Property Insurance in California Continues to be a Ticking Time Bomb
Author, Jeremy Hoolihan, Partner, Rancho Mesa Insurance Services, Inc.
Insurance industry experts and legislators continue to work with Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara and the California Department of Insurance (CDI) to address the overwhelming crisis in the insurance property market. On March 26th, 2024, there was a public hearing to address the crisis.
The hearing appeared to be a step in the right direction in adopting Lara’s Sustainable Insurance Strategy which is designed to restore insurance markets to competitive health by making it easier for insurers to get adequate rates and timely rate decisions.
The hearing also brought expert commentary from Sheri Scott, a Principal and Consulting Actuary at Milliman, one of the nation’s leading actuarial firms. Scott urged the CDI to amend its regulations to include a more comprehensive reconciliation checklist. The idea is to streamline the process and ensure that insurance company filings were complete, and also to limit its evaluations to issues that could impact potential rates. Scott suggests the CDI only focus on underwriting material that has a clear impact on rates they utilize and all other non-rate related items be evaluated separately.
While this hearing had some positive points, there is still a lot of work to be done. On April 23rd, 2024, the CDI hosted a public workshop on a proposal that would allow insurers to use catastrophic loss modeling in their rate making applications. As it currently stands, California is the only state that requires insurers to base rate requests solely on their own individual losses over the last 20 years rather than projecting future losses based on analysis.
The CDI and Commissioner Lara are clearly feeling the pressure to improve and streamline the rate approval process. With the FAIR Plan exposure now at $366 billion across California ($25 billion just added in January and February), it is ill equipped to handle any major disasters. The FAIR Plan has just $700,000 in cash on hand, $200 million in surplus and about $2 billion dollars in reinsurance available. The Plan also has nearly 400,000 policy holders and are fielding over 2,000 calls a day. The CDI and Lara seem to agree that California and the FAIR Plan are a major wildfire away from needing emergency help.
Obviously, the inability for insurance companies to have rates approved in a timely fashion has caused several insurance companies to leave California. The result is fewer insurance carrier options and in many cases having to rely on the FAIR Plan. Stay tuned for updates on the progress being made with Commissioner Lara’s Sustained Insurance Strategy.
If you have any questions about your commercial property insurance, please feel free to contact me at (619) 937-0174 or jhoolihan@ranchomesa.com.