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05 January 2015
London
Reporter Stephen Durham

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Tough renewals season ahead, says Willis Re

There will be no respite for reinsurers at the start of renewal season, with the reshaping of the global reinsurance industry now starting in earnest, according to the latest renewals report from Willis Re.

Willis has cited what it calls “relentless” rate reductions, low investment returns and the continued influx of alternative capital as reasons for the continued pressure on the reinsurance industry.

According to the report, downward pressure on reinsurance rates continued across nearly all lines and geographies along with improved terms and conditions, with abundant oversupply of capital continuing to outstrip demand following another year of benign loss activity.

Willis has claimed that the tiering of reinsurers is also gaining wider traction, which is putting pressure on smaller reinsurers and single line catastrophe writers “who have the additional burden of competing with the capital efficient and highly competitive capital market-backed funds and sidecars”.

The report states that long-rumoured M&A activity is now reality, with some companies recognising that any further delay is only likely to see further deterioration in their valuations.

Peter Hearn, chairman for Willis Re, said: “In the current environment, many reinsurers recognise they can no longer hope for salvation through major market losses or increasing interest rates.”

“Their only sustainable course of action is to change their business models, portfolio mixes and to strive for scale. The new mantra is diversification. Whether this is by class or geography—preferably both—reinsurers are being actively rewarded by investors and buyers who see diversification as key to sustainability, along with size.”

However, according to the report, not all reinsurers are accepting wider terms and conditions in addition to reduced rates, and a number of buyers have given firm order prices above the best market terms to maintain their relationships with key partners.

Some reinsurers are also actively scaling back their portfolios and going into 2015 with reduced budgets—particularly within the natural catastrophe sphere—helping to resist overly aggressive pricing and terms and conditions.

The anticipated influx of hedge fund-backed reinsurers also appears to have abated. However, the report suggests that this is more closely related to rating agency hurdles than to current market conditions.

Looking to 2015, CEO of Willis Re John Cavanagh, concluded: “Yet again, buyers have held sway. Also adding to reinsurer woes are the predictions that the global reinsurance market is only just managing to cover its cost of capital in 2014 and may fail to do so in 2015.”

“Arguably, the continued lack of demand and oversupply of capital can only keep driving pricing down: unlike other financial markets, the reinsurance market lacks inherent depth, with no structured secondary trading market to help absorb the excess capacity. As a sector, we need to create depth.”

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