Home insurance giants won’t sell new California policies. What it means for all homeowners [The Sacramento Bee]
As a result, thousands of consumers in wildfire-exposed communities have been dropped when their policies come up for renewal. In 2019, after two years of devastating wildfires, insurers refused to renew 235,597 policies, a jump of 42.7% from 2018. In 2020, 212,727 were not renewed.
“Since the fires of 2017-2018,
When the
On Thursday, another insurer admitted it had stopped selling policies as well. Allstate, once the state’s fourth-largest insurer for homes, said it stopped selling new policies last year so it could “continue to protect current customers,” a spokeswoman for the firm told the
The two joined AIG and Chubb, companies that typically insured luxury homes, in pulling coverage in recent years, according to the Chronicle.
In some regions of the state,
“As recent events have depleted decades of profits ... insurance companies have been dropping coverage, raising premiums, and refusing to write new policies,” she said.
And, unlike flood and earthquake insurance, wildfire coverage is bundled into general homeowner’s insurance, Schlickman said, so people living in wildfire-prone areas often cannot get any insurance for their homes, making it difficult to secure a mortgage loan.
A number of factors have driven up costs for
Why costs are climbing for CA home insurers?
California’s licensed insurers incurred losses of
These figures are important not simply because the liabilities are so great but because of how those liabilities and the negligible growth in premiums reshaped how key financiers in the insurance business viewed risk in California’s insurance business, Frazier said.
To understand why, you have to know a little something about how insurance companies work. Like banks, they must keep a certain amount of capital on hand, Frazier said, and as they sell more policies, insurers must increase the amount of money they have to support the increased liability. If they can’t increase their capital, they can’t write new policies.
While some publicly traded insurers might be able to issue a stock offering to raise capital,
So, if
The rewards of these deals outweighed the risks to re-insurers up until climate change turned California’s trees into kindling during a prolonged drought, Frazier said, and skyrocketing inflation began driving up the costs of rebuilding homes.
Schlickman said you can really see the impact of inflation on one
“In Paradise, a conventional wood-framed home is out of reach for many former residents,” she said. “Even modular homes are too expensive, as their cost has doubled since the fire. This is leaving the future of
Home insurers have costs they can’t recoup
Under this inflationary pressure, it’s also more likely that both home insurers and their re-insurance partners will be on the hook for larger payouts, Frazier said.
“Re-insurers treated
Insurers, however, cannot afford to pay the soaring re-insurance fees because
While the number of licensed insurers in the state has remained about the same since 2019, Californians in some regions of the state have experienced a disruptive churn in the carriers willing to serve them, forcing them to scramble to find a new insurer to meet their mortgage obligations.
Even as climate change has resulted in more frequent, more severe wildfires and some wild weather events, Frazier said, the state has held carriers to a formula that bases the premiums they can charge on the average wildfire losses the companies incurred over the last 20 years.
“We don’t think this makes any sense because today’s climate is very different than 20 years ago,” Frazier said. “Why wouldn’t
Every other state allows carriers not only to factor in the cost of re-insurance but also to use forward-looking loss projection models, Frazier said. Earthquake insurers, he already, already use such modeling in
“Under current rules, an insurer gets no credit for writing in new, higher-risk areas because they need to, first, experience big losses in order to get approval to charge the higher rates to support the higher losses they expect in riskier areas. Not a good business decision,” Frazier said.
Think your premiums are high? Talk to Floridians
If state leaders do allow the changes,
On average, Californians pay about
With State Farm’s decision to stop selling new policies, Frazier said, a number of
The FAIR Plan, created by
A growing number of consumers have gone with these alternative means of coverage in recent years as wildfires lay waste to large swaths of
The FAIR Plan wrote 75,247 new policies in 2019 and 77,650 the next year, assuring that homeowners can meet mortgage lenders’ requirements for coverage, according to state data. Those figures were more than three times the new business FAIR saw in 2018.
By 2020, many of those consumers still could not find a licensed
FAIR’s growth makes private home insurers nervous because this last-resort plan has limited capital, Frazier said, and if it runs out of money, the private insurers must pay its unfunded losses. Each company would have to pay a percentage of the liability that is based on their market share. This unknown liability, Frazier said, is another reason why licensed carriers are pulling back on covering risky areas of the state.
In an effort to stem the tide of homeowners being rejected for renewal,
The number of non-renewals in moratorium-protected regions jumped by 70% to 97,771 in 2019, compared with a year earlier. But in 2020, the first full year in which the moratorium was used, non-renewals dropped by nearly 20% to 78,366.
What’s the right kind of help for Californians?
Schlickman said she wonders whether this kind of help is really what’s best for Californian consumers.
“Perhaps stopgap insurance measures like the FAIR Plan and moratoriums on non-renewals are delaying the inevitable and are actually putting more lives and properties at risk,” she said. “By insulating people from the real risks of wildfire, are we doing more harm than good? In this case, could market-based insurance actually help us adapt to climate-exacerbated disasters like wildfires?”
There are ways to adapt the FAIR Plan to slow development in wildfire-ravaged areas, she said. State leaders could take steps to limit FAIR coverage to existing homes to slow or freeze risky development. They could offer it only for primary residences to slow down building in the secondary vacation-home market.
In the overall home insurance market, Schlickman said, it might help to be more transparent with homeowners about how their rates were assigned. In effect, the bills then would be a way to educate homeowners on the cost and risks of living in wildfire-prone communities.
Certainly, she said, if state leaders ever to change the formula that determines premiums and allow home insurers to use forward-looking climate models to determine rates, the jump in cost would be a wake-up call.
Insurers already have long been able to assess a wildfire-risk surcharge on homeowner policies, but recently, Lara required insurers to offer discounts to property owners who have taken steps to make their properties safer from wildfire.
Schlickman said this approach is not without risks: Will these discounts promote more development in risky areas, increasing the potential for ignition? Will today’s ideas for increasing resilience work against future wildfires?
“In a way, these incentives serve as a false security blanket for residents as there is no way to make properties ‘fire-proof,’” she said, and “enforcement of these measures is a challenge as some properties are only getting assessed every few decades.”
Lara also has recommended that communities as a whole work together to reduce wildfire risk, using the collaborative framework developed by
In an upcoming book titled “Designed by Fire,” Schlickman and co-author
As residents of
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