Your insurance costs won’t climb so high this year. All bets are off if we get a lot of hurricanes. [South Florida Sun-Sentinel]
It’s so
A yearslong effort to stabilize the home insurance industry is finally paying dividends, according to state officials and insurance insiders, just as forecasters are predicting a super-charged, La Niña-driven hurricane season.
What could possibly go wrong?
Let’s start with what insurers say has gone right: Reduced losses from the reforms that quelled high litigation rates, combined with a single hurricane that hit a sparely populated area last year, convinced reinsurers — the global financiers that insure insurers — to ease back on rates charged for the upcoming hurricane season.
So companies purchased more reinsurance than they needed to and say they are prepared to pay off losses after not one but two hurricanes that could hit the state this year.
If more than two strike
“If that were to happen, you could see some companies experience some financial stress.”
Meanwhile, eight new companies have been approved to sell insurance in
Ten insurers have filed for approval to leave their rates unchanged this year while eight have filed for rate decreases, the state says.
New data shows further slowing of cost increases
And newly released data backs up state officials’ assertions that costs for home insurance are stabilizing in
Quarterly market share data released by insurance regulators showed that homeowner insurance premium increases slowed to their lowest point during the first quarter of 2024 since the state began requiring insurers to submit the data in early 2022.
An analysis by the
That average was just 1.3% more than the
Agents say that homeowners have not yet started to feel the relief.
“Premiums have not leveled off, but increases are not as large,” said
Statewide totals are the only figures currently available to the public, and averages are calculated by dividing the total of premiums collected by the number of policies reported by each state-regulated insurer. Premiums charged by surplus lines insurers, often used to insure expensive homes on the coasts, are not included in the quarterly reports.
Because of how the state’s economy is structured,
Condominium unit owners aren’t getting quite the same break. The statewide average premium to insure a condo unit rose 2.6% in the first quarter to
The average premium for policies that condo associations purchase — and that unit owners pay for in their annual fees — to cover common areas was up 3.1% to
New insurers still gearing up
While state officials are touting approval of eight new companies, most are not yet making offers to cover individual homeowners who shop for lower-cost policies.
Several have showed no signs they are actually selling insurance in the state, while most of the companies that have started operating are building their initial books of business by participating in Citizens’ depopulation strategy, said
A number of the new companies — Ovation Home Insurance Exchange,
Ovation, a subsidiary of
Manatee Insurance Exchange, a subsidiary of
Like Tailrow, Condo Owners Reciprocal Exchange is a subsidiary of
The company has been authorized to take out another 700 policies in April and June.
HCI spokesman
Tailrow, approved by the state in
Mitchell said the company has been focused on establishing Condo Owners Reciprocal Exchange and getting Homeowners Choice and TypTap in position to takeout 70,000 Citizens policies.
Whether Tailrow actually goes into business is unknown, Mitchell acknowledged.
“We’re probably going to evaluate the (upcoming) storm season and make a decision in the fall,” he said. “If the opportunity is there, we have the option to activate it.”
In August, the state approved three out-of-state companies —
Orion180 announced in August that it planned to sell wind-only coverage along Florida’s coast beginning in late 2023, catering to homes with a replacement cost above
The company also said it “would evaluate” offering a
Although Orion180 has secured approval from the
Its sister company, Orion180 Select, has not submitted rates and policy forms for state approval.
Nor are either companies on the office’s list of consent orders identifying insurers that have been approved to take policies out of Citizens.
Orion180’s website lists sales representatives for
Mainsail, a subsidiary of the
The company’s website states that it expects its insurance products to be approved for sale in
Representatives for Orion180 and Mainsail did not respond to emails seeking information about their plans to offer coverage in
Orange Insurance Exchange has hit the ground running. Since obtaining state approval on
In response to an email seeking information about the company, CEO
What
Subscribers contribute a fee equal to 10% of their premiums to build up the company’s surplus, which makes it easier to raise investment capital to run the management firm, called the “Attorney-in-Fact,” appointed to operate the reciprocal exchange.
As owners of the companies, subscribers can have a say in their operations by joining a subscriber’s advisory committee, and depending on how successful the company is, can actually receive a dividend.
Hurricane ready?
Several reasons exist for the additional reinsurance purchases, he said. One of the major ones is that the amount of losses that companies must report before collecting reinsurance from the
“I think the industry is well set up,” he said. “For the first time in six years, it’s making money. The legislative reforms are working and companies are decreasing rates for the first time in six years.”
Yet, few should expect rate decreases anytime soon. That’s because while eight companies, including
“The bad news is that the cost of homebuilding is expected to go up by 10% to 15% over the next 12 months,” he said.
Insurers are obligated to raise coverage costs to account for the added replacement costs, he said.
Of course, all of the storm modeling and insurance actuarial expertise in the world won’t mean a thing if
While companies have enough reinsurance to pay off losses from two major storms, the second storm would force many to buy additional reinsurance, says Handerhan. That additional coverage would come at an increased price, he said.
Reinsurers will likely raise costs if the state only gets two hurricanes, he said, and those costs “will have to be passed onto consumers.”
Homeowners hear forecasts like NOAA’s recent projection for an above-average hurricane season with 17 to 25 named storms and four to seven major hurricanes and naturally become pessimistic, said agent
“I’m certainly detecting anxiety about the upcoming hurricane season. Not just from clients, but also from insurers and reinsurers,” Heidrick said. “I probably received a half-dozen reports or articles last week describing how warm the oceans are and hurricane season hasn’t even begun.”
But “brokers know better,” he said. “We understand the market’s volatility and the risks involved. ‘Never’ will happen. … Happens in
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