is rarely questioned. Secondly, with solicitors willing to pay between £600-£1000 per case, the justification for ‘farming’ these injuries and selling them on has been fairly obvious for some time.

However, in recent months and despite its complicity in this marketplace almost all insurance industry trade groups have called for a ban; The Association of British Insurers, British Insurance Brokers Association, the Lloyd’s Market Association; all have said this cannot continue. For example in April, Nick Starling, ABI director of general insurance and health, told Post Magazine: “Enough is enough. Putting the brake on ambulance-chasing lawyers and claims management firms cannot come a moment too soon. Motorists have rightly had enough of paying for excessive legal costs, which add an extra 10% to the cost of motor insurance.

“It cannot be right that for every £1 motor insurers pay out in compensation; an extra 87p is paid out in legal costs.”

However, the legal sector remains steadfastly of the view that access to justice is at stake and these payments are not detrimental to clients. On May 27th, the Legal Services Board dropped plans to force its membership to publish their payment of the fees through their own web sites, whilst promising to ‘shine the light of transparency’ on them to ‘manage their impact’.

Understandably the insurance industry reacted negatively to the news, but in the end cold, hard cash did the talking some days later. on 31st May, stock market analyst Collins Stewart was bullish about the prospects of FTSE 100 darling Admiral Insurance precisely because of the LSB’s protectionist stance. Referral fees are to continue and Admiral will carry on earning a tidy sum from them; a fact that won’t have gone unnoticed by the many pension funds with holdings in the motor insurer.

The insurance industry has secured a number of significant victories in recent months, not least the likelihood that the loser pays business model will be removed in favour of a contingent fees structure for most types of civil litigation. It has also rightly complained that inflation was rising much too quickly within the area of personal injury, which was backed up by the industry’s most recent Bodily Injury Awards Study published in 2007.

Insurers can also take comfort in the fact that claims inflation is expected to rise further but the level of increase may be about to plateau with datamonitor revising its prediction of 2010-14 growth in claims costs down from 5.45 to 3.7% – a more comfortable figure given current levels of inflation around the general economy.

Once all’s been said and done, personal injury claims will remain big business. Those earning money from their persuit will alter business models based on a low cost up front model that promises to generate compensation cheaply and simply. Insurers will just keep having to work hard to pay the genuine claims and bat away the chancers.

This article was written by freelance business journalist and PR consultant Ralph Savage.

13
May
11

#BIBA2011: Insurance industry joins social media age

This week’s British Insurance Brokers’ Association conference may be the last of its kind, with the trade body announcing a proposed merger with the Institute of Insurance Brokers.
But for me it will be remembered as an event where the hashtag #biba2011 became the label that brought delegates together.
As a regular tweeter from the event myself, I was delighted to see how much banter and reportage flowed from delegate and media smartphones alike. As long as one’s device had enough charge, you could easily keep abreast of developments from the lecture theatres and exhibition hall simultaneously, whilst networking in person with the thousands of professionals at Manchester Central Exhibition Hall (I can’t stop calling it the G-Mex).
Admitedly there were still only a minority of individuals and corporate tweeters sharing their news, thoughts and opinions in 140 characters or less, but the discussion and intrigue amongst those yet to delve into online social networking was palpable.
Barely a moment went by when I wasn’t asked by someone to explain precisely what social media was adding to the mix at #biba2011 and I was happy to show them via tweetdeck or hootsuite just how busy the banter had become.
Every video posted by Insurance Times, Insurance Age or Post Magazine was tweeted and linked, while corporate accounts jostled for attention with their wizzy promos and Ipad2 giveaways.
Sure, the limelight is fleeting on social networks and very often much of what is said can be banal, self promotional or just dull. But for these two days there was a genuine sense that people were talking to eachother and networking without the handshakes.
Online social networking is like a conference that goes on 24hours a day. When you are networking both physically and online, this makes the conference and exhibition scenario all the more powerful and I’m glad the insurance industry has begun to see the light.

This article was written by freelance business journalist and PR consultant Ralph Savage.

28
Apr
11

Happy 30th Birthday to Reactions

Congratulations to Reactions which this month is celebrating its 30th birthday.

The staff of the magazine have produced a special anniversary issue and have gone to town on lists that cover the good, bad and the ugly of the (re)insurance industry between 1981 and 2011.

Needless to say the insurance industry and world in which it operated in were very, very different in 1981 to today.

‘The Biggest Events’, ‘The Most Influential People’ and the magazine’s ’30 Best Covers’ it must be a journalistic trait because I love lists like these (a bit like one of Nick Hornby’s geekier characters). They are good fun to compile and read, but also prompt some healthy debate and retrospection on the events that have shaped the world and the people at the heart of them.

There are the thoughts of industry big hitters such as Hank Greenberg, Bill Berkley, Brian Duperreault and Grahame Chilton on subjects including the lessons of the last 30 years and the rise of the big three brokers.

Meanwhile Garry Booth’s reflections on almost 30 years of reporting on the (re)insurance industry serve to remind us that the media has also changed out of all recognition since 1981. I mean, what’s a typewriter?

So, once again congratulations to Reactions on reaching the big 3-0 and congratulations to the staff there for such an entertaining and interesting issue to mark it with.

13
Apr
11

So much for #PRFAIL what about #PRprowess!

The relationship between journalists and their subjects is often a fractious affair, dominated by mistrust and mutual loathing.

By ‘subjects’, I mean of course companies and organisations and the PR people that represent them.

Owing to a pen-mightier-than-sword issue that relationship is publicly a very one way thing, and this is rather nicely illustrated by the amount of traffic involving the #PRFAIL hashtag on twitter.

However, it’s interesting to see the kudos with which corporate power can be bestowed upon an organisation by journalists because of its formidable PR prowess. Insurance Times‘ Saxon East this week wrote his editorial on just such a thing, when he revealed his thinking behind the relative success of rivals The AA and RAC.

Ruminating over the sale of RAC from Aviva, Saxon chose to compliment the AA’s PR strategy and personnel, saying that their content and approach to dealing with journalists is second to none. This, he suggested, might be one of the deciding factors in the AA’s success at a time during which the RAC stumbled along under Aviva’s ownership and was eventually sold for a fraction of its previous value.

It’s an interesting suggestion and certainly not without merit. Let’s see how they get on with new owners.

This article was written by freelance business journalist and PR consultant Ralph Savage.

23
Mar
11

How we reported on Japan

The Japanese earthquake and tsunami have of course dominated the (re)insurance pages for the last 10 days or so. I have mentioned before on these pages the slightly odd nature of being a business journalist at a time like this and having to focus on the financial consequences of what is essentially a human tragedy.

So how did the (re)insurance press cover this extraordinary catastrophe?

Reinsurance Magazine was on the cusp of going to press when the quake struck. It still managed to get a striking image of a boat trapped in a whirlpool onto the cover and include some thoughts that this may be the event that finally turns the soft market on the inside.

Others with more time at their disposal have managed to analyse some of the myriad aspects of this disaster.

Business Insurance has been looking at the estimates for the total economic losses caused by the catastrophe, with the help of the cat modelling firms.

BI reports that at present RMS are still hedging their bets and have a spread of $200bn-$300bn on the economic loss while rivals AIR and EQECAT estimate that insured losses are $15-$35bn and $12-$25bn respectively.

This “guessing game” over the exact nature and totality of the losses is discussed in Michael Loney’s comment piece in Reactions.

The article goes on to highlight the uncertainty now afflicting investors, which (re)insurers will take a hit and why it is unlikely that this loss, even taken in conjunction with events in Australasia, will harden global (re)insurance rates.

One reinsurer that definitely will take a hit is Munich Re, as Post reported, the German giant has revealed it expects losses of EUR1.5bn and that means it won’t hit its profit target of EUR2.4bn for 2011.

One area that stands out for its lack of coverage in contrast to that of the mainstream news is the ongoing travails of the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear reactors.

This is because the vast majority of the loss will be retained by the Japanese government, although Post reports that nuclear rates may increase regardless.

Meanwhile The Review highlights the possible impact on ratings and the moderate affect on the Life market.

And The Insurance Insider reveals that Lloyd’s has assigned the event its own loss code, the code 11D, helping the Franchise Board keep track of the size and volume of claims.

The Insider also discusses the knock-on affect the disaster may have on aspects as diverse as the personal accident market, Industry Loss Warranties and catastrophe bonds.

23
Feb
11

It depends on how you look at these things…2010 results

Here we go again, it’s that time of year when companies release their full-year results and once more it’s a mixed bag from the (re)insurance firmament.
You might be forgiven that 2010 had not been kind to carriers, what with all those natural disasters such as earthquakes in Chile and New Zealand, freezing winters in Europe and the US and floods seemingly everywhere.
Not to mention a prolonged soft market in most classes of business.
But, there was plenty of good news, although that can depend on how you look at these things.
Swiss Re for instance, prompted some almost contradictory headlines after it revealed its results. ‘Swiss Re Makes Loss After Loan Repayment’ was the headline in the Wall Street Journal.
And the company did make a loss in the final quarter of the year after repaying of a costly loan from Warren Buffett-owned rival Berkshire Hathaway. However as Reactions headline pointed out ‘Swiss Re posts $863mn profit for 2010’, which hinted at a slightly rosier outlook.
Meanwhile, The Insurance Insider covered all bases with its ‘Swiss Re profits up 74% despite Berkshire repayment drain’ headline.
Other reinsurers that enjoyed a good year included XL Group, as Business Insurance reported its net income for 2010 was up to $585.4mn from $206.6mn in 2009, a 183% increase.
Other reinsurers did not fare so well as the same publication reported that Arch Capital Group’s full-year net income had slipped to $816.7 million, compared with $851.1 million in 2009, as profits for the fourth quarter took a hit from Australian flood losses.
And things were worse at fellow Bermudian, PartnerRe, which reported $852.6mn in net income, a 44.5% decrease from 2009. The company blamed catastrophe losses, large loss events and lower reinvestment rates.

Bermuda-based Lloyd’s insurer Catlin Group’s pretax profits fell 33% to $406 million in 2010, as it suffered from a year of heavy catastrophe losses.

However, another foreign-domiciled Lloyd’s carrier, Beazley, reported pre-tax profits of $250.8mn up from $158.1mn in 2009.

Beazley said the increase was caused, in part, by a one-off foreign exchange gain after the insurer and reinsurer changed its reporting currency to US dollars from pounds sterling, and by releases of prior-year reserves.
And in the US casualty specialist WR Berkley’s full-year net income rose by 45 percent to reach $449mn as the firm bounced back from heavy investment losses in 2009 while HCC “crept down by just 2.5 percent to $345mn in 2010, as the company largely withstood the combined challenges of high industry cat losses, torpid investment returns and falling rates” according to The Insurance Insider.

14
Feb
11

Trade press review: Fire lit under Jackson; would a Quora law firm be better than a twitter one?

It is becoming increasingly difficult to tell if media coverage of the debate between claimant and defendant sides in personal injury is having any influence on government policy. However in January, it appeared that good old fashioned case law may have trumped Whitehall’s timetable for civil justice reform anyway.

Despite the myriad consultations and decrees from the Ministry of Justice, one case may have had the power to accelerate Lord Justice Jackson’s civil justice reforms quicker than anyone could have imagined.

January was awash with comment and debate on the implications of the judgement in MGN v United Kingdom (Case No. 39401/04). Legal Week produced an excellent roundup of the media coverage on the issue, which has certainly got tongues wagging over the future of success fees and CFAs.

The matter of access to justice is rarely away from the headlines these days and the issue does find itself the subject of news copy in some odd places. For example, the Mirror seems to be posing its journalists as Raymond Chandler-esque private detectives; it appears they’re keen to lay it on thick with whatever material they can.

January’s news was also replete with discussion about how motor insurers can justify rising premiums amidst a climate in which every other cost for motorists is heading north too. It’s not difficult to understand the reason this was such a hot topic; Parliament’s Transport Select Committee has been hearing presentations from interested parties on the issue so it’s been straight-talking time.

To offer a little context, rates across personal and commercial motor have generally been on the rise for more than a year and understandably many insurers are keen to present ways in which they might conceivably keep premiums down. For example, insurer Swiftcover added its name to proposals by the Association of British Insurers for broader access to the DVLA database, regarded as one of the most effective means of cutting out fraud at point of sale. Another company, Esure, pointed out some salient concerns it has about rather worrying claims inflation statistics that are specific to one postcode synonymous with the motoring world
And finally, returning to the world of social networking, some smart people at personal injury referral network Loyalty Law have launched what on the surface appears to be the country’s first ever Twitter law firm. Obviously there’s a little more behind it but in essence, users can ask simple ‘what if?’ questions which are answered by a panel of law firms.
It would be my hunch that Quora would be a better network for this type of approach, but we’ll have to wait and see if it gains enough traction with everyday users first.

This article was written by freelance business journalist and PR consultant Ralph Savage.

17
Dec
10

Insurance and legal trade press roundup

Insurance Times

Personal lines market returns to growth

Hooray, Datamonitor says the insurance sector’s rate rises will push through growth in the industry over the next four years, bringing in combined GWP of £29.2bn by 2014.

The said it expects to see the strongest growth in 2011 and 2012, with growth continuing, though at a decreased rate, in 2013 and 2014. Datamonitor financial services analyst Stephen Ko said: “Private motor is seeing double-digit rate increases every quarter: 11%, 12% and 13%.”

Post Magazine

Helpline claims to be hoax victim over texts

I’ve heard a lot of insurance company claims directors quoted in the media that they’ve received unsolicited texts from claims farmers telling them they’ve got a £5k whiplash action in the bag if they want it.

Interestingly, National Accident Helpline has now claimed to be a victim of such calls, with staff receiving texts. The problem was, the calls purported to be from NAH itself.

As it turns out NAH was caught up in a Claims Standards Council investigation of unsolicited text messages.

According to the CSC, replies to the messages were picked up by the National Accident Helpline and then forwarded to one of its panel solicitors. The findings of the investigation were forwarded to the Ministry of Justice this week.

However, Beth Powell, consumer director of National Accident Helpline, told Post: “In the past month we have reported three text messaging companies for their unregulated activity and one online company to the Ministry of Justice for passing off their businesses under our name. One of the text messaging companies had targeted four of our own senior staff, claiming to offer £3750 in compensation.”

Motor Claims soar in wintry weather –

Not being a Doctor I couldn’t tell you whether this means more or less whiplash claims, but perhaps motor insurers will get their first frostbite legal action?

AA Insurance has reported a 23% jump in motor insurance claims in the first week of December, following a spate of icy weather conditions across the UK.

During the period, the broker received 609 claims, including 210 traffic collisions, 104 incidents with parked cars, 34 cars hitting walls, two collisions with cyclists and one collision with a wild boar.

News in brief from the legal press…

Law Soc Gazette

As is his wont, FOIL president Tim Oliver who runs a law firm that specialises in high volume, fixed cost work and 3rd party capture, says the fixed cost RTA regime needs extending and that third party capture should be encouraged.

It seems the government wants to avoid the embarrassment caused by Geoff Hoon and all those cash for lobbying stings when he asked for £5000 a day and is establishing a register of lobbyists with a new bill next year and a green paper in February. The Law Society has jumped at the opportunity, although it’s unclear how private companies will be able to circumvent conflict of interest issues… 

Local Government Lawyer

The government has published another list, this time of courtroom closures. There’s not been a huge amount in the insurance press about how this will affect case management, but it’s a good bet there will be some raised eyebrows when a claim in Northwich gets referred to Birmingham or somewhere miles away…




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