Welcome to the inaugural issue of The Partners’ Perspective.
If you like to watch The O’Reilly Factor, The Partners’
Perspective will be similar to the Talking Points segment. If ESPN is
your thing, think Break Down segment. We will address topics related
to the insurance industry and we will discuss how these topics impact
private equity transactions and portfolio companies.
For the first Partners’ Perspective, we will focus on the current
hard insurance market and the “Lessons Learned from Underwriting
Cycles”. We have summarized the lessons into a handy Top Ten List.
Unlike the economy, where money supply and interest rates can be
managed, the insurance underwriting cycle must work through its, um,
ups and downs naturally. The good news, as we are witnessing
currently, is that the hard market usually doesn’t last too long.
The balance sheets of most commercial insurers are dominated by the
reserves to pay future claims. It is difficult (if not impossible) to
predict future claims with any degree of certainty. No other industry
prices its product (premium) before knowing its costs (claims). This
retroactive approach is the fundamental fuel for underwriting cycles.
Have pity on Sybil, your local underwriter. She gets confused as to
whether or not she has an appetite for a certain risk. It depends on
where we are in the cycle.
The enduring theme in the aftermath of 9/11 will be continued rise of
the Specialty/Bermuda market. Specialist carriers with clean balance
sheets and a niche underwriting focus will continue to garner greater
market share. Traditional carriers will continue to be burdened by
past mistakes and will focus on economies of scale to lower the cost
side of their profit equation.
Mergers and acquisitions will continue to fuel the growth in the
insurance industry. Bigger is not better. Bigger is just bigger.
Insurers need to manage and price risks better, not simply improve
their economies of scale. Brokers need to provide real service, not
just amass resources for the Fortune 500.
What previously unforeseen liability will rear its balance sheet
zapping head over the next decade? If the insurers knew, “It”
would already be excluded from your policy. If the big brokers knew,
they would already be holding free seminars on how to avoid “It”
(then pitch you for your workers’ comp or D&O business).
“It” will come. “It” will force carriers to take a reserve
charge, cause restrictions in coverage, and cause premium increases.
General liability insurers replaced the occurrence form with the
claims made form. D&O insurers allocated a portion of every claim
to the corporate entity which was not covered under the policy.
“Side A” only coverage was added for another separate premium.
Next, of course, claims made by certain plaintiff’s attorneys will
be excluded from your D&O policy. (You’re not sure if we’re
kidding, are you? We are…for now.)
An underwriter has never been fired for saying “no” to a risk.
But, you can bet your P&L that plenty of them were fired for
saying “yes” to the wrong risk.
Enron, Kmart, Qwest, Adelphia, Global Crossing, and Acme (Wil E
Coyote’s company) led the parade of less than stellar results
despite the highest premiums in a generation. High premiums do not
offset bad decisions. High premiums do make good decisions look even
better.
Insurance companies charge a premium. Insurance brokers charge a
commission. When premiums go up, commissions go __________________ ?
a) Up
b) Down
c) Depends on whether or not you tried to lock in a revenue stream by
switching to a fee during the soft market when commissions were
depressed and now you are stuck with a fee that is below market
commission levels.
Equity Risk Partners has one fundamental purpose – to help
private equity firms and their portfolio companies buy insurance. We
focus on doing that one thing very well. We do not own a mutual fund.
We do not own insurance companies and mandate our “objective”
brokers to use them.
We work really hard on your behalf and we get a percentage of the
premium as compensation.
We hope that you enjoyed the inaugural edition of The Partners’
Perspective and that we were able to inform and entertain you. As
always, we appreciate your continued support of Equity Risk Partners.
We look forward to having an opportunity to be of service in the
future.
T H E P A R T N E R S ’ P E R S P E C T I V E