Allstate becomes next major insurer to halt new policy sales in California
cbsnews.comToo pricey due to natural disasters, pretty nuts. Sounds like premiums will creep up excessively if large companies aren’t biting interested in the market right now.
The problem is rising risk, the state requiring Cadillac policies as its bare minimum, and refusing to allow premiums to rise. The only solution to that trifecta is Sacramento buying the risk.
My premium went up 50% last year due to rising risk and I'm not in a fire or flood zone or high crime area... On my end at least I don't see Sacramento limiting premiums.
> I don't see Sacramento limiting premiums
CDI approves every rate change. Between marginally higher risks, inflation, new costs (e.g. re-capitalising the FAIR Plan for people who like living inside wildfires) and the risk that future rates won't be approved, the cost basis is likely quite a bit higher than 50%, particularly if you take into account prior years covered by the pandemic rate-hike moratorium [1].
[1] https://www.insurancebusinessmag.com/us/news/breaking-news/a...
Just to put this into perspective a little… due to hurricane risk, ALL the big boys (Allstate, State Farm, et. Al.) refuse to offer homeowners insurance in the entire state of Florida.
The reason this is kind of bullshit is because there are parts of Florida- even on the coast- that get fewer direct strikes from hurricanes than parts of Texas, Louisiana, North Carolina, and even New Jersey[0]
[0] https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/paststate.shtml
There’s a better link but the website seems to be down. This link shows a map of direct strikes from hurricanes, split into smaller groups than “northeast”, “southeast”, et. Al. http://www.csc.noaa.gov/hurricanes
I haven’t looked into this but why doesn’t pricing vary by region? I’d imagine that the denser areas aren’t at risk of fire as much as the outlying areas next to forests.