California homeowners flood Farmers with requests for new policies, but it can’t absorb them [The Sacramento Bee]
“We are working diligently with the
While
“The Department of Insurance understands Farmers has been writing 7,000 monthly new homeowners policies on average,” Soller said, “We do not expect their footprint in the state to change significantly one way or another. By maintaining its historic average of new homeowners policies in
The announcement from Farmers does, however, show that there is a great deal of consumer demand for policies and that the capacity to handle all that new business will be tested.
All insurers have to maintain a certain amount of capital to back the policies they write, said
Testing capacity in CA home insurance market
In the area of homeowners insurance, 12 carriers write 84% of policies in
“If Farmers writing almost 15% is saying they can’t take a single new policy beyond what they were doing, do we really think CSAA or Liberty Mutual or Mercury or these other companies that are at around 6% market share, are they going to have the capacity to do it?” Frazier asked.
He said he feels like much of that business will go to the California FAIR Plan, a kind of insurer of last resort for people who can’t get coverage from a commercial insurer. Created by
If, for some reason, the FAIR Plan runs out of money to pay its claims, it has the power to assess the commercial carriers a fee to cover what is needed. The portion they must pay is determined by market share.
Consequently, when thinking about capital needs, Frazier said, insurers must think about not only their liability but also the liability they face through the FAIR Plan. Carriers are desperately trying to right-size, Frazier said, because inflationary pressures and catastrophic weather and fire events, driven by climate change, have driven up their costs.
Frazier said there’s increased risk in a state like
But there’s increased risk with the more rural properties, Frazier said, because as you build further out, you have more exposure to the wildland-urban interface where there’s a greater potential for wildfires.
“We’re convinced that there is a perceptible change in weather patterns, where we have more peak fire days than we used to have,” he said. “We’re not concerned about a fire in July when there’s still moisture in the grass. We’re concerned about the fire in late October, early November when we have the traditional winds. Like up in
Why climate change plays role in insurance coverage
These hot, seasonal winds come along, as they did with the devastating
“Ten years ago, who even knew the term atmospheric river?” Frazier asked.
Those deluges of water dump about the same amount of yearly precipitation but in shorter burst.
“Even a diligent homeowner who would have hardened their home doesn’t have defensible space around their home,” Frazier said. “It’s just a lot to ask the firefighters to think that they can stop these 50- or 60-mile-an-hour wind-driven fires.”
The cost of rebuilding homes and businesses has skyrocketed because of inflation, Frazier said, and the reinsurance companies that many commercial carriers contract with to share the financial risk are charging higher prices and negotiating tougher terms. And, because
This means that
©2023 The Sacramento Bee. Visit sacbee.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
We asked experts: What are the best ways to navigate insurance if a storm smashes your home? [South Florida Sun-Sentinel]
When it comes to your retirement income, the time to look at it is before you retire [Bangor Daily News, Maine]
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News