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This presentation provides an overview of the North American property/casualty insurance industry, including market shares, financial performance, stock market performance, growth estimates, catastrophe losses, investment income, mergers and acquisitions, and distribution trends.
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North AmericanProperty/Casualty Insurance Industry Review & Outlook Canadian Insurance Accountants Association Conference The Prince Edward Hotel Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island September 20, 1999 Download this presentation at: http://www.iii.org/media/ciaa/index.html Robert P. Hartwig, Ph.D. Vice President & Chief Economist Insurance Information Institute 110 William Street New York, NY 10038 Tel: (212) 669-9214Fax: (212) 732-1916 bobh@iii.org www.iii.org
World P/C InsuranceMarket Shares 1997=$897 Billion (US$) Worldwide P/C premiums will surpass $1 trillion in the Year 2000 Source: Swiss Re, Insurance Information Institute
Global Non-Life Market Share 1997: Canada became the world’s 6th largest p/c market Source: Swiss Re, Insurance Information Institute
North American P/C Insurance Market Place 1998 (US$) Source: Insurance Information Institute, A.M. Best, Insurance Bureau of Canada
Foreign Direct Investment inthe U.S. Insurance Industry 1997 Source: Insurance Information Institute, Bureau of Economic Analysis
Marine&Aircraft Comm. Prop. Reinsurance Workers Comp Personal Property Liability Auto Other A&H Product Line Share ofTotal Premium (1998) Percent of Industry NPW Source: A.M. Best, Insurance Bureau of Canada, Insurance Information Institute
1999 vs. 1998 US Industry: Stock Performance 52 Weeks Ending 9/3/99 Full Year 1998 Source: SNL Securities, Insurance Information Institute
1999 Stock Market Performance, by Segment Year-to-Date through 09/03/99 Source: SNL Securities, Insurance Information Institute
1999 Insurer Stock Performance, by Asset Size Year-to-Date Through 09/03/99 Source: SNL Securities, Insurance Information Institute
Insurers vs. Banks:1999 Stock Performance Year-to-Date Through 09/03/99 Source: SNL Securities, Insurance Information Institute
Growth in Net Premiums Written 1999 NPW Growth Estimates: US: 1.0% Canada: 0.8% Source: A.M. Best, Insurance Bureau of Canada, Insurance Information Institute
Personal/Commercial Growth in NPW: Canada Source: Insurance Bureau of Canada, Insurance Information Institute
Net Premiums Written and Surplus (Equity): Canada Source: A.M. Best, Insurance Bureau of Canada, Insurance Information Institute
Net Premiums Written to Policyholder Surplus 1999-2000 (U.S. Est./Forecast) = 0.8 Source: A.M. Best, Insurance Bureau of Canada, Insurance Information Institute
U.S. InsuredCatastrophe Losses 1st-Half 1999 Cat losses: $5.2B Source: Property Claims Service, Insurance Information Institute
Combined Ratio: 1970-1999* * * 1999 figures based on 1st-half results. Source: A.M. Best, Insurance Bureau of Canada, Insurance Information Institute
Net Investment Income Billions (US$) US Facts 1997 Peak = $41.5B 1998 = $39.9B 1999 (Estimate) = $39B 2000 (Forecast) = $37B Billions (C$) Source: A.M. Best, Insurance Bureau of Canada, Insurance Information Institute
Return on Equity1975 - 1998 * * Estimate Source: Insurance Bureau of Canada, Insurance Information Institute
Insurance Mergers and Acquisitions 1998: 565 deals valued at $165.4 B Source: Compiled from Conning & Company reports.
A Big Piece of the Pie... Insurance Deals = $165.4 Billion or 10.3% Overrepresented? Insurance Share of US GDP = 8.5% Source: Insurance Information Institute, Conning & Company, Securities Data Corp.
M&As by Segment/Value 1998 = $165.4 Billion Source: Conning & Co.
M&As by Segment/#Deals 1998 = 565 Deals Source: Conning & Co.
How to Get Rid of Overcapacity • Pay bigger dividends • policyholder & stock • Share buybacks • Reduce prices (underwriting losses rise) • Buy non-P/C assets • Wait for bear market (invest. losses rise) M&As CAN’T DO IT ALONE
U.S. Insurance Industry Employment (All Segments) Annual Averages (Thousands) Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor.
U.S. Insurance Industry Employment (By Segment) Annual Averages (Thousands) Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor.
P/C Premium Distribution1998 Personal Lines ($146B) Ind. Agents/ Brokers 27% Banks 2.8% ($4.1B) $39.5B Direct Response 9.8% Internet 0.9% ($1.3B) $14.3 Other 3.0% ($4.4B) $82.6B Captive Agents 56.5% Source: Insurance Information Institute, A.M. Best, Datamonitor
P/C Premium Distribution1998 Commercial Lines ($135B) Ind. Agents/ Brokers73% $99B $36B CaptiveAgents27% Direct Response 0.3%($0.4B) Source: Insurance Information Institute, A.M. Best
Shifting Distribution Channels: Life/Health Insurers 1998 2003 Source: Datamonitor
Respondents Extremely/Very Comfortable Purchasing Auto Insurance(%), by Outlet Source: Insurance Information Institute’s 1999 Insurance Pulse
Respondents Having Better Relationship with Agents, Banks, or Neither Source: Insurance Information Institute’s 1999 Insurance Pulse
Distribution Channels Continue to Proliferate Agent Broker Mail Telephone Bank Customer Insurer Internet Dealerships Payroll Plans ???
The Electrons Are Coming... www.InsureMe.com www.NoAgent.com
E-Agencies (As of Sept. 1999) Just 3% (1,200) of the 42,000 independent agencies in the US have a web site
Advantages of a Single Currency • Benefits to insurers are peripheral • Elimination of FX risk • Reduced transaction cost • Facilitates cross-border investment (real/financial) • Encourages dollar-zone investment • Promotes economic integration
EU Directives AffectingNon-Life Insurance • Reinsurance/Retrocession (February 2, 1964) • Abolished nationality-based restrictions on reinsurance transactions • First Generation Directives (July 24, 1973[life];1979[non-life]) • Objective: Increase competition • Insurers from one member state allowed to operate in • other member states • Insurers remained protectionist • Had right to sell, few allowed to buy • Largely ineffective until 1990s
EU Directives AffectingNon-Life Insurance • Second Generation Directives (June 22, 1988) • Allowed medium/large commercial risks to buy P/L coverage in insurance markets of member states • Personal lines excluded • Third Generation Directives (June 18, 1992) • Objective: Remove remaining obstacles to open competition • Single license (issued by home country) permits operation • in all EU states • Home country supervisory authority may not require prior • approval of rates, policy conditions, or forms • Can’t deny entry based on “market disruption” • Standardization of regulatory oversight (esp. solvency) • Foreign branch operations regulated by home country
Lingering Problems for Insurers • No uniformity of contract law • No standardization of corporate law • Limited uniformity of insurance taxation • General-good provision • Language (11+ languages spoken in 15 EU nations) • Cultural differences • Weak euro? • Defections before 2002?
EMERGING ISSUES • Y2K • Financial Services Reform • Banks and Insurance • Firearms Exposure? • Fraud
Insurers’ Estimated Y2KExposure: Worst Case Scenario* *High estimate ($35 billion); M&R estimates range from $15 - $35 billion. Source: Milliman & Robertson
Senate Banks, securities firms & insurers must operate as holding cos. Fed oversight Bar banks from entering commercial businesses/bar non-fin. cos. from thrifts Small, rural banks exempt from CRA Criminalize privacy breaches House Holding cos/national bank subsidiary structures permitted Fed/OCC oversight Banks can enter commercial services/non-fin. cos can own thrifts Extend CRA to holding companies Disclosure policies, customer consent Financial Services Reform: Work (Still) in Progress
1997 Bank Insurance Premiums Total = $27.8 Billion Source: Association of Banks-in-Insurance
Firearms Exposure:Long Shot or Bull’s-Eye? Rate per 100,000 population (1997) Source: FBI
WANTED • Raises questions for insurance regulators in small states • Adds fuel to federal v. state oversight debate • Current safeguards designed to minimize insolvency risk, not risk of financial fraud. • NAIC role/position CAPTURED 9/4/99 Martin Frankel: Disappeared with $215 million in policyholder funds
Insurance Information Institute On-Line WWW.III.ORG • Tips on safety, disaster preparedness • Consumer advice • Information for Insurance Professionals • Media Resources • Industry Financial Results, Surveys & Polls • Download this presentation at: http://www.iii.org/media/ciaa/index.htm