MEMBERSHIP
AMPLIFY
EN ESPAÑOL
Connect With Us
- Popular search terms
- Automobile
- Home + Renters
- Claims
- Fraud
- Hurricane
- Popular Topics
- Automobile
- Home + Renters
- The Basics
- Disaster + Preparation
- Life Insurance
For Immediate Release
Triple-I: Loretta Worters, lorettaw@iii.org
Milliman: Jeremy Engdahl-Johnson, jeremy.engdahl-johnson@milliman.com
NEW YORK, July 11, 2024 – Favorable first-quarter economic and underwriting results for property/casualty insurance are in line with projections that the industry will see a small underwriting loss in 2024 and achieve profitability in 2025, according to the latest forecasting report – Insurance Economics and Underwriting Projections: A Forward View – from the Insurance Information Institute (Triple-I) and Milliman, a collaborating partner.
Some highlights of the report include:
“The ongoing performance gap between personal and commercial lines remains, but that gap is closing,” said Dale Porfilio, FCAS, MAAA, Triple-I’s chief insurance officer. “This quarter, we are projecting commercial lines underwriting results to outperform personal lines premium growth by over five points in 2024. The difference in large part illustrates how regulatory scrutiny on personal lines has curbed the ability for insurers to increase prices to reflect the significant amount of inflation that impacted replacement costs through and coming out of COVID.”
Jason B. Kurtz, FCAS, MAAA, a principal and consulting actuary at Milliman – a premier global consulting and actuarial firm – points out how commercial multi-peril is one line that continues to face long-term challenges.
“While the expected net combined ratio of 106.2 is one point better than 2023, matching the eight-year average, the line has not been profitable since 2015. And with a Q1 direct incurred loss ratio of 52% and premium growth rates continuing to slow, we see some improvement but continuing unprofitability through 2026,” Kurtz said.
In juxtaposition, Kurtz pointed out the continuing robust performance of workers’ compensation. “The expected 90.3 net combined ratio is nearly a one-point improvement from prior estimates and would mark 10 consecutive years of profitability for workers’ comp,” he said. “We continue to forecast favorable underwriting results through 2026.”
"Medical costs are going up, but they have not experienced the same type of inflation as the broader economy," said Donna Glenn, FCAS, MAAA, chief actuary at the National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI). NCCI produces the Medical Inflation Insights report, which provides detailed information specific to workers' compensation on a quarterly basis. “Since 2015, both workers' compensation severity and medical inflation, as measured by NCCI's Workers’ Compensation Weighted Medical Price index, have grown at a similar rate, a quite moderate 2% per year.”
Michel Léonard, Ph.D., CBE, chief economist and data scientist at Triple-I, discussed how P/C replacement costs continue to increase more slowly than overall inflation.
"For the last 12 months, economic drivers of insurance performance have been favorable to the industry, with P/C insurance's underlying growth catching up to overall U.S. economic growth rates, and its replacement costs increasing at a sluggish pace compared to overall inflation,” Léonard said. “We expected this favorable window to last into 2025.”
That may not be the case anymore for two reasons, according to Léonard.
“First, U.S. economic growth slowed more than expected in Q1 2024, largely because of the Fed's lack of clarity about the timing of interest rate cuts,” he said. “Second, global supply chains are again showing stress due to ongoing and increasing geopolitical risk, such as the tensions in and around the Suez Canal. These causes may be threatening to send inflation back toward pandemic-era levels. Geopolitical risk never left and supply chains are on a lifeline."
Note to Media:
Insurance Economics and Underwriting Projections: A Forward View is a quarterly report offered exclusively to Triple-I members and Milliman customers. Members of the media may request copies for reporting purposes only.
About Insurance Information Institute (Triple-I)
With more than 50 insurance company members — including regional, super-regional, national and global carriers — the Insurance Information Institute (Triple-I) is the #1 online source for insurance information in the U.S. The organization’s website, blog and social media channels offer a wealth of data-driven research studies, white papers, videos, articles, infographics and other resources solely dedicated to explaining insurance and enhancing knowledge.
Unlike other sources, Triple-I’s sole focus is creating and disseminating information to empower consumers. It neither lobbies nor sells insurance. Triple-I offers objective, fact-based information about insurance – information that is rooted in economic and actuarial soundness. Triple-I is affiliated with The Institutes Risk and Insurance Knowledge Group.
About Milliman