Business
Hurricane Harvey may cost US insurance $20bn
Insurance stocks were mostly lower Monday, as investors awaited the initial estimates of losses from hurricane Harvey, which devastated Texas over the weekend.
“While it is early days and Harvey is expected to bring even more rain and flooding for another week, our best guess at this point is Harvey could result in $10-$20bn of industry insured losses making it one of the top 10 most costly hurricanes to hit the U.S.,” J.P. Morgan analyst Sarah DeWitt wrote in a Monday note.
CreditSights analysts said the most vulnerable lines of business include allied lines, commercial and private auto, commercial multiple peril, homeowners and farm owners multiple peril, crop mulitple peril, private crop, fire, flood and inland marine.
Among the companies that are most exposed to the region, Allstate Corp. shares fell 1.7%, Progressive Corp. shares were down 2.5%, Chubb Ltd. fell 1.6%, CNA Financial Corp. was down 0.5% and Hartford Financial Services Group Inc. was down 2%. RenaissanceRe Holdings Ltd. fell 1.8% and Everest Re Group Ltd. fell 2.5%. Dow Jones Industrial Average component Travelers Cos. Inc. fell 3%, to shave about 20 points off the price-weighted index.
-
News2 days agoCourt orders British Govt. to pay £420m to 21 coal miners killed by colonial masters
-
Finance2 days agoCBN cuts 1-Year Treasury Bill rate, rejects Bids
-
Maritime2 days agoNIMASA mulls expansion of deep blue project, calls for continued partnership with Navy
-
Economy2 days agoBPE, stakeholders unite to rollout $500m free meters, DisCos pledge to lead drive
-
Business2 days agoMTN to acquire controlling stake in IHS Holdings, eyes full ownership
-
Agriculture2 days agoOver 2.5m metric tonnes of food valued N2trn produced in 2yrs—FG
-
Economy16 hours agoDubai’s consumer electronics maker, Maser Group to invest $1.6bn in Nigeria, others
-
Oil and Gas16 hours agoEdo govt, NNPC partner to establish 10,000bpd condensate refinery
