Making Sense of the Headlines: Insurance Market Insights for 2023 with Dr. Robert Hartwig

Wednesdays with Woodward® webinar series

January 18, 2023

Wednesday 1:00 p.m.-2:00 p.m. ET

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Savvy risk and insurance professionals are tracking a lot of news these days - from consumer sentiment, inflationary pressures and recession fears to nuclear verdicts, catastrophe losses and more. We kicked off 2023 with industry veteran and fan favorite Dr. Robert Hartwig, Director of the Risk Management and Uncertainty Center at the University of South Carolina, where he shared his signature property casualty insurance market outlook. Dr. Hartwig helped us connect all the dots and understand the broader trends underlying both the personal and commercial P&C insurance markets in the year ahead.

Presented by the Travelers Institute, MetroHartford Alliance, American Property Casualty Insurance Association, Risk and Uncertainty Management Center at the University of South Carolina’s Darla Moore School of Business and the Connecticut Business & Industry Association.

Summary

What did we learn? Here are the top takeaways from Making Sense of the Headlines: Insurance Market Insights for 2023 with Dr. Robert Hartwig.

Recession is increasingly likely, but still not inevitable. While economic decline is anticipated for the second half of 2023, Dr. Hartwig noted predictions look increasingly less negative. With sectors important to the insurance industry, like auto and housing, regaining strength, “there is a possibility that we could avoid recession altogether, but perhaps the most likely scenario is a relatively shallow recession,” he said.

P&C growth prospects are linked to economic performance. “This is an industry that is very much joined at the hip with respect to the overall economy,” Dr. Hartwig emphasized. Illustrating how premium growth has historically mirrored nominal GDP performance — for instance slowing industrywide in 2020, then strongly rebounding in 2021 and 2022 alongside the economy.

The inflation threat is still with us. While a sharp decline in inflation is expected for 2023, the cost of housing is a “big issue” keeping it high now — and not without significant impact. Surging severity of claims, high medical costs and insurance-to-value ratio risks remain. And if inflation persists, reserve adequacy could become a problem for the industry.

Medical cost inflation is easing, which could help moderate Workers Comp rates. Dr. Hartwig explained how COVID-19 completely flipped the relationship between overall inflation and medical inflation — where an increase in the Consumer Price Index once correlated with a decrease in medical cost inflation, they now move in parallel. “That’s excellent news for Workers Comp,” he said, citing data showing it to be the only commercial line industrywide for which premium renewal rates have remained flat or slightly declined over the past few years, which he attributes to strong underwriting.

Cyber premiums increases in 2022, overtaking Umbrella by nearly 10%. “There’s no shortage of major events, attacks and hacks and ransomware… and that’s driving up the Cyber coverage costs,” Dr. Hartwig explained. He sees experts in “polar opposition” about the future: some predict exponential growth, while others see cyber ultimately becoming an uninsurable risk. “When you think about a major cyber-attack, you think about the way those losses can aggregate. They could be catastrophically large, exceeding even the largest natural disasters,” he warned. “But I do think that cyber is a line that is here to stay,” he countered with optimism about the line’s growth potential.

The rise in CAT losses show no signs of easing. U.S. insurers sustained an estimated $80 million in total CAT losses for 2022, a number expected to grow once Hurricane Ian’s impact — which, adjusted for inflation, could exceed that of Hurricane Katrina’s — is fully calculated. As population sprawl continues into areas prone to natural disasters, “there’s nothing about this that’s going to change,” lamented Dr. Hartwig, punctuating his outlook with the fact that 12 of the 22 most expensive insurance events in U.S. history have occurred since 2010.

The pandemic introduced unparalleled volatility, particularly for personal auto lines. “The frequency [of claims] fell off a cliff during COVID-19, but severity continued to rise to record levels,” said Dr. Hartwig. More concerning now is that, as frequency begins creep back up to pre-pandemic levels, severity remain high — a phenomenon Dr. Hartwig blames in part on inflation.

Rising litigation costs will continue to be a major challenge for businesses and their insurers. Legal system abuse is driving rate increases across multiple lines, a situation Dr. Hartwig described as “very problematic.” With trial lawyers using lobbying power to drive the rules to their favor, “it’s not something the industry can manage on its own,” he lamented. “Getting the necessary regulatory changes, getting the cooperation among many different industry groups is a huge challenge that’s going to stretch far beyond 2023.”

P&C insurance is critical to the U.S. economy. As a member of the Federal Reserve Board’s Insurance Policy Advisory Committee, Dr. Hartwig underscored the important role the insurance industry plays in the nation’s economy. “You can’t build buildings. You can’t hire workers. You can’t lay a railroad… nothing gets done unless you have insurance sitting behind it,” he said.

Presented by the Travelers Institute, MetroHartford Alliance, American Property Casualty Insurance Association, Risk and Uncertainty Management Center at the University of South Carolina’s Darla Moore School of Business and the Connecticut Business & Industry Association.

Watch replay

Speaker

Robert HartwigRobert Hartwig, PhD
Director, Risk and Uncertainty Management Center; Clinical Associate Professor, Darla Moore School of Business, University of South Carolina

Host

Joan Woodward headshot
Joan Woodward
President, Travelers Institute; Executive Vice President, Public Policy, Travelers


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