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Hurricane Milton: The Implications For Rated U.S. Insurers And Global Reinsurers

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Hurricane Milton: The Implications For Rated U.S. Insurers And Global Reinsurers

Potential economic and insured losses from Hurricane Milton remain highly uncertain. Much will depend on its landfall location and its magnitude. Milton could cause significant wind damage, heavy rainfall, substantial storm surges, and floods.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center predicts it will make landfall around the Tampa Bay region late on Oct. 9 or in the early hours of Oct. 10. The hurricane has fluctuated in intensity and is currently rated Category 5. This is the second major hurricane to hit the U.S. in two weeks following Hurricane Helene (see "U.S. Insurers' Earnings Could Take A Hit From Hurricane Helene," Oct. 3, 2024).

Given the uncertainty as to the magnitude of losses, we are reviewing various industry-insured-loss scenarios and their potential impact on U.S. primary insurers and global reinsurers. For reference, Hurricane Ian, which made landfall as a Category 4 hurricane in Florida in 2022, resulted in industry-insured losses of about $60 billion.

Hurricane Milton Losses Could Fully Deplete U.S. P/C Insurers' 2024 Catastrophe Budgets

As insurer of last resort, Citizens Property Insurance Corp. (not rated) will absorb a higher proportion of insured property losses relative to other insurers in the state. For our rated insurers, direct property premiums (homeowners and commercial) in Florida represent just 1.1% of total U.S. P/C premiums written in 2023. We assume our rated insurers' exposure to property business in Florida is less than 33% of their total insurance business in the state and, on average, their exposure is more to residential than to commercial. State-sponsored Citizens was Florida's largest homeowners insurer by premiums written in 2023. In the past five years, Citizens' market share in the state's personal property insurance market has jumped significantly, to 18.6% in 2023 from 5.2% in 2019, to become the tenth largest insurance writer for homeowners in the U.S.

While the magnitude of insured losses remains unknown, most rated U.S. primary P/C insurers entered 2024 with substantial capital buffers at the 99.99% confidence level under our risk-based capital adequacy model. In first-half 2024, capital and pre-tax operating incomes have mostly remained strong. Given that many primary insurers are already close to 2024 catastrophe budgets based on first-half catastrophe losses, we believe the potential losses from Hurricane Milton, combined with other weather-related losses so far, could fully exhaust their 2024 catastrophe budgets. This will affect underwriting margins and earnings, but not capitalization.

Table 1

Property lines exposure in Florida for selected rated U.S. P/C insurers
Insurance group FSR/outlook* Total Florida property DPW (mil. $) Personal property (%) Commercial property (%) Market share (% of total Florida property) Total insurer’s DPW for all lines (mil. $) Florida property DPW/Total insurer’s DPW for all lines (%) Year-end 2023 policyholders surplus (mil. $)
Citizens Property Ins Corp. NR 3,209 100.0 0.0 16.0 5,071 63.3 5,023

State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.

AA/Stable 1,219 97.5 2.5 6.1 93,787 1.3 134,782

Allstate Corp.

A+/Stable 713 73.3 26.7 3.5 50,042 1.4 13,602

United Services Automobile Assn.

AA+/Negative 697 100.0 0.0 3.5 32,002 2.2 25,453

Progressive Corp.

AA/Stable 633 100.0 0.0 3.1 62,712 1.0 22,143

Chubb Ltd.

AA/Stable 578 72.6 27.4 2.9 31,873 1.8 20,722

Berkshire Hathaway Insurance Group

AA+/Stable 412 23.2 76.8 2.0 59,668 0.7 304,435

Tokio Marine & Nichido Fire Insurance Co. Ltd.

A+/Stable 279 81.4 18.6 1.4 11,917 2.3 12,460

Farmers Insurance Co. Inc.

A/Stable 258 99.9 0.1 1.3 27,221 0.9 6,180

American International Group

A+/Positive 251 78.3 21.7 1.2 16,077 1.6 18,691

Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co.

A+/Stable 227 58.2 41.8 1.1 19,766 1.1 18,971

Liberty Mutual Group Inc.

A/Stable 209 39.3 60.7 1.0 45,795 0.5 27,613

Hartford Financial Services Group Inc.

A+/Positive 150 15.6 84.4 0.7 15,954 0.9 15,784

American Family Mutual Insurance Co. Group

A-/Stable 140 52.8 47.2 0.7 16,628 0.8 7,114

Zurich Reinsurance

AA/Stable 125 0.0 100.0 0.6 18,563 0.7 6,293

QBE Insurance Group Ltd.

A+/Positive 97 88.4 11.6 0.5 7,560 1.3 1,854

Assurant Inc.

A/Stable 64 100.0 0.0 0.3 6,765 0.9 1,467

Travelers Cos. Inc. (The)

AA/Stable 61 46.2 53.8 0.3 38,597 0.2 23,888

Cincinnati Financial Corp.

A+/Stable 37 97.0 3.0 0.2 7,456 0.5 7,294

CNA Financial Corp.

A+/Stable 36 0.0 100.0 0.2 13,741 0.3 10,946

W. R. Berkley Corp.

A+/Positive 20 89.7 10.3 0.1 10,049 0.2 8,777

The Hanover Insurance Group

A/Stable 17 0.0 100.0 0.1 6,286 0.3 2,652
Group total N/A 9,432 84.7 15.3 46.9 597,530 1.6 696,145
P/C industry N/A 20,113 85.9 14.1 100.0 966,700 2.1 1,042,624
*Rating represents the financial strength rating on core operating entities as of Oct. 8, 2024. DWP--Direct premiums written. P/C--Property-casualty. N.A.--Not available. NR--Not rated. N/A--Not applicable. Source: S&P Global Ratings, S&P Market Intelligence.

Chart 1

image

Global Reinsurers' Losses Should Stay Within 2024 Catastrophe Budgets

Milton is poised to be a significant event for global reinsurance this year. In our view, global reinsurers face substantial exposure to the damage it could cause. The key question is whether potential losses will stay within reinsurers' annual natural catastrophe budgets or annual earnings, or whether they will escalate and become a capital event.

At this stage we think the impact from Hurricane Milton, combined with natural catastrophe losses incurred so far in 2024, could still fall within reinsurers' catastrophe budgets.

In 2024, the global insurance sector again faces a highly active natural catastrophe environment. During the first half of the year, global insured losses from natural catastrophes soared to about $60 billion, significantly higher than the 10-year average of $37 billion, as reported by Swiss Re Institute. Much of these losses, around 70%, stemmed from severe convective storms predominantly in the U.S. First-half events also included the earthquake in Japan, in January, and devastating floods in the United Arab Emirates, Europe, and Brazil.

Milton, following closely on the heels of Helene, will likely significantly increase global reinsurers' claims payouts in the second half of 2024. This period has also been marked by other notable events, including Hurricanes Beryl, Debby, and Francine, as well as wildfires and hailstorms in Canada and floods in Central and Eastern Europe (see "Central European Insurers' Financial Strength Is A Barrage Against Flood Damage," Sept. 24, 2024).

Due to structural changes in reinsurance programs and fewer tail events in 2023, the top-19 rated global reinsurers held only about 10% of the market share for global insured natural catastrophe losses. We assume a similar market share for the first half of this year. However, given Milton's potential scale, we expect this market share will approach the long-term average of around 20%. If Milton's insured losses are contained to just under $50 billion, the reinsurance sector could yet remain within its annual catastrophe budget (see chart 2).

The reinsurance sector's expected 2024 combined earnings of $44.8 billion, and its catastrophe budget of $19.2 billion, provide a substantial buffer of about $64 billion before any catastrophe losses affect its capital. While capital levels and risk appetites can vary among individual reinsurers, the sector's overall resiliency has notably increased in recent years (see "Reinsurers Show Growing Appetite For Natural Catastrophe Risks," Aug. 30, 2024).

Based on our annual natural catastrophe survey, we assess that the net exposure for the top-19 reinsurers in the exposed zone 3 for one-in-10-year to one-in-500-year return periods lies between $6 billion and $46 billion (see table 2). However, zone 3 in our annual survey includes an aggregated number for wind exposure in multiple regions including Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina.

Chart 2

image

Table 2

The top-19 global reinsurers aggregate catastrophe exposure; this can vary among individual reinsurers
--Return periods for in-force book as of Jan. 1, 2024--
S&P Global Ratings property catastrophe annual survey (zone 3) 1 in 10 year 1 in 20 year 1 in 50 year 1 in 100 year 1 in 200 year 1 in 250 year 1 in 500 year
Net aggregate probable maximum loss (bil. $) 5.9 10.9 18.7 26.2 34.5 37.4 45.8
*In a few instances, when the reinsurer does not provide zonal exposure, S&P Global Ratings uses estimated figures. Zone 3: Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina; top 19 global reinsurers are: Arch, Ascot, Aspen, AXIS, China Re, Convex, Everest, Fairfax, Fidelis, Hannover Re, Hiscox, Lancashire, Lloyd's, Markel, Munich Re, RenaissanceRe, SCOR, Sirius, and Swiss Re.

We think reinsurers are approaching their annual natural catastrophe budgets. Whether budgets are fully consumed or exceeded will depend on the development of global natural catastrophes for the remainder of the year.

Despite the challenges, we maintain our base-case earnings scenario for the reinsurance sector. We forecast a combined ratio of 92%-96%, which includes a natural catastrophe load of 8-10 percentage points, and a return on equity in the low to mid-teens in 2024-2025. We also forecast that the sector will benefit from rising investment income, with expected net investment yields of 3.5%-4.0% during this period. Furthermore, reinsurers entered 2024 with robust capitalization. In aggregate, capital adequacy for the top 19 was redundant under our risk-based capital model: 6.1% at the 99.99% confidence level at year-end 2023.

Table 3

Reinsurers' base case earnings assumptions remain unchanged
(%) 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024f 2025f
Net combined ratio 100.6 100.6 104.7 96.6 96.2 91.5 92-96 92-96
(Favorable)/unfavorable reserve developments -4.8 -1.3 -2.1 -2.8 -1.7 -2 (1)-(2) (1)-(2)
Net natural catastrophe losses' impact on the combined ratio 9.7 7.4 6.1 9.5 9.2 4.4 8-10 8-10
Accident-year combined ratio, excluding natural catastrophe losses, reserve developments, and pandemic losses 95.7 94.5 91.9 90 88.7 89.1 86-87 86-87
Return on equity 3.1 9.4 2 9.3 2.5 21.4 Low to mid teens Low to mid teens
Net investment yield 2.6 3 2.4 2.3 1.9 3.4 3.5-4.0 3.5-4.0
The top 19 global reinsurers are Arch, Ascot, Aspen, AXIS, China Re, Convex, Everest, Fairfax, Fidelis, Hannover Re, Hiscox, Lancashire, Lloyd's, Markel, Munich Re, RenaissanceRe, SCOR, Sirius, and Swiss Re. The 2020 combined ratio included 8.8 percentage points related to COVID-19 losses. Return on equity in 2024f and 2025f will depend on investment performance. 2018-2022 data is based on GAAP and IFRS4. For 2023, 2024f, and 2025f, we used the undiscounted combined ratios for IFRS17 filers. f--Forecast. Source: S&P Global Ratings.

Related Research

This report does not constitute a rating action.

Primary Credit Analysts:Johannes Bender, Frankfurt + 49 693 399 9196;
johannes.bender@spglobal.com
Patricia A Kwan, New York + 1 (212) 438 6256;
patricia.kwan@spglobal.com
Taoufik Gharib, New York + 1 (212) 438 7253;
taoufik.gharib@spglobal.com
Saurabh B Khasnis, Englewood + 1 (303) 721 4554;
saurabh.khasnis@spglobal.com
Secondary Contacts:Charles-Marie Delpuech, London + 44 20 7176 7967;
charles-marie.delpuech@spglobal.com
Sachin Bhojani, London;
sachin.bhojani@spglobal.com
Simon Ashworth, London + 44 20 7176 7243;
simon.ashworth@spglobal.com
Lawrence A Wilkinson, New York + 1 (212) 438 1882;
lawrence.wilkinson@spglobal.com
Research Contributors:Vikas Rathore, Pune;
vikas.rathore@spglobal.com
Nadeem N Shaikh, Mumbai;
nadeem.shaikh@spglobal.com
Ronak Chaplot, Mumbai + 02233428355;
ronak.chaplot@spglobal.com
Media Contacts:Jeff Sexton, New York + 1 (212) 438 3448;
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