General Insurance Article - Rate reductions of up to 30% for commercial insurance buyers


 Overcapacity in the international construction, property & casualty markets in the first half of 2014 has resulted in rate reductions of up to 30% for commercial insurance buyers, according to Willis Group Holdings.

 This is primarily driven by benign loss activity and softening conditions in the global reinsurance market, which is having a trickledown effect to the primary insurance market, according to Willis’s Q3 2014 Construction, Property & Casualty Market Review. Over and above rate reductions, corporate insurance buyers are also benefitting from an increase in available natural catastrophe capacity.

 With no withdrawals of capacity from the construction market in the last six months, capacity is at an all-time high, according to the report. At the same time the volume of construction projects in many parts of the world has reduced, intensifying competition between carriers for premium volume and market share in the construction insurance market.

 Meanwhile, the international property & casualty insurance market continues to witness an influx of capital. Provided that detailed risk information is available, carriers are prepared to offer insurance buyers improved coverage, particularly improved contingent business interruption extensions, noted the report.

 In the general property market, premium rates are continuing to decrease by between 10% and 15% on claims free business. Even larger reductions are available for buyers who can clearly demonstrate robust risk management practices and detailed risk information, claimed the report.

 Commenting on the report’s findings, James Nicholson, head of Broking and Industry Practice Groups for Construction, Property and Casualty at Willis, said “Our view is that soft market conditions are likely to continue without necessarily threatening the profitability and solvency of carriers, provided that they actively manage their portfolios. For their part, corporate insurance buyers can achieve substantially better than average pricing through the provision of good underwriting data, the use of analytics to drive pricing and through strong relationships with carriers. The outlook therefore remains very favourable for corporate buyers and more particularly for the well-informed.” 

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

IPT receipts for 2024 to 2025 hits over GB7bn in January
According to this morning’s HMRC data, Insurance Premium Tax (“IPT”) receipts stood at £853 million in January 2025, bringing the 10-month total for t
Unlocking the potential of IFRS17 insights and opportunities
As mentioned in part one of this blog series, IFRS 17 has reshaped financial reporting for insurance contracts since its implementation on 1 January 2
Lack of expertise main barrier to AI adoption in insurance
A lack of expertise within insurance companies is the biggest challenge to implementing artificial intelligence (AI) technology. As AI has the potenti

Site Search

Exact   Any  

Latest Actuarial Jobs

Actuarial Login

Email
Password
 Jobseeker    Client
Reminder Logon

APA Sponsors

Actuarial Jobs & News Feeds

Jobs RSS News RSS

WikiActuary

Be the first to contribute to our definitive actuarial reference forum. Built by actuaries for actuaries.