Mercury General Corporation, one insurance company with meaningful exposure to claims from the Los Angeles, California wildfires, has said today that it has not yet determined whether it should consider the fires as two separate events under its reinsurance arrangements.
Previously, Mercury had explained that it expected the California wildfires would end in losses for the corporate that exceed its reinsurance retention of $150 million.
Mercury said on the time that its reinsurance program provides for $1.29 billion of coverage limits, on a per-occurrence basis, after covered catastrophe losses exceed that retention level.
Today, Mercury has provided an update on the wildfires, saying it has already received many claims, while further claims continued to be reported, and it’s using aerial imagery to assist it determine whether properties are total losses.
The insurer said it has already paid $80 million to its policyholders, primarily for living expenses and housing contents, and has begun paying out dwelling claims on the Coverage A limit for verified total losses as well.
Mercury then explained that its current catastrophe reinsurance treaty would allow it to mix the losses of events that occur inside a 150-mile radius as a single occurrence, which is an option in relation to the 2 most damaging California wildfires, the Palisades and Eaton fires.
Nevertheless, the insurer also noted that its reinsurance treaty also allows for events to be considered a separate occurrence, if each individual event is assessed as its own catastrophic event by Property Claims Service (PCS).
Mercury then explained that PCS has designated each of the the Palisades and Eaton wildfires as a separate event.
Stating that the insurer, “has not yet determined if it should consider the Wildfires as two separate events.”
“As more information becomes available to the Company, including regarding any subrogation potential, the Company will evaluate whether it should consider the Wildfires as two separate events,” Mercury explained.
Mercury then explained that, should it elect to contemplate the wildfires as two loss events, it could use reinsurance limits of as much as $1.29 billion for the primary event and reinstated limits as much as $1.238 billion for the second event.
Under this scenario, Mercury can be liable for the primary and second event retentions of $150 million each, plus as much as a $101 million reinstatement premium, leading to total retention and reinstatement premiums of $401 million.
In addition to this, Mercury said that it might have co-participation as much as $52 million for losses in excess of $650 million on the second event.
So this decision, of whether to opt to recuperate from its reinsurance for the wildfires as a single, or as two, distinct catastrophe loss events, could have ramifications for the extent of recoveries sought from the reinsurance firms that take part in the Mercury tower.
Mercury will likely wait until it has further information on the degrees of claims it faces from each fire event to make that call, depending on the financial impact of losses it faces.
Mercury also noted that it may need to accumulate additional reinsurance if reinstated limits are utilized by a second event, for the period to June thirtieth 2025, which is the expiration date of its current catastrophe treaty.
It’s value noting also that Mercury has been a beneficiary to numerous the Randolph Re series of personal catastrophe bonds.
The newest of those, issued in July 2024, was a $45.5 million privately placed transaction, that gives Mercury with collateralized catastrophe reinsurance protection against wildfire losses in California.
As we reported per week ago, that Randolph Re 2024-1 cat bond had been marked down roughly 11% on the mid of bid and offer, sources told us.
We understand from sources that the value for this Randolph Re 2024-1 cat bond moved down further at probably the most recent Friday pricing as well.
Also read:
– Cat bond index falls -0.27% on wildfires, market implies roughly $30bn industry event: Plenum.
– LA wildfires: 17,027 structures damaged or destroyed. Insured loss estimates avg $32.5bn.
– LA wildfires: Moody’s RMS estimates insured losses to-date of $20bn to $30bn.
– LA wildfires: Gallagher Re estimates industry insured losses at $20bn to $30bn.
– LA wildfires: CoreLogic initial insured loss estimate is $35bn to $45bn.
– Alternative capital can provide wildfire capability, but pricing a sticking point: Morningstar DBRS.
– Stone Ridge marks mutual cat bond / ILS funds probably the most on LA wildfires.
– Euler ILS Partners puts wildfire industry loss at $15bn-$17bn, highlights BI / ALE uncertainty.
– Wildfire losses may cause re/insurance pricing to firm as payback sought: Berenberg.
– BMS says LA wildfire insured losses prone to exceed $25bn. KBW analyses as much as $40bn.
– Autonomous raises its LA wildfire loss estimate to $25bn, $18bn from Palisades fire.
– California wildfires: Subrogation topic raised, as utilities come into focus.
– ICEYE satellite evaluation: Over 10,900 buildings likely destroyed in Palisades and Eaton fires.
– Catastrophe bond price movements because of LA wildfire exposure.
– Evercore ISI: LA wildfire insured loss $20bn-$25bn. Might be one event under reinsurance.
– LA wildfire losses to “notably exceed” $10bn, could approach $20bn: Gallagher Re.
– Mercury says LA wildfire losses to exceed reinsurance retention.
– LA fires: “Considerable attachment erosion” likely for some aggregate cat bonds – Steiger, Icosa.
– LA wildfires: Over 10k structures destroyed. Insured losses as much as ~$20bn, economic $150bn.
– LA wildfire losses unlikely to significantly affect cat bond market: Twelve Capital.
– LA wildfires unlikely to cause meaningful catastrophe bond impact: Plenum Investments.
– JP Morgan analysts double LA wildfire insurance loss estimate to ~$20bn.
– LA wildfires: Analysts put insured losses in $6bn – $13bn range. Economic loss said $52bn+.
– LA wildfires bring aggregate cat bond attachment erosion into focus: Icosa Investments.