Business Services Industry

A.M. Best: January 2005 Reinsurance Renewals Indicate European Underwriting Is Disciplined

Business Wire, Feb 18, 2005

OLDWICK, N.J. -- European January renewals confirm A.M. Best Co.'s expectations that underwriting discipline is being maintained, despite wide capacity availability. Overall premium rates have decreased moderately, with some expected increases in U.S. property lines exposed to the hurricanes in 2004.

The January 2005 renewal season highlights that this cycle, although still moving downward, is shallower than previous cycles. Forthcoming renewals throughout 2005 and the first quarter of 2006 will be decisive. Traditional leading reinsurers could capitalise on their strong business position to withstand market pressure and to maintain underwriting discipline, or relatively new players--particularly those in Bermuda--could enforce price reductions to attract new business at a time of ample capacity.

January renewals mainly refer to European property risks (approximately two-thirds of treaty renewals) but, as a global sector, reflect the high number of catastrophes world-wide, and prices for non-loss making treaties declined only moderately. In the United States, loss-making non-proportional catastrophe treaties experienced double-digit increases, whereas loss-free treaties followed a similar pattern outside the United States. Casualty reinsurers are happily forgoing business when underwriting conditions (either in terms of wordings or premium rates) do not conform with their standards. Traditional reinsurers are further reducing their exposure to some European business (i.e., motor and D&O) when clients and brokers disagree with their renewal terms.

The renewal negotiations were marked by the continued reserve strengthening in respect of U.S. liabilities (reserve strengthening has been reported by a number of reinsurers during 2004). A.M. Best believes that uncertainties about future loss patterns and claims inflation will remain in 2005, which could continue to negatively affect the current favourable accident year underwriting performance.

The significant exposure of reinsurers to the hurricanes in the United States and the typhoons in Japan in 2004 also highlight that underwriting discipline may provide excellent results under "normal circumstances." Increasing frequency in natural catastrophes and potential for new causes of losses (i.e., electromagnetic fields) make it more difficult to prospectively forecast underwriting results as indicated by the 2004 earnings revisions of the leading reinsurance players. The stability of ratings will largely depend on reinsurers' ability to generate sufficient earnings to absorb potential adverse loss developments from previous, as well as current, underwriting years while continuing to build their risk-adjusted capitalisation as to withstand any potential sharp falls in the underwriting cycle.

For current Best's Ratings, independent data and analysis on more than 330 reinsurance companies, please visit http://www.ambest.com/reinsurance/.> A.M. Best Co., established in 1899, is the world's oldest and most authoritative insurance rating and information source. For more information, visit A.M. Best's Web site at http://www.ambest.com.

COPYRIGHT 2005 Business Wire
COPYRIGHT 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning

 

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