The Daily - The Possible Collapse of the U.S. Home Insurance System
Episode Date: May 15, 2024Across the United States, more frequent extreme weather is starting to cause the home insurance market to buckle, even for those who have paid their premiums dutifully year after year.Christopher Flav...elle, a climate reporter, discusses a Times investigation into one of the most consequential effects of the changes.Guest: Christopher Flavelle, a climate change reporter for The New York Times.Background reading: As American insurers bleed cash from climate shocks, homeowners lose.See how the home insurance crunch affects the market in each state.Here are four takeaways from The Times’s investigation.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.Â
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From The New York Times, I'm Sabrina Tavernisi, and this is The Daily.
Today, my colleague Christopher Flavell on a Times investigation into one of the least
known and most consequential effects of climate change, insurance, and why it may now be a concern for every homeowner
in the country.
It's Wednesday, May 15th.
So Chris, you and I talked a while ago about how climate change was really wreaking havoc in the insurance market in Florida.
You've just done an investigation that takes a look into the insurance markets more broadly and more deeply.
Tell us about it.
Yeah, so I cover climate change, in particular the way climate shocks affect different parts of American life.
And insurance has become a really big part of that coverage.
And Florida is a great example.
As hurricanes have gotten worse and more frequent, insurers are paying out more and more money to rebuild people's homes.
and more money to rebuild people's homes.
And that's driving up insurance costs and ultimately driving up the cost
of owning a home in Florida.
So we're already seeing that climate impact
on the housing market in Florida.
My colleagues and I started to think,
well, could it be that that kind of disruption
is also happening in other states,
not just in the sort of obvious coastal states,
but maybe even through the middle of the U.S. So we set out to find out just how much it is
happening, how much that Florida kind of turmoil has in fact become really a contagion that is
spreading across the country. So how did you go about reporting this? I mean, where did you start?
across the country. So how did you go about reporting this? I mean, where did you start?
All we knew at the start of this was that there was reason to think this might be a problem. If you just look at how the federal government tracks disasters around the country, there's been a big
increase almost every year in the number and severity of all kinds of disasters around the
country. So we thought, okay, it's worth trying to find out what does that mean for insurers? The problem is getting data on the insurance industry is actually
really hard. There's no federal regulation. There's no government agency you can go to
that holds this data. If you talk to insurers directly, they tend to be a little reluctant
to share information about what they're going through. So we weren't sure where to go until
finally we realized the best people to ask are the people whose job it is to gauge the financial
health of insurance companies. Those are rating agencies, in particular, this one rating company
called AM Best, whose whole purpose is to tell investors how healthy an insurance company is.
Whoa. So this is like way down in the nuts and bolts of the U.S. insurance industry.
Right. This is a part of sort of the broader economy that most people would never experience.
But we asked them to do something special for us. We said, hey, can you help us find the one number that would tell us reporters just how healthy or unhealthy this insurance market is state by state over time?
And it turns out there is just such a number.
It's called a combined ratio.
Okay, plain English?
Plain English, it is the ratio of revenue to costs.
Plain English, it is the ratio of revenue to costs. How much money these guys take in for homeowners insurance
and how much they pay out in costs and losses.
You want your revenue to be higher than your costs.
If not, you're in trouble.
So what did you find out?
Well, we got that number for every state going back more than a decade.
And what it showed us was
our suspicions were right. This market turmoil that we were seeing in Florida and California
has indeed been spreading across the country. And in fact, it turns out that in 18 states last year,
the homeowner's insurance market lost money. And that's a big jump from five or 10 years ago
and spells real trouble for insurance and for homeowners and for almost every part of the
economy. So the contagion was real. Right. This is our first window showing us just how far
that contagion had spread. And one of the really striking things
about this data was it showed the contagion had spread to places that I wouldn't have thought of
as especially prone to climate shocks. For example, a lot of the Midwest, a lot of the Southeast.
In fact, if you think of a map of the country, there was no state between Pennsylvania and the Dakotas that didn't lose money on homeowners insurance last year.
So just huge parts of the middle of the U.S. have become unprofitable for homeowners insurance.
This market is starting to buckle under the cost of climate change.
And this is all happening really fast.
Like when we did the Florida episode two years ago,
it was a completely new phenomenon.
And really only in Florida.
And now it's everywhere.
Yeah, and that's exactly what's so striking here.
The rate at which this is becoming, again,
a contagion and spreading across the country
is just demolishing the expectations of anyone I've
spoken to. No one thought that this problem would affect so much of the U.S. so quickly.
Okay, so in these states, these new places that the contagion has spread to,
what exactly is happening that's causing the insurance companies to fold up shop?
Yeah, something really particular is happening in
a lot of these states, and it's worth noting how it's surprised everyone. And what that is, is
formerly sort of unimportant weather events like hailstorms or windstorms, those didn't
used to be the kind of thing that would scare insurance companies, right? Obviously, a big
problem if it destroys your home or damages your home. But for insurers, it wasn't going to wipe them out financially. Right. It wasn't just
a complete and utter wipeout that the company would then have to pony up a lot of money for.
Exactly. And insurers call them secondary perils, sort of a belittling term, right? Something other
than a big deal like a hurricane. These minor league weather events. Right, but those are becoming so frequent
and so much more intense
that they can cause existential threats
for insurance companies.
And insurers are now fleeing states,
not because of hurricanes,
but because those former things that were small
are now big.
Hailstorms, wildfires in some places,
previous sort of annoyances
are becoming real threats to insurers. Chris, what's the big picture on what
insurers are actually facing? Like what's happening out there numbers wise?
This is a huge threat in terms of the number of states where this industry is losing money.
It's more than doubled from 10 years ago
to basically a third of the country. The amount they're losing is enormous. And some states,
insurers are paying $1.25 or even $1.50 for every dollar they bring in in revenue, which is totally
unsustainable. And the result is insurers are making changes. They are pulling back from these markets.
They're hiking premiums.
And often, they're just dropping customers.
And that's where this becomes real, not just for people who surf balance sheets and trade
the stock market.
This is becoming real for homeowners around the country who all of a sudden increasingly
can't get insurance.
So Chris, what's the actual implication? I mean, what happens when people in a state
can't get insurance for their homes? Getting insurance for a home is crucial if you want
to sell or buy a home, right? Most people can't buy a home without a mortgage and banks won't
issue a mortgage without home insurance. So if you've got a home without a mortgage and banks won't issue a mortgage
without home insurance. So if you've got a home that insurance company doesn't want to cover,
you've got a real problem. You need to find insurance or that home becomes very close
to unsellable. And as you get fewer buyers, the price goes down. So this doesn't just hurt people
who are paying for these insurance premiums. It hurts people who want to sell their homes.
It even could hurt, at some point, whole local economies, right?
If home values fall, governments take in less tax revenue.
That means less money for schools and police.
It also means people who get hit by disasters and have to rebuild their homes all of a sudden can't because their insurance isn't available anymore.
It's hard to
overstate just how big a deal this is. And is that actually happening, Chris? I mean,
are housing markets being dragged down because of this problem in the insurance markets right now?
Anecdotally, we've got reports that in places like Florida and Louisiana, and maybe in parts of California, the difficulty
of getting insurance, the crazy high cost of insurance is starting to depress demand because
not everyone can afford to pay these really high costs, even if they have insurance.
What we wanted to focus on with this story was also, okay, we know where this goes eventually,
but where is it beginning, right? What are the
places that are just starting to feel these shocks from the insurance market? And so I called around
and asked insurance agents who are the front lines of this. They're the ones who are struggling to
find insurance for homeowners. And I said, hey, is there one place that I should go if I want to
understand what it looks like to homeowners when all of a sudden insurance becomes really expensive for homeowners. And I said, hey, is there one place that I should go if I want to understand
what it looks like to homeowners when all of a sudden insurance becomes really expensive
or you can't even find it? And those insurance agents told me, if you want to see what this
looks like in real life, go to a little town called Marshalltown in the middle of Iowa.
We'll be right back. So Chris, you went to Marshalltown, Iowa.
What'd you find?
You know, even before I got to Marshalltown,
I had some idea I was in the right spot.
When I landed in Des Moines and went to rent a car,
the nice woman at the desk who rented me a car,
she said, what are you doing here?
I said, I'm here to write a story about people in Iowa
who can't get insurance because of storms.
She said, oh yeah, I know all about that.
That's a big problem here.
Okay, even the rental car lady.
Even the rental car lady knew something was going on.
And so I got in my rental car
and drove about an hour northeast of Des Moines
through some rolling hills
into this lovely little town of Marshalltown.
Marshalltown is a really cute little Midwestern town with old homes and a beautiful courthouse
in the town square. And when I drove through, I couldn't help noticing all the roofs looked new.
What does that tell you?
Turns out Marshalltown, despite being sort of a pastoral image of Midwestern easy living, was hit by two
really bad disasters in recent years. First, a devastating tornado in 2018. And then in 2020,
what's called a derecho, sort of a straight line wind event that's also just enormously damaging. And the result was lots of homes in this small town got severely damaged in a short period of time.
And so when you drive down, you see all these new roofs that give you the sense that something's going on.
So climate had come to Marshalltown.
Exactly.
A place that had previously seemed maybe safe from climate change, if there is such a thing, all of a sudden was not.
So I found an insurance agent in Marshalltown.
Talked to other agents, but haven't talked to many homeowners.
Named Bobby Shamo.
And he invited me to his office early one morning and said, you know, come meet some people.
And so I parked on a quiet street outside of his office,
across the street from the courthouse, which also had a new roof,
and went into his conference room and met a procession of clients
who all had versions of the same horror story.
It was well more of double.
A huge reduction in coverage with a huge price increase.
Some people had faced big premium hikes.
I'm just a little small business owner, so every little bit I do feel.
They had so much trouble with their insurance company.
I was with IMT Insurance forever, and then when I moved in 2020, Bobby said they won't insure a pool.
Some people had gotten dropped. We used to
see carriers canceling someone for frequency of three or four or five claims. It's one or two
now. Some people couldn't get the coverage they needed, but it was versions of the same tale,
which is all of a sudden having homeowners insurance in Marshalltown was really difficult. But I wanted
to see if it was bigger than just Marshalltown. So the next day, I got back in my car and drove
east to Cedar Rapids, where I met another person having a version of the same problem,
a guy named Dave Langston. Tell me about Dave. Dave lives in a handsome, modest little townhouse on a quiet cul-de-sac on a hill at the edge of Cedar Rapids.
He's the president of his homeowners association.
There's 17 homes on this little street.
And this is just as far as you could get from a danger zone, right?
It looks as safe as could be.
from a danger zone, right? It looks as safe as could be. But in January, they got a letter from the company that insures him and his neighbors saying his policy was being canceled, even though
it wasn't as though they'd just been hit by some giant storm. So then what was the reason they gave?
Yeah, they didn't give a reason. And I think people might not realize insurers don't have
to give a reason. Insurance policies are year to year. And if your
insurance company decides that you're too much of a risk or your neighborhood is too much of a risk
or your state is too much of a risk, they can just leave. They can send you a letter saying,
forget it. We're canceling your insurance. There's almost no protection people have.
And in this case, the reason was that this insurance company was losing too much money
in Iowa and didn't want to keep on writing
homeowners insurance in the state. That was a situation that Dave shared with tens of thousands
of people across the state that were all getting similar letters. What made Dave's situation a
little more challenging was that he couldn't get new insurance. He tried for months through agent after agent after agent,
and every company told him the same thing, we won't cover you. Even though these homes are
perfectly safe in a safe part of the state, nobody would say yes. And it took them until
basically two days before their insurance policy was going to route until they finally found
new coverage that was far more expensive and far more bare bones than what they'd had.
But at least it was something.
It was something, but the problem was it wasn't that good. Under this new policy,
if Dave's streets got hit by another big windstorm. The damage from that storm and fixing that damage would wipe out all the savings set aside by these homeowners.
The deductible would be crushingly high, $120,000 to replace those roofs if the worst happened.
Because the insurance money just wouldn't cover anywhere close to the cost of rebuilding.
Wow.
He said to me, we didn't do anything wrong.
This is just what insurance looks like today.
And today it's us in Cedar Rapids.
Everyone though is going to face a situation like this eventually.
And Dave is right.
I talked to insurance agents around the country
and they confirmed for me that this kind of a shift towards a new type of insurance, insurance that's more expensive and doesn't cover as much and makes it harder to rebuild after a big disaster, it's becoming more and more common around the country.
So Chris, if Dave and the people you spoke to in Iowa were really evidence that your hunch was right, that the problem is spreading and rapidly, what are the possible fixes here? The fix that people seem most hopeful about is this idea that what if you could reduce the risk and cause there to be less damage in the first place?
less damage in the first place. So what some states are doing is they're trying to encourage homeowners to spend more money on hardening their home or adding a new roof or, you know,
if it's a wildfire zone, cut back the vegetation, things that can reduce your risk of having really
serious losses. And to help pay for that, they're telling insurers, you've got to offer a discount
to people who do that. And everyone who works in this field says,
in theory, that's the right approach, right? The problem is, number one, hardening a home costs a fantastic amount of money. So doing this at scale is hugely expensive. Number two,
it takes a long time to actually get enough homes hardened in this way that you can make a real
dent for insurance companies. You're talking
about years or probably decades before that has a real effect, if it ever works. Okay, so that
sounds not particularly realistic given the urgency and the timeline we're on here. So
what else are people looking at? Option number two is the government gets involved. And instead of most Americans
buying home insurance from a private company, they start buying it from government programs
that are designed to make sure that people, even in risky places, can still buy insurance.
That would be just a gargantuan undertaking. The idea of the government providing homeowners insurance because
private companies can't or won't would lead to one of the biggest government programs that exist
if we could even do it. So huge change, like the federal government actually trying to kind of
write these markets by itself by providing homeowners insurance. But is that really feasible?
Well, in some areas, we're actually already doing it. The government already provides
flood insurance because for decades, most private insurers have not wanted to cover flood. It's too
risky. It's too expensive. But that change with governments taking over that role creates a new problem of its own. Because the government providing flood insurance that you otherwise couldn't get means people have been building and building in flood prone areas because they know they can get that guaranteed flood insurance.
Interesting. So that's a huge new downside. Like the government would be incentivizing people to move to places that they shouldn't be. That's right. But there's even one more
problem with that approach of using the government to try to solve this problem, which is
these costs keep growing, right? The number of billion dollar disasters the U.S. experiences
every year keeps going up. And at some point, even if the government pays the cost through some sort of subsidized insurance, what happens when that cost is so great that we can no longer afford to pay it? That's the really hard question that no official can answer.
So that's pretty doomsday, Chris. Are we looking at the end of insurance?
day, Chris. Are we looking at the end of insurance? I think it's fair to say that we're looking at the end of insurance as we know it. The end of insurance that means most Americans can
rest assured that if they get hit by a disaster, their insurance company will provide enough money
they can rebuild. That idea might be going away. And what it shows is maybe the threat of climate
change isn't quite what we thought. Maybe instead of climate change wrecking communities
in the form of a big storm or a wildfire or a flood, maybe even before those things happen,
climate change can wreck communities by something as seemingly mundane
and even boring as insurance, right?
Maybe sort of the harbinger of doom
is not a giant storm,
but an anodyne letter from your insurance company
saying, we're sorry to inform you,
we can no longer cover your home, right?
Like maybe sort of the future of climate change is best seen not by pouring over weather data from NOAA,
but by pouring over spreadsheets from rating firms showing the profitability from insurance companies
and how bit by bit that money that they're losing around the country tells its own story.
And the story is these shocks are actually already here.
Chris, as always, terrifying to talk to you.
Always a pleasure, Sabrina.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you should know today.
the number of women and children killed in Gaza,
saying that it does not have enough identifying information to know exactly how many of the total dead are women and children.
The UN now estimates that about 5,000 women
and about 8,000 children have been killed,
figures that are about half of what it was previously citing.
The UN says the number's dropped because it is using a
more conservative estimate while waiting for information on about 10,000 other dead Gazans
who have not yet been identified. And Mike Johnson, the Speaker of the House,
gave a press conference outside the court in lower Manhattan, where Michael Cohen, the former fixer for Donald Trump, was testifying for a second day, answering questions from Trump's lawyers.
Trump is bound by a gag order, so Johnson joined other stand-ins for the former president to discredit the proceedings.
Thank you. It was edited by M.J. Davis-Lynn with help from Michael Benoit. Contains original music by Dan Powell, Marion Lozano, and Rowan Nemisto.
And was engineered by Alyssa Moxley.
Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsberg of Wonderly.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Sabrina Tavernisi.
See you tomorrow.