Insurer Hartford Financial Services Group warned Monday that its third-quarter catastrophe losses would be substantially higher than a year earlier, mostly as a result of last month’s Hurricane Irene.
The Hartford, in a slide presentation for a Barclays Capital conference, said it expects pretax catastrophe losses for July and August of $150 million to $250 million, of which $75 million to $175 million comes from Irene.
In the third quarter of 2010, in which no hurricanes made landfall in the United States, the Hartford’s catastrophe losses were $13 million.
For most insurers, though, disaster losses this year have far exceeded expectations and historical comparison. Between Irene, devastating tornadoes in April and May, drought and a severe winter, many U.S. insurers have already lost well more in 2011 than they lost in 2010.
Worldwide, insurers lost more than $70 billion just in the first six months of the year due to natural disasters, reinsurer Swiss Re has said.
(Reporting by Ben Berkowitz, editing by Gerald E. McCormick)
Topics Trends Profit Loss
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
NAIC Says Data Taken in Hack Has Been Published Online
Need Wind Mitigation? New Florida Insurer Wants to Help With That
Florida’s Unemployment Rate Is Surging Even as High-Profile Companies Move In
Endless Shrimp Deal Was Scheme to Squeeze Red Lobster, Suit Says 

