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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here. ©
2002 The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
State
Farm shuts door State Farm Insurance
has stopped writing new homeowner, renter, and condominium insurance policies
in at least six western states, including Oregon.
State Farm has more than one
in five of these policies in the region or 20 percent of the market, so
the decision, announced June 20, has had an impact throughout the industry.
"The more competitors there
are out there, it keeps downward pressure on the rates. If you have a
player with that big a piece of the pie say they are not writing anymore,
it puts (upward) pressure on the market," said Don Fullhart of Fullhart
Insurance of Sisters (formerly Sisters Insurance Center), who competes
with State Farm.
State Farm will continue to
insure existing policy holders or customers who have had policies within
the last six months, according to Bryan LaBerge, Public Affairs Specialist
with State Farm. However, the company announced an average statewide rate
increase of 21.5 percent last May 13.
Announcing the decision not
to accept new customers, State Farm Vice President Harold Gray said that
"State Farm incurred homeowners losses and expenses of $1.14 for every
$1 of premium collected in 2001. We are simply not able to continue to
accept new customers under these circumstances."
New customers are more expensive
than existing customers, because the company has a better claims history
on its existing customer base. It is easier to "factor rates" for existing
policy holders, according to LaBerge.
"We have the promise we made
to our current customers to remain financially strong, so we made the
decision (to halt writing new policies)" said LaBerge. He also said that
State Farm is a "mutual" insurance company owned by policy holders, which
means "we answer to (existing) policy holders, not investors."
Michelle Wolfe works for Sage
Insurance in Bend, and sells policies for competitors of State Farm. As
a result of State Farm’s decision, Wolfe said her company had seen a lot
of potential new customers calling for quotes.
Wolfe said State Farm had
pulled out of 24 states, and that the company had suffered large losses
due to "mold claims."
"Mold is a huge issue, right
now," said Wolfe. Insurers are looking at loss history that goes back
five years.
Even contractors who have
never had a claim have seen insurance rates double when they can find
a carrier, but many companies are not insuring contractors at all, forcing
them into the arms of very expensive "specialty carriers."
These costs get passed on
to consumers, said Wolfe, who had to find a new insurance carrier for
her husband, a finish carpenter.
Fullhart of Sisters has seen
the same thing.
"We have seen it in the contractors
market, guys who had State Farm have not been renewed. Most of our insurance
carriers do not want residential general contractors. I think it is a
combination of construction defect claims, the regulatory environment
for lawsuits, and some condo development lawsuits in California," he said.
"That is tough in a growth area."
Insurance companies are regulated.
John Piper, Public Information Officer with the Oregon Insurance Division,
said that since there are a number of competitors, the state’s position
is that it is State Farm’s prerogative not to accept new accounts.
Fullhart also said that the
bad stock market might have also contributed to the decision.
"(An insurer) might be more
willing to accept costs of $1.10 for every $1 they take in, if they are
making a lot of money in the stock market. If they are not making money,
they want more money from the insurance," he said.
But Fullhart also said that
policy renewals have not skyrocketed in cost -- yet. Safeco, an insurance
company represented by Fullhart, has said that their homeowners line "has
been killing them" for about 10 years, he said. Coast communities and
Central Oregon were supposed to see hikes of up to 30 percent. |
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