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    Global Non-Life Insurance Rates ‘Plateauing’ but Nat Cat Losses Delay Market Softening


    Global non-life premiums are expected to hit a decade-high growth level of 4.3% in 2024, following the repricing of risk over the past several years in response to elevated claims, according to Swiss Re’s sigma.

    “Premium rates are now moderating, and we forecast softer global premium growth of 2.3% annually in real terms over 2025-26, below the 3.1% average of the last five years,” said the research report titled “Growth in the shadow of (geo-)politics,” which provides a global economic and insurance market outlook for 2025-2026.

    Jérôme Jean Haegeli, Swiss Re’s group chief economist, said rates on the property/casualty side of the industry “are plateauing if you look at market indicators.”

    But he indicated that inflation and inflation risk as well as the industry’s expected growth upside that still exists “probably is going to extend the rate cycle on the P&C side.”

    Haegeli and Paul Murray, Swiss Re’s CEO Life & Health Reinsurance, spoke during a press briefing this week to discuss the report.

    Another trend that could put downward pressure on rates is the fact that P&C business profitability is expected to improve significantly in 2024, primarily due to strong underwriting results and significant rate increases in personal lines insurance.

    “We expect these trends to increase industry return on equity (ROE) for our sample of global markets to 9%, from 5% in 2023. For 2025 and 2026, we expect 10% ROE, meeting and exceeding the cost of capital,” the report said.

    Source: Swiss Re

    The Swiss Re report acknowledged that the rate hardening forces that followed the inflation surge in 2021 and 2022 are fading and the outlook for pricing is now more moderate, but trends such as social inflation and rising natural catastrophe losses “have the potential to counteract market softening in related portfolios. Geopolitical events also risk an inflation shock that could prolong the cycle transition.”

    Indeed, US hurricane losses in 2024 will likely push global natural catastrophe insured losses to well over US$100 billion, for the fifth consecutive year, “and may delay the onset of softer property insurance pricing.”

    Swiss Re said that commercial lines rates moderated during the third quarter – a trend (led by property rates) that is expected to continue.

    “After 27 consecutive quarters of increases, the Marsh global commercial insurance rate index declined slightly (‒1%) in the third quarter of 2024 from flat in the prior quarter,” said Swiss Re, quoting Marsh’s Global Insurance Market Index, which was published in October.

    “Property rates, which have driven the hardening cycle to date, saw a small decline. US property rates declined by 1% in the third quarter, down from +2% in the second quarter of 2024, +8% growth in 1Q24 and a 11‒17% gain in 2023,” the report said, noting that Hurricanes Helene and Milton are unlikely to drive prices higher but may prevent rates from further declining in the US and other affected regions.

    In continental Europe, Q3 2024 property rates rose by 1% (after +7% in 2023), but in the UK and Asia Pacific, rates fell.

    Other key points highlighted by the Swiss Re report include:

    • Global total insurance premiums (life and non-life) are expected to increase by 2.6% on average in real terms in 2025 and 2026, after 4.6% estimated growth in 2024. Swiss Re’s forecast is well above the average of the past five years (2019‒2023: 1.6%).
    • Growth will be primarily driven by the life sector, although saving business growth will moderate as interest rates decline. Non-life insurance will grow more slowly than in recent years as the boost from the hard market tapers down.
    • The insurance industry will be supported by steady economic growth, resilient labor markets, rising real incomes as inflation moderates, and still-elevated long-term interest rates that support investment yields.
    • The global cyber insurance market is expected to reach US$16.6 billion by 2025.
    • While the volume of malicious cyber-attacks worldwide jumped by 75%, year-over-year, during the third quarter of 2024, pricing in the cyber insurance market is softening.
    • Casualty pricing, principally for general and motor liability, reflects regional claims trends. In the US, social inflation, in the form of large jury verdicts, continues to have a strong impact.
    • US general liability and auto liability rates have increased by 14% in 3Q 2024, up from 7% increase in the first two quarters. In Continental Europe and the UK, rate increases are mostly driven by US exposures.
    • In financial & professional lines covers (largely D&O), rates are softening in all regions, a reaction to good results and capacity inflows in this line.
    • Life and non-life (including health) premiums accounted for 43% and 57% of total premium in 2024.
    • The global economy is poised to see further solid expansion with global real GDP growth forecasted at 2.8% in 2025 and 2.7% in 2026, which is roughly in line with 2024, but slower than the 3.1% average growth of the pre-pandemic decade.
    • Real GDP growth in the US is expected to moderate from 2.8% in 2024 to 2.2% in 2025 and 2.1% in 2026.
    • The distribution of risks to the global economy is tilted to the downside, driven by geopolitics, the potential for disruptive policy changes, and financial market vulnerabilities.

    Topics
    Profit Loss
    Pricing Trends

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