Insurers agree: Reforms sparked ‘phenomenal’ improvement in market climate [South Florida Sun-Sentinel]
The stewards of Florida’s property insurance industry refused to tamp down their enthusiasm at this week’s Florida Chamber Insurance Summit in
Recent legislative reforms are driving down lawsuits — the wildcard of risk modeling — and enticing more reinsurance capital and new insurance companies into the state, many said.
Ultimately, insurance leaders said Thursday, the reforms will make insurance risks more predictable and property insurance rates should stabilize.
Policyholders might not be ready to declare victory, particularly after enduring multiple years of rate hikes that sent Florida’s average premium to three times the national average. Some have said the reforms tilted the playing field too far in insurers’ direction.
But summit participants say what they’re seeing is a good start. Without the reforms, investors weren’t willing to fund reinsurance coverage necessary to keep the market alive, they said.
Views and actions of high-level executives of reinsurance providers are closely monitored throughout the industry. Reinsurers provide insurance that insurance companies must buy each year to ensure they can pay claims after catastrophic weather events.
And in recent years, uncertainty about increasing numbers of claims and lawsuits in
The past couple of years have also brought uncertainty over whether enough reinsurance capacity would be available at the beginning of hurricane seasons to cover all
In a session on reinsurance rates and availability, Justin O’Keefe, chief underwriting officer for
A year after the one-way attorney fee statute was reformed during a special legislative session in
New cases against Citizens declined 17% during the first 10 months of 2023, according to a new report released by the
“A lot of that stuff, from a reinsurance perspective, gives us more certainty, more credibility,” O’Keefe said, “of how to price the risk in Florida.”
“I’ve been spreading the message worldwide to a global investor base that really is breathing a great sigh of relief.”
Later, he said, “You’ve now opened up the runway for tens of billions of dollars of fresh capital to flow into
“I think we’ve gotten it back to an insurance market rather than a fraud market,” Ehrhart said. “That’s what we hope to see continuing.”
Predicting payouts after storms, known as risk modeling, had become impossible prior to the reforms because of the high levels of claims litigation in the state, Ehrhart said.
O’Keefe said that his firm ended up paying
“We all probably have an assumption of where that half a billion dollars went to and I won’t go into the details,” he said.
Seo said Citizens and the
Citizens is the insurer of last resort that covers homeowners unable to find affordable coverage elsewhere.
“In the absence of Citizens and the
Still, speakers also noted potential problems that the market could face as it waits for further declines in litigation.
Ehrhart noted that many
And reinsurance costs likely won’t fall this year, despite the downward claims trend, because of updates to risk modeling that take into account increased frequency and severity of severe, non-hurricane, weather events.
But even those issues could not quell the jubilant attitude at the summit, which prompted Yaworksy to declare, “It feels very good that we have stopped the bleeding in the market.”
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