Florida homeowners finally have some new
insurers to consider
Anyone freshly dumped back
into the insurance market for one reason or another now has
several new options. |
Article Courtesy of The Tapa Bay Times
By Jeffrey Schweers
Published
May 29, 2024
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Ted Herbert, a retired business
professor from Rollins College, said he was shocked when he got a letter
last month from his insurance company telling him that while they valued
him as a customer they would not be renewing his policy.
“I checked to see why this was happening, thinking they thought my home
was on the coast and subject to hurricanes or rising tide,” said
Herbert, who lives in Winter Park.
But to his surprise, his insurance company identified him as a high risk
for hurricane damage, along with 100,000 other policyholders.
“That’s puzzling,” Herbert said. “Why
would we be at a higher risk than others?”
The closest he got to an answer was that the company was
re-balancing its Florida portfolio “due to a reduction in
our hurricane exposure.”
Herbert is among the thousands of homeowners hunting for a
new insurer after their companies shed them like winter
jackets as hurricane season starts on June 1. And this year
is expected to be one of the worst on record.
A forecast released Thursday by the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration gave an 85% chance of an
above-normal hurricane season, which goes to Nov. 30, with
up to 25 named storms.
Anyone freshly dumped back into the
insurance market for one reason or another now has several
new options, in addition to 19 other companies that are
either keeping their rates the same or lowering them
slightly, according to the state’s Office of Insurance
Regulation.
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Houses In the Florida town of Geneva are inundated by
floodwaters from the St. Johns River after historic levels of
rainfall from Hurricane Ian in 2022.
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“New residential insurers entering the Florida market
will provide opportunities for consumers to shop their home coverage, a
rarity in recent years,” said Mark Friedlander, spokesperson for the
Insurance Information Institute. “More competitive markets typically
lead to more competitive pricing.”
Florida is the only state showing a high volume of new companies
entering the market this year, Friedlander said. “Insurers feel they can
profitably write home insurance in Florida due to the legislative
changes that eliminated the drivers of legal system abuse and claim
fraud that led to our state’s risk crisis.”
Several of the “new” companies aren’t really new, said Jeff Brandes, a
former state senator from the Tampa Bay area who has been a relentless
voice for insurance reform in Florida.
“If you look at the list of companies, you’ll notice that some are
spinoffs or subsidiaries of existing Florida companies, while others are
new to the state or are reactivating their presence here,” Brandes said.
Six new companies are start-ups, Friedlander said. Several were created
by holding companies already operating multiple insurers in Florida, he
said. Two were operating in another state.
Only one new company, Mainsail, is offering full lines of insurance for
auto, home and business.
Four new companies are known as reciprocal insurance exchanges, which
work something like a mutual fund, where policyholders are also owners,
former OIR Commissioner Kevin McCarty said.
“In most recent years it’s been enormously difficult to find investors
in the Florida market,” McCarty said.
Reciprocal insurance exchanges are a way to raise capital and, if
profitable, the policyholders share the rewards, he said.
“They still assume risk but more flexibility getting startup capital,”
he said.
Several of the new start-ups are by existing Florida domestic insurance
companies.
Ovation Home Insurance Exchange, for instance, is a start-up of Florida
Peninsula Insurance Company and Edison Insurance. All three share the
same Boca Raton address.
The others are Manatee Insurance Exchange, a start-up by SafePoint of
Temple Terrace; the Condo Owners Reciprocal Exchange, a startup of
Tampa-based HGI Group, which also started up Tailrow Insurance; and
Orange Insurance Exchange, run by a former Tower Hill CEO.
Some other companies in Florida following the reciprocal insurance
exchange model include Tower Hill, Kin Interinsurance Network and
Loggerhead Reciprocal Interinsurance Exchange, the Insurance Journal
said.
The exchange insurance contracts to spread out risk, so that when one
policyholder’s property gets damaged, other policyholders can help cover
their losses.
The upside is policyholders generally have lower premiums and can offset
operating costs. As part owners, policyholders have a say in the
business operations. And they protect each other instead of receiving
profits.
The downside is that if the subscriber pool is too small, premiums can
go up.
Several existing Florida companies launching start-ups are also lowering
their rates or keeping them the same, including Safe Harbor, Spinnaker,
Florida Peninsula and Edison.
Startups have a clean slate with new investment opportunities and no
backlog of litigated claims, making it possible to offer lower rates,
McCarty said.
“You base your rates on expected future losses that are being driven by
cases in litigation,” McCarty said. “A new company starting under new
laws has no claims in the pipeline and doesn’t have to worry about the
cost of litigation later on.”
The big three factors that affect rates are reinsurance costs, legal
costs and catastrophic losses, said Lisa Miller, a former deputy
insurance commissioner who lobbies on behalf of the insurance industry.
Legal reforms imposed by the Legislature will help a great deal, McCarty
said. But the impact won’t be felt for a while yet because there are so
many claims in the litigation pipeline.
Reinsurance remains a large driver of premiums because state companies
that don’t have the capital to pay out a huge catastrophic hurricane
rent capital from the reinsurance companies.
About 50% of every homeowner’s premium pays for the company’s
reinsurance, which helps cover payouts from catastrophic events like
major hurricanes.
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