Richard Wachman and Oliver Morgan
Sunday September 4, 2005
The Observer
BRITISH and American insurance industries face claims topping $40 billion following the devastation in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.
The figure, leaked to The Observer by sources within the Lloyds of London insurance market, is similar to the hit taken by companies following the terrorist attacks in September 2001. As a consequence, businesses face huge hikes in insurance premiums.
According to a document circulating within Lloyds of London insurance syndicates, the devastation left by the hurricane is equivalent to a worse-case scenario sketched out by Lloyds forecasters two years ago. The forecasters published a paper on the effect on the industry of a major hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico - where Katrina wrought havoc last week.
The highly secretive department at the Lloyds market, dubbed Department X, has also prepared estimates of the damage that could be caused by an earthquake along the St Andreas fault line in California measuring nine on the Richter scale. In those circumstances, the bill could be five or six times higher. Lloyds of London is expecting a hit of between £1bn and £2bn following last week's carnage, about 25 per cent less than its exposure after 9/11.
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/business/story/0,6903,1562119,00.html