In 2018, natural catastrophes wreaked havoc around the world. Windstorms caused massive losses in the United States, Japan and the Philippines. Droughts hit the United States and Europe, and unusually large wildfires caused devastation in California. Experts have suggested that at least a portion of the worlds global catastrophes in 2018 can be attributed to climate change. Yet, while they could have raised rates after absorbing such large insured losses, reinsurers of property catastrophe exposures left their prices largely unchanged when it came time for renewal in January 2019. Historically, the reinsurance market has been an efficient purveyor of pricing information to the direct insurance market. They, in turn, pass this information to insureds (often after regulatory approval), who are then able to make economically informed decisions. From asbestos to toxic torts, the reinsurance market has effectively acted as the “canary in the coal mine” by placing a price on insuring “bad acts.”
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