South Florida policyholders will have to pay if Florida's insurers can't cover Ian's destruction [South Florida Sun-Sentinel]
While it's still early to project exactly where the storm is going to go and how much damage it's going to create, industry analysts have been studying computer models and trying to predict how much the storm is going to cost.
Scenarios from
Later on Tuesday, the company released another model showing the storm causing
Late-afternoon models showed Ian entering the state around the Fort
A damage-cost model for that scenario was not available late Tuesday, but it's safe to infer that total damage would be closer to the
In 2019, by contrast,
Officials cautioned that the forecast could shift several times before making landfall sometime Thursday night.
Whatever path it takes, Ian is expected to cause widespread damage and flooding not only along its primary path, but in other areas of the state that will suffer spinoff effects such as heavy rain, flooding and tornados.
Property insurance only covers wind-driven flooding. Rising flood waters, including floods caused by storm surge, is primarily covered by the
"Those without flood coverage will have to rely on
Ian comes at a bad time for
Homeowners have seen premiums double over the past four years and now pay the highest average premiums of all 50 states. Increasing weather severity, claims fraud and high rates of litigation helped push six insurers into insolvency this year, and an unknown number of surviving companies were not able to secure as much reinsurance -- that's insurance insurers pay -- as they had planned.
Customers of state-owned
If combined Citizens losses exceed
Under a worst-case scenario, typical Citizens customers with a
Smaller private-market insurers that spend 15% of their surplus and all of their private-market reinsurance will be eligible to tap into the
Meanwhile, if Ian forces any other company into insolvency,
Prior to
"No one is talking about how this storm is going to further contract the reinsurance market's appetite to cover catastrophic risk moving forward and what happens to those primary insurers that cannot obtain reinsurance to complete their future reinsurance programs," Handerhan said.
If reinsurance costs go up next year, insurers will of course recoup those increases by hiking rates.
Not all companies are facing Ian on shaky ground.
She added, "This is why we're here. We prepare for situations like Ian every single day of the year."
The company, with about 169,000 policies, expects 20,000 claims and insured losses ranging from
Devriese says the company stands ready with
(C)2022 South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Visit sun-sentinel.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


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