Losses
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This takes pre-tax cat losses for the calendar year to $1.23bn
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The ratings agency warns that wildfire is an increasingly risky and unpredictable peril.
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The carrier experienced a benign Q1 for catastrophic loss activity.
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Storms struck the Great Plains, the Midwest and the Southeast.
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Overall economic losses hit $45bn in the first quarter of 2024.
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As a result of mostly flooding, £474mn of losses occurred in the UK.
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This follows February’s cat losses coming in below the $150mn reporting threshold.
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Insured loss for Q1 was 10% higher than the decadal average of $18bn.
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The most extensive damage was caused by rainfall in Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Florida.
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Tropical Storm Risk (TSR) has updated its forecast for North Atlantic hurricane activity, predicting a "hyper-active season" in 2024, with activity being around 70% above the 1991-2020 climate norm.
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The Magnitude-7.4 earthquake occurred early on 3 April.
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Tremors were felt as far north as capital city Taipei.
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The estimate is up from A$1.4bn, published by Perils in February.
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Several prior-year cat losses deteriorated during the quarter.
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Severe convective storms were the biggest driver of last year’s losses.
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Insured loss estimates are not yet available.
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The US tallies $97bn in economic losses from major perils each year.
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The vast majority of 2023 recoveries were from events in prior years.
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The notes were further marked down after a year-end Ian loss update.
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The event occurred a fortnight after major North Island flooding in New Zealand.
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Monthly cat losses were driven by two major events.
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The bond is trading at 70c-75c in the dollar in the secondary market.
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There were 10 fatalities, mostly due to drowning or tree fall accidents.
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The carriers were in arbitration with UnipolRe and Gen Re.
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The claw-back is anticipated after PCS revised down its Ian loss estimate.
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A so-called atmospheric river effect is behind the severe weather.
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The figure represents a 26% increase on the previous estimate.
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Most of the losses occurred in France, followed by the UK and Belgium.
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The final estimate is a 12% increase on an August tally of NZ$1.99bn.
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The increase can be attributed to the Christmas storms of 2023.
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Storm Ciarán incurred insured losses of EUR1.9bn, according to WTW’s natural catastrophe report for July to December.
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The broker’s latest climate report tallied global insured cat losses at $118bn.
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As a result of mostly flooding, £467mn of losses occurred in the UK.
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