Tag Archives: combined ratio breakdown

Softening but not soft

The speed dating jamboree that is the annual Monte Carlo Reinsurance Rendezvous kicks off on the 6th September where buyers and sellers (i.e. underwriters and brokers, with those clients that can afford the hotel rates) of speciality insurance and reinsurance kick off their discussions ahead of drawn-out negotiations for the January 2026 renewal season. Each side will earnestly set out their stall, with the US hurricane season as the backdrop (with the extent of any insured catastrophe losses playing a part in how actual negotiations progress towards the year-end), on the degree of rate, term, and condition changes for each client and/or client group.

The fact that rates have peaked is now beyond doubt with even the losses from the California wildfires failing to shift the downward trend in rates. In January, David Flandro of reinsurance broker Howden Re stated “if it wasn’t obvious already, we are now firmly in the hard market softening phase of the rating cycle” with the exhibit below in a report entitled “Passing the Pricing Peak” illustrating the point.

Metrics from Lloyd’s H1 presentation by new CEO Patrick Tiernan focus on the adequacy of rates in the context of the recent decline in rates, as per the exhibit below.

(Re)insurers and other commentators such as rating agencies are voraciously stressing the need for market discipline. A common defence from (re)insurers, as articulated by Flandro, is that “if you look at all lines, or most lines, we are still harder in terms of pricing than we were five years ago”. AM Best stated that “the lessons of past cycles suggest caution, but reinsurer sentiment has ensured tighter exposure management and market disciple in the current cycle” and asked, “the question now facing the industry is whether the improvements in terms and conditions represent a durable shift”. Fitch adjusted its outlook for the reinsurance sector to “deteriorating” stating that “softer pricing conditions and rising claims costs will pressure underwriting margins, though profitability remains strong by historical standards.” Munich Re CEO dismissed any talk of any meaningful softening in rates, stating “there is no soft market”. On the buyer side, Gallagher Re CEO highlighted that for property CAT business supply is now “materially outpacing demand”. There will be many such perspectives aired in articles and interviews over the coming week laying out the battle lines in these pre-negotiations.

A pickup in M&A is another sign that firms understand growth will not come from rates. Within the past few weeks, Sompo announced a deal to purchase Aspen at 1.3 times the tangible book and Skyward announced a deal for the Apollo Managing Agent in Lloyd’s at approx 8.5 times EBITDA, both sensible prices.

On my part, I will offer some of my thoughts on the subject in the remainder of this post through the lens of results and data over past decades, whilst updating some of the previous thinking detailed on this site (which are several years old now).

The first issue is to highlight the level of profitability the specialty insurance and reinsurance sector has enjoyed over the past few years. The exhibit below illustrates the heightened levels of ROE achieved by reinsurers over the cost of capital in recent years, according to a recent Gallagher Re mid-year report. Many would argue that such returns of 12-10% above the cost of capital are justified to compensate for the heightened risk environment of today given the climate, geopolitical, and macroeconomic issues at play.

By way of further illustrating the level of recent profits in the sector, Lloyd’s of London has just announced their H1 2025 results and the pre-tax profits of Lloyd’s from 2023, 2024 and H1 2025 equal the aggregate profit and losses from the previous 15 years (from 2007 to 2022). Lloyd’s has not had the two back-to-back return on capital years of 20%+ it had in 2023 and 2024 since 2006 and 2007.

The introduction of IFRS 17 reporting for many specialty insurers and reinsurers has complicated comparative, historical and aggregate analysis in the sector so I will revert to Lloyd’s historical results as a benchmark for the sector’s history. Obviously, Lloyd’s results carry a significant degree of caution when used as a proxy for the whole sector and I would caveat their use by referring to a (now 10-year-old) post called “Lessons from Lloyds”. An updated breakdown of the Lloyd’s combined ratio from 1993 to H1 2025 is below.

 30 year history of Lloyd's combined ratio, history of Lloyds of London

To illustrate the specialty underwriting cycle, I have discounted these combined ratios to adjust for the time value of money applicable for each year (i.e. a discount factor equal to the average annual 1 year T-Bill rate for each year over a duration of 24 months). The next metric I used to represent changes in market rates is the Guy Carpenter ROL index for property CAT reinsurance. Although this is clearly not representative of all specialty lines (see pricing and rate exhibits above) it gives a directional sense of rates for the overall sector, and it is measured on a consistent basis over an applicable long-term period. Combining these metrics with the inflated historical CAT insured losses for the post preceding this one gives the following graphic.

Specialty insurance cycle

In a highly unscientific way, I judgementally selected an ROL index base of 250 for the graphic as representing a level of adequacy akin to an 85% discounted combined ratio (as per 1996, 2003, 2009, and 2013). A 250 base indicates that the current 2025 index level has a further 7% to fall before becoming “inadequate”. This selection does assume that the sector has historically been able to adjust T&Cs, specifically attachment levels, to stay ahead of trend changes in insured CAT losses (at approx. 6-9% per year recently) due to factors such as loss inflation and climate change (an obviously BIG assumption!).

So, what does the above graphic illustrate? Accepting the (vast) limitations of my simplistic analysis, it indicates that the market today is at a similar stage in the rate cycle as we were in 2007 and 2014 (I would discount the 1990’s as the wild west in terms of London market underwriting behaviour). However, as highlighted by Beazley CEO Adrian Cox “in contrast to the previous softer cycle, there is a fundamental difference in today’s environment; the claims environment is active in respect to both frequency and severity, and uncertainty is elevated”. In the 2007 and 2013 years and the years that followed each, insured CAT losses were relatively low which fed the subsequent declines in rates. The CAT losses of 2011 and 2017 represented the bottom of each of the soft cycles albeit that the peak of 2012 and 2013 were short lived and it took a full 5 years over 2018 to 2022 for rates to get to an “adequate” level again.

Most (re)insurers would agree wholeheartedly in public with Cox when he says, “rate discipline is essential”. However, I suspect brokers and clients in Monte Carlo will be pushing hard to reduce rates further given the level of recent profits from the sector. Discipline but not yet will be the mantra and the level of insured losses (CAT or otherwise) over the remainder of 2025 will, I suspect, dictate how much softening of the current hard market will actually result in the January 2026 renewals and through 2026.

As a postscript, I also updated the graphic on underwriting and credit cycles to see if there were any further insights to be had, as below.

Specialty underwriting and credit cycle

The first thing to note is that credit and insurance cycles can be driven from the same event – 9/11 and COVID are obvious applicable cases. The graphic shows that the credit cycles over the past 20 years do not obviously influence the underwriting cycles with insured CAT losses being a much more relevant factor in the underwriting cycle.

The lack of a rush of new capital into the sector following major loss years have been an important factor over the past 20 years in shaping the character of underwriting cycles although economic and interest rate cycles do influence the level of capital which comes into the ILS market. It is interesting to note that with interest rates on a downward track currently, the appetite for CAT related returns from investors is again playing a part in the current availability of reinsurance, particularly retro, capacity. Memories can be short and it looks like it may take more CAT losses to reinforce to current ILS investors the risk they are taking on and the curse of “uncorrelated” tail exposure.

Finally, the impact of the policies of the mad Orange King and his sycophants, whom a wise commentator recently generously called “economic morons”, may just result in a return of a big beautiful credit crash akin to those of the past in the coming months and years which, were it to occur, would undoubtedly negatively impact everybody including (re)insurers.

It will be intriguing to see exactly how the 2026 renewal negotiations play out over the coming weeks and months.

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Multiple Temptation

I thought it was time for a quick catch up on all things reinsurance and specialty insurance since my last post a year ago. At that time, it looked like the underlying rating environment was gaining momentum and a hoped-for return to underwriting profitability looked on the cards. Of course, since then, the big game changer has been COVID-19.

A quick catch-up on the 2019 results, as below, from the Aon Reinsurance Aggregate (ARA) results of selected firms illustrates the position as we entered this year. It is interesting to note that reserve releases have virtually dried up and the 2019 accident year excluding cats is around 96%.

The Willis Re subset of aggregate results is broadly similar to the ARA (although it contains a few more of the lesser players and some life reinsurers and excludes firms like Beazley and Hiscox) and it shows that on an underling basis (i.e. accident year with normalised cat load), the trend is still upwards and more rate improvement is needed to improve attritional loss ratios.

The breakdown of the pre-tax results of the ARA portfolio, as below, shows that investment returns and gains saved the day in 2019.

The ROE’s of the Willis portfolio when these gains were stripped out illustrates again how underwriting performance needs to improve.

Of course, COVID-19 has impacted the sector both in terms of actual realised losses (e.g. event cancellations) and with the cloud of uncertainty over reserves for multiple exposures yet to be fully realised. There remains much uncertainty in the sector about the exact size of the potential losses with industry estimates ranging widely. Swiss Re recently put the figure at between $50-80 billion. To date, firms have established reserves of just over $20 billion. One of the key uncertainties is the potential outcome of litigation around business interruption cover. The case brought in the UK by the FCA on behalf of policyholders hopes to expedite lengthy legal cases over the main policy wordings with an outcome expected in mid-September. Lloyds industry insurance loss estimate is within the Swiss Re range and their latest June estimate is shown below against other historical events.

I think Alex Maloney of Lancashire summarised the situation well when he said that “COVID-19 is an ongoing event and a loss which will take years to mature”, adding that for “the wider industry the first-party claims picture will not be clear until 2021”. Evan Greenberg of Chubb described the pandemic as a slow rolling global catastrophe impacting virtually all countries, unlike other natural catastrophes it has no geographic or time limits and the event continues as we speak” and predicted that “together the health and consequent economic crisis will likely produce the largest loss in insurance history, particularly considering its worldwide scope and how both sides of the balance sheet are ultimately impacted”.

The immediate impact of COVID-19 has been on rates with a significant acceleration of rate hardening across most lines of business, with some specialty lines such as certain D&O covers have seen massive increases of 50%+. Many firms are reporting H1 aggregate rate increases of between 10% to 15% across their diversified portfolios. Insurance rate increases over the coming months and reinsurance rates at the January renewals, assuming no material natural cats in H2 2020, will be the key test as to whether a true hard market has arrived. Some insurers are already talking about increasing their risk retentions and their PMLs for next year in response to reinsurance rate hardening.

Valuations in the sector have taken a hit as the graph below from Aon on stock performance shows.

Leaving the uncertainty around COVID-19 to one side, tangible book multiples amongst several of my favourite firms since this March 2018 post, most of whom have recently raised additional capital in anticipation of a broad hard market in specialty insurance and reinsurance market, look tempting, as below.

The question is, can you leave aside the impact of COVID-19? That question is worthy of some further research, particularly on the day that Hiscox increased their COVID-19 reserves from $150 million to $230 million and indicated a range of a £10 million to £250 million hit if the UK business interruption case went against them (the top of the range estimate would reduce NTAs by 9%).

Food for thought.

Creepy Things

It has been a while since I looked at the state of the reinsurance and specialty insurance markets. Recent market commentary and insurers’ narratives at recent results have suggested market rates are finally firming up, amidst talk of reserve releases drying up and loss creep on recent events.

Just yesterday, Bronek Masojada the CEO of Hiscox commented that “the market is in a better position than it has been for some time”. The Lancashire CEO Alex Maloney said he was “encouraged by the emerging evidence that the (re)insurance market is now experiencing the long-anticipated improvements in discipline and pricing”. The Chubb CEO Evan Greenberg said that “pricing continued to tighten in the quarter while spreading to more classes and segments of business, particularly in the U.S. and London wholesale market”.

A look at the historical breakdown of combined ratios in the Aon Benfield Aggregate portfolio from April (here) and Lloyds results below illustrate the downward trend in reserve releases in the market to the end of 2018. The exhibits also indicate the expense disadvantage that Lloyds continues to operate under (and the reason behind the recently announced modernisation drive).

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In the Willis Re mid-year report called “A Discerning Market” their CEO James Kent said “there are signs that the longstanding concern over the level of reserve redundancy in past year reserves is coming to fruition” and that in “some classes, there is a clear trend of worsening loss ratios in recent underwriting years due to a prolonged soft market and an increase in loss severity.

 In their H1 presentation, Hiscox had an exhibit that quantified some of the loss creep from recent losses, as below.

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The US Florida hurricane losses have been impacted by factors such as assignment of benefits (AOB) in litigated water claims and subsequently inflating repair costs. Typhoon Jebi losses have been impacted by overlapping losses and demand surge from Typhoon Trami, the Osaka earthquake and demand from Olympics construction. Arch CEO Marc Grandisson believes that the market missed the business interruption and contingent BI exposures in Jebi estimates.

The fact that catastrophic losses are unpredictable, even after the event, is no surprise to students of insurance history (this post on the history of Lloyds is a testament to unpredictability). Technology and advances in modelling techniques have unquestionably improved risk management in insurance in recent years. Notwithstanding these advances, uncertainty and the unknown should always be considered when model outputs such as probability of loss and expected loss are taken as a given in determining risk premium.

To get more insight into reserve trends, it’s worth taking a closer look at two firms that have historically shown healthy reserve releases – Partner Re and Beazley. From 2011 to 2016, Partner Re’s non-life business had an average reserve release of $675 million per year which fell to $450 million in 2017, and to $250 million in 2018. For H1 2019, that figure was $15 million of reserve strengthening. The exhibit below shows the trend with 2019 results estimated based upon being able to achieve reserve releases of $100 million for the year and assuming no major catastrophic claims in 2019. Despite the reduction in reserve releases, the firm has grown its non-life business by double digits in H1 2019 and claims it is “well-positioned to benefit from this improved margin environment”.

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Beazley is one of the best insurers operating from London with a long history of mixing innovation with a balanced portfolio. It has doubled its net tangible assets (NTA) per share over the past 10 years and trades today at a 2.7 multiple to NTA. Beazley is also predicting double digit growth due to an improving rating environment whilst predicting “the scale of the losses that we, in common with the broader market, have incurred over the past two years means that below average reserve releases will continue this year”.

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And that’s the rub. Although reserves are dwindling, rate improvements should help specialty (re)insurers to rebuild reserves and improve profitability back above its cost of capital, assuming normal catastrophe loss levels. However, market valuations, as reflected by the Aon Benfield price to book exhibit below, look like they have all that baked in already.

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And that’s a creepy thing.