Catastrophes Drove Private U.S. P/C Insurers to $4.7B Net Underwriting Loss: ISO and PCI Report

May 8, 2017

Private U.S. property/casualty insurers lost big in 2016, with a $4.7 billion net underwriting loss driven, in part, by significantly higher catastrophe-related insured property losses, according to ISO and the Property Casualty Insurers Association of America.

The results stand in sharp contrast to the $8.9 billion net underwriting gain insurers reported in 2015.

Adding to sobering results, insurers saw a 25 percent drop in 2016 after-tax net income. The number came in at $42.6 billion, versus $56.8 billion the previous year.

As well, insurers’ combined ratio deteriorated to 100.7 in 2017, versus 97.8 in 2015. The result comes with direct insured property losses in the U.S. hitting $21.6 billion in 2016, versus $15.2 billion in 2015. The number is also above the $19.2 billion average direct catastrophe loss over the last decade.

“Catastrophe losses continued to hurt insurer performance in 2016. There were 43 catastrophe events in 2016, the highest number of such events since 1980,” Beth Fitzgerald, president of ISO solutions, said in prepared remarks.

She said insurers need to use detailed and accurate analytics of weather and environmental perils to underwrite catastrophic risk better. But they’re also hampered by legacy losses, she said, which underscores the need to focus on disciplined underwriting.

Robert Gordon, PCI’s senior vice president for Policy Development and Research, noted that most operating results in 2016 hovered near long-term trend lines, though there has been deterioration in nearly every category since 2013.

Here are highlights from the PCI/ISO report:

ISO is a Verisk Analytics business.

Source: ISO/Verisk, PCI