RenaissanceRe
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Chris Parry said the denominator effect remains a suppressant on ILS inflows after a strong phase of returns.
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The acquiring reinsurer will now run off the business.
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The rise was helped by performance fees at DaVinci.
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The Bermudian said its third-party vehicles were “sufficiently capitalised”.
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Fourth quarter inflows also included $111mn for its retro platform Upsilon
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The Medici cat bond fund experienced the largest growth in AuM.
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The year brought a degree of closure on the loss-hit years of 2017-2021, while the outlook remains changeable for ILS managers.
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Key names taking up senior roles at Validus include Sven Wehmeyer and Pablo Nunez.
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Prior-year cat loss years that are finally shaking out drove fee benefits in Q3.
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The Bermudian firm said it expects the acquisition could drive more growth than the prior forecast of $2.7bn incremental premium.
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The carrier returned $369mn of capital to third-party investors in Q3 from investors in the Upsilon and Vermeer vehicles.
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As of year-end 2022, the fund’s largest ILS allocation was in a RenRe fund.
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The industry’s ability to draw new capital will hinge on the outcome of the Atlantic hurricane season.
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The AuM total hits $12.1bn when including Top Layer Re and RenRe’s own participation.
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The reinsurer said it was monitoring conditions in the property E&S markets, where it has been reducing capacity to grow in property treaty, as rate gains could provide fertile ground for future growth.
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The reinsurer’s ILS vehicles delivered returns of $174.9mn to investors during the quarter, with improved returns from PGGM joint venture Vermeer and the Medici cat bond fund.
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The investment firm’s ILS holdings were worth around $746mn at year-end 2022.
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Removing any competitor is a positive for ILS peers in a competitive time for fundraising, but it is not clear how much of a boost this will give RenRe.
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RenRe will be taking control of ILS manager AlphaCat as part of its purchase of Validus Re.
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The takeover will push it up two places to rank as the fifth-largest writer of P&C reinsurance by gross premium.
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AIG will invest a significant amount into Fontana and DaVinci.
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The Bermudian reinsurer launched a public offering of 6,300,000 common shares and anticipates raising around $1.15bn to finance the transaction.
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The deal includes AIG's AlphaCat platform.
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The CEO said the reinsurer has already written some private deals ahead of the June 1 deadline and expects to continue a pivot away from E&S in favour of property cat reinsurance.
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The reinsurer’s core management fee income was up by 50% year on year to $40.9mn.
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RenaissanceRe won the Manager of the Year title, while Beazley’s cyber cat bond won the non-life transaction of the year.
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The executive will stand for election at RenRe’s AGM in May.
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Reinsurer-owned ILS platforms were challenged to grow fee income in a tough year for nat cat losses and as cat market economics shifted.
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The capital commitments to the vehicle have expired.
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Shea has worked at RenRe for seven years, most recently having served as head of underwriting for credit before the promotion.
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The CEO said the reinsurer expects to post $35mn of fee income a quarter after raising more capital.
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All four of the firm’s key third-party vehicles were profitable in the quarter.
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The headline market drop in AuM belies a more lively growth story for funds operating outside of the ILS major league.
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The world’s largest investment company has assets under management of more than $10tn.
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The firm elevated Justin O'Keefe, Cathal Carr, Fiona Walden and Bryan Dalton to US and Bermuda, Europe, casualty & specialty, and property CUOs, respectively.
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The bond includes two layers protecting against annual aggregate and occurrence losses.
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The market is characterised by rising prices and shrinking deal sizes as investors pick and choose over which bonds to back.
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The transaction across two tranches is offering higher multiples compared to the 2021 Mona Lisa issuance, with pricing on the aggregate layer almost 80% up despite carrying a lower risk level.
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The RenRe vehicle, formerly a major retro writer, has been a reduced force this year.
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The reinsurer is ready to “walk away from business” where it feels pricing and terms and conditions are not good enough.
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Some firms have fared better than others in the competition to raise funds during the year.
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The Bermudian reinsurer said both appointments are effective January 1, 2023.
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The reinsurer raised $122mn in Q3, including $100mn for PGGM joint venture Vermeer and $22mn in its cat bond fund.
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The company’s third-party assets dropped $178mn during Q3 to $4.2bn.
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A 3.9-point decline in the casualty and specialty segment offset a 2.5-point deterioration in the company’s property business.
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The estimate is driven by $540mn of losses attributable to Hurricane Ian.
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Ratings agencies suggest that carriers must do better on controlling volatility – but diverging risk appetites give the lie to the idea that the industry is walking away from risk.
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In its Q2 earnings call, CEO Kevin O’Donnell said that the company held its PMLs flat while taking the benefit of increased rate.
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The firm’s Medici and Fontana vehicles were hit by foreign exchange losses.
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The company’s property segment booked a combined ratio of 57.6%, 13.8 points higher compared to Q2 2021 due to a higher attritional loss ratio.
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The hardening rate environment in Florida provided a mid-year opportunity for some, but overall there was little growth.
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The segment’s lustre has been dulled by losses and capital trapping.
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The hire of the senior Horseshoe executive follows two earlier ones, as Bryce Wojciechowski and Alex Staab joined as analysts.
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RenaissanceRe CEO Kevin O’Donnell explained on an earnings call his take on the mid-year renewals and a relatively low impact of the Ukraine war.
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Higher interest rates drove investment write-downs that offset a turnaround in underwriting performance after last year’s first quarter was hit by Uri losses.
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The committee is the most senior management team at the Bermuda company, responsible for governance and strategy of the firm.
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Fontana investors will face a short lock-up period in the sidecar’s ramp-up phase, but thereafter there will be some “embedded liquidity.”
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The new platform extends RenRe’s suite of ILS and reinsurance strategies.
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The carrier has introduced a number of ESG-focused roles, which sees Cathal Carr, SVP, underwriting, appointed as global head of climate and sustainability strategy.
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Executive pay at RenaissanceRe fell for the second year in a row in 2021 after a “disappointing” return for shareholders in a year of elevated natural catastrophes.
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Carr was previously SVP, global head of property catastrophe at the reinsurer.
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RenaissanceRe has nominated Shyam Gidumal to its board, while Jean Hamilton is set to retire from the board in May 2022.
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RenaissanceRe had raised $470mn for the high-risk fund platform a year earlier.
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The company’s DaVinci fund grew by $500mn as it took in a higher share of cat risk from the group.
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The third-party capital raise came in 24% lower than January 2021, as the DaVinci sidecar took most inflows.
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Manjit Varwandkar, who managed the parametrics product line at Sompo, will manage the Medici Fund.
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The CEO and president said he expects to shrink the portfolio for retro-focussed sidecar Upsilon.
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Performance declined at the reinsurer’s third-party ventures owing to Q3’s big cat events.
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The reinsurer grew GWP by 55% – to $1.77bn – helped by a surge in reinstatement premiums, but the company was weighed down by $727mn in net cat claims.
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Its $725mn estimated losses equated to 10% of shareholders’ equity and came in ahead of its Q3 2017 losses of $617mn.
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The figure – which included $440mn in losses from Hurricane Ida and $210mn from severe flooding in Europe – exceeds the $617mn in claims in the third quarter of 2017.
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From ESG to social inflation, systemic risk to cat risk, we highlight some of the top discussions from this year’s four-day virtual conference.
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Kevin O’Donnell also said he saw social inflation as more of a concern for the industry than climate change.
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Fee income – an area of patchy disclosure by reinsurers – was generally stable amongst early reporters.
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The reinsurer stepped off five Florida domestic insurance programmes but has taken more E&S risk in the southeast US.
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The reinsurer posted intakes to its Medici and Upsilon funds.
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The reinsurer upsized the transaction to $250mn, from a $150mn initial target.
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The catastrophe bond’s price guidance was also tightened from the initial offer.
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The issue, in conjunction with the DaVinci Re sidecar, follows a $400mn sale of the bond last year.
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New and growing carriers helped to fill out treaties as Sompo stepped back from a market that came in flatter than expected for remote risk.
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The reinsurer said it had significantly grown its casualty underwriting portfolio, but also returned $230mn via share buybacks to mid-April.
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Last year, RenRe reported an operating profit of $33mn in Q1 due to Covid-19 losses.
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Lynette Pirilla Walter takes on the chief legal officer role as John Drnek joins the firm in Bermuda as general counsel.
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Significant moves over the past month included the appointment of Chris Parry as global head of RenaissanceRe Capital Partners and the departure of Axis head of risk funding Ben Rubin, as well as an ILS launch at ERS and a new bond team moving to Credit Suisse ILS.
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The division had been led by group CEO Kevin O’Donnell on an interim basis following Aditya Dutt’s departure.
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The move follows Fidelis’ decision to hand back $275mn it had raised for a retro vehicle.
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RenRe said it had “ample dry powder” even after fully deploying its $1.1bn 2020 capital raise.
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RenRe boosted its stake in DaVinci to 29% after buying $119mn of shares from third parties.
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The additional $730mn in capital for its Upsilon RFO, DaVinci and Medici funds include $130mn of the company’s own money.
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The reinsurer anticipates a $175mn hit from Covid-19 claims during the quarter.
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The move comes as environmental policies move up the list of investor priorities.
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RenRe thinks the major cat losses of Q3 will cause the property cat market to harden throughout 2021.
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The Bermuda carrier will be an initial investor in Griffin Highline.
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Rising capital costs, not losses, will support reinsurance rate increases, the CEO argued.
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Nephila’s fall in AuM contributed to the trend of specialist firms shrinking, as reinsurer-backed assets were up modestly.
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CEO Kevin O'Donnell also noted that RenRe had dropped one-third of its Florida clients.
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The reinsurer did not provide an updated Covid-19 loss estimate.
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The former RenRe third-party capital chief joins the Bermudian ILS firm.
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RenaissanceRe CEO Kevin O'Donnell will take on responsibility for the firm's Ventures business on an interim basis.
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RenaissanceRe raised $913mn from a new share issuance last week, with joint venture partner State Farm investing a further $75mn.
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The shares change hands at a 0.6 percent premium to the undisturbed price, though more than 5 percent below Tuesday's close.
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The sale of about 5.5 million shares would increase the carrier’s outstanding common stock by 12.5 percent.
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Even as Florida rates improve, the reinsurer said it expects to hold back capacity for net growth and potential new demand.
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Two large ILS managers bucked the trend for alternative retractions, but traditional carriers recorded the fastest expansion.
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CEO Kevin O’Donnell said the firm was relying on cedents who advised of minimal property BI exposure.
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A surge in earned premiums and reserve releases helped profits climb to $108mn in the first quarter.
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Kevin O’Donnell said that several domestic insurers in Florida are now close to exhausting their 2017 treaties.
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The carrier contributed more than $100mn of the January intakes for its retro-focused Upsilon fund and the Medici cat bond fund.
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The firms said their relationship would see RenRe sourcing capital to provide Beazley with cyber catastrophe reinsurance cover.
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Both tranches of the transaction priced at the bottom of the guidance range.
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Pricing across the deal has slipped 1.5-3.2 percent, according to sources.
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RenaissanceRe CEO Kevin O’Donnell estimated the market took $12bn of losses and brought in $20bn of new capital in 2017.
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In its first public cat bond since 2013, the firm joins peers in seeking aggregate retro cover.
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Retro fundraising hits the wall, with Eklund downing tools on start-up.
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Wildfire recoveries benefitted DaVinci investors and RenRe's retro partners in Q3.
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Sidecar sponsor RenaissanceRe also posted a 40 percent uplift in Q3 fee income.
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The Bermudian reinsurer expects to pay out about $100mn in losses from Faxai and about $55mn for Dorian claims.
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The RenRe CEO also warned that the market must be wary of repeating its errors in estimating Typhoon Jebi losses.
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Former Tokio Millennium Re CEO Tatsuhiko ‘Tats’ Hoshina is now the chief commercial officer at the start-up.
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Trading Risk looks at the dominant themes that the ILS market will be discussing at the 63rd Monte Carlo Reinsurance Rendez-Vous in September.
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