Published On: October 27th, 2022Categories: Florida News

Estimates from the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund, or Cat Fund, approved by its board of directors Wednesday show it could pay out billion to companies due to the damage brought by Hurricane Ian, leaving it with .3 billion in cash at the end of the year.

Although it would be able to pay all obligations stemming from this year, it would be a significant hit to the Cat Fund, which acts as a reinsurance fund for property insurers operating in Florida, greatly reducing its ability to pay claims next year without heading to the bond markets and increasing the risk of emergency assessments on policyholders.

“We feel very confident that we can cover our obligations for Ian because coming into this year we had a very large cash balance,” said Gina Wilson, Cat Fund Chief Operating Officer.

The estimates, which are still preliminary projections one month after Ian slammed into Southwest Florida, also assume the $9.25 billion in losses from Hurricanes Irma and Michael don’t increase. The fund would still have other ways of paying claims, however, with $3.5 billion in pre-event bonds and $1.6 billion in new premiums.

But that would still leave the fund with a $9.6 billion gap to meet its $17 billion maximum annual obligation, which would need to be garnered with bonds after a hurricane. If a large enough storm hit that triggered the need for those bonds, they would be backed up by emergency assessments on policyholders. This year, that gap is $1.2 billion, but is unlikely to be triggered, even after Ian.

Wilson warned that if the Legislature — which is poised to enter a Special Session later this year that could address the property insurance market’s struggles — changes the law, that financial outlook could change for the worse.

“When you make changes to the Cat Fund to increase our obligations then this situation would change,” Wilson said. “Anything that increases our obligations or makes us pay out quicker could deplete our resources.”

Earlier this year, some lawmakers floated reducing the retention level, or threshold of damages for when the Cat Fund starts paying claims to insurers, as a way to give companies more reinsurance for the coming hurricane season, but the proposal never gained traction.

Global reinsurance giants have pulled back from the Florida market, making it more expensive, if not impossible for some companies to obtain. That has put pressure on some smaller domestic insurers, which have seen losses in recent years, pushing six of them to be liquidated this year before Ian hit.


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