Even though investment returns rebounded from first-quarter levels during the second quarter of 2020, claims from COVID-19 created an “anemic earnings” picture for global reinsurers, Moody’s Investor Services says.

In a new report on half-year earnings for the sector published today, Moody’s calculated a 10-point jump in the average combined ratio of 14 global reinsurers for the first half. The average combined ratio came in at 102.8 for the first six months of 2020, compared to 92.8 for the comparable period in 2019. Moody’s estimates a COVID-19 impact of 9.9 points in the half-year 2020 combined ratio.

Net income for the cohort totaled $1.7 billion for first-half 2020, compared to nearly $16 billion for the first half of 2019.

With pandemic-related non-life claims, particularly travel and event cancellation, rising over the six months—and with ongoing uncertainty around business interruption, an active hurricane season and ultra-low interest rates all dimming reinsurer earnings prospects for the year, “the positive pricing environment is a singular bright spot,” the report says.

“Global reinsurers reported a broad-based improvement in pricing, extending beyond previously loss-making lines of business,” Moody’s Vice President Christian Badorff said in a media statement. “Price increases in recent policy renewals are in the mid-to-high single digits on average, and significantly higher natural catastrophe-exposed business in the U.S. and Asia-Pacific.”

Lower investment yields will pressure margins, particularly on longer-tail casualty lines, Moody’s noted.

The Details

During the first half, on the underwriting front, Partner Re and Berkshire Hathaway Reinsurance Group saw the largest jumps in half-year combined ratios overall—with more than 17 points of deterioration from 2019 to 2020 for each. Contributing to the 17-point changes, COVID losses added almost 11 points each to the Partner Re and Berkshire results, according to Moody’s. Swiss Re’s combined ratio deteriorated 15 points and all of that links back to COVID-19 claims, according to the data presented in the Moody’s report. Ranking the reinsurers based on COVID’s combined ratio year-to-date impact, a chart in the report indicates that the roughly 15.6 point impact for Swiss Re is the largest among the 14 reinsurers included in the analysis.

While none of the reinsurers reported improved or steady combined ratios in the first half, Fairfax Financial Holdings came the closest, with the overall combined ratio rising just 1.7 point to 98.6, and a 5.8-point impact from COVID claims. (Editor’s Note: Although Odyssey Reinsurance Company is the rated reinsurance company, the 98.6 combined ratio figure in the Moody’s report relates to all of Fairfax’s insurance and reinsurance companies. Odyssey by itself reported a 99.2 combined ratio for the first six months, up 3.7 points from 95.5 in last year’s first half.)

Only five of the 14 reinsurers reported combined ratios under 100 during the first half. And only RenaissanceRe was under 90—at 85.4.

In terms of overall net income (available to common shareholders), Berkshire, Fairfax and Swiss saw the biggest dips—all more than $2 billion, according to Moody’s figures.

Building on the pricing “bright spot,” Moody’s reported that gross written premiums rose 6.4 percent in the first half of 2020 for the reinsurer cohort analyzed. As with the combined ratios, premium growth varied by company, with RenRe and Arch Capital seeing premiums jump more than 20 percent while Partner Re recorded a 10.6 percent drop in premiums.

“Companies with large books of natural catastrophe exposed business are typically benefiting the most from price increases,” the report said, partially explaining company-by-company variations. “Given the coronavirus pandemic and economic uncertainty, some companies are paring back selected business lines where risk-adjusted returns are not meeting internal hurdles,” the report added.

On the capital front, Moody’s analysts noted that shareholders’ equity recovered during the second quarter of 2020 for the selected reinsurers. “The improvement reflects a rebound in equity markets, tightening credit spreads and falling interest rates that increased fixed income valuations.”

Still, shareholders’ equity for the reinsurance cohort remains more than 5 percent below year-end 2019 levels, Moody’s reported noting actions by some companies to raise capital, reduce dividend payments and curtail share buyback programs.

Source: Moody’s