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Return to Virginia Business - December 2002

Turmoil after terrorism
How last year’s attacks have scrambled an industry

by John Rubino

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Back in the 1990s, Chesapeake real estate development and construction firm Armada/Hoffler didn’t give much thought to insurance. It didn’t have to, since the premiums on its workers compensation and liability policies “actually went down for quite a few years in a row,” says Mike O’Hara, the company’s chief financial officer. But when the policies came up for renewal at the beginning of 2002, O’Hara discovered just how much times have changed. “The increases were huge, 40 percent to 50 percent,” he says.

Believe it or not, Armada/Hoffler got off easy. Other companies, especially those in risky fields or with less sterling safety records, are seeing premiums double or more — assuming their carriers will insure them at all.

Welcome to the insurance industry’s version of the Perfect Storm, where just about everything that can go wrong has, all at once.
First, there’s the distorted insurance cycle. Look at the 30 years prior to 1990, says Tom Brown, president of The Rutherfoord Cos., a large regional insurance broker. “You’ll see that the markets [for commercial insurance] would swing pretty religiously on a three- to four-year cycle,” with carriers cutting rates to gain business and raising rates when the cuts weakened earnings. Because the swings were of relatively short duration, they didn’t cause much of a stir either way.
But the 1990s were so good for so long that the insurers — like a lot of other businesses — were lulled into a false sense of security. They cut rates to chase new business. As they did, premiums fell to ridiculously low levels. Between 1992 and 2000 the cost of commercial insurance fell a whopping 42 percent, from an average of $8.30 per $1,000 of revenue to just $4.83 per $1,000 of revenue, according to the Insurance Information Institute.

As a result, in the late 1990s, the industry’s combined ratio — the cost of writing and paying off insurance versus the premiums they charged — was 107 percent, meaning that carriers were losing 7 cents on every dollar of coverage they extended. That should have set off alarm bells. But with bonds and stocks returning 10 percent or more a year, investment income more than made up the difference, allowing the industry to earn a cumulative $67 billion in 1997 and 1998.

While the good times were rolling, a series of new risks were creeping up on American business. Asbestos litigation, says Brown, “had been going on for years. Problem is it didn’t stop.” Recently, for instance, Chubb, a major property/casualty insurer, was forced to add $625 million to reserves to cover asbestos-related claims.

Mold — which affects both structures and the health of the people living and working inside — recently came out of left field to become another big insurance headache. And the efforts of the tobacco industry to insulate itself from lawsuits have apparently failed, leading to a string of huge jury awards that culminated with a $28 billion judgment against Philip Morris in October. Meanwhile, the stock market’s recent plunge has turned insurers’ steady investment gains into big losses. And with all the WorldCom and Tyco debt still festering in industry portfolios, the bad investment news may be far from over. Insurance rates, in short, were going to rise substantially this year and next, even if nothing serious happened on the claims side.

But of course something serious did happen — something incredibly serious. The World Trade Center attack on Sept. 11, 2001 constituted the biggest insured event in the history of the world, totaling maybe $50 billion when all is said and done. “September 11 wasn’t like when a hurricane hits and you see a lot of property damage but not loss of life,” says Dorothy J. Dembowski, a vice president and real estate specialist with insurance broker Marsh in Virginia Beach. “This was everything all at once, workers comp, life insurance, business interruption, accidental death, aviation.”
The effect on insurance industry finances has been catastrophic. Carriers are required by regulators to hold a surplus equal to a percentage of the value of policies written. In 2000, the property/casualty industry’s surplus was around $300 billion, which means the WTC attacks sucked 15 percent or more out of the industry’s capital base in one fell swoop. “Wall Street isn’t particularly interested in recapitalizing this business,” notes Bruce Kay, spokesman for Richmond-based specialty insurer Markel. So rebuilding the industry’s balance sheet won’t be simply a matter of a few stock offerings.


With a suddenly much lower surplus and no ready source of new capital, insurers have no choice but to cut back on business and raise prices dramatically. Barry Flax, national loss coordinator for Rockville, Md.-based insurance consultancy Goodman-Gable-Gould/Adjusters International, tells of an apparel manufacturer client that had a bad fire at a plant which caused about $1 million in damage. When it came time to renew its coverage, the premium jumped from $40,000 to $250,000. “It’s not the size of the claim, but the fact that it brought the company onto the radar screen of the carrier,” says Flax. “The carriers have tightened the reins on their underwriters.”

They are, says Flax, looking harder at potential risks and trying to price in all contingencies. And they’re dumping businesses that present unpredictable risks. Among the most vulnerable to lost coverage are costal properties, due to a rise in the number of Atlantic storms in the past couple of decades, and lower-rent apartment complexes, “where you see a lot of fires and floods,” says Flax. Markel, which frequently acts as insurer of last resort for companies unable to get standard coverage, is seeing a rise in the number of inquiries from restaurants, says spokesman Kay.

But the problems go far beyond a temporary shortfall in the insurance industry’s balance sheet. “The World Trade Center created an exposure that underwriters had never considered before on the property side, and obviously didn’t charge for,” says Kay. Now they’re being forced to assess the new level of risk that global terrorism represents. The chilling conclusion: 9/11 could have been a lot worse. As Warren Buffett, super-investor and chairman of insurance company Berkshire Hathaway, put it in a November 2001 Washington Post OpEd piece: “Indeed, had a nuclear device been available to Osama bin Laden, the loss could have bankrupted most of the industry, Berkshire very much included. Given that kind of horrendous, but not impossible, nuclear scenario, insured losses could have been $1 trillion, an amount that exceeds the net worth of all property/casualty insurers worldwide.”

Insurers, as a result, are building terrorism exclusions into many policies, says Marsh’s Dembowski, exempting themselves from liability in the case of another attack. Legislation now working its way to through Congress will require the federal government to pick up a big piece of future terrorist attacks, but it won’t cover everything, leaving insurance companies and/or their customers with yet another hard-to-quantify risk.

Companies facing big premium increases and new exclusions are reacting in a variety of ways. Verona road builder Moore Brothers, for instance, is part of a group of companies that pool resources to cover their workers compensation claims, laying off the excess risk to reinsurance companies and refunding overpayments to its members. Reinsurance rates recently quadrupled, says Dennis Miller, Moore Brothers’ comptroller. “Our group is absorbing some of that increase,” by holding down member payments in the short run and paying the reinsurance increases from the group’s accumulated surplus, he says. That means lower refunds in the future, of course. “It’s pay me now or pay me later.”

A more common way to hold down premiums is to accept a much higher deductible. “We used to see apartment complexes that had $5,000-$10,000 deductibles,” says Flax. “Now we’ll see $100,000-$200,000. Any loss underneath that amount and they’re going to eat it.”

Some bells and whistles in existing policies are also being sacrificed, says Flax. Blanket coverage is being replaced with specific — much lower — amounts for each individual building. And law/ordinance coverage, which pays for bringing a damaged facility up to new codes, is in some cases being dropped.

To counteract the resulting increase in risk, insurance professionals counsel companies to become more risk conscious. And, says Brown, “You’d better be dealing with [a carrier] who can manage those claims, because they’re coming out of your pocket.” He recommends policy terms that require the carrier to consult with the policyholder before settling claims above a certain amount. As for terrorism coverage, it may be available on a stand-alone basis, says Dembowski. She’s currently working with an apartment developer whose construction loan covenants require terrorism insurance.
Meanwhile, since insurance is a cost of doing business, it’s being passed on to customers wherever possible. At Moore Brothers, rising insurance costs, while painful, have “no effect on the jobs that we’re willing to do,” says Miller. “It just goes into the overhead when we calculate what to bid on a job. It’s like paying taxes.”

Office building tenants may see higher rents, especially those with “triple net” leases, where the cost of taxes, building maintenance and insurance are passed through to tenants. In short, the insurance industry’s problems are society’s problems, and from the looks of things they’ll be with us for a while.

Return to Virginia Business - December 2002



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