Friday, January 22, 2010

CIAB: Commercial Prices Under Pressure, Weak Market Continues

Premium rates for commercial property and casualty insurance continued to fall in the fourth quarter at the same 6 percent rate as in the earlier quarter, the Council of Insurance Agents and Brokers said today in a new survey.

And equally important, an overwhelming 74 percent of the brokers responding to the survey said that demand for insurance products did not improve in the fourth quarter—indicating that no end is in sight for the weak pricing.

The push for business is even cutting into the surplus lines business, one broker noted.

“Carriers had a tremendous appetite for premium,” the CIAB said the broker stated. “Standard markets are snapping up surplus lines type accounts and providing broader terms at cheaper rates,” the carrier.

The survey indicated that the key reason for the pricing pressure is “ample” capacity as carriers compete for new business.

CIAB officials said that brokers across the country reported very aggressive underwriting by carriers. “Risk selection as well as pricing has deteriorated,” reported a broker from the Southeast, the report said.

A Northeast broker said carriers are “more flexible on terms and conditions – underwriting appetite expanding.” Another said, “Terms and pricing are still excellent – competitive marketplace is driving the rate down,” CIAB officials said.

“Tough competition for new business was the name of the game last quarter as carriers chased market share in a still weak economy,” said Ken Crerar, CIAB president.

Added pressure came from clients putting the squeeze on carriers to get the best terms and rates,” he said.

“We don’t expect to see pricing turn upward until demand picks up and capacity diminishes.”

Overall, the rates for small, medium and large business accounts declined slightly less than rates in the third quarter, according to charts prepared by Barclays Capital Equity Research using CIAB survey data.

Even lines that were tougher to place in the first half of the year are getting more competitive, according to the respondents:

“After flattening for much of the second half of 2009, we saw an uptick in competitive pricing during the last quarter, particularly in the casualty lines.”

“Catastrophe property rates have dropped and terms loosened, significantly.”

“WC is still a competitive marketplace. Unfortunately, exposure is down and so are rates, which results in premiums that are a fraction of previous years.”