General Insurance Article - Smart MGAs find opportunities in adversity


Global law firm Clyde & Co’s latest survey of the MGA market, carried out with more than 100 insurers and MGAs in early 2020*, reveals that the MGA market remains positive in mood, with strong MGAs seeing upside even among the challenges posed by COVID-19.

 According to the firm’s report, Proceeding with caution, while carriers and MGAs are overwhelmingly in agreement that setting up a new MGA will be harder this year, two-thirds of carriers and MGAs think the number of relationships will hold steady or increase in 2020’s renewals season, even in a hardening market.

 In a subsequent addition to the research looking specifically at the impact of COVID-19, on balance opinion was positive on how the pandemic would affect capacity. Just over half (51%) of carriers felt the impact would be neutral or positive. Although MGAs were split, many commented that any negative impact was likely to be short term.

 Jennette Newman, Partner at Clyde & Co commented: “Our survey shows that while the overwhelming majority of carriers and MGAs agree there will be more competition for capacity and a real flight to quality, they do not see the volume of capacity or the number of partnerships diminishing. In fact, broadly two thirds of MGAs and carriers believe relationships will hold steady or even increase and over half of carriers believe the impact of COVID-19 will be neutral or even positive for MGA capacity.”

 Strong and weak: divisions are stark
 The impact of COVID-19 on the MGA market, as in so many sectors, can be viewed as binary.

 Newman comments: “Our research suggests that good MGA players will do better – they have read the mood of Lloyd’s reform, they have their house in order, they ‘own’ their niche and can deliver for brokers who can’t now always get the underwriters’ attention. Big MGAs will also see an opportunity to increase capacity and accelerate growth. But the smaller players, those with poor claims records or high expense ratios, may struggle to demonstrate their value.”

 “As we approach the January 1 renewal, this may translate into challenges renewing capacity, because carriers’ newfound caution cuts two ways – not just in the business they underwrite, but also in extending their paper to MGAs.”

 Carriers see more value in MGAs, with caution their watchword
 For carriers, the ability to hold ‘risky business’ at arms’ length via an MGA binder agreement is more obvious than ever, but it must be balanced by tightly controlled costs.

 Perhaps unsurprisingly, for carriers the focus is very much on efficient access to new markets and on technical insight and capability. MGAs need to add value by opening up new opportunities rather than simply amplifying existing carrier competencies.

 Strong performers that can add value in niche markets are valued highly. Technology is an important element of this and 96% of carriers and 84% of MGAs believe the shift to electronic placement and data standardisation will accelerate as a result of COVID-19.

 In a world where regulation is only increasing, excellent risk management and a strong conduct record have also grown rapidly in importance. Carriers have three ‘top asks’ of MGAs cited by over 50% of our sample: access, insight and conduct.

 Newman comments: “It is clear that carriers have borne the brunt of the claims and reputational impact of COVID-19, and this has impacted their appetite for new business. Their focus has been on renewals and blue-chip ‘secure’ business. But with carriers losing appetite for anything but standard renewals, bright MGAs have seen an opportunity. They report that they are receiving more enquiries and writing more new business and they are continuing to capitalise on their ability to be responsive to brokers in a market where many carriers have become more cautious.”

 Lloyd’s reform agenda sees choices crystallising
 While the London company market remains the preferred option for developing MGA business, overall, there is support for Lloyd’s Blueprint One initiative among MGAs – 50% of whom are positive about its impact on the MGA market while Carriers’ support is more muted with 41% positive. While red tape is held up as one concern – MGAs (89%) and carriers (82%) both strongly believe there will be more legal and regulatory scrutiny over MGA businesses as part of Blueprint One - MGAs (75%) and carriers (82%) are both positive that Blueprint One will help drive progress towards standardising application and compliance processes at Lloyd’s.

 Newman says: "This has been an extraordinary year in which the appeal of Lloyd's as a market for MGA business has been impacted by COVID-19 in addition to the market reforms focused on profitability, cost reduction and enhanced underwriting discipline. However, our research demonstrates that MGAs remain a popular and efficient business model and we anticipate that appetite to operate within Lloyd’s will return longer term as the reforms bed in and softer market conditions return."

 MGA Report 2020 - Whitepaper Update

 
  

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