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NEW YORK, April 24, 2020鈥擲tate legislation aimed at retroactively rewriting business interruption policies nationwide would cost insurers tens of billions of dollars a month and quickly imperil the U.S. insurance industry鈥檚 solvency, according to the 听(Triple-I).听
鈥淧andemics are an extraordinary catastrophe that can impact nearly every economy in the world, so it is hard to predict and manage the risk,鈥澨齭aid Sean Kevelighan, CEO, Triple-I, in to the National Council of Insurance Legislators (NCOIL) and the Rutgers Center for Risk and Responsibility. 鈥淧andemic-caused losses are clearly excluded from traditional business interruption insurance policies for just this reason.鈥
A standard business interruption policy generally pays out when the business incurs a covered loss due to direct physical damage from something like a hurricane or a tornado.听
鈥淚f insurers nationwide had to pay business interruption policy claims for which insurers collected no premium, it could cost the industry each month anywhere from roughly $150 billion to nearly as high as $380 billion,鈥 Kevelighan said, noting the smaller amount accounted for the U.S.鈥檚 small and medium-size enterprises (SMEs) that currently have business interruption coverage and the larger amount includes those who do not.听About 40 percent of SMEs have business interruption insurance coverage.
鈥淚nsurers recognize many of their customers are struggling financially. It is why insurers nationwide are offering auto premium relief programs totaling more than $10 billion and donating $200 million-plus to charitable organizations, such as food banks and those who support first responders,鈥 Kevelighan stated.
The federal government鈥檚 CARES Act and the proposed COVID-19 Business and Employee Continuity and Recovery Fund have won insurance industry support because the government is the only entity with the financial resources to confront a pandemic鈥檚 economic fallout, the Triple-I鈥檚 CEO observed, in his presentation.
There is nearly $800 billion on-hand in policyholders鈥 surplus鈥攖he U.S. property/casualty insurance industry鈥檚 cumulative assets, minus its liabilities鈥攖o keep the promises made, the Triple-I鈥檚 CEO added. This surplus is invested for the long-term, mostly in less volatile fixed income investments, Kevelighan noted.听
鈥淲e are in the middle of tornado season, with hurricane and wildfires to come, and insurers are ready and prepared to keep the promises they have made to policyholders 鈥 to be the financial first responders,鈥 Kevelighan said.听 听
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