P/C Insurance Buyers Facing Improved Market Conditions
Commercial insurance buyers face improved market conditions in 2014, due in part to declining rates in the property insurance line and an easing of recent upward pressure on rates in many other lines of insurance coverage, according to Willis, a global risk advisor, insurance and reinsurance broker.
These key findings in Willis’s semiannual 2014 Marketplace Realities report serves as a guide for North American insurance buyers preparing for upcoming 2014 insurance program renewals.
Willis expects property rates to fall an average of 10-12 percent for non-catastrophe-exposed risks, while risks exposed to natural catastrophes such as hurricanes will likely decrease in the 5-10 percent range.
The forecast reflects a change since Willis published its spring edition of Marketplace Realities where modest decreases were expected for non-catastrophe exposed risks and rate increases were expected for catastrophe exposed accounts. The downward pressure is being driven by an influx of alternative capital to the insurance industry, particularly the segment devoted to catastrophic property risk. For commercial casualty lines, buyers should expect a continuation of single-digit increases, with higher rate hikes in some states, such as California.
Overall, 14 insurance lines will likely see rate increases, while eight will see decreases, according to Willis experts. However, in many cases, the expected level of rate increase is moderating, and in some cases, predictions from the spring have reversed. For errors & omissions and trade credit insurance, spring predictions of increases have been supplanted by expectations of modest decreases or flat rates. Two exceptions are political risk and terrorism, where market hardening forces are gathering momentum.
Willis expects rate increases in casualty insurance lines, including workers’ compensation and auto, employee benefits, cyber, executive risks, crime/fidelity, health care professional, construction, kidnap & ransom, political risk and terrorism. Meanwhile, rates are expected to fall in property, errors & omissions, aerospace, energy, environmental, marine, surety and trade credit.
In introductory remarks, Eric Joost, chief operating officer of Willis North America and Senior Editor of Marketplace Realities, addresses the controversy accompanying the new capital that is impacting the insurance marketplace. “The reaction has not been all positive, to say the least, especially with respect to the new sources of capital,” Joost writes. However, “some of this represents some real innovation – in an industry often criticized for conservatism and a lack of innovative progress. From our perspective we see clear benefits to these new vehicles, because our perspective is really that of our clients. For our clients – insurance buyers – the increase in supply of capital makes a more inviting marketplace,” he added.
More certain, Joost says, is the reason for the evolution in the industry: “It’s the advent of big data, insurance style – the increased access and ability to work with the data related to the possibilities of risk transfer.” He notes that big data is behind WillPLACE, Willis’s ground-breaking placement platform. He expects that “Big data will be a source of much innovation in the years ahead.”
Key Price Predictions for 2014:
Marketplace Realities series, which is published in the fall and updated every spring, features market snapshots of property, casualty, workers’ compensation, employee benefits and all executive risks lines, as well as key specialty lines: aerospace, cyber risks, construction, energy (upstream and downstream), environmental, health care professional, kidnap & ransom, marine, political risk, surety, terrorism and trade credit.
The publication is available free of charge on the Publications page of the Willis website, http://www.willis.com/What_We_Think/Publications/.
Source: Willis
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