Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Seventeen U.S. Insurance Companies became Financially Impaired in 2006

Seventeen U.S. insurance companies became financially impaired in 2006, despite a respite for property/casualty insurers from two consecutive turbulent hurricane seasons and more diversified asset portfolios among life/health insurers, according to two new A.M. Best Co. special reports, "2007 Annual U.S. Life/Health Impairments" and "2007 Annual U.S. Property/Casualty Impairments."

The property/casualty report found 15 insurers in those lines of business became impaired last year, a rate of 1-in-233 companies. While any impairment can be a hardship to policyholders and employees, 2006's impairment rate is half the historical rate of the past 38 years. So far in 2007, A.M. Best has identified one public impairment: Vanguard Fire & Casualty Co. Florida regulators placed that company in rehabilitation in January. Vanguard Fire & Casualty was never rated by A.M. Best.

Of the two life/health companies identified as impaired in 2006, one is a known confidential supervision. The other impairment is Security General Life Insurance Co., which was issued a cease-and-desist order by the Oklahoma Insurance Department last September. It was placed in rehabilitation in November. The company was not rated by A.M. Best at the time of impairment. 2006's impairment rate of 1-in-769 life/health companies continues a seven-year trend of below-average impairment rates.

A.M. Best designates an insurer financially impaired as of the first official regulatory action taken by an insurance department. That marks the point when an insurer's ability to conduct normal insurance operations is adversely affected, capital and surplus have been deemed inadequate to meet legal requirements, or the company's general financial condition has triggered regulatory concern.

State actions include supervision, rehabilitation, liquidation, receivership, conservatorship, cease-and-desist orders, suspension, license revocation and certain administrative orders. The financially impaired companies identified in these studies might not technically have been declared insolvent. The definition of financially impaired is broader than that of a Bests Rating of E (under regulatory supervision), which is assigned only when an insurer is no longer allowed to conduct normal ongoing insurance operations.

In addition to the regulatory actions that are announced publicly, there also are actions that insurance regulators undertake on a confidential basis. When A.M. Best becomes aware of an active confidential regulatory action, the impairment is counted in the aggregate analysis but is not reported on a company-specific basis to protect confidentiality.

Property/Casualty Impairments

The performance of property/casualty insurers was bolstered by a dearth of hurricanes and near-record underwriting profits, which were parlayed into a combined ratio that stands at its lowest level since 1953. "It speaks favorably to the capital strength of the property/casualty industry," said John Williams, senior business analyst at A.M. Best. "What we found with most of these companies, both in property/casualty and in life/health, the impaired companies and those that became impaired either had vulnerable A.M. Best ratings, or were not rated at all by A.M. Best."

The majority of last year's impaired property/casualty companies were affiliated with either Poe Financial Group or Vesta Insurance Group.

Poe Financial Group was formed in 1996 by Tampa Mayor Bill Poe, who later established Southern Family Insurance Co. The company acquired Atlantic Preferred Insurance Co. and Florida Preferred Insurance Co. in 2003. By July 2004, Poe Group had become the largest privately held property insurance organization in the Florida market and the third-largest property insurance organization in Florida overall. The hurricanes and storms of 2004 and 2005 prompted policyholders to submit more than 120,000 claims, which cost more than $2.1 billion. Vesta's family of companies were domiciled in Texas, Florida and Hawaii. Most were placed into rehabilitation in June, 2006 after being hit hard by hurricane claims and were unable to pay claims.
The sector's outlook for the remainder of this year is bright. David Small, an equity analyst at Bear Stearns, said both publicly traded and mutual insurance companies are in a strong position going forward in terms of capital and funding. "One could argue that aggregate amounts (of capital) measured by standard surplus is at record levels. That is one of the reasons we see rates softening," Small said. "You could argue that some of the publicly traded companies have excess capital on their balance sheets."
Small said one major hurricane this season should not adversely affect property/casualty companies. "When you look back at 2005, the industry still grew a surplus and that was after Katrina, Rita and Wilma. The companies generated so much investment income the way they're set up that one good storm isn't going to knock them out," Small said.

Life/Health Impairments
One life/health company, Oklahoma-based Security General Life Insurance Co., was placed in rehabilitation in September 2006. Another company was taken under a confidential supervision impairment. While the 2006 life/health impairment rate represents a new 31-year low, additional confidential supervision impairment could rise.

"We have a circumstance with confidential supervision," said Williams. "The states take action to try to prevent problems for companies that they see in financial trouble. We picked up three additional impairments for 2005 and there's a fair shot that you'll see a fair jump in the 2006 numbers as we go forward-- enough that they won't be the lowest numbers on record."
The recent improved annual impairment rates for life/health insurers reflects an improving operating environment since 2001, industry efforts to diversity its asset portfolios and consolidation of some of the more thinly capitalized insurers with stronger companies.

(By Tom De Martini, associate editor, BestWeek: Thomas.DeMartini@ambest.com) Copyright 2007 A.M. Best Company, Inc.

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Insurance Industry Mergers On the Rise.

Insurance industry mergers and acquisitions transactions in the US increased in 2006 to the highest level since 2001 and may foreshadow an acceleration of activity into 2007-2008, according to a new study by Conning Research and Consulting.

"Insurance industry mergers and acquisitions transactions in 2006 increased due to a significant increase in the distribution sector. This is the highest level of transactions since 2001, yet the total value of these transactions was USD8bn lower than 2005 levels," said Clint Harris, senior analyst at Conning Research & Consulting. "The property-casualty sector led public offerings, including secondary offerings, with eight of the nine IPOs and nine of the fourteen secondary offerings."

The Conning Research study, "Mergers & Acquisitions and Public Equity Offerings -- 2007 Edition" continues Conning's annual review of insurance industry M&A and its effects on the industry.

"While transaction level increases in the insurance industry have kept pace with the broader marketplace over the past five years, the annual value of transactions has been very volatile," said Stephan Christiansen, director of research at Conning Research & Consulting. "Despite this, we forecast an increase in acquisition transaction values in the next 12-18 months, due to the continuing increase in surplus in the industry, along with private equity's increasing involvement in insurance. The ability of these firms to access large amounts of capital, and their ability to secure relatively inexpensive debt layers, means that they can be part of transactions exceeding USD10bn. Therefore, we expect more transactions valued between USD1bn and 5bn, with perhaps a few USD10bn or higher. Of course long-term drivers of scalability of data and process and global trends in business continue."

This article is supplied by Insurance Newslink (www.insurancenewslink.com).

Copyright 2007 Shillito Market Intelligence

Monday, March 19, 2007

Data Loss Seen as Most Serious Global Risk

More than one-third of a group of senior executives and risk professionals surveyed earlier this year view loss of data as among the most serious threats facing their organizations.

In fact, loss of data was the most commonly cited threat in a new global risk report put out by the London-based Economist Intelligence Unit for ACE European Group, IBM Corp. and KPMG L.L.P. Thirty-six percent of the 181 participants ranked it among the types of threats "seen to be most important in your organization’s consideration of operational risk management planning."

Human error followed closely, being cited by 35% of the participants, and systems failure ranked third at 31%. Natural disasters, terrorism and pandemics showed up much lower on the list, behind such exposures as supply chain disruption and attacks on information technology systems.

"The survey shows that risk managers clearly understand the value of data and, increasingly are focusing on its associated losses," Gareth Tungett, senior underwriter specializing in IT and cyber risk at ACE, said in a statement released Friday discussing the survey’s results.

The survey—"Business Resilience: Ensuring Continuity in a Volatile Environment"—is available at www.aceeuropeangroup.com.

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Survey: Most Workers Underestimate Chances, Impact of Disability

While growing number of American workers are forecasted to experience a disability during their career, more than 80 percent of workers said they believe their chances of becoming disabled are far lower than actual statistics report, according to a new survey. The 2007 Disability Awareness Survey, released today by the Council for Disability Awareness (CDA), said the majority of workers are not concerned about the possibility of becoming disabled – an accident or illness that will keep them out of work at least three months.

Data from the survey underscores the need to better inform America's workforce about the likelihood of experiencing a disability, as well as the potential financial consequences that may accompany a disability. The CDA is embarking on an outreach effort to increase public dialogue about disability awareness.

"Preparing for an unexpected disability has never been more important for America's workforce – especially as more American workers are suffering from income-limiting disabilities that can leave them and their families vulnerable to severe financial hardship," explained Robert Taylor, executive director of CDA. "It's important that workers recognize the growing threat that disability can pose to their financial security."

Since 2000, the number of disabled workers in America has increased by 35 percent according to recent Social Security Administration data. At the same time, the financial health of many American workers has declined. Workers are not only spending their earnings, but also are dipping deeper into their savings and going into debt to make ends meet. The overall 2006 U.S. savings rate was negative 1 percent – the worst since the Great Depression. These statistics are distressing, considering two-thirds of respondents with a 401k or IRA plan are unaware of what would happen to their retirement savings should they become disabled and unable to earn an income.

Given this unsteady financial situation, it's alarming that nearly 60 percent of workers surveyed said they haven't discussed how they would manage an income-limiting disability. In fact, almost half of these workers haven't thought at all about the need to plan for the financial impact of a disability.

On the other hand, more than 80 percent of workers who have planned financially for a disability are confident about their ability to cover living expenses if a disability strikes.

The CDA survey also showed that:
* The majority of workers (56 percent) didn't realize that their chances of becoming disabled had risen over the past five years.
* Nine out of 10 (90 percent) workers underestimated their own chances of becoming disabled.
* More than one-third (35 percent) of workers with 401k or IRA plans said they haven't thought about or don't know what would happen to their contributions if they were unable to earn an income for a period of time.

As responsibility for long-term financial security continues to shift to the American worker, the need to incorporate disability planning into each person's financial security plan has become more critical," Taylor said. "Fortunately, with good planning, American workers can dramatically improve their chances of financial stability should a disability strike."

Source: Council for Disability Awareness, www.disabilitycanhappen.org.

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

The McLaughlin Company Speakers Bureau

Over the years, we have seen an increase in the need for professional speakers in the Insurance and Risk Management area. Ted Pappas, Webb Hubbell, Brenda Mantz and Cheri Brewer represent over 100 years of experience in these areas. To make it more convenient for your organization to utilize their abilities, The McLaughlin Company responded by creating a speakers bureau specifically focused on those areas. Each speaker has become fluent in the issues and trends surrounding the insurance and risk management industries. Our speaker's bureau coordinator, Julie Johnson will strategically work with you to define your exact needs in a speaker. Contact her at speakersbureau@mclaughlin-online.com

Our Insurance and Risk Management speakers address many areas including:
Specific insurance and/or risk management topics
Continuing education and training Industry trends
Market transformations
Dynamic sales and management techniques
Insurance Programs and Risks specifically designed for Labor Unions
Fiduciary Insurance and Risk Avoidance
Risk Management for Pension Real Estate Investments
The Hidden Costs of Workers Compensation Insurance
The Pension Protection Act of 2006

To learn more about our speakers go to www.mclaughlin-online.com

Friday, March 09, 2007

Backdating -- What's in your D&O Wallet?

Stock option backdating and financial restatements will bring on a surge of shareholder class actions and drive the cost of D&O coverage upward in 2007. Numerous suits were filed at the end of 2006 and the SEC is investigating over 100 other backdating charges. Although insurers continue to say that they look at each company on a case-by-case approach pressure continues to grow to raise D&O rates for all companies.