CoreLogic News
Where Are the Private Insurers? Analyses Highlight U.S. Flood Gap
Two new analyses—one from a risk modeler estimating insured damages from Hurricane Helene, and the other from a rating agency about flood insurance penetration and profitability—highlight the ...
AccuWeather Raises Helene Total Damage Estimates by $50B; Insured Loss Estimates Not Ready
While inland flooding complicates the picture of still-to-be-determined insured loss estimates from Hurricane Helene, a weather forecasting firm has already delivered a second estimate of total ...
CoreLogic: 2.6M U.S. Homes at Moderate to High Wildfire Risk
Changing weather patterns and extreme weather are factors leading to more frequent wildfires. New analysis indicates more than 2.6 million homes across 14 states are at moderate to very high risk of ...Beryl Lands in Texas; Record Storm Spawns ‘Early Warning’ for Insurers
Although Beryl was still a tropical storm on Sunday, late day National Hurricane Center advisories put it on track to make landfall on the middle Texas coast early Monday, possibly regaining strength ...
CoreLogic: Mid-Month Hail Events Impact More Than 600K Homes
Several convective storms earlier this month spawned hail as large as softballs, causing damage to more than 600,000 homes across the Central U.S., according to a weather bulletin by Jon Schneyer, ...
Tech Bytes: New Partnerships at Openly, CoreLogic, ACORD
Bees360, a provider of drone-assisted property inspection services powered by artificial intelligence, is announcing a new partnership with Openly, a homeowners insurance provider sold exclusively by ...
Insured Property Losses From Lahaina Wildfire Estimated at $3.2B
The insured property losses resulting from the deadly and damaging wildfire that broke out on Aug. 8 in the town of Lahaina on the Hawaiian island of Maui has been estimated at around $3.2 billion, ...
Maui Wildfire Insured Losses Estimated to Be Second Worst in Hawaii History
A wildfire that quickly spread across the Hawaiian island of Maui last week will likely be responsible for the second worst disaster, in terms of insured losses, in Hawaii's history. Karen Clark ...

