14 January 2019Insurance

January 1 renewals rate movement limited: Guy Carpenter

The overall impact of catastrophe losses on property rates was muted at the January 1, 2019 reinsurance renewals, according to Guy Carpenter.

At the same time, the broker noted that the fourth highest annual catastrophe loss year on record did create questions over pricing adequacy, underwriting strategy and the amount of capital available.

In its annual renewal report, Guy Carpenter said potential sector pressure from global catastrophe losses in the second half of 2018 and the continued development of 2017 claims was at least partially offset by plentiful capacity. As a result, its Global Rate on Line (RoL) Index, a measure of change in catastrophe premium dollars paid year on year, increased just 1.1 percent despite back-to-back years of major loss accumulation, the broker noted.

Contributions to the index from the two largest sectors, the US and Europe/Middle East/Africa (EMEA), increased 2.6 percent and decreased 2.5 percent, respectively, but there was a wide degree of variation within these results depending on account specifics, the report said. For some European renewals, the uncertainty around Brexit affected their willingness to use Lloyd’s capacity, but this had little effect on renewal outcomes as additional capital was available. While Japan also experienced significant catastrophe activity, any renewal impact will not be evident until the April 1 renewals conclude, Guy Carpenter said.

While upward movement in property pricing was limited to localized activity, the effects on profitability from losses in this sector put pressure on other lines to achieve or maintain self-sustaining levels. As a result, in addition to increases on loss-impacted business, increases on some non-loss-impacted casualty and specialty business were achieved, the report noted.

“While the impact on January 1 renewals overall was muted, this was a more challenging environment for some segments than it was a year ago,” said David Priebe, vice chairman at Guy Carpenter. “The industry is dealing with questions of pricing adequacy and where and to what degree adjustments might be needed. Finding equilibrium was not always easy and questions remain coming out of this renewal,” Priebe added.

Conditions for upcoming 2019 renewals are uncertain as capital providers integrate recent experience into their market approach, the report noted. Diminishing profitability as well as uncertainty over the amount of available convergence capital impacted retrocessional renewals at January 1, but it is unclear what this might mean for broader market dynamics going forward, according to Guy Carpenter. As the events of 2018 unfolded and 2017 losses continued to develop, increasing amounts of collateralized capital were lost or restricted by trust agreements, the company said. “If this trend continues, or capital providers in general are more conservative in their commitments, deployable capacity may become more broadly constrained. However, there are also signs capital may increase, with several initiatives reportedly in progress to bring in new funds,” it added.

As the industry continues to refine the process by which capital supports risk, the evolving nature of those risks is creating additional challenges, the report noted. The effects of climate change are not fully known but may shape the industry’s future assessment of exposure to loss, and emerging risks such as cyber have the potential to rival or exceed the exposure from any event currently considered, it added. “Market participants may need to adapt their approach to a shifting landscape, but capacity is likely to remain plentiful for risks that can be adequately measured and priced,” Guy Carpenter said.

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