As policy load rises steeply, Louisiana's insurer of last resort prepares for the worst
Tens of thousands of homeowners and businesses have lost their property insurance coverage in the last year, following four major hurricanes, eight company failures and a dozen pullouts from the state's increasingly dicey market.
The shakeup has triggered a mass migration away from small private insurers. Most people left without coverage have only one place to turn:
The 75,000 homes and businesses Louisiana Citizens now counts on its rolls is more than double the number the insurer had when Hurricane Laura struck in
The bulk of the policies were added in the
By midyear, the organization had written
"It's just a quicker process when a company goes insolvent versus when they non-renew or stop writing new business," Newberry said. "We're averaging about 530 new policies a day here."
While consumers may find getting coverage a relief, the government-backed insurance is a double-edged sword. Louisiana Citizens' policies must be priced 10% higher than private options.
The four hurricanes to make landfall in
Eight insurers have gone broke and several others have retreated from writing policies or left the state altogether. The latest to leave was
The unraveling of
"The problem with reinsurance right now is that it's expensive," said
As a result, Powell said some insurers must either raise their prices or try to make do with less reinsurance. If they take the latter approach, a major storm can mean financial failure.
The combined effects of the marketplace shakeout are shifting more people to the state's insurer of last resort.
So much so that Louisiana Citizens is now preparing for the worst possible financial scenario.
The organization now has more than
"We never anticipated the seven companies were going to fail, but as we went out we knew that we were going to increase quite a bit," Newberry said. "We actually increased our (coverage) by
In keeping with that strategy, Louisiana Citizens will go before the
The idea is more than a hypothetical forecast: Homeowners are still paying off a debt of nearly
If that ever happens again, Louisiana Citizens could raise about
"The only reason that
The recent surge of growth was not entirely unexpected, Newberry said. But Louisiana Citizens struggled to manage the sudden influx of customers after the mass cancellation of 22,000 policies from
Some insurance agents complained that the computer system was strained, and they had to process applications during off hours late at night.
Newberry said the growing pains were quickly addressed in July when Louisiana Citizens purchased two new servers to speed up the process.
"When you have 130,000 quotes and 40,000 policies in 30 days," Newberry said, "there's no system in the world that could take care of that and not slow down."
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