Site logo
Site logo
Site logo
Site logo
  • Default
  • Blue
  • Green
  • Red
  • Black
myExtraContent1 (only enabled when style-switcher is on)
myExtraContent2 (only enabled when clock bar is on)
myExtraContent5 (reserved for mega-menu navigation option)
myExtraContent7
myExtraContent8 (only enabled when header search bar is on)
myExtraContent9
myExtraContent10 (used for the content of a second sidebar container)
myExtraContent11

New Premium News and Analysis

myExtraContent12

Irene Not a ‘Market Turning’ Event

The weekend storm will not create a hard market, but will put additional pressure on federal flood insurance.
Hurricane Irene will not create enough loss for the private property/casualty market in order to impact pricing, according industry watchers But the weekend storm will likely put even more stress on the money losing government-backed flood insurance program.

“From an insurance perspective, this is not market turning event,” says
Robert Hartwig, Ph.D.,” president of the Insurance Information Institute. “There was a lot of speculation prior to the storm that that could happen, but much of the loss will reside with the National Flood Insurance Program.”

Initial losses estimates form Hurricane Irene have started to trickle, with several catastrophe modeling firms saying the private insurance market’s exposure could run between $1 billion and $3 billion.

Modeling firm
EQECAT estimates that insured losses from Irene will range between $200 million to $400 million for hardest hit North and South Carolina. Maryland-based Kinetic Analysis Corp. estimated insured losses would total $14 billion prior to the storm making landfall but quickly dropped that estimate to $2.6 billion, according to published reports.

“It will still be a multibillion property insurance loss for property casualty insurers with some additional loss for the state run property residual markets,” Hartwig says. “This will be a significant loss for the National Flood Insurance Program, likely several billions dollars”

EQECAT also adds that the flooding from Hurricane Irene would drive losses, explaining in a statement issued Monday that rainfall was “more than forecasted” in North Carolina and Virginia and reached 20 inches in some areas.

blog comments powered by Disqus
myExtraContent13
myExtraContent15