Hurricane Matthew may cost US insurers a loss of $25-30 billions | World News - Hindustan Times
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Hurricane Matthew may cost US insurers a loss of $25-30 billions

ByReuters, London
Oct 07, 2016 07:38 PM IST

A hurricane threatening the first direct hit on the United States in more than a decade could cause insurance losses of $25-30 billion and be the second costliest US hurricane on record for insurers, according to initial industry estimates..

A hurricane threatening the first direct hit on the United States in more than a decade could cause insurance losses of $25-30 billion and be the second costliest US hurricane on record for insurers, according to initial industry estimates.

Palm trees sway due to Hurricane Matthew on Cocoa Beach, Florida.(AFP Photo)
Palm trees sway due to Hurricane Matthew on Cocoa Beach, Florida.(AFP Photo)

Hurricane Matthew is just off the east coast of Florida near Cape Canaveral, the National Hurricane Center said in an advisory on Friday, after killing at least 339 people in Haiti on its move north through the Caribbean.

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Data modelling firm RMS has told clients its initial estimates were a 42% chance of a $20 billion insurance loss and a 26% chance of a $30 billion loss from the hurricane, a source familiar with the research said.

Ben Brookes, vice-president capital markets at RMS told Reuters its guidance to clients was based on a forecast from earlier in the week.

“We have continued to update our guidance as the situation changes,” Brookes said, without giving further details.

An estimate from Kinetic Analysis of insured losses of $25 billion would make Matthew “the second most costly hurricane in US history behind Katrina”, JPMorgan analysts said in a note late Thursday, referring to the hurricane which hit New Orleans and the surrounding coast in 2005.

This handout photo shows a woman looking on in the devastated town of Jeremie, west Haiti. (AFP Photo)
This handout photo shows a woman looking on in the devastated town of Jeremie, west Haiti. (AFP Photo)

Kinetic could not immediately be reached for comment.

Market participants expect these estimates to rise.

“People are looking at this literally every minute and working overnight on it,” one trader said.

The average impact to US property and casualty insurers’ book value from $10-30 billion of insured losses from the hurricane would equate to around a quarter’s worth of earnings, the JPMorgan analysts added.

A $20 billion insured loss would match the insured losses caused by Hurricane Sandy in the northeast of the United States in 2012, which did not make landfall. A loss of this size would lead to “material risks” for Lloyd’s of London insurers, analyst Ben Cohen at Canaccord Genuity said in a note on Friday.

Cohen calculated a loss equivalent to Sandy would hit Beazley’s earnings by $104 million, Hiscox’s by 117 million pounds ($145 million) and Lancashire’s by $39 million.

Beazley estimates an $80 billion storm would cause a $200 million loss, a spokesperson said, without specifying losses from a smaller disaster.

A Hiscox spokesperson said it was too early to judge the impact of the hurricane.

A Lancashire spokesperson also said it was early days, but the firm was feeling “relatively relaxed” about its losses because it was very lightly exposed to risk in Florida compared with other states in which it offers reinsurance for wind damage.

The hurricane represented a “real test” of reinsurers’ exposure, S&P Global said in a report, but it did not see a ratings impact, due to reinsurers’ strong capital buffers.

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