Fact File: Hurricane Katrina
Insurance Information
Institute Releases Current Katrina Statistics
With reports being
updated and released daily, the Insurance Information Institute
recently prepared a “fact file” summarizing the handling of Hurricane
Katrina claims. Highlighted below are some recently released facts
from the I.I.I. report.
- Seven of the 10 most costly hurricanes in
U.S. insurance history occurred in the 14 months from Aug. 2004
– Oct. 2005: Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, Wilma, Charley, Ivan,
Frances and Jeanne. Insured losses for the seven storms totaled
$79.1 billion.
- Insurance companies have paid an estimated
$40.6 billion on 1.7 million claims for damage to homes,
businesses and vehicles in six states from Hurricane Katrina,
the largest loss in the history of insurance. By contrast, Hurricane
Andrew, the previous record holder, resulted in $15.5 billion in
losses in 1992 ($22.2 billion in 2006 dollars) and 790,000
claims in three states.
- There were 350,000 claims for damaged
vehicles and some 156,000 commercial claims. The $20.5 billion
in claims payments to businesses accounted for about one-half of
the $40.6 billion in insured losses from Hurricane Katrina.
- More than 95 percent of the 1.1 million
homeowners insurance claims from Hurricane Katrina in Louisiana
and Mississippi, totaling more than $15.5 billion, were settled
within one year of the storm.
- In Louisiana, more than 688,000 homeowners
claims, totaling $10.8 billion, have been settled. In
Mississippi, more than 350,000 homeowners claims, totaling $5.4
billion, have been settled.
- Nearly all of the 350,000 Katrina-related
claims from damaged vehicles, totaling $2.2 billion, have been
settled.
- The National Flood Insurance Program
reported that it has paid approximately $15.7 billion in federal
flood insurance claims, representing 99 percent of all flood
claims received.
- Despite the attention focused on lawsuits
filed following this catastrophic storm, the number of claims in
litigation accounts for a very small percentage of the total
number of claims filed. The I.I.I. estimates that fewer than 2
percent of homeowners’ claims in Louisiana and Mississippi were
disputed either through mediation or litigation.
- As of July 27, 2007, 537 lawsuits in
Mississippi were pending against insurers. U.S. District Court
Judge L.T. Senter Jr. ordered 174 cases into mediation, with 84,
or 49 percent settled.
- Policyholders also continue to resolve
their cases through mediation sponsored by the Mississippi
Department of Insurance. Of 3,687 policyholder claims mediated
through the program, 3,034 were settled—an 83 percent success
rate as of July 27, 2007.
- The American Arbitration Association
oversees the mediation programs for Hurricane Katrina insurance
claims. Results reported through July 27: U.S. District Court
cases ordered to mediation: 174 cases mediated, 84 settled, 88
with no resolution—a 49 percent settlement rate Mississippi
Insurance Department: 4,260 mediations requested, 3,687
mediations held, 3,034 claims settled, 643 with no resolution—an
83 percent settlement rate.
- A poll conducted by IPSOS Public Affairs in
2006 found that 89 percent of homeowners in Louisiana and 93
percent in Mississippi are satisfied with their insurance
company. The survey reported that four in five people (82
percent in Louisiana and 80 percent in Mississippi) who filed a
hurricane-related claim are satisfied with the way it was
managed by their insurer. While satisfaction numbers are
slightly higher inland, most residents in the hardest-hit
coastal areas describe themselves as satisfied with the way
their claim was handled.
- While significant problems with rebuilding
persist along the Gulf Coast—including severe damage to public
infrastructure, a shortage of contractors and reduced
population—the billions of dollars in claims paid to date by
insurance companies are helping fuel an increase in residential
building. Building permits have risen by 4 percent in Louisiana
and 32 percent in Mississippi, compared with a 4 percent decline
nationally during the same period.
- 2005 was by far the worst year ever for
insured catastrophe losses in the U.S., but the worst has yet to
come. The $100 billion hurricane will not be unusual in the
future, given the extent of insured coastal exposure in the U.S.
- New York and Florida have the highest total
insured coastal exposure, valued at more than $1.9 trillion
each; Massachusetts has more than $662 billion.
- Major hurricanes have affected the
Northeast and will continue to pose an ongoing threat to the
region.
- The last major hurricane to devastate the
Northeast was the 1938 Long Island Express, which crossed Long
Island and moved into New England, killing approximately 600
people.
- Scientists expect the continuation of
warming in the Atlantic to increase the probability of hurricanes
in the Northeast. Frequency in the Northeast is up 30 percent
and severity 10-15 percent.
- Data from the Census Bureau, collected by
USA Today, show that in 2006 34.9 million people were seriously
threatened by Atlantic hurricanes, compared with 10.2 million in
1950.
For
additional I.I.I. research and analysis, please visit their website,
www.iii.org.
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