Top 10 Casualty Insurance Trends for 2015

January 12, 2015

While casualty insurance rates are stable and new capacity continues to enter the market, certain classes of business continue to be difficult to place, according to Marsh’s U.S. Casualty Practice. Following are 10 key trends Marsh expects will shape the casualty insurance marketing in 2015.

Casualty Market Softens

Casualty insurance rates remain stable heading into 2015, with the market poised to soften. Average rates had been rising, but the magnitude of those increases has slowed. “We expect this trend to pick up in 2015, which would turn average rate changes negative. As insurers battle for favorable classes of business, those that rely on reinsurance may no longer be able to hold on to the price arbitrage they have enjoyed and may have to pass some savings on to their clients to maintain a competitive advantage,” Marsh said. “A softening U.S. casualty market could lead to aggressive multi-year options in both the primary and the excess liability space.”

New Capacity: Where it Will Come From

A softening U.S. casualty market could lead to aggressive multi-year options in both the primary and the excess liability space.

New capacity continues to enter the U.S. casualty marketplace, particularly as the workers’ compensation line returns to profitability, according to the Marsh report. “Thanks to record policyholder surplus, some of the new capacity comes from expanded appetite of current players looking for premium growth. Asian markets also continue to expand their footprints; one insurer gained approval for a full Lloyd’s syndicate, and others are making acquisitions in the U.S. and elsewhere.” Also, additional capacity is likely to enter and improve the competitive landscape for casualty insurance buyers.

New Capacity: Where it Won’t Come From

New alternative capital capacity that has entered the market has indirectly influenced the casualty market by encouraging traditional property reinsurers to shift their appetites to casualty. “A few reinsurers have established specialty and casualty reinsurance platforms in the United States. But from an alternative capital perspective, the casualty space continues to be untapped on a direct basis,” according to the report. The long-tail nature of the risk, contract ambiguities and the lack of any reliable third-party industry loss index make for a challenging proposition for shorter duration appetites. “We expect to see some attempts at bifurcating the casualty risk to isolate and quantify the short-tail liability portion of the risk (for example, claims-made policies with defined payout triggers and vertical-loss events as opposed to horizontal exposures),” Marsh said. “Even if successful, these attempts are unlikely to result in alternative capital directly altering the casualty reinsurance landscape or influencing casualty insurer buying strategies.”

The Haves and Have Nots

Although the casualty insurance market is relatively calm, certain classes of business continue to be favored while others continue to be more difficult to place, Marsh said. Underwriters are flocking to the favored classes with good loss experience, leaving less competition for risks that are more difficult to place such as California workers’ compensation, workers’ compensation for employers with large concentrations, excess workers’ compensation, trucking fleets, and New York labor law-exposed risks. “This will result in more alternative programs being developed and upward pressure on rates and retentions on loss-sensitive programs for these harder-to-place risks.”

Data is Power

Marsh said that insurers continue to focus on underwriting profitability – and are using analytics to find it in a very competitive marketplace. Carriers are getting more granular in their underwriting to differentiate between risks and to be able to feed their models. A “go or no-go” decision for carriers often comes down to a ZIP code or a street address. “Trading ranges are narrowing across the book, which could indicate that the low-hanging fruit of price differentiation has been picked,” Marsh said. “In excess casualty, for example, the spread between the first and fourth quartiles of rate changes was 9.2 percent in the fourth quarter of 2013; it is now 5.5 percent.” Insurance buyers are also using data more aggressively to help them negotiate the most favorable programs and make buying decisions.

Insurer Differentiation

Insurers in 2015 will likely look to differentiate themselves on flexibility and relationship, according to Marsh. Clients will enjoy an increased acceptance of alternative collateral forms to the always popular letter of credit. “This phenomenon has been moving in a positive direction for the past 18 months and is starting to gain momentum going into 2015 as more carriers accept surety for a portion of total collateral, and are willing to sell credit and offer larger credit deviations,” the report said. Meanwhile, carriers are offering multi-line discounts as they seek to round out their books. On the negative side, insurers will likely become more insistent when it comes to increasing their product penetration with clients.

The Dog Starts to Wag the Tail

While brokers and insureds have historically benchmarked premium rates and limits purchased, the ever-increasing volume of data and enhanced analytics will provide more insight into loss costs – often the most significant component of total cost of risk. New analytical tools remove subjectivity in claims-handling success and allow clients to quantify how well their third-party administrators (TPAs) manage medical costs on workers’ compensation claims. Refocusing cost-reduction efforts on what is driving the workers’ compensation spend will empower buyers in an increasingly competitive and consolidating TPA environment.

Unintended Consequences

The increasing severity of individual, multi-district, and class-action settlements and judgments is likely to result in more difficult coverage and claim negotiations related to excess liability, Marsh said. “Carriers continue to scrutinize language before binding and after losses. Program structures will likely be reevaluated and changed at renewal with a post-claim mindset. Marsh gave the following examples:

  • Will quota share layers – although they may save organizations money today – be the best option post-claim?
  • What about short limits? Does the cheaper option mean that more carriers will be involved in the claim scenario?
  • Will a decision to forego punitive damage coverage mean carriers will have a leg up in allocation discussions during settlement negotiations?

“We believe that 2015 will see more insureds factor these types of post-loss consequences into their buying decisions.”

Innovation Continues

“Carriers will likely be pushed to focus on reducing complexity and ambiguity in policy wordings and on innovating products to cover never-before-seen exposures,” Marsh said. “ISO’s recent cyber endorsements do not provide the required clarity when it comes to bodily injury and property damage.” Other general liability components that will continue to evolve include professional liability exclusions and pollution wording in the context of communicable disease. In excess liability, clients are likely to demand consistency in the tower, which will push insurers to adopt new endorsements or policy forms. “The socioeconomic shifts we are experiencing, crowdsourcing, farm-to-table initiatives and the impact of the Affordable Care Act on workers’ compensation costs, are likely to have implications for the liability landscape, forcing an increased level of innovation by insurers in 2015,” Marsh said.

Topics Trends USA Carriers Workers' Compensation Excess Surplus Reinsurance Casualty

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