Wednesday, September 4, 2024

Reinsurers retrench

Climate losses add up |

As reinsurers step back from growing climate-related risks, primary insurers are being forced to pay the price. Today's newsletter looks at the situation unfolding across the industry. You can also read and share the story on Bloomberg.com. 

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Insurers hit by climate losses; reinsurers retrench

By  Gautam Naik

As the planet warms and more natural disasters occur, insurers are facing an increasingly difficult time.

In 2023, for the fourth year in a row, global insured catastrophe losses exceeded $100 billion. The trend continues this year: In the first half, losses have reached $62 billion and are tracking well above the 10-year average of $37 billion, according to a recent analysis by Munich Re.

Ordinarily this shouldn't trouble primary insurers, which can offset some of that risk by buying reinsurance. But it's getting harder for them to do so. In a world of climate change, inflation and growing property exposure, reinsurers have ramped up their prices and are demanding more favorable terms, such as raising the level at which a policy will pay out.

And that means primary insurers are left holding the bag.

"Insurers are being forced to take on more risk," said Charles-Marie Delpuech, an insurance credit analyst at S&P Ratings. "It's a structural change in the overall market."

And the numbers show just how much better reinsurers are doing as a result. S&P's data on the top 19 global reinsurers shows that while their annual share of natural-catastrophe losses had historically been in the 20% range, it fell sharply in the last three years, sliding to about 10% in 2023.

A flag displayed over flood waters after Hurricane Debby made landfall in Suwannee, Florida on Aug. 5. Photographer: Christian Monterrosa/Bloomberg

The key reason is the reinsurance industry has become more averse to backstopping "secondary perils," which are smaller but more frequent extreme weather events such as tornadoes, thunderstorms, fires and floods. These localized events are harder for the insurance industry to model and manage, partly because they're driven by climate change.

They're also responsible for a rising share of insured losses. Severe convective storms alone accounted for about $70 billion of insured losses globally last year, according to an estimate by insurance broker Aon Plc. That's equivalent to 59% of losses from all natural disasters.

Reinsurers were hurt by secondary-peril losses in 2021 and 2022, but they have since trimmed their exposure, Delpuech said.

By 2023, "a large portion of the losses fell mainly on primary insurers," particularly in the US where most severe convective storms occur, according to S&P. Conversely, reinsurance losses were "well within their budgeted natural-catastrophe load."

Delpuech points out that even if a once-in-a-100-year natural catastrophe were to occur, causing more than $250 billion in annual industry losses, most reinsurers would still be shielded.

"We calculate that the sector, as a whole, would still be capitalized above the 99.99% confidence level after such an event," S&P said.

The upshot is that reinsurers appear to be in a particularly strong position to ride out both primary perils, like a large hurricane, and secondary perils, to which they have less exposure.

Now that reinsurers feel they have found their footing, they've become emboldened to expand operations—but on their own terms. This means higher prices and tougher clauses for when a policy will be triggered.

Moody's Ratings says it has turned more bullish on reinsurers. On Tuesday the firm raised its outlook for the global reinsurance sector to "positive" from "stable," citing several factors, including higher premiums, tougher policy conditions and lower exposure to secondary perils.

Based on January renewals, the 19 top reinsurers increased their average overall risk exposure to natural catastrophes by 14%, according to S&P. Their combined budget for absorbing "nat-cat" losses also jumped to about $19.2 billion in 2024 from $17.1 billion in 2023 and $15.5 billion in 2022.

The expectation is that global reinsurers will deploy more capital over the next two years, S&P said. The industry earned its cost of capital in 2023 for the first time in four years, and it will likely do so again in 2024 and 2025, "solidifying our stable view of the sector."

Sustainable finance in brief

One of the most contentious investing strategies on Wall Street might be a lot less beleaguered right now if its defenders had shown a bit more moderation at the start. So says Kyle Bass, the hedge fund veteran and founder of Hayman Capital Management. Bass argues that the Republican backlash that's been building against environmental, social and governance investing in recent years is largely due to demands that fossil fuels be abandoned immediately, as opposed to gradually. "Energy transitions take 40 or 50 years," Bass said. There are people who "think we can just turn hydrocarbons off and turn on alternative power."

Kyle Bass Photographer: Patrick T. Fallon/Bloomberg
  • Republican state treasurers aren't happy Business Roundtable put serving employees on the same level as serving shareholders.
  • Catastrophe bond giant Fermat Capital Management says anxiety about hurricane season has already left a meaningful dent in returns.
  • Pork and beef producers in developed markets are becoming more vulnerable to credit downgrades triggered by climate-related risks.

Adding up 

 $151 billion 
This is how much  annual natural-catastrophe losses for the global insurance industry are expected to rise to due to urban expansion, property exposure and climate change.

Captive market

"Climate change is having an amplifying effect on all the risks we know. [And captives are] playing a role as a shock absorber."
Peter Carter
Head of climate and captives at broker WTW
Captive insurance, where companies create their own coverage vehicles, is on the rise, according to insurance broker Aon Plc. And it's a development that's particularly pronounced in sectors tied to climate change. 

More from Green

Netflix is looking to clean up the dirty business of Hollywood productions. On most film and television sets, illumination is powered by loud, clunking diesel generators. Now, a number of Netflix's productions are replacing generators and fossil fuel-based transportation with greener alternatives. In Atlanta, Stranger Things is dabbling with solar-powered trailers, and just outside London, Bridgerton has tested a hydrogen power unit.

It's all part of Netflix's plan to cut its emissions roughly in half by 2030. Yet its progress has been marginal in the three years since it began focusing on sustainability in 2020.

On a rainy day, massive 18,000-watt lights running on a giant battery provide the 'sunlight' on the Virgin River set. Photographer: Paige Taylor White/Bloomberg

BYD pauses its Mexico EV factory plans. The Chinese automaker is waiting until at least after the US election on a decision, as shifting American policy forces global businesses into wait-and-see mode.

Heat waves benefit Hello Kitty. Shares of Sanrio Co., the owner of the Hello Kitty brand, have soared as tourists have flocked to its indoor theme parks amid heat waves in Japan.

China has been sweltering, too. The country just experienced its hottest summer on record — damaging crops and pressuring the power grid — but the risks from the extreme heat aren't over yet.

Worth a listen

Before he founded the geothermal startup Fervo in 2017, Tim Latimer was a drilling engineer for the oil and gas industry — a job he loved. "Honestly, if it wasn't for climate change, I probably wouldn't have ever changed my career," he says on the latest episode of Zero. Now Latimer is applying his drilling know-how to Fervo's wells, supercharging their energy production in the process. Latimer and Akshat Rathi chat about opportunities in geothermal, the infernal permitting process, and why Fervo has its sights on expanding into Kenya, Indonesia, Turkey and the Philippines. Listen now, and subscribe on Apple or Spotify to get new episodes of Zero every Thursday.

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