Rates Should Rise Moderately for Most Commercial Lines

April 22, 2013

rates-rise
Commercial insurance buyers in all product lines should see rates rise moderately through the remainder of 2013, although commercial property rates for non-catastrophe exposed risks and some specialty lines may see slight reductions, according to global broker Willis in its “2013 Marketplace Realities” report.

In an update to the annual report, Willis Group Holdings said in commercial casualty lines, the top end of expected increases edged up from 7.5 percent to 10 percent since last fall.

For commercial property insurance, price expectations for catastrophe (CAT)-exposed programs shifted from flat renewals to slight increases.

For non-CAT risk programs, the expected price movement changed from decreases ranging from -5 percent to -10 percent to rates remaining flat or falling by up to -5 percent.

The report noted, however, that property programs affected by Superstorm Sandy can expect a complicated renewal process including restructuring of the flood language in their policies.

The specialty lines present a combination of price increases and decreases across product lines.

Willis expects rate declines in the aviation, healthcare professional, political risks and surety coverage lines.

Meanwhile, Willis believes rate increases can be expected in the fidelity/crime, kidnap/ransom, terrorism and trade credit lines.

Willis experts anticipate a mix of price increases and decreases in the energy, environmental and marine sectors.

In the employee benefits space, Willis said employers remain focused on the healthcare reform law that will go into effect in the next few years, particularly the pay or play excise tax. Rate increase estimates for 2013 remain at 8 percent to 10 percent, as insurers pass down the cost of compliance.

Regarding claims trends, Eric Joost, chief executive of Willis North America Specialties and senior editor of the “Marketplace Realities” report, said they are “generally more complex and volatile” than the fairly predictable insurance marketplace.

In the workers’ compensation as well as the directors and officers liability claims area, Willis experts see rising costs but declining frequency. Meanwhile, in property claims, the company’s experts predict a growing use of lawyers and consultants in claim resolution, as well as an increase in advance payments on claims.

Topics Trends Commercial Lines Business Insurance Pricing Trends

Was this article valuable?

Here are more articles you may enjoy.

From This Issue

Insurance Journal Magazine April 22, 2013
April 22, 2013
Insurance Journal Magazine

Top 50 Apps for Insurance Agents; Entertainment, Sports & Special Events; Directors & Officers Liability