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 MarketScout Says 3 Big Insurers Depressing Market Prices  

 
Published 6/5/2009 

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NU Online News Service, June 5, 3:32 p.m. EDT

The chief executive of the online insurance exchange MarketScout announced that three unnamed insurers are keeping rates low at a time when business realities call for market hardening.

In the Dallas-based company’s release of its monthly barometer on insurance market pricing, Richard Kerr, chairman and chief executive officer of MarketScout, said, “Every sensible economic indicator tells us rates should be increasing, yet there are still three large, admitted, publicly traded insurers clamoring for premium, seemingly at any rate and continuing to prolong the soft market.”

He did not respond to calls and e-mails asking him to identify the companies involved.

Mr. Kerr’s statement said the end of a soft market is traditionally punctuated by deep rate cuts “by a few desperate insurers,” usually signaling the end of the cycle or “the end of an irresponsible insurer.”

Once these insurers cease cutting rates, the way is cleared for increases, he observed.

He predicted an end to the soft cycle by year’s end, saying all admitted and surplus writers but the three in question are making “appropriate underwriting decisions.”

He advised stock analysts to be more probing in their questions with CEO’s and to seek more detail about underwriting practices. The best source is brokers, though many will be reluctant to divulge information for fear of losing access to these insurers, he noted.

Brokers cannot be blamed for the continuation of the hard market, said Mr. Kerr, because they are acting in the best interest of their clients to get the best price. However, the shareholders are paying the price.

“In our new financial world, the CEOs of the terrible trio are ultimately going to have some explaining to do,” he observed.

Many critics have pointed fingers at American International Group, accusing it of underpricing risk in exchange for volume. A charge the company has adamantly denied.

Underscoring Mr. Kerr’s observations, MarketScout reported the composite premium rate for May stood at minus 6 percent, compared to minus 7 percent in April. The May 2009 figure is a notable improvement from last year where the composite premium rate came in at minus 11 percent.

Most coverage classes were down by 4 or 5 percent. The exceptions were business owners policy, general liability and umbrella excess (minus 6 percent); workers’ compensation at minus 7 percent; and fiduciary at minus 3 percent.

Examining account size, only jumbo size accounts of over $1 million in premium remained unchanged on a month-to-month basis at minus 8 percent.

Small, medium and large accounts changed one percentage point on a month-to-month basis. Small and medium size accounts went from minus 7 percent in April to minus 6 percent, and large accounts went to minus 7 percent for May from minus 8 percent in April.



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    • 6/8/2009 10:27:38 AM
    • Dan
    • 3 Big Insurers Depresing Prices
    • Can you start a cintest to guess what three publicly traded carriers are depressing prices? Do they advertise in your magazine, thus no specific mention?
    • 6/8/2009 11:37:14 AM
    • Geof Smith
    • MarketScout being irresponsible
    • I find articles that claim the market is being deliberately guided by a few - and refuses to mention names - irresponsible. Are the author's claims unfounded, or is he simply acting as a stooge for the markets that want to increase rates?
    • 6/8/2009 2:17:50 PM
    • Susan
    • 3 Big Insurers Depressing Market Prices
    • I find it disgusting that Hartford is getting public funds to 'prop up' the fact that they've done business badly. Are we crazy? I work with an insurer that ISN'T lowering prices, but they also aren't borrowing money to stay in business. It is unfair trade practices to allow these losing insurers to continue in the market place.
    • 6/8/2009 6:29:48 PM
    • Peter
    • Rate Depression
    • We need more people to speak out about what is actually going on in the market. Market Scout's CEO at least cites data to back up his statements. Go through the logic of deteriorating loss ratios, no investment income, damaged balance sheets to varying degrees, and a defective economy--sure points to strengthen the underwriting. We need a healthy market and at the moment many of these companies are living on borrowed time--
    • 6/8/2009 8:07:11 PM
    • Charles Ruoff
    • P&C Market Pricing
    • Insurers are reporting very acceptable accident year combined ratios indicating current pricing is at profitable level so why try to change prices and lose market share. All are hurting on investment side and poor industry results last year caused by small group Mortgage and Financial Guaranty insurers. Economy will prevent any material price movement
    • 6/9/2009 9:37:28 AM
    • Bob
    • Kerr is a knucklehead
    • I'd like to see an analysis of Marketscout's data. Has anyone stopped to ask where these barometer numbers are coming from? Or do we just get distracted by all the graphs and colors? I would call for a little journalistic integrity on the part of P&C.com and not publish these witch-hunt articles without some kind of proof to back these claims up. Or is one man's rumourmongoring enough to constitue fact?
    • 6/9/2009 4:11:30 PM
    • Terry
    • Kerr stirring the pot
    • I would call on anyone publishing anything out of Marketscout to attempt to verify the results. This so called data is merely hearsay and conjecture. Any data allegedly gleamed from a CIC class is spotty at best. Mr. Kerr is only interested in self-promoting himself and his company. NU needs to do some homework before posting items like this. Bob and Geoff are right on. Marketscout is out of the insurance game and into the symposium game apparently.
    • 6/9/2009 4:14:04 PM
    • joe taylor
    • the big three
    • SINCE MY LOSS IN THE STOCK MARKET WITH INSURANCE STOCKS HAS LEFT ME WITHOUT A SMILE, WHY NOT TELL US WHO THE OTHER TWO WOULD BE SO WE CAN AT LEAST GET A GOOD LAUGH.

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