Two big storms in two seasons. How will that affect Floridians’ hurricane insurance?
It doesn't mean that windstorm rates will skyrocket, at least this time. Experts believe the state's insurance industry can weather the latest losses from Hurricane Michael without significant increases in premiums statewide.
Historically, major storms -- or a string of them -- have bankrupted the state's insurance firms and sent rates skyrocketing.
In more recent years, carriers have taken out enough of their own re-insurance to carry them through, said
"
About 60 percent of the state's homeowner's policies are held by
It would take a monster hurricane in a well-populated area to cause the kind of damage needed to raise rates statewide or bankrupt one of those companies, said
"We haven't seen a level of that loss yet that would impact these companies," he said.
In 1992, the then-record-breaking
Since then, the state had been relatively untested by huge, expensive storms. Hurricane Irma changed that, causing an estimated
Already, the first batch of Hurricane Michael claims has trickled in: more than 38,000 claims totaling an estimated
Schneider estimated that the "magic number" for modern-day insurance firms to feel serious pain could be around
"That's not to say we wouldn't see more isolated incidences of price changes. There's more risk in the
In the Keys,
"We really haven't seen anything go up drastically other than regular increases we've seen on flood," he said.
His group was part of the successful push to delay Citizens' latest rate hike to December, and Montagne said he wants to push it back even further.
However, he thinks Michael could be a "game changer" for the industry, but it isn't clear yet. "I think the level of destruction we have down here doesn't get near what we see up there," he said.
"Let me see that crystal ball," he joked.
___
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