• Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance news and updates directly to your inbox.

Top News

The Art of Barista Budgeting: Financial Lessons From Coffee Culture

May 9, 2025

Here’s Why Working Women Are Delaying Motherhood

May 9, 2025

6 Warning Signs You’re Botching Best Way To Save Money and Don’t Know It

May 9, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • The Art of Barista Budgeting: Financial Lessons From Coffee Culture
  • Here’s Why Working Women Are Delaying Motherhood
  • 6 Warning Signs You’re Botching Best Way To Save Money and Don’t Know It
  • Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg Wants You to Make AI Friends
  • The Easy Way to Keep Tabs on Site Status and Downtime
  • Microsoft Prohibits Employees From Using DeepSeek AI App
  • Warren Buffett Doesn’t Believe in 10,000 Hours of Practice
  • Mortgage rates hold steady, Freddie Mac says
Saturday, May 10
Facebook Twitter Instagram
FintechoPro
Subscribe For Alerts
  • Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans
FintechoPro
Home » Who Wants To Insure California And Florida—Or The Rest?
Banking

Who Wants To Insure California And Florida—Or The Rest?

News RoomBy News RoomAugust 6, 20230 Views0
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email Tumblr Telegram

“We’ve been building more and more in harm’s way” – Sean Kevelighan, CEO of the Insurance Information Institute.

Here is an edited excerpt from this week’s CxO newsletter. To get this to your inbox, sign up here.

While wildfires in Canada are no longer burning our eyes and throats here in New York, they’re causing smoke to settle over parts of Minnesota as the world gears up for another year of record temperatures – exacerbated by developing El Nino conditions.

As climate change wreaks havoc on property, growth and human health, it’s becoming harder to insure against such risks. Average insured natural catastrophe losses have risen nearly 700 percent since the 1980s, according to Sean Kevelighan of the Insurance Information Institute. Nine of the top 10 record loss years for the industry have happened since the 2000s.

While climate change is a clear culprit, let’s also point a finger at those who are developing or moving into areas that are prone to risks like wildfires. “We’ve been building more and more in harm’s way,” says Kevelighan. “When you increase the risk, it also increases the price of that risk transfer tool.”

That contributes to rising rates or situations where insurers decide to exit a state altogether. (Insurance is regulated and priced at the state level.) State Farm, which insured more than 20% of all homes in California last year, said last month that it would no longer sell new insurance policies for homeowners or business property owners in the state. It was soon followed by Allstate, which has also decided to stop writing new policies in California, citing increased climate risk and building costs—along with reinsurance to protect its own bottom line.

Protecting Against Probable Futures

One of the most prescient and data-driven thinkers in quantifying the cost of climate change is Spencer Glendon, who began studying climate risk while running investment research at Wellington Management and founded Probable Futures to democratize the tools to understand and address it. (His Equinox and Solstice letters are a must-read.) Glendon argues that climate stability “underpins all of civilization.”

What reinforces that stability is insurance: pooling capital to protect individuals from the risk of low-probability, high-consequence events. Just as health insurers need healthy clients to subsidize the costs of the sick, property/casualty insurers need robust models that keep premiums affordable and the company profitable.

Thus begins a tug of war between regulators who want insurance to be widely available at affordable prices and insurers who to price premiums to reflect the real risk—and maximize profit. That’s hard to do in California, Kevelighan says, because of proposition 103, a 1988 law that effectively caps rates and limits insurers’ ability to model for risk.

Fighting Climate Coverage in Court

In Florida, meanwhile, insurers worry about mounting climate risks and a legal system that has let people sell their insurance claims to a third-party attorney or contractor who then fights those claims in court. That’s how a state that accounts for 9% of property claims can also account for 79% of lawsuits related to property claims.

While Gov. Ron DeSantis recently signed a bill to reduce those lawsuits and fees, many Floridians find themselves unable to afford expensive insurance against floods, hurricanes and natural disasters. And so, in a state where homeowners already pay more than three times the national average to insure their homes, Floridians face the prospect of higher prices or potentially no coverage at all.

Click above to get Kevelighan’s comments. And below is a video interview with Columbia University climate economist Gernot Wagner on the real cost of wildfires.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

From Fintech’s Top Founders To Wall Street’s Best Dealmakers: 30 Under 30 Finance 2024

Banking November 30, 2023

The Evolution Of Bank-Fintech Partnerships

Banking November 29, 2023

One Part Tech, One Part Data, And Lots Of Human Curiosity

Banking November 28, 2023

Binance Dies, And Crypto Is Birthed. What is next for digital assets

Banking November 26, 2023

Why Javier Milei’s Victory In Argentina’s Presidential Election Is Great News

Banking November 21, 2023

How ChatGPT And AI Can Help (And Hurt) Your Investing Decisions

Banking November 20, 2023
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top News

Here’s Why Working Women Are Delaying Motherhood

May 9, 20250 Views

6 Warning Signs You’re Botching Best Way To Save Money and Don’t Know It

May 9, 20250 Views

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg Wants You to Make AI Friends

May 9, 20250 Views

The Easy Way to Keep Tabs on Site Status and Downtime

May 9, 20250 Views
Don't Miss

Microsoft Prohibits Employees From Using DeepSeek AI App

By News RoomMay 9, 2025

DeepSeek’s AI app quickly became popular in the U.S. after its release in January, rising…

Warren Buffett Doesn’t Believe in 10,000 Hours of Practice

May 9, 2025

Mortgage rates hold steady, Freddie Mac says

May 9, 2025

Forbes Best Places to Retire in 2025 List

May 9, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2025 FintechoPro. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.