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After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26, 2010 Download at www.iii.org/presentations Robert P. Hartwig, Ph.D., CPCU, President & Economist Insurance Information Institute 110 William Street New York, NY 10038 Tel: 212.346.5520 Cell: 917.453.1885 [email protected]

After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

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Page 1: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

After the Crisis:Overview & Outlook for the

P-C Insurance IndustryInternational Association of Claims Professionals

Amelia Island, FLSeptember 26, 2010

Download at www.iii.org/presentationsRobert P. Hartwig, Ph.D., CPCU, President & Economist

Insurance Information Institute 110 William Street New York, NY 10038Tel: 212.346.5520 Cell: 917.453.1885 [email protected] www.iii.org

Page 2: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

2

Presentation Outline

Reasons for Optimism, Causes for Concern

Insurance Industry Financial Overview & Outlook Profitability Premium Growth Capital & Capacity Underwriting Performance: Commercial & Personal Lines Financial/Investment Review & Outlook

Financial Strength Overview

Financial Services Reform: Impacts on the Insurance Industry

Tort System Review: Overview and Causes for Concern

Performance by Segment/Line Personal & Commercial Lines

The Global Economic Storm: Financial Crisis & Recession Crisis-Driven Exposure Issues: Personal & Commercial Lines Exposure, Growth & Profitability

Catastrophe Losses

Q&A

Page 3: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

3

Reasons for Optimism, Causes for Concern in the P/C Insurance Industry Economic Recovery in US is Self-Sustaining: No Double Dip Recession

Pessimism “Bubble” Persists; Negative Economic News Amplified; Positive News is Discounted Financial market volatility will remain a reality

Era of Mass P/C Insurance Exposure Destruction Has Ended But restoration of destroyed exposure will take 3+ years in US

No Secondary Spike in Unemployment or Swoon in Payrolls/WC Exposure But job and wage growth remains sluggish

Exposure Growth Will Begin in 2nd Half 2010, Accelerate in 2011

Increase in Demand for Commercial Insurance is in its Earliest Stages and Will Accelerate in 2011 Includes workers comp, commercial auto, marine, many liability coverages, D&O

Laggards: Property, inland marine, aviation

Personal Lines: Auto leads, homeowners lags

P/C Insurance Industry Will See Growth in 2011 for the First Time Since 2006

Investment Environment Is/Remains Much More Favorable Volatility, however, will persist and yields remain low

Both are critical issues in long-tailed commercial lines like WC, Med Mal, D&O

Source: Insurance Information Institute.

Page 4: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

4

P/C Insurance Industry Capacity as of 6/30/10 Is at Record Levels and Has Recovered 100%+ of the Capital Lost During the Financial Crisis As of 12/31/09 capacity was within 2% of pre-crisis high

Record Capacity, Depressed Exposures Mean that Generally Soft Market Conditions Will Persist through 2010 and Potentially into 2011

There is No Catalyst for a Robust Hard Market at the Current Time High Global First Half 2010 CAT Losses Insufficient to Trigger Hard Market

Localized insurance and reinsurance impacts are occurring, especially earthquake coverage in Latin/South America, Offshore Energy Markets, European Wind Cover

Inflation Outlook for US and Major European Economies and Japan is Tame Will temper claims inflation Deflation is highly unlikely

Financial Strength & Ratings of Global (Re)Insurance Industries Remained Strong Throughout the Financial Crisis in Sharp Contrast With Banks

Insurers Avoided the Most Draconian Outcomes in Financial Services Reform Legislation

Tort Environment in US is Beginning to Deteriorate; No Tort Reform in US Major Transformation of US Economy Underway with Major Opportunities for Insurers

through 2020 in Health, Tech, Natural Resources, Energy

Source: Insurance Information Institute.

Reasons for Optimism, Causes for Concern in the P/C Insurance Industry

Page 5: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

5

Profitability

Historically Volatile

Page 6: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

P/C Net Income After Taxes1991–2010:H1 ($ Millions)

$1

4,1

78

$5

,84

0

$1

9,3

16

$1

0,8

70

$2

0,5

98

$2

4,4

04 $3

6,8

19

$3

0,7

73

$2

1,8

65

$3

,04

6

$3

0,0

29

$6

2,4

96

$3

,04

3

$1

6,5

31$2

8,3

11

-$6,970

$6

5,7

77

$4

4,1

55

$2

0,5

59

$3

8,5

01

-$10,000

$0

$10,000

$20,000

$30,000

$40,000

$50,000

$60,000

$70,000

$80,000

91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10:H1

2005 ROE*= 9.6% 2006 ROE = 12.7% 2007 ROE = 10.9% 2008 ROE = 0.3% 2009 ROAS1 = 5.8% 2010:H1 ROAS = 6.3%

* ROE figures are GAAP; 1Return on avg. surplus. Excluding Mortgage & Financial Guaranty insurers yields a 7.5% ROAS for 2010:H1 and 4.6% for 2009. 2009:H1 net income was $19.2 billion and $10.2 billion in 2008:H1 excluding M&FG.Sources: A.M. Best, ISO, Insurance Information Institute

P-C Industry 2010:H1 profits rose $10.6B from $6.0B in 2009:H1, due mainly to $2.2B in realized

capital gains vs. -$11.1B in previous realized capital losses

Page 7: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

7

ROE: P/C vs. All Industries1987–2009*

* Excludes Mortgage & Financial Guarantee in 2008 and 2009.Sources: ISO, Fortune; Insurance Information Institute.

-5%

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09

US P/C Insurers All US Industries

P/C Profitability IsCyclical and Volatile

Hugo

Andrew

Northridge

Lowest CAT Losses in 15 Years

Sept. 11

Katrina, Rita, Wilma

4 Hurricanes

Financial Crisis*

(Percent)

Page 8: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

A 100 Combined Ratio Isn’t What ItOnce Was: 90-95 Is Where It’s At Now

Combined Ratio / ROE

* 2009 and 2010:Q1 figures are return on average statutory surplus. 2008, 2009 and 2010:H1figures exclude mortgage and financial guaranty insurersSource: Insurance Information Institute from A.M. Best and ISO data.

97.5

100.6 100.1 100.7

92.6

99.5 100.1101.0

7.5%7.3%

9.6%

15.9%

14.3%

12.7%

4.4%

8.9%

80

85

90

95

100

105

110

1978 1979 2003 2005 2006 2008* 2009* 2010:H1*0%

3%

6%

9%

12%

15%

18%

Combined Ratio ROE*

Combined Ratios Must Be Lower in Today’s DepressedInvestment Environment to Generate Risk Appropriate ROEs

A combined ratio of about 100 generated a 7% ROE in 2009,10% in 2005 and 16% in 1979

Page 9: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

Financial Services Reform

11

Insurers Are Impacted, But Not Significantly

Page 10: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

12

Financial Services Reform:What does it mean for insurers?

Systemic Risk and Resolution Authority

Creates the Financial Stability Oversight Council and the Office of Financial Research

Imposes heightened federal regulation on large bank holding companies and “systemically risky” nonbank financial companies, including insurers

Federal Insurance Office (FIO)

Establishes the FIO (while maintaining state regulation of insurance) within the Department of Treasury, headed by a Director appointed by the Secretary of Treasury

FIO will have authority to monitor the insurance industry, identify regulatory gaps that could contribute to systemic crisis

CONCERN: FIO morphs into quasi/shadow or actual regulator

Surplus Lines/Reinsurance

Title V of the Dodd-Frank bill includes, as a separate subtitle, the Nonadmitted and Reinsurance Reform Act (NRRA), which eliminates regulatory inefficiencies associated with surplus lines insurance and reinsurance

The Dodd Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act

Source: Insurance Information Institute (I.I.I.) updates and research; The Financial Services Roundtable; Adapted from summary by Dewey & LeBoeuf LLP

Page 11: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

Source: James Madison Institute, February 2008.

ME

NH

MA

CT

PA

WV

VA

NC

LA

TX

OK

NE

ND

MN

MI

IL

IA

ID

WA

OR

AZ

HI

NJRI C

DE

AL

VT

NY

MD

SC

GA

TN

AL

FL

MS

ARNM

KYMOKS

SDWI

IN

OH

MT

CA

NV

UT

WY

CO

AK

= A= B= C= D= F= NG

Source: Heartland Institute, May 2010

A- A-

A-

B-

B-

B-

B-

B-

B-B-

B-B-

B-

B-

B-

B-

B- C-

C-

C-

C -

C-

D-D-

A

A

A

A

B+

B+

B+

B

B

B

B

B

B

C+

C+

C

D+

D+D+

D

NG

NG

D F

F

2010 Property and Casualty InsuranceReport Card

Not Graded: District of ColumbiaMississippiLouisiana

Page 12: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

Critical Differences Between P/C Insurers and Banks

23

Superior Risk Management Model and Low Leverage Make a Big Difference

Page 13: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

24

How P/C Insurance Industry Stability Has Benefitted Consumers

Bottom Line:

Insurance markets – unlike banking – are operating normally

The basic function of insurance – the orderly transfer of risk from client to insurer – continues uninterrupted

This means that insurers continue to: Pay claims (whereas 287 banks have gone under as of 9/10/10)

– The promise is being fulfilled

Renew existing policies (banks are reducing and eliminating lines of credit)

Write new policies (banks are turning away people and businesses who want or need to borrow)

Develop new products (banks are scaling back the products they offer) Compete intensively (banks are consolidating, reducing consumer choice)

Source: Insurance Information Institute

Page 14: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

Shifting Legal Liability & Tort Environment

28

Is the Tort PendulumSwinging Against Insurers?

Page 15: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

29

Important Issues & Threats Facing Insurers: 2010–2015

Source: Insurance Information Institute

Bottom Line: Tort “crisis” is on the horizon and will be recognized as such by 2012–2014

No tort reform (or protection of recent reforms) is forthcoming from the current Congress or Administration

Erosion of recent reforms is a certainty (already happening)

Innumerable legislative initiatives will create opportunities to undermine existing reforms and develop new theories and channels of liability

Torts twice the overall rate of inflation

Influence personal and commercial lines, esp. auto liability

Historically extremely costly to p/c insurance industry

Leads to reserve deficiency, rate pressure

Emerging Tort Threat

Page 16: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

33

Over the Last Three Decades, Total Tort Costs* as a % of GDP Appear Somewhat Cyclical

$0

$50

$100

$150

$200

$250

$300

80 82 84 86 88 90 92 94 96 98 00 02 04 06 08E 10E

To

rt S

ys

tem

Co

sts

1.50%

1.75%

2.00%

2.25%

2.50%

To

rt Co

sts

as

% o

f GD

P

Tort Sytem Costs Tort Costs as % of GDP

($ Billions)

* Excludes the tobacco settlement, medical malpracticeSources: Tillinghast-Towers Perrin, 2008 Update on US Tort Cost Trends, Appendix 1A; I.I.I. calculations/estimates for 2009 and 2010

2009–2010 Growth in Tort Costs as % of GDP is Due in

Part to Shrinking GDP

Page 17: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

Business Leaders Ranking of Liability Systems in 2009*

Best States

1. Delaware

2. North Dakota

3. Nebraska

4. Indiana

5. Iowa

6. Virginia

7. Utah

8. Colorado

9. Massachusetts

10. South Dakota

Worst States

41. New Mexico

42. Florida

43. Montana

44. Arkansas

45. Illinois

46. California

47. Alabama

48. Mississippi

49. Louisiana

50. West Virginia

Source: US Chamber of Commerce 2009 State Liability Systems Ranking Study; Insurance Info. Institute.

New in 2009

North Dakota Massachusetts South Dakota

Drop-offs

Maine Vermont Kansas

Newly Notorious

New Mexico Montana Arkansas

Rising Above

Texas South Carolina Hawaii

Midwest/West has mix of good and bad states.

Page 18: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

35

The Nation’s Judicial Hellholes: 2010

Source: American Tort Reform Association; Insurance Information Institute

South Florida

West VirginiaIllinoisCook County

New MexicoAppellate

Courts

Watch List

California Alabama Madison County, IL Jefferson County, MS Texas Gulf Coast Rio Grande Valley,

TX

Dishonorable Mention

AR Supreme Court MN Supreme Court ND Supreme Court PA Governor MA Supreme

Judicial Court Sacramento County

New JerseyAtlantic County (Atlantic City)

New York City

Page 19: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

Average Jury Awards 1999 - 2008

$725$747 $756

$800 $799

$1,018 $1,022

$950

$1,077$1,046

$500

$600

$700

$800

$900

$1,000

$1,100

$1,200

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008

Source: Jury Verdict Research; Insurance Information Institute.

Page 20: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

2009 Top Ten Jury Verdicts

Source: Lawyers USA, January 15, 2010.

Value Issue State

$370 Million Defamation California

$330 Million Personal Injury (Drunk driving case) Florida

$300 Million Personal Injury (Tobacco verdict) Florida

$89 Million Personal Injury (Drunk driving case) Missouri

$78.75 Million Personal Injury (Prempro) New Jersey

$77.4 Million Medical Malpractice New York

$71 Million Conversion and Breach of Fiduciary Duty Texas

$70 Million Workers Comp Case Texas

$65 Million Personal Injury Florida

$60 Million Medical Malpractice New York

Page 21: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

Financial Strength & Ratings

49

Industry Has Weathered the Storms Well

Page 22: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

P/C Insurer Impairments, 1969–20098

15

12

71

19

34

91

31

21

99

16

14

13

36

49

31 3

45

04

85

56

05

84

12

91

61

23

11

8 19

49 50

47

35

18

14 15

7 65

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

69

70

71

72

73

74

75

76

77

78

79

80

81

82

83

84

85

86

87

88

89

90

91

92

93

94

95

96

97

98

99

00

01

02

03

04

05

06

07

08

09

Source: A.M. Best; Insurance Information Institute.

The Number of Impairments Varies Significantly Over the P/C Insurance Cycle, With Peaks Occurring Well into Hard Markets

5 of the 11 are Florida companies (1 of these

5 is a title insurer)

Page 23: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

53

Reasons for US P/C Insurer Impairments, 1969–2008

38.1%

14.3%8.1%

7.6%

7.9%

7.0%

9.1%

4.2%

3.7%

Source: A.M. Best: 1969-2008 Impairment Review, Special Report, Apr. 6, 2009

Deficient Loss Reserves and Inadequate Pricing Are the Leading Cause of Insurer Impairments, Underscoring the Importance of Discipline.

Investment Catastrophe Losses Play a Much Smaller Role

Deficient Loss Reserves/In-adequate Pricing

Reinsurance Failure

Rapid GrowthAlleged Fraud

Catastrophe Losses

Affiliate Impairment

Investment Problems

Misc.

Sig. Change in Business

Page 24: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

P/C Premium Growth Primarily Driven by the

Industry’s Underwriting Cycle, Not the Economy

54

Page 25: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

55

-5%

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09

10F

Soft Market Appears to Persist in 2010 but May Be Easing: Relief in 2011?

(Percent)1975-78 1984-87 2000-03

Shaded areas denote “hard market” periodsSources: A.M. Best (historical and forecast), ISO, Insurance Information Institute.

Net Written Premiums Fell 0.7% in 2007 (First Decline Since 1943) by 2.0% in 2008, and 4.2% in 2009, the First 3-Year Decline Since 1930-33.

NWP was flat with 0.0% growth in 10:H1 vs. -4.4% in 09:H1

Page 26: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

59

Average Commercial Rate Change,All Lines, (1Q:2004–2Q:2010)

-3.2

%

-5.9

%

-7.0

%

-9.4

%

-9.7

% -8.2

%

-4.6

%

-2.7

%

-3.0

%

-5.3

%

-9.6

%

-11

.3%

-11

.8%

-13

.3%

-12

.0%

-13

.5%

-12

.9% -1

1.0

%

-6.4

% -5.1

%

-4.9

%

-5.8

%

-5.6

%

-5.3

%

-6.4

%

-0.1

%

-16%

-14%

-12%

-10%

-8%

-6%

-4%

-2%

0%

1Q

04

2Q

04

3Q

04

4Q

04

1Q

05

2Q

05

3Q

05

4Q

05

1Q

06

2Q

06

3Q

06

4Q

06

1Q

07

2Q

07

3Q

07

4Q

07

1Q

08

2Q

08

3Q

08

4Q

08

1Q

09

2Q

09

3Q

09

4Q

09

1Q

10

2Q

10

Source: Council of Insurance Agents & Brokers; Insurance Information Institute

KRW Effect

Magnitude of Price Declines Shrank

During Crisis, Reflecting Shrinking

Capital, Reduced Investment Gains,

Deteriorating Underwriting

Performance, Higher Cat Losses and

Costlier Reinsurance

(Percent)

Market Remains Soft as Capital Restored and

Underwriting Losses Remain Modest

Page 27: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

61

Change in Commercial Rate Renewals, by Account Size: 1999:Q4 to 2010:Q2

Source: Council of Insurance Agents and Brokers; Insurance Information Institute.

Percentage Change (%)

Market has Been Soft for 6 years and Remains Soft as Capital is Restored and

Underwriting Losses Remain Modest

Trough = 2007:Q3 -13.6%

KRW Effect

Pricing Turned Negative in Early

2004 and Has Been Negative

Ever Since

Peak = 2001:Q4 +28.5%

Page 28: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

Capital/PolicyholderSurplus (US)

63

Shrinkage, but Not Enoughto Trigger Hard Market

Page 29: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

65

Policyholder Surplus, 2006:Q4–2010:Q2

Sources: ISO, A.M .Best.

($ Billions)

$487.1$496.6

$512.8$521.8

$478.5

$455.6

$437.1

$463.0

$490.8

$511.5

$540.7$530.5

$505.0$515.6$517.9

$420

$440

$460

$480

$500

$520

$540

$560

06:Q4 07:Q1 07:Q2 07:Q3 07:Q4 08:Q1 08:Q2 08:Q3 08:Q4 09:Q1 09:Q2 09:Q3 09:Q4 10:Q1 10:Q2

2007:Q3Previous Surplus Peak

Quarterly Surplus Changes Since 2009:Q1 Trough

09:Q1: -$84.7B (-16.2%) 09:Q2: -$58.8B (-11.2%)09:Q3: -$31.8B (-5.9%)09:Q4: -$10.3B (-2.0%)

10:Q1: +$18.9B (+3.6%)10:Q2: -$10.2B (-1.9%)

Surplus set a new record in 2010:Q1*

*Includes $22.5B of paid-in capital from a holding company parent for one insurer’s investment in a non-insurance business

Page 30: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

68

Ratio of Insured Loss to Surplus for Largest Capital Events Since 1989*

* Ratio is for end-of-quarter surplus immediately prior to event. Date shown is end of quarter prior to event** Date of maximum capital erosion; As of 9/30/09 (latest available) ratio = 5.9%Source: PCS; Insurance Information Institute

3.3%

9.6%

6.9%

10.9%

6.2%

13.8%

16.2%

0%

3%

6%

9%

12%

15%

18%

6/30/1989Hurricane

Hugo

6/30/1992HurricaneAndrew

12/31/93NorthridgeEarthquake

6/30/01 Sept.11 Attacks

6/30/04Florida

Hurricanes

6/30/05Hurricane

Katrina

FinancialCrisis as of3/31/09**

The Financial Crisis at its Peak Ranks as the Largest

“Capital Event” Overthe Past 20+ Years

(Percent)

Page 31: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

Merger & Acquisition

70

Barriers to Consolidation Will Diminish in 2010

Page 32: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

71

U.S. P/C Insurance-RelatedM&A Activity, 1988–2009

$2$5

$19

$1 $0

$20

$0

$9

$35

$14$16

$4

$56

$31

$8$12

$2$3 $3 $5$6

$40

$0

$10

$20

$30

$40

$50

$60

88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09

Tra

ns

ac

tio

n V

alu

e (

$ B

illio

n)

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

Nu

mb

er o

f Tra

ns

ac

tion

s

Transaction Values

Number of Transactions

Note: U.S. Company was the acquirer and/or target.

Source: Conning Research & Consulting.

2010: No Mega Deals So Far, Despite Record Capital, Slow Growth and Improved

Financial Market Conditions

$ Value of Deals Down 78% in 2009, Volume Up 7%

Page 33: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

Investment Performance

72

Investments Are a PrincipleSource of Declining Profitability

Page 34: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

Property/Casualty Insurance Industry Investment Gain: 1994–2010:H11

$35.4

$42.8$47.2

$52.3

$44.4

$36.0

$45.3$48.9

$59.4$55.7

$64.0

$31.7

$39.0

$25.8

$58.0

$51.9$56.9

$0

$10

$20

$30

$40

$50

$60

$70

94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05* 06 07 08 09 10:H1In 2008, Investment Gains Fell by 50% Due to Lower Yields and

Nearly $20B of Realized Capital Losses 2009 Saw Smaller Realized Capital Losses But Declining Investment Income

Investment Gains Are Recovering So Far in 20101 Investment gains consist primarily of interest, stock dividends and realized capital gains and losses.* 2005 figure includes special one-time dividend of $3.2B.Sources: ISO; Insurance Information Institute.

($ Billions) 2009:H1 gain was $12.5B

Investment gains in 2010 are on track to be their best since 2007

Page 35: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

75

Treasury Yield Curves: Pre-Crisis (July 2007) vs. August 2010

0.15% 0.16% 0.19% 0.26%0.52%

2.10%

2.70%

4.82% 4.96% 5.04% 4.96% 4.82% 4.82% 4.88% 5.00% 4.93% 5.00%5.19%

1.47%

0.78%

3.80%3.52%

0%

1%

2%

3%

4%

5%

6%

1M 3M 6M 1Y 2Y 3Y 5Y 7Y 10Y 20Y 30Y

August 2010 Yield Curve*Pre-Crisis (July 2007)

Treasury yield curve is near its most depressed level in at least 45 years. Investment

income is falling as a result

Stock Dividend Cuts Have Further Pressured Investment Income

Sources: Board of Governors of the United States Federal Reserve Bank; Insurance Information Institute.

Page 36: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

77

-1.8

%

-1.8

%

-2.0

%

-3.6

%

-3.3

%

-3.3

%

-3.7

%

-4.3

%

-5.2

%

-5.7

%

-7.3%

-1.9

%

-2.1

%

-3.1

%

-8%-7%-6%-5%-4%-3%-2%-1%0%

Perso

nal L

ines

Pvt Pass

Aut

o

Pers P

rop

Comm

ercia

l

Comm

l Auto

Credit

Comm

Pro

p

Comm

Cas

Fidelity

/Sure

ty

War

rant

y

Surplu

s Line

s

Med

Mal

WC

Reinsu

ranc

e**

Lower Investment Earnings Place a Greater Burden on Underwriting and Pricing Discipline

*Based on 2008 Invested Assets and Earned Premiums**US domestic reinsurance onlySource: A.M. Best; Insurance Information Institute.

Reduction in Combined Ratio Necessary to Offset 1% Decline in Investment Yield to Maintain Constant ROE, by Line*

Page 37: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

79

Underwriting Trends – Financial Crisis Does Not

Directly Impact Underwriting Performance: Cycle, Catastrophes

Were 2008’s Drivers

Page 38: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

80

P/C Insurance Industry Combined Ratio, 2001–2010:H1*

* Excludes Mortgage & Financial Guaranty insurers in 2008, 2009 and 2010. Including M&FG, 2008=105.1, 2009=100.7, 2010:H1=101.7 Sources: A.M. Best, ISO.

95.7

99.3 100.1101.0

92.6

100.898.4

100.1

107.5

115.8

90

100

110

120

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009* 2010:H1

Best Combined

Ratio Since 1949 (87.6)

As Recently as 2001, Insurers Paid Out

Nearly $1.16 for Every $1 in Earned

Premiums

Relatively Low CAT Losses, Reserve Releases

Cyclical Deterioration

Heavy Use of Reinsurance Lowered Net

Losses

Relatively Low CAT Losses, Reserve Releases

Lower CAT

Losses, More

Reserve Releases

Page 39: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

Underwriting Gain (Loss)1975–2010:H1*

* Includes mortgage and financial guarantee insurers.Sources: A.M. Best, ISO; Insurance Information Institute.

Large Underwriting Losses Are NOT Sustainable in Current Investment Environment

-$55

-$45

-$35

-$25

-$15

-$5

$5

$15

$25

$35

75 77 79 81 83 85 87 89 91 93 95 97 99 01 03 05 07 09

The industry recorded a $5.1B underwriting

loss in 2010:H1 compared to $2.1B in

2009:H1

Cumulative underwriting deficit from 1975 through

2009 is $445B

($ Billions)

Page 40: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

82

2.3

-2.1

-8.3

-2.6-6.6

-9.9 -9.8

-4.1

1

11.7

23.2

13.79.9

7.3

-6.7-9.5

-14.6-16 -15

-5

-$20

-$15

-$10

-$5

$0

$5

$10

$15

$20

$25

$309

2

93

94

95

96

97

98

99

00

01

02

03

04

05

06

07

08

09

10

E

11

E

Pri

or

Yr.

Re

se

rve

Re

lea

se

($

B)

-6

-4

-2

0

2

4

6

8 Imp

ac

t on

Co

mb

ine

d R

atio

(Po

ints

)

Prior Yr. ReserveDevelopment ($B)

Impact onCombined Ratio(Points)

P/C Reserve Development, 1992–2011E

Reserve Releases Are Continuing Strong in 2010 But Should Begin to Taper Off in 2011

Note: 2005 reserve development excludes a $6 billion loss portfolio transfer between American Re and Munich Re. Including this transaction, total prior year adverse development in 2005 was $7 billion. The data from 2000 and subsequent years excludes development from financial guaranty and mortgage insurance. Sources: Barclay’s Capital; A.M. Best.

Prior year reserve releases totaled $8.8 billion in the

first half of 2010, up from $7.1 billion in

the first half of 2009

Page 41: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

83

Calendar Year vs. Accident Year P/C Combined Ratio: 1992–2010E1

Note: 2005 reserve development excludes a $6 billion loss portfolio transfer between American Re and Munich Re. Including this transaction, total prior year adverse development in 2005 was $7 billion. The data from 2000 and subsequent years excludes development from financial guaranty and mortgage insurance. Sources: Barclay’s Capital; A.M. Best.

10

5.6

10

7.8

11

0.1 1

15

.9

10

7.3

10

0.1

98

.3 10

0.9

92

.4 95

.5

10

5.1

10

1.9 10

5.9

11

4.7

10

7.8 11

1.8

10

7.4

10

8.3

10

5.3 10

9.2

10

9.2

11

0.0

11

2.3

10

0.8

96

.6

96

.0

10

0.6

93

.9 97

.4

10

5.5

10

5.7 10

9.4

11

5.7

10

6.9

10

8.4

10

6.4

10

5.8

10

1.6

80

85

90

95

100

105

110

115

120

92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05* 06 07 08 09E 10E

Calendar Year Accident Year

Accident Year Results Show a More Significant Deterioration in Underwriting Performance. Calendar Year Results Are Helped by Reserve Releases

Page 42: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

85

Performance by Segment:Commercial/Personal Lines

Page 43: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

86

Calendar Year Combined Ratios by Segment: 2008-2012F

Sources: A.M. Best (historical) Conning forecasts for 2010 - 2012); Insurance Information Institute.

101.799.9

101.9103.7

100.9

103.5

100.2

102.5

107.2

103.6

9092949698

100102104106108110

Personal Lines Commercial Lines

2008 2009E 2010P 2010F 2010F

Overall deterioration in 2010 underwriting performance is due to expected return to normal catastrophe activity along with deteriorating underwriting

performance related to the prolonged commercial soft market

Personal lines combined ratio is expected to remain stable in 2010 while commercial lines and reinsurance deteriorate

Page 44: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

87

Net Written Premium Growth by Segment: 2008-2012F

0.6%

-7.9%

3.6%

-0.7%

5.2% 4.8%5.1% 5.8%

-4.0%

-0.7%

-10%

-8%

-6%

-4%

-2%

0%

2%

4%

6%

8%

Personal Lines Commercial Lines

2008 2009E 2010P 2011F 2011F

Rate and exposure are more favorable in personal lines, whereas a prolonged soft market and sluggish recovery from the recession

weigh on commercial lines.

Personal lines will show growth in 2010 while commercial lines is expected to continue to shrink

Sources: A.M. Best (historical) Conning forecasts for 2010 - 2012); Insurance Information Institute.

Page 45: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

88

Claim Trends in Auto Insurance

Rising Costs Held in Check by Falling Frequency:

Can That Pattern Be Sustained?

Page 46: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

89

Bodily Injury: Severity Trends Generally Above Decline in Frequency

-5.4%

-3.8%-5.0%

-3.1% -3.2%-2.2%

2.9%

4.7%5.9% 6.1%

2.1% 2.3%

-6%

-4%

-2%

0%

2%

4%

6%

8%

2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010*

Severity Frequency

*For 2010, data are for the 4 quarters ending with 2010:Q1.Source: ISO/PCI Fast Track data; Insurance Information Institute

Annual Change, 2005 through 2010*

Cost Pressures Will Increase if BI Severity Increases Outpace Declines in Frequency

Page 47: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

91

No-Fault (PIP) Liability: Frequency and Severity Trends Are Adverse*

-4.8%-5.7%

-2.7%

-6.9%

5.9%7.4%

4.7%

2.4%

6.3% 6.4% 6.5%5.0%

-8%

-6%

-4%

-2%

0%

2%

4%

6%

8%

10%

2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010*

Severity Frequency

*No-fault states included are: FL, HI, KS, KY, MA, MI, MN, NY, ND and UT; 2010 data are for the 4 quarters ending 2010:Q1.Source: ISO/PCI Fast Track data; Insurance Information Institute

Annual Change, 2005 through 2010*

Multiple States Are Experiencing Severe Fraud and Abuse Problems in their No-Fault Systems, Especially FL, MI, NY and NJ

Page 48: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

94

The Economic Storm

What the Financial Crisis and Recession Mean for the Industry’s

Exposure Base, Growth and Profitability

Page 49: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

95

US Real GDP Growth*

* Estimates/Forecasts from Blue Chip Economic Indicators.Source: US Department of Commerce, Blue Economic Indicators 7/10; Insurance Information Institute.

2.7

%

0.9

%

3.2

%

2.3

%

2.9

%

-0.7

%

0.6

%

-4.0

%

-6.8

% -4.9

%

-0.7

%

1.6

%

5.0

%

3.7

%

1.6

%

1.8

%

2.3

%

2.5

%

2.8

%

3.0

%

3.2

%

4.1

%

1.1

%

1.8

%

2.5

% 3.6

%

3.1

%

-8%

-6%

-4%

-2%

0%

2%

4%

6%

   2

00

0   

   2

00

1   

   2

00

2   

   2

00

3   

   2

00

4   

   2

00

5   

   2

00

6   

07

:1Q

07

:2Q

07

:3Q

07

:4Q

08

:1Q

08

:2Q

08

:3Q

08

:4Q

09

:1Q

09

:2Q

09

:3Q

09

:4Q

10

:1Q

10

:2Q

10

:3Q

10

:4Q

11

:1Q

11

:2Q

11

:3Q

11

:4Q

Demand Commercial Insurance Continues To Be Impacted by Sluggish Economic Conditions

Real GDP Growth (%)

Recession began in Dec. 2007. Economic toll of credit

crunch, housing slump, labor market contraction has

been severe but modest recovery is underway

The Q4:2008 decline was the steepest since the Q1:1982 drop of 6.8%

Economic growth up sharply in late 2009 with rebuilding

of inventories and stimulus. More moderate growth

expected in 2010/11 but no “double dip”

Page 50: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

105

Labor Market Trends

Massive Job Losses Sapped the Economy and Commercial/Personal

Lines Exposure, But Trend is Improving

Page 51: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

106

Unemployment and Underemployment Rates: Rocketed Up in 2008-09; Stabilizing in 2010?

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

Jan 00 Jan 01 Jan 02 Jan 03 Jan 04 Jan 05 Jan 06 Jan 07 Jan 08 Jan 09 Jan 10

Traditional Unemployment Rate U-3

Unemployment + Underemployment Rate U-6

Aug10

Unemployment rate was 9.6% in

August

Unemployment peaked at 10.1%

in Oct. 2009, highest monthly rate since 1983.

Peak rate in the last 30 years: 10.8% in Nov -

Dec 1982

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics; Insurance Information Institute.

U-6 went from 8.0% in March

2007 to 17.5% in Oct 2009; Stood at 16.7% in July

2010

January 2000 through August 2010, Seasonally Adjusted (%)

Recession ended in

November 2001

Unemployment kept rising for

19 more months

Recession began in

December 2007

Page 52: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

107

US Unemployment Rate

4.5

%

4.5

%

4.6

%

4.8

%

4.9

% 5.4

% 6.1

%

6.9

%

8.1

%

9.3

%

9.6

% 10

.0%

9.7

%

9.7

%

9.6

%

9.5

%

9.4

%

9.2

%

9.0

%9.6

%

4.0%

5.0%

6.0%

7.0%

8.0%

9.0%

10.0%

11.0%

07

:Q1

07

:Q2

07

:Q3

07

:Q4

08

:Q1

08

:Q2

08

:Q3

08

:Q4

09

:Q1

09

:Q2

09

:Q3

09

:Q4

10

:Q1

10

:Q2

10

:Q3

10

:Q4

11

:Q1

11

:Q2

11

:Q3

11

:Q4

Rising unemployment eroded payrolls

and workers comp’s exposure base.

Unemployment likely peaked at 10% in late 2009.

* = actual; = forecastsSources: US Bureau of Labor Statistics; Blue Chip Economic Indicators (9/10); Insurance Information Institute

2007:Q1 to 2011:Q4F*

Unemployment forecasts remain stubbornly high

through 2011

Page 53: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

109

Unemployment Rates Vary Widelyby State and Region: July 2010*

14.3

%

13.1

%

6.5%

4.7%

4.4%

3.6%

8.9%

10.6

%12.3

%

10.2

%7.

8%

6.8%

10.3

%

6.8%

9.2%

10.3

%

8.0%

6.7%7.

3%7.

2%

8.8%

8.2%

8.2%

6.9%

9.6%

0%

3%

6%

9%

12%

15%

AZ

NM TX OK ID CO UT

MT

WY

NV

CA

OR

WA MI IL O

H IN WI

MO

MN IA KS NE

SD

ND

Une

mpl

oym

ent R

ate

(%)

*Provisional figures for July 2010, seasonally adjusted.

Sources: US Bureau of Labor Statistics; Insurance Information Institute.

Southwest Mountain

Far West

Great Plains

Great Lakes

Unemployment in July was far

above average in OH, 10.3% vs.

9.5% nationally

Page 54: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

110

Unemployment Rates Vary Widelyby State and Region: July 2010* (cont’d)

11.5

%10

.8%

10.8

%9.

9%9.

9%9.

8%9.

8%9.

7%8.

6%7.

4%7.

2%7.

0%

9.7%

9.3%

8.4%

8.2%

7.1%

11.9

%9.

0%8.

9%8.

1%6.

0%5.

8%

7.7%

6.3%

0%

3%

6%

9%

12%

15%

FL MS

SC

GA KY

TN NC AL

WV AR LA VA NJ

PA DE

NY

MD RI

MA CT

ME

VT

NH

AK HI

Une

mpl

oym

ent R

ate

(%)

*Provisional figures for July 2010, seasonally adjusted.

Sources: US Bureau of Labor Statistics; Insurance Information Institute.

Southeast Mid-Atlantic New England

Page 55: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

111

Monthly Change Employment*-7

2-1

44

-12

2-1

60

-13

7-1

61

-12

8-1

75

-32

1-3

80

-59

7-6

81

-77

9-7

26

-75

3-5

28 -3

87

-51

5 -34

6 -21

2-2

25

-22

46

4-1

09

14 39

20

8 31

3 43

2-1

75 -5

4-5

4

-1,000

-800

-600

-400

-200

0

200

400

600

Jan

08

Fe

b 0

8M

ar

08

Ap

r 0

8M

ay

08

Jun

08

Jul 0

8A

ug

08

Se

p 0

8O

ct 0

8N

ov

08

De

c 0

8Ja

n 0

9F

eb

09

Ma

r 0

9A

pr

09

Ma

y 0

9Ju

n 0

9Ju

l 09

Au

g 0

9S

ep

09

Oct

09

No

v 0

9D

ec

09

Jan

10

Fe

b 1

0M

ar

10

Ap

r 1

0M

ay

10

Jun

10

Jul 1

0A

ug

10

Monthly Losses in Dec. 08–Mar. 09 Were

the Largest in the Post-WW II Period

*Estimate based on Reuters poll of economists.Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics: http://www.bls.gov/ces/home.htm; Insurance Information Institute

Job Losses Since the Recession Began in Dec. 2007 Peaked at 8.4 Mill in Dec. 09; Stands at 7.7 Million Through August 2010;

14.9 Million People are Now Defined as Unemployed

January 2008 through August 2010* (Thousands)

The job gain and loss figures in 2010 are severely distorted by the hiring and

termination of temporary Census workers. So far in 2010, 763,000 private sector jobs

have been created.

Page 56: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

121

Insurance Industry Employment Trends

Soft Market, Difficult Economy, Outsourcing, Productivity

Enhancements and Consolidation Have Contributed

to Industry’s Job Losses

Page 57: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

122

U.S. Employment in the DirectP/C Insurance Industry: 1990–2010*

*As of July 2010; Not seasonally adjusted; Does not including agents & brokersNote: Recessions indicated by gray shaded columns.Sources: US Bureau of Labor Statistics; National Bureau of Economic Research (recession dates); Insurance Information Institutes.

Thousands

460

480

500

520

'90 '91 '92 '93 '94 '95 '96 '97 '98 '99 '00 '01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10

As of July 2010, P/C insurance industry employment was down by 26,900 or 5.5% to 464,200 since the

recession began in Dec. 2007 (compared to overall US employment decline of 7.2%)

Page 58: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

127

U.S. Employment in Insurance Claims Adjusting: 1990–2010*

Thousands

40

45

50

55

60

Jan-

90

Sep

-90

May

-91

Jan-

92

Sep

-92

May

-93

Jan-

94

Sep

-94

May

-95

Jan-

96

Sep

-96

May

-97

Jan-

98

Sep

-98

May

-99

Jan-

00

Sep

-00

May

-01

Jan-

02

Sep

-02

May

-03

Jan-

04

Sep

-04

May

-05

Jan-

06

Sep

-06

May

-07

Jan-

08

Sep

-08

May

-09

Jan-

10

*As of July 2010; Not seasonally adjusted.Note: Recessions indicated by gray shaded columns.Sources: US Bureau of Labor Statistics; National Bureau of Economic Research (recession dates); Insurance Information Institutes.

As of July 2010, claims adjusting employment was down by 8,100 or 15.6%

to 43,900 since the recession began in Dec. 2007 (compared to overall US

employment decline of 7.2%)

Katrina, Rita, Wilma

Page 59: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

128

U.S. Employment in Third-Party Administration of Insurance Funds: 1990–2010*

Thousands

85

95

105

115

125

135

'90 '91 '92 '93 '94 '95 '96 '97 '98 '99 '00 '01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10*As of July 2010; Not seasonally adjusted. Includes all types of insurance.Note: Recessions indicated by gray shaded columns.Sources: US Bureau of Labor Statistics; National Bureau of Economic Research (recession dates); Insurance Information Institutes.

Page 60: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

Crisis-Driven Exposure Drivers

129

Economic Obstaclesto Growth in P/C Insurance

Page 61: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

130

16.9

16.5

16.1

13.1

10.3

11.5

12.7

16.9

16.617

.117.5

17.8

17.4

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10F 11F

(Millions of Units)

Auto/Light Truck Sales, 1999-2011F

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce; Blue Chip Economic Indicators (9/10); Insurance Information Institute.

Car/Light Truck Sales Will Recover from the 2009 Low Point, but High Unemployment, Tight Credit Are Still Restraining Sales

New auto/light truck sales fell to the lowest level since the late 1960s. Forecast for

2010-11 is still far below 1999-2007 average of 17

million units

Sharply lower auto sales will have a smaller effect on auto insurance

exposure level than problems in the housing market will on home insurers

“Cash for Clunkers” generated about $300M in net new personal auto premiums

Page 62: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

131

(Millions of Units)

New Private Housing Starts, 1990-2011F

1.4

8

1.4

7 1.6

2

1.6

4

1.5

7

1.6

0 1.7

1 1.8

5 1.9

6 2.0

7

1.8

0

1.3

6

0.9

0

0.5

6

0.6

0 0.7

6

1.3

51.4

6

1.2

9

1.2

0

1.0

11.1

9

0.3

0.5

0.7

0.9

1.1

1.3

1.5

1.7

1.9

2.1

90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10F11F

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce; Blue Chip Economic Indicators (9/10); Insurance Information Institute.

Little Exposure Growth Likely for Homeowners InsurersDue to Weak Home Construction Forecast for 2010-2011.

Also Affects Commercial Insurers with Construction Risk Exposure, Surety

New home starts plunged 34% from 2005-2007; drop

through 2009 was 72% (est.); A net annual decline of 1.49 million units,

lowest since records began

in 1959

I.I.I. estimates that each incremental 100,000 decline in housing starts costs home insurers

$87.5 million in new exposure (gross premium). The net exposure loss in 2009 vs. 2005 is

estimated at about $1.3 billion

Page 63: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

136

43,6

9448

,125

69,3

0062

,436

64,0

04 71,2

77 81,2

3582

,446

63,8

5363

,235

64,8

5371

,549

70,6

4362

,304

52,3

7451

,959

53,5

4954

,027

44,3

6737

,884

35,4

7240

,099

38,5

4035

,037

34,3

1739

,201

19,6

95 28,3

2243

,546

60,8

3729

,059

0

10,000

20,000

30,000

40,000

50,000

60,000

70,000

80,000

90,000

80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 0910

:H1

Business Bankruptcy Filings,1980-2010:H1

Source: American Bankruptcy Institute; Insurance Information Institute

Significant Exposure Implications for All Commercial Lines. There Are Some Preliminary Indications that Business

Bankruptcies Are Beginning to Decline.

There were 60,837 business bankruptcies in 2009, up 40% from 2008 and the most since 1993. 2010:H1

bankruptcies totaled 29,059, down 4% from H1:2009, but still very high by historical standards.

% Change Surrounding Recessions

1980-82 58.6%1980-87 88.7%1990-91 10.3%2000-01 13.0%2006-09 208.9%*

Page 64: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

137

Private Sector Business Starts,1993:Q2 – 2009:Q4*

175

186

174

180

186

192

188

187 18

918

6 190 19

419

119

9 204

202

195

196

196

206

206

201

192

198

206

206

203

211

205

212

200 20

520

420

419

720

320

920

1

192

192

193

201 20

420

221

0 212

209

216 22

0 223

220

220

210

221

212

204

218

209

207

199

191 19

317

117

716

918

0

203

150

160

170

180

190

200

210

220

230

93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09

Business Starts Are Down Nearly 20% in the Current Downturn, Holding Back Most Types of Commercial Insurance Exposure

*Latest available as of September 12, 2010, seasonally adjustedSource: Bureau of Labor Statistics, http://www.bls.gov/news.release/cewbd.t07.htm.

(Thousands)

180,000 businesses started in 2009:Q4, the best quarter in 2009. 2009 was the slowest year for new

business starts since 1993.

Page 65: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

66%

68%

70%

72%

74%

76%

78%

80%

82%

Ma

r 0

1

Ju

n 0

1

Se

p 0

1

De

c 0

1

Ma

r 0

2

Ju

n 0

2

Se

p 0

2

De

c 0

2

Ma

r 0

3

Ju

n 0

3

Se

p 0

3

De

c 0

3

Ma

r 0

4

Ju

n 0

4

Se

p 0

4

De

c 0

4

Ma

r 0

5

Ju

n 0

5

Se

p 0

5

De

c 0

5

Ma

r 0

6

Ju

n 0

6

Se

p 0

6

De

c 0

6

Ma

r 0

7

Ju

n 0

7

Se

p 0

7

De

c 0

7

Ma

r 0

8

Ju

n 0

8

Se

p 0

8

De

c 0

8

Ma

r 0

9

Ju

n 0

9

Se

p 0

9

De

c 0

9

Ma

r 1

0

Ju

n 1

0

Recovery in Capacity Utilization is a Positive Sign for Insurance Exposure

Source: Federal Reserve Board statistical releases at http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/g17/Current/default.htm. 142

Percent of Capacity Utilized (Manufacturing, Mining, Utilities)

Hurricane Katrina

March 2001-November 2001

recession

“Full Capacity”

The closer the economy is to operating at “full

capacity,” the greater the demand for insurance

Manufacturing capacity stood at

74.8% in July 2010, above the June 2009 low of 68.2% but well below the pre-crisis

peak of 80%+

Recession began December 2007

Page 66: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

144

Year-Over-Year Change in Quarterly USState Tax Revenues, Inflation Adjusted

Source: US Census Bureau; Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government: http://www.rockinst.org/.

2.4

%4

.7%

5.6

% 9.9

%9

.5%

4.4

%1

.8%

0.4

%-1

.3%

-1.7

%-3

.0%

-7.6

%-1

0.7

%0

.0%

1.6

%-0

.6%

0.1

% 4.0

%4

.7%

5.7

% 8.2

%3

.4% 6.0

%7

.0%

12

.4%

6.6

%4

.2%

3.7

% 6.3

%2

.6%

1.3

%3

.2% 5.5

%3

.1%

3.6

%2

.6% 5.4

%2

.8%

-3.9

%

-10

.9%

-4.1

%2

.5%

2.2

%

-16

.4%-11

.6%

2.4

%

-25%

-20%

-15%

-10%

-5%

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

1Q

99

2Q

99

3Q

99

4Q

99

1Q

00

2Q

00

3Q

00

4Q

00

1Q

01

2Q

01

3Q

01

4Q

01

1Q

02

2Q

02

3Q

02

4Q

02

1Q

03

2Q

03

3Q

03

4Q

03

1Q

04

2Q

04

3Q

04

4Q

04

1Q

05

2Q

05

3Q

05

4Q

05

1Q

06

2Q

06

3Q

06

4Q

06

1Q

07

2Q

07

3Q

07

4Q

07

1Q

08

2Q

08

3Q

08

4Q

08

1Q

09

2Q

09

3Q

09

4Q

09

1Q

10

2Q

10

States Revenues Were Up 2.2% in Q2 2010, the 2nd Consecutive Quarter of Revenue Increase. Public Infrastructure Spending is Still Likely to Remain

Depressed, Dampening Related Insurance Exposures and Demand.

Nationwide, state-tax collections for fiscal year 2009 declined by a record

$63 billion, or 8.2 percent from the previous year. That loss is roughly twice the amount states gained in fiscal relief

from the federal stimulus package. Receipts now beginning to recover.

State tax revenues are beginning a slow recovery in 2010

Page 67: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

147

Mounting Pressure on Claim Cost Severities?

Inflation Trends:Concerns Over Stimulus Spending

and Monetary Policy

Page 68: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

148

Annual Inflation Rates(CPI-U, %), 1990–2011F

2.8 2.6

1.51.9

3.3 3.4

1.3

2.5 2.3

3.0

3.8

2.8

3.8

-0.4

1.6 1.5

2.92.4

3.23.0

5.14.9

-1.0

0.0

1.0

2.0

3.0

4.0

5.0

6.0

90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10F11F

Sources: US Bureau of Labor Statistics; Blue Chip Economic Indicators, 9/10 (forecasts).

There is So Much Slack in the US Economy Inflation Should Not Be a Concern Through 2010/11, but Deficits and Monetary Policy Remain Longer

Run Concerns

Annual Inflation Rates (%) Inflation peaked at 5.6% in August 2008 on high energy and commodity crisis. The recession and the collapse of the

commodity bubble have reduced inflationary pressures

Page 69: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

P/C Insurers Experience Inflation More Intensely than 2009 CPI Suggests

Source: CPI is Blue Chip Economic Indicator 2009 estimate, 12/09; Legal services, medical care and motor vehicle body work are avg. monthly year-over-year change from BLS; BI and no-fault figures from ISO Fast Track data for 4 quarters ending 09:Q3. Tort costs is 2009 Towers-Perrin estimate. WC figure is I.I.I. estimate based on historical NCCI data.

-0.4%

2.7% 3.0% 3.1%3.8%

4.3%

5.5%6.2%

-2%

0%

2%

4%

6%

8%

OverallCPI

LegalServices

US TortCosts

MedicalCare

MotorVehicleBodyWork

BodilyInjury

Severity

WC MedSeverity

No-FaultClaim

Severity

(Percent)

Healthcare and Legal/Tort Costs Are a Major P/C Insurance Cost Driver. These Are Expected to Increase Above the Overall Inflation Rate (CPI) Indefinitely

149

Page 70: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

162

Catastrophic Loss –Catastrophe Losses Trends Are

Trending Adversely

Page 71: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

163

$8

.3

$7

.4

$2

.6 $1

0.1

$8

.3

$4

.6

$2

6.5

$5

.9 $1

2.9 $

27

.5

$6

1.9

$9

.2

$6

.7

$2

7.1

$1

0.6

$7

.9

$1

00

.0

$7

.5

$2

.7

$4

.7

$2

2.9

$5

.5 $1

6.9

$0

$20

$40

$60

$80

$100

$120

89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10*20??

US Insured Catastrophe Losses

*Through June 30, 2010.Note: 2001 figure includes $20.3B for 9/11 losses reported through 12/31/01. Includes only business and personal property claims, business interruption and auto claims. Non-prop/BI losses = $12.2B.Sources: Property Claims Service/ISO; Munich Re; Insurance Information Institute.

2010 CAT Losses Are Running Below 2009, So Far Figures Do Not Include an Estimate of Deepwater Horizon Loss

$100 Billion CAT Year is Coming Eventually

First Half 2010 CAT

Losses Were Down 19% or $1.4B from

first half 2009

($ Billions)

2000s: A Decade of Disaster

2000s: $193B (up 117%)

1990s: $89B

Page 72: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

164

Combined Ratio Points Associated with Catastrophe Losses: 1960 – 2009

Notes: Private carrier losses only. Excludes loss adjustment expenses and reinsurance reinstatement premiums. Figures are adjusted for losses ultimately paid by foreign insurers and reinsurers.Source: ISO; Insurance Information Institute.

0.4

1.2

0.4 0.

8 1.3

0.3 0.4 0.

71.

51.

00.

40.

4 0.7

1.8

1.1

0.6

1.4 2.

01.

3 2.0

0.5

0.5 0.7

3.0

1.2

2.1

8.8

2.3

5.9

3.3

2.8

1.0

3.6

2.9

1.6

5.4

1.6

3.3

3.3

8.1

2.7

1.6

5.0

2.6

3.6

0.9

0.1

1.1

1.1

0.8

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

1960

1962

1964

1966

1968

1970

1972

1974

1976

1978

1980

1982

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

2000

2002

2004

2006

2008

The Catastrophe Loss Component of Private Insurer Losses Has Increased Sharply in Recent Decades

Avg. CAT Loss Component of the Combined Ratio

by Decade

1960s: 1.04 1970s: 0.85 1980s: 1.31 1990s: 3.39

2000s: 3.52

Combined Ratio Points

Page 73: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

Largest International Oil Well Blowouts by Volume, as of July 12, 2010*

Date Well Location Bbl Spilled

April 20 2010-July 12, 2010

Deepwater Horizon Gulf of Mexico, USA est. 4,900,000

June 1979-April 1980

Ixtoc I Bahia del Campeche, Mexico 3,300,000

October 1986 Abkatun 91 Bahia del Campeche, Mexico 247,000

April 1977 Ekofisk Bravo North Sea, Norway 202,381

January 1980 Funiwa 5 Forcados, Nigeria 200,000

October 1980 Hasbah 6 Gulf, Saudi Arabia 105,000

December 1971 Iran Marine International Gulf, Iran 100,000

January 1969 Alpha Well 21 Platform A Pacific, CA, USA 100,000

March 1970 Main Pass Block 41 Platform C

Gulf of Mexico 65,000

October 1987 Yum II/Zapoteca Bahia del Campeche, Mexico 58,643

December 1970 South Timbalier B-26 Gulf of Mexico, USA 53,095

*Date well was capped. Federal government estimate as of August 2, 2010. Does not include offset for any amounts recovered.

Source: American Petroleum Institute (API), 09/18/2009; http://www.api.org/ehs/water/spills/upload/356-Final.pdf and updates from the Insurance Information Institute.

Page 74: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

50

100

150

200

250

1980 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010

First Half 201095 Events

Number of events in first half of 2010 is close to the annual totals from five of past ten years.

Nu

mb

er

Geophysical (earthquake, tsunami, volcanic activity)

Climatological (temperature extremes, drought, wildfire)

Meteorological (storm)

Hydrological (flood, mass movement)

Natural Disasters in the United States, 1980 – 2010Number of Events (Annual Totals 1980 – 2009 vs. First Half 2010)

Source: MR NatCatSERVICE 169© 2010 Munich Re

Page 75: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

174

Top 12 Most Costly Disastersin US History

(Insured Losses, 2009, $ Billions)

Sources: PCS; Insurance Information Institute inflation adjustments.

$11.3 $12.5

$18.2$22.8 $23.8

$45.3

$8.5$8.1$7.3$6.2$5.2$4.2

$0$5

$10$15$20$25$30$35$40$45$50

Jeanne(2004)

Frances(2004)

Rita (2005)

Hugo(1989)

Ivan (2004)

Charley(2004)

Wilma(2005)

Ike (2008)

Northridge(1994)

9/11Attacks(2001)

Andrew(1992)

Katrina(2005)

8 of the 12 Most Expensive Disasters in US History Have Occurred Since 2004;

8 of the Top 12 Disasters Affected FL

Hurricane Katrina Remains, By Far, the Most Expensive Insurance Event in US

and World History

Page 76: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

Share of Losses Paid by Reinsurers for Major Catastrophic Events

30%25%

60%

20%

45%

33%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

HurricaneHugo (1989)

HurricaneAndrew (1992)

Sept. 11Terrorist

Attack (2001)

2004Hurricane

Season

2005Hurricane

Season

2008 TexasHurricane

Source: Wharton Risk Center, Disaster Insurance Project, Renaissance Re, Insurance Information Institute.

Reinsurance plays a very large role in claims payouts

associated with major catastrophes

Page 77: After the Crisis: Overview & Outlook for the P-C Insurance Industry International Association of Claims Professionals Amelia Island, FL September 26,

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