Florida

With Hurricane Season Looming, Florida Faces an Insurance Meltdown

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When it was time for Winter Garden, Fla., retiree Sue Maher, 69, to renew her homeowners insurance this year, her carrier informed her that it was hiking her annual premium, already at $3,800, by $2,000. “I kind of freaked out when I got the letter,” she says.

She isn’t the only Floridian reeling from costly insurance. The average homeowners insurance premium in Florida has increased 100% over the past three years, and the average cost is approximately $6,000—more than triple the national average, says the Insurance Information Institute. Florida homeowners may see average premiums reach $9,000 next year. Experts say insurance for properties near the coast can easily top $100,000.

Rank Year Number of Billion-Dollar Disasters Estimated Cost in Billions of Dollars
1 2017 19 $381
2 2022 18 176
3 2021 20 165
4 2020 22 117
5 2018 16 112
6 2011 18 94.5

*Adjusted for the CPI

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Source: National Centers for Environmental Information

Climate change and a uniquely litigious environment have made Florida a costly state for insurers to do business in. So costly that this summer, Farmers Insurance, one of the U.S.’s biggest property and casualty insurers, said it was pulling out.

Rank Year / Hurricane Estimated Insurance Loss in Billions of 2022 Dollars
1 2005 / Katrina $99
2 2022 / Ian* 53
3 2021 / Ida 39
4 2012 / Sandy* 39
5 2017 / Harvey 36
6 2017 / Irma* 36
7 2017 / Maria 36
8 1992 / Andrew* 34
9 2008 / Ike 25
10 2005 / Wilma* 16

*Hurricanes hitting Florida

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Source: Aon

State lawmakers passed legislation in December to curb the number of lawsuits. But with a backlog of thousands of cases, it may take 18 months or more before benefits are apparent, analysts say. In the meantime, risks including climate change are looming. Florida waters have broken temperature records. Some meteorologists have revised forecasts to predict above-average hurricane activity this year. Another bad storm year could send rates higher, prompt more carriers to exit, and push small carriers into insolvency.

Last Week

Markets

Consumer confidence neared prepandemic levels, home prices rose, and UPS appeared to dodge a strike. Expectations were high that the Federal Reserve would raise again—and it did, another quarter point. Chair Powell said the Fed staff was no longer forecasting recession, which sent stocks up, including the Dow industrials for a 13th straight session. The kicker: Second-quarter GDP rose to 2.4%, rattling investors and killing the win streak. On the week, the


Dow Jones Industrial Average

rose 0.66%, the

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S&P 500

1%, and the


Nasdaq Composite

2%.

Companies

Alphabet


and

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Microsoft


beat expectations, and both forecast more spending on artificial intelligence. Snap got crushed by a sales slump;

Meta Platforms


beat on revived ad sales.

General Electric


and

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Coca-Cola


both beat.

Deals

Elon Musk replaced Twitter’s blue bird logo with an X. Now he has to provide services beyond just tweets…Banc of California agreed to buy

PacWest Bancorp


for just over $1 billion. Warburg Pincus and Centerbridge will invest $400 million into the deal…The Financial Times reported that the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. is reviewing the UAE’s sovereign-wealth fund Mubadala’s $3 billion takeover of Fortress Investment Group. The concern: Mubadala’s China ties…Biogen said it was buying

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Reata Pharmaceuticals


for $7.3 billion, a 59% premium.

Next Week

Tuesday 8/1

Merck and

Pfizer


headline a bevy of large-cap pharmaceutical and healthcare companies reporting results.

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Vertex Pharmaceuticals


also reports on Tuesday, with

CVS Health


and

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Humana


on deck for Wednesday.

Amgen
,

Gilead Sciences
,


and

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Regeneron Pharmaceuticals


round out the week on Thursday.

The BLS releases the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey. Consensus estimate is for 9.7 million job openings on the last business day of June, slightly less than in May. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell reiterated this past week that “labor demand still substantially exceeds the supply of available workers.”

Thursday 8/3

Amazon.com


and

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Apple


release earnings after the market close. Shares of both companies are up more than 50% this year, with Apple recently hitting a record high.

Friday 8/4

The BLS releases the jobs report for July. Economists forecast a gain of 200,000 for nonfarm payrolls, 9,000 less than in June. The unemployment rate is expected to remain unchanged at a historically low 3.6%.

Write to Andrew Welsch at andrew.welsch@barrons.com



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