Sandy Insured Losses Estimated Between $16 and $22B: AIR

Catastrophe modeling firm AIR Worldwide now estimates that insured losses from Sandy will be between $16 and $22 billion.

Photo: Steve Zumwalt FEMA

AIR estimates include wind and storm surge damage to onshore residential, commercial and industrial properties and their contents, automobiles, and time element coverage (additional living expenses for residential properties and business interruption for commercial properties).

“The significant increase in estimated losses from AIR’s estimate issued on October 30, the day after Sandy’s landfall, is driven primarily by an increase in estimated losses from storm surge damage,” said Dr. Tim Doggett, principal scientist at AIR Worldwide. “This, in turn, is driven by a reassessment of the percentage of flood losses that will actually be paid, as well as an improved storm surge footprint run against high-resolution industry exposure information.”

Commentary on selected notable factors that influenced AIR’s update of insured loss estimates:

Commercial Flood Insurance Penetration: AIR’s default assumption—and the one used to generate insured loss estimates hours after Sandy’s landfall—is that 10 percent of commercial structures carry flood insurance. Based on further investigation into how storm surge losses will be covered under Sandy, AIR now believes that a revised assumption of 20 percent is more applicable for this particular storm and region. Therefore, the above range of losses reflects the assumption that 20 percent of the damage from Sandy’s storm surge to commercial and industrial properties will be covered.

Homeowners Deductibles: One hour before Sandy made landfall, the National Hurricane Center (NHC) issued a public advisory, which, in addition to updating the meteorological information and position of Sandy, stated that the storm had transitioned from a hurricane to a post-tropical cyclone. In the days following landfall, officials in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Washington, DC all ruled that insurers may not impose hurricane deductibles on homeowners policies in their jurisdictions. (In AIR’s initial loss estimates for Sandy posted on October 30, hurricane deductibles were applied.)

Source: AIR Worldwide