Investors, state senator see opportunity to cash in on Florida's insurance crisis [Miami Herald]
When Floridians go to shop around for a new homeowners insurance policy next year, they could find several new companies offering coverage.
Including one company backed by a current state senator.
Lured by the nation's highest premiums and new laws making it harder to sue insurance companies, investors see an opportunity in
"As soon as we were done with the last vote in session, I had a couple of people ... including legislators, asking if I wanted to invest in an insurance company," Sen.
That includes state Sen.
READ MORE:Bad news for
Investing millions of dollars into one of the nation's most volatile insurance markets might seem like folly. Hurricanes and floods are multiplying. Meanwhile, numerous companies have gone insolvent without being hit by either of those threats.
But
Those structures, combined with a reduced threat of lawsuits, is an enticing combination, at least to some investors. And Gov.
"The market needs green shoots, and it's exciting to see new companies," said former state Sen.
Pizzo, one of the state's wealthiest lawmakers with a net worth of
"I just don't want to be directly involved with profiting off of what I think is less restrictive, or more favorable, conditions for insurers," Pizzo said.
To the public, the optics of lawmakers forming insurance companies right after passing legislation affecting those companies "probably aren't great," he said. But he doesn't begrudge Gruters for trying.
"If he gets them affordable policies, I don't think they'll care," Pizzo said.
READ MORE: Homeowners insurance in
'A unique and lucrative opportunity'
To solve
Although lawmakers and regulators haven't proven that lawsuits were driving up rates and causing insurers to go out of business, they passed legislation in December that stopped requiring homeowners insurance companies to pay attorney's fees when plaintiffs sue and win. This year, they extended that to all insurance companies.
The legislation hasn't yet had a meaningful effect on homeowners' premiums, which the industry now says will not go down in the foreseeable future because of factors such as climate change.
But it has sparked immediate interest from investors looking to put their money into insurance companies.
"You have a number of different investors that are looking at this ... as a real potential opportunity," he said.
Gilway said the market was so active that he'd consider joining one of the companies.
"If the right opportunity came along, I'd get serious about jumping back in," Gilway said.
One of the new companies is
In May the company announced it was raising
It's unclear what role Gruters, an accountant by trade, has with the company. His involvement has not been previously reported, and he did not respond to calls and text messages for comment.
In a pitch to investors sent by Gruters, company leaders wrote that "there lies a unique and lucrative opportunity for investors" as
The pitch directs potential investors to a spreadsheet of financial projections showing that the company would take 20,000 policies out of Citizens next year. By 2028, the company would grow organically and be writing
The pitch directs investors to one category of the financials in particular, involving the company's "managing general agent," which is an affiliate company.
After paying those expenses, tens of millions of dollars would be left over each year to repay investors. By 2028, the company would show a cumulative return on investment of the managing general agent of 165%, the document shows.
"We firmly believe that this venture presents an extraordinary chance to achieve exceptional returns in an environment of change and growth," the pitch states.
Gruters voted for the
Gruters also voted for this year's legislation shielding all insurance companies from paying attorneys' fees in most situations, but he bucked most of his party by voting for an amendment that would have watered down the bill. The amendment failed.
A recipe for success -- and failure
Since 1992 s Hurricane Andrew,
Those
While insurance company profits are capped by regulators, and its managing general agent fees are approved by regulators, the managing general agents' activities are not regulated. State lawmakers tried to pierce the veil on insurers' affiliate companies this year, but provisions that would have required affiliates to report more information to the state was removed from the legislation. One key senator said they didn't want to "upset the apple cart" of the insurance industry.
This formula has been a recipe for success -- or stunning failure -- for some companies.
It's successfully lured investors and sparked new insurance companies. But it's also been a consistent theme in the many companies that have failed.
Forensic accountants hired by the state have repeatedly cited excessive or unusual payouts to affiliated companies for insurance companies failing. Some of those payments were not approved by regulators. Others were fees for overlapping services.
While it's not unusual for insurance companies in other states to use managing general agents,
The arrangement doesn't make sense for a large insurer unless the company wanted a guaranteed stream of money regardless of the whether the insurance company was profitable, Birnbaum said.
The arrangement posed "an unbelievable conflict of interests," he said.
"The question is, why would regulators permit it?"
Editor's note: Because of a reporting error, a previous version of this story incorrectly stated Pizzo's voting record.
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