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27 February 2014
New York
Reporter Stephen Durham

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Far from a catastrophe for P&C

Property and casualty (P&C) insurance experienced a buoyant year in 2013 with approximately $7.1 billion worth of new catastrophe bonds issued—a record year for P&C issuance, according to GC Securities.

The firm’s report stated that in Q4 2013, catastrophe bond issuance of $1.82 billion was minimally offset by the limited amount of catastrophe bond maturities of $360 million, resulting in a net change of risk capital outstanding of $1.46 billion.

As a result of the positive net change in risk capital outstanding, total risk capital outstanding at the end of 2013 reached an all-time high of $18.58 billion, an estimated 16 percent of global property catastrophe limit purchased annually.

While the capital markets pressured pricing through the first three quarters of 2013, traditional reinsurers responded to protect their market share and limit further pricing impact by offering attractive pricing, expanded structural features and in some cases, collateralised capacity and/or limited multi-year capacity.

Given the desirable pricing seen in the traditional market, some insurers began lining up capacity for their 1 January 2014 renewals before the end of Q3.

Despite the traditional market's response, insurance-linked securities (ILS) issuance in Q4 2013 remained robust, as sponsors issued $1.82 billion of capacity, a level of issuance consistent with the fourth quarters in previous years.

Global head of ILS for GC Securities, Cory Anger, said: "Overall, 2013 included seven new sponsors who collectively secured $1.46 billion of catastrophe bond capacity. In addition to these new sponsors, another prevalent change in the market was the increasing use and acceptance of indemnity-based triggers.”

“Given that spreads have tightened between indemnity and other trigger types, sponsors were inclined to take advantage of investors' openness to indemnity triggers to reduce coverage basis risk without a material increase in pricing relative to non-indemnity trigger pricing."

Traditional players in particular are now hedging their bets and creating their own capital markets decisions to attract, manage and utilise capital from third-party sources whether in the form of fund management, managed accounts or sidecars. This will allow reinsurers the opportunity to securitise the most capital-intensive parts of the business while providing valuable cost-efficient capacity on other business lines.

Despite the significant decrease in ILS pricing over the past 12 months, investor demand continues to be robust. ILS managers continue to see interest in deploying large amounts of capital into the sector, but given the limited opportunities to actually deploy such capital, some ILS managers are maintaining a soft closed position with respect to bringing incremental capital into the ILS space.

Chi Hum, global head of distribution for ILS for GC Securities, said: "The growing influence of alternative markets capacity is pressuring traditional reinsurers' business model and challenging them to compete against a model with lower-cost of capital that continues to enter the reinsurance market. As the catastrophe bond market continues to mature, more new sponsors are looking to the alternative market space for meaningful capacity and we expect that this trend is likely to continue through 2014."

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