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2022 started off with promise, the end of the pandemic was upon us, or so we thought. Workers were heading back to the office, sort of, and the early insurance renewals were not seeing the huge pricing increases of 2021 and 2020, just kidding. The second half of 2022, however, saw the insurance industry hit with two major hurricanes in Florida causing losses of unimaginable numbers and the capacity for natural catastrophe coverage shrinking. This coverage curtailment carried all the way through January 1, 2023, treaty renewals. There is an expectation that the unused treaty capacity may show up as strategically priced facultative capacity. The likely coverages with expected higher premiums are property, lead and excess casualty programs, and cyber coverage but no coverage is safe in 2023.
Property insurance, already hit with huge losses, will see premium increases for those locations with natural catastrophe and earthquake exposures, coupled with lower capacity and higher retentions. General Liability, Automobile, Umbrella/ Excess Liability, and Project Specific CIPs will certainly see similar increases in premium, reduced capacity, and higher retentions. Cyber underwriting, as has been the trend in recent years, is focused on understanding the risk with the best pricing going to those firms with the best loss control. There does not seem to be an area of business insurance that is predicting a decrease in premiums. We are definitely still deep in a hard market, even for the best of risks.Navigating your renewal will require Risk Managers to develop a strategy yet remain flexible, recognize risks and opportunities, and communicate
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