The P&C sector has been witnessing slow but resilient growth in premiums, with the real premium growth rate stabilizing gradually after the financial crisis. However, in 2017, there was a decline of 0.5 percentage points in the real growth rate of premiums and profitability also trended down for the third consecutive year.
The P&C sector has been particularly affected by heavy underwriting losses due to the rise in natural catastrophe losses and overall auto claims costs. Spurred by rapid technological advancements, the industry is coping with a change in customer expectations, in which insurance customers increasingly demand a digital, simplified, and personalized experience. Therefore, insurers must now cater to changing customer expectations to ensure retention and stabilize the top line. Margin pressures brought on by heavy underwriting losses in recent years must also be tackled.
Insurers have responded by leveraging voice assistants and connected devices to increase customer touch points and by providing a variety of value-added services to improve meaningful customer engagement. P&C insurers have also started offering new models of insurance such as parametric and on-demand insurance and have developed sophisticated cyber risk assessment tools to address gaps in coverage and to gain access to new avenues of revenue generation.
Insurers are exploring artificial intelligence (AI), analytics, and distributed ledger technology (DLT) to enhance fraud detection and loss prevention capabilities, improve operational efficiency, and streamline their internal processes. Insurers are also considering strategic partnerships with appropriate InsurTech firms to foster innovation and gain cost efficiencies.
Finally, insurers have begun to open their platforms through APIs for seamless delivery of services to customers and better integration with ecosystem partners. P&C insurers are gradually moving to a digitally integrated, efficient ecosystem, with seamless information flow between ecosystem partners.
Over the last 10 years, the P&C business has been witnessing slow but resilient premium growth, with real premium growth declining 0.5 percentage points in 2017 to 2.8% as compared to 2016 (Exhibit 1). The decline was primarily related to a slowdown in emerging markets, with 2017’s 6.1% real premium growth rate down 3.7 percentage points from 2016. Meanwhile, advanced markets witnessed a steady 1.9% real premium growth in 2017. Industry profitability is also under pressure, trending downward for the third consecutive year, with sector return on equity (ROE) declining to 5.1% in 2017. The overall combined ratio for the eight major non-life markets1 deteriorated to 101.8% in 2017 from 99.4% in 2016.
The decline was primarily driven by heavy underwriting losses due to rise in natural catastrophe losses across the globe as well as an increase in overall claims costs in the auto insurance sector.
Insured natural catastrophe losses surged to $135 billion in 2017, marking an increase of 165% over the previous year and making it the costliest year for insurers since 1980.
Auto insurance claim loss costs have been increasing steadily since 2012 because of an increase in claims frequency and severity. Claims frequency is driven by increases in miles driven and occurrences of distracted driving, etc. Increased claim severity is mainly driven by rising medical treatment costs and increasing usages of the sophisticated and expensive sensors and other high-end devices in today’s vehicles, which raises repair costs.
P&C insurers are offering value-added services to increase customer touch points and drive meaningful engagement.
Background
Key Drivers
P&C insurers are leveraging connected devices to streamline claims processing and improve customer engagement.
Background
Key Drivers
P&C insurers are enhancing customer experience by leveraging voice assistants across the value chain, including claims management.
Background
– According to a research by Capgemini Research Institute, voice assistants would become a dominant mode of customer interaction, with 40% of consumers preferring to use a voice assistant rather than a website by 2020.13
Key Drivers
– The number of customers using voice assistants is estimated to reach 1.83 billion by 2021.14
– The rise in the integration of voice assistants in mobile has increased voice adoption even more.
P&C insurers are exploring offerings that allow dynamic coverage and insuring previously uninsured risks.
Background
Key Drivers
The cyber insurance market is expanding with the entry of new players and sophisticated tools for assessing cyber losses.
Background
– Worldwide cyber security spending was predicted to increase by 8% by the end of 2018 to reach $96 billion.24
Key Drivers
Distributed ledger technology (DLT) is enabling P&C carriers to improve operational efficiencies and optimize costs.
Background
Key Drivers
P&C insurers are leveraging AI and analytics to bolster fraud detection and loss prevention capabilities.
Background
Key Drivers
Insurers are investing in automation of internal processes to improve real- time data handling and offer customers seamless services.
Background
– According to the World Insurance Report 2018, 18.3% of respondents said they had developed full real-time data collection infrastructure while another 24.4% said that they were building a front-end interface for real-time data capturing.42
Key Drivers
InsurTech firms are becoming the R&D hubs of insurance carriers with a gamut of enabling services.
Background
– In the pharmaceutical industry firms collaborate with research organizations and university groups to drive innovation.
Key Drivers
Insurers are coming up with open platforms and APIs to partner more efficiently with other ecosystem players.
Background
– With BigTech firms also testing insurance waters and the emergence of InsurTech firms, the insurance industry is also gearing toward the adoption of an open ecosystem approach.
Key Drivers
Advancements in technology are driving new and disruptive models in the P&C insurance sub-sector while also gradually reorienting the industry around the customer. P&C insurers will form a digitally-integrated ecosystem with customers and partners to streamline the customer’s entire insurance journey. Thus, rather than customers transacting separately with intermediaries, insurers, third-party vendors, etc., these players will work with each other through integrated, digital interfaces to deliver a seamless experience to customers.
Source: Capgemini Financial Services Analysis, 2018
Insurers are enhancing customer connectedness by enabling anytime/anywhere service access through voice assistants and by raising customer engagement frequency through value-added services. They are leveraging digital tools and analytics to cater to customer needs by providing dynamic and flexible products and highly-personalized offerings.
Technologies such as APIs are enabling insurers to more effectively integrate with partners such as agents and intermediaries, InsurTech firms, third-party vendors for claims, and third- party applications for distribution. This partner ecosystem may eventually expand to include BigTechs such as Amazon as new distribution channels.
Better integration within insurance organizations has become a priority with the help of technologies such as RPA, AI, DLT, and advanced analytics to execute data-driven, automated processes.
In a changing market and ecosystem, it will be important for insurers to build underlying attributes to remain relevant and competitive. They should become intelligent insurers by building real-time data capture and cognitive processing capabilities to derive richer insights for decision making and design of offerings. They should build a deep customer focus to enhance customer access to services and realign strategies to meet changing customer expectations.
With the rising adoption of mobile apps and connected devices by both insurers and customers and with more real-time customer data being stored, data-driven compliance will be critical for insurers. Finally, becoming an open insurer to collaborate effectively with other players will enable strong competitive positioning in the future ecosystem.
Source: Capgemini Financial Services Analysis, 2018