Verisk Estimates Industry Insured Losses to Onshore Property for Hurricane Ian Will Range from USD 42 Billion to USD 57 Billion

The industry loss estimate includes estimated wind, storm surge, and inland flood losses resulting from Ian’s landfalls in both Florida and South Carolina; Majority of insured losses in estimate caused by wind damage in Florida

BOSTON, Oct. 03, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Verisk (Nasdaq:VRSK) estimates that insured losses to onshore property for Hurricane Ian will range from USD 42 billion to USD 57 billion. The industry loss estimate from Verisk Extreme Event Solutions includes estimated wind, storm surge, and inland flood losses resulting from Ian’s landfalls in both Florida and South Carolina. The loss estimate excludes certain elements, such as losses to the National Flood Insurance Program and any potential impacts of litigation or social inflation, that could cause the total insured industry loss to exceed USD 60 billion.

Wind damage of USD 38 to 51 billion comprises the majority of the loss estimate. Storm surge (excluding losses from the NFIP) account for USD 3 to 5.5 billion of the loss estimate, and inland flood less than USD 1 billion. Approximately 1 percent of the total industry loss will come from the impacts of Ian’s South Carolina landfall.

Overview of the damage 

Wind damage in varying degree was observed in all the areas impacted by Hurricane Ian’s windfield. Damage was more severe in and around the areas where Ian made landfall in southwest Florida. It ranged from significant loss of roof covers in residential homes to torn up roof membranes in commercial structures. Extensive damage is also seen to elements of building components and cladding.

Storm surge also caused massive destruction to communities along the western coast of Florida where Ian made landfall. Residential construction in these areas are predominantly founded on slabs which do not afford a lot of elevation above the local ground surface. Surge damage caused collapse of several rows of beachfront residential homes. In some cases, homes were dislodged from their foundations.

Manufactured homes constitute a significant portion of the residential inventory in southwest Florida when Ian made landfall. Several manufactured home parks in these areas saw massive damage including loss of roofs, damage to wall siding and near total destruction.

What’s included in Verisk’s estimate

Included in the estimate are losses to onshore residential, commercial, and industrial properties and automobiles for their building, contents, and time element coverage. The estimate reflects the impacts of inflation on labor and materials over the past two years, as well as the effects of demand surge, when large numbers of property owners look to rebuild at the same time.

Verisk’s modeled insured loss estimates do not include:

  • Losses to inland marine, ocean-going marine cargo and hull, and pleasure boats
  • Loss adjustment expenses
  • Losses exacerbated by litigation, fraudulent assignment of benefits, or social inflation
  • Losses paid out by the National Flood Insurance Program
  • Storm surge leakage losses paid on wind-only policies due to government intervention
  • Losses to uninsured properties
  • Losses to infrastructure
  • Losses from extra-contractual obligations
  • Losses from hazardous waste cleanup, vandalism, or civil commotion, whether directly or indirectly caused by the event
  • Losses resulting from the compromise of existing defenses (e.g., natural and man-made levees)
  • Other non-modeled losses, including those resulting from tornadoes spawned by the storm
  • Losses for U.S. offshore assets and non-U.S. property

How the hurricane unfolded and broke records

Heavy rain, storm surge, and tropical storm conditions began across portions of southwest Florida late Tuesday afternoon. Overnight Ian slid past the Florida Keys. Despite receiving a glancing blow from Ian, Key West recorded its third-highest storm surge since 1913 at just over 3 feet and peak wind gusts into the upper-60s mph.

Conditions deteriorated rapidly in western Florida as Wednesday morning progressed, with heavy rainfall spreading northward and major-hurricane-force winds from Ian’s eyewall coming onshore late morning near Fort Myers Beach and Sanibel Island. To the south, in Naples and surrounding areas, Ian’s powerful winds were oriented perpendicular to the coast, which exacerbated the water inundation caused by storm surge as water from the Gulf was effectively blown inland. As a result, Naples saw over 6 feet of catastrophic storm surge, shattering the previous record.

Ian officially made landfall at Cayo Costa, Florida at 3:05 PM local time as a Category 4 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 150 mph. Around this time, a 124-mph wind gust was observed in Punta Gorda before the station failed. Ian then slowly proceeded inland, following a northeasterly track that led the storm’s massive 30-mile-wide eye (wider than the east-west extent of Lake Okeechobee) over Gasparilla Sound and Punta Gorda.

Owing to the storm’s slow motion, areas like Port Charlotte and Englewood remained in Ian’s eyewall for several hours; this resulted in 18 – 20 inches of rainfall in addition to prolonged exposure to the powerful wind gusts located in Ian’s northwestern eyewall. Ian managed to stay about 65 miles southwest of Tampa, which owing to Ian’s large wind field was still close enough to bring wind gusts into the upper-70s mph and 2 – 5 inches of rainfall; before that, Tampa Bay was temporarily drained of water because of inverse storm surge from Ian.

On Thursday morning, Ian moved off the Atlantic coast near Cape Canaveral – a bit further south than previously expected. As Ian moved back over the ocean on Thursday, conditions were favorable enough for some additional strengthening and Ian was upgraded to a hurricane as of Thursday evening.

Ian made a second landfall on Friday afternoon at 2:05 pm EDT near Georgetown, SC as a mid-range Category 1 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 85 mph. Heavy rainfall and strong gusty winds of more than 50 mph impacted portions of the Carolinas. With these impacts ongoing, Ian was officially declared post-tropical at 5pm as the center moved into northeast South Carolina.

Hurricane Ian brought significant storm surge damage to southwest Florida, to both residential and commercial exposures.  However, the flood insurance take-up on residential risks in Florida are low.

About Extreme Event Solutions at Verisk

Extreme event solutions at Verisk provides risk modeling solutions that help individuals, businesses, and society become more resilient to extreme events. In 1987, Verisk founded the catastrophe modeling industry and today models the risk from natural catastrophes, supply chain disruptions, terrorism, pandemics, and casualty catastrophes. Insurance, reinsurance, financial, corporate, and government clients rely on Verisk’s advanced science, software, and consulting services for catastrophe risk management, insurance-linked securities, longevity modeling, site-specific engineering analyses, and agricultural risk management. Verisk’s extreme event solutions team is headquartered in Boston, with additional offices in North America, Europe, and Asia. For more information, please visit www.air-worldwide.com. For more information about Verisk, a leading data analytics provider serving customers in insurance, energy and specialized markets, and financial services, please visit www.verisk.com

For more information, contact: 
Mary Keller 
Verisk Extreme Event Solutions 
617-267-6645 
Mary.Keller@verisk.com

Indonesia, Australia cooperate in fighting IUU fishing

Indonesia and Australia have agreed to strengthen cooperation in eradicating illegal fishing near the sea borders between the two countries, Indonesian news agency Antara reported.

 

The cooperation is part of effort to prevent marine and fishery resources from the threat of illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing particularly in the border area between Timor Sea and Arafura Sea.

 

Indonesia and Australia are committed to creating a maritime territory which is safe and free from IUU, Director General of Maine and Fishery Resources Surveillance at the Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Ministry Rear Admiral Adin Nurawaluddin said in a press statement released on October 2.

 

The agreement is the realisation of long-term resolution the two countries agreed upon at the 22nd Indonesia-Australia Fisheries Surveillance Forum (IASFS) in Darwin, Australia.

 

Indonesia and Australia have formed three working groups to realise the joint action in supporting the effort to combat illegal fishing.

 

The three working groups are respectively engaged in public information campaign, surveillance and law enforcement, and alternative livelihood./.

 

Source: Vietnam News Agency

FDI poured into real estate sector doubles

Real estate sector attracted 3.5 billion USD in foreign direct investment (FDI) the first nine months of this year, accounting for mearly 19% of total FDI that the country lured in the period, coming second among sectors in terms of FDI attraction.

 

According to Foreign Investment Agency under the Ministry of Planning and Investment (MPI), as of September 20, registered FDI totalled 18.7 billion USD, down 15.3% year on year.

 

The figure includes 7.12 billion USD poured into 1,355 new projects, respectively falling 43% and rising 11.8%. More than 8.3 billion USD was poured into 769 existing projects, up 29.9% and 13.4%, respectively. Meanwhile, foreign investors spent over 3.28 billion USD on purchasing shares in Vietnamese companies, up 1.9%.

 

Experts from real estate firm Savills Vietnam held that along with the country’s economic growth, the real estate sector has eyed great development opportunities.

 

According to Savills Vietnam, some factors have positively impacted on the country’s industry, such as the early application of policy to open the border that has created favourable conditions for foreign firms to work in Vietnam, and great advantages from free trade agreement, especially the EU-Vietnam FTA, making it more attractive to foreign enterprises.

 

FDI poured into real estate sector doubles hinh anh 2

 

Real estate sector attracted 3.5 billion USD in foreign direct investment the first nine months of this year (Photo: VNA)

 

Savills Vietnam also pointed to other factors that make Vietnam a safe investment destination for investors, including the stability in VND/USD exchange rate.

 

Statistics from Savills Vietnam showed that in September, the supply of industrial real estate in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City were almost completely filled. With the advantages in infrastructure and transport, industrial real estate in the two biggest cities of Vietnam are more competitive.

 

Savills Vietnam also noted that the Vietnamese Government has given directions for the development of the sector and added more real estate supply across the country.

 

In the first half of 2022, the construction of nine new industrial parks were approved and they are scheduled to be put into operation in the 2023-2025 period with total area of 2,472 hectares and total investment of 29.4 trillion VND. In Hanoi alone, 2-5 industrial parks have been approved to be built in the 2021-2025 period in outskirt districts.

 

However, Deputy Minister of Planning and Investment Nguyen Thi Bich Ngoc said that in order to attract more investment in the sector, it is necessary to deal with problems in ground clearance and land rent./.

 

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Afternoon briefing on October 3

The following is a brief review of the day’s events as reported by the Vietnam News Agency on October 3.

 

– The sixth plenum of the 13th Party Central Committee opened in Hanoi on October 3 under the chair of General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong.

 

The participants are scheduled to opine and make decisions on reports and projects on major issues relating to the country’s socio-economic situation and state budget in 2022, the socio-economic development plan and state budget estimate for 2023, and the state finance-budget plan from 2023 to 2025. Read full story

 

– The Vietnam-Canada Business Association (VCB Association) made its debut in Ottawa on October 1, meeting the Vietnamese and Canadian business communities’ demand to meet, connect with and support each other during trade and investment activities. Read full story

 

– The export turnover of aquatic products topped 8.5 billion USD in the first nine months of 2022, up 38% year-on-year, according to the Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers (VASEP). Read full story

 

– Budget carrier Vietjet will be offering attractive promotion for all passengers flying internationally every Monday from now to December 19. Read full story

 

– A concert celebrating 20 years of diplomatic relations between Vietnam and the US will take place at Hanoi Opera Theatre on October 7, according to the Vietnam National Symphony Orchestra (VNSO). Read full story

 

– A music and fashion festival themed “Canh buom do tham” (Crimson sails) took place in Tuoi Tre Park in Hanoi on October 2, helping connect Russian community living in Vietnam and Vietnamese people studied and worked in Russia. Read full story

 

– Hanoi will build a national dossier for Mo Muong to be included in the UNESCO List of Intangible Cultural Heritage in Need of Urgent Safeguarding, heard a conference held in the capital city on October 3.

 

Mo Muong is a job and also a performance practiced at funerals, religious festivals, and life cycle rituals by the Muong ethnic group. The art consists of Mo prayers and performances, by Mo practitioners, or Mo artisans. Read full story

 

– Despite their defeat in the match against Japan on October 2, Vietnam’s national futsal team enter the quarterfinals in the 2022 Futsal Asian Cup as it ranked second in Group D. Read full story./.

 

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Party leader urges Party Central Committee to seek new measures for implementing major issues

Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong stressed that many major issues have been implemented for a long time but the results have not met expectations, thus requiring new resolve and new measures to address them at a different scale to meet the requirements of the new situation.

 

He made the remarks when addressing the opening of the sixth plenum of the 13th Party Central Committee on October 3. The Party leader said this plenum aims to scrutinize the study and implementation of key major contents and issues in the Resolution of the 13th National Party Congress.

 

Regarding the socio-economic and State budget performance in 2022, General Secretary Trong said fast, complicated and unprecedented changes in the world have negatively affected economic recovery and development in Vietnam.

 

He asked the Party Central Committee to analyse the outstanding features of the year 2022, clarify existing shortcoming and weaknesses as well as difficulties and obstacles, and pinpointed their causes with a view to defining guiding viewpoints, targets and tasks and solutions for 2023.

 

As the plenum will consider and give opinions on the orientations of the national master plan for 2021-2030 with a vision to 2050, the Party General Secretary affirmed that this is a new and difficult task. He urged the Party Central Committee engage in in-depth discussion of the proposal submitted by the Party committee of the Government, thus contributing practically to the building, issuing and implementing the national master plan.

 

Party leader urges Party Central Committee to seek new measures for implementing major issues hinh anh 2

 

Other issues on the plenum’s agenda are the assessment of the implementation of the policy on national industrialization and modernization, and the progress of the building and perfection of a law-governed socialist state.

 

The Party chief also underlined the importance of a report reviewing 15 years implementing the resolution of the fifth plenum of the 10th Party Central Committee on continuing renewing the Party leadership over the political system, which is submitted to this plenum.

 

He said this is an important content of the task on building clean and strong Party and political system. He required that during discussion of the report, attention should be paid to seeking new breakthrough but feasible solutions to meet the development requirements in the new stage./.

 

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Thailand’s health, beauty industry rejuvenates thanks to ageing society

The COVID-19 pandemic and Thailand’s ageing society are driving recovery in the health and beauty industry, the Ministry of Commerce has said.

 

The number of operators registering businesses in the industry rose 90% over the first eight months this year, the ministry said.

 

A total of 353 health and beauty businesses were registered from January to August, compared to just 167 in the same period last year.

 

August alone saw 56 registrations, up 211.12%  from the same month last year.

 

A total of 1,621 health and beauty businesses were operating in Thailand as of August 31, accounting for capital value of 7.51 billion THB (198.41 million USD). More than half are operating in Bangkok.

 

Deputy Minister of Commerce Sinit Lertkrai attributed recovery in the industry to seniors paying more attention to their health and looks.

 

He added that health and beauty businesses had also gained a boost from pandemic trends such as working from home, exercise, and healthy foods, vitamins and supplements.

 

The Thai health and beauty industry generated 16.08 billion baht in 2019 before COVID-19 emerged. That figure fell to 14.31 billion baht in 2020 before recovering to 15.15 billion baht last year.

 

The Ministry of Commerce expects the global health and beauty industry to generate 206 trillion baht this year as the rising elderly population drives continuous growth.

 

As of December 31 last year, 12.24 million or 18.5% of Thailand’s population were aged 60 or above, according to Department of Provincial Administration data. Of these, 5.42 million were men and 6.81 million women./.

 

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Credit growth cap remains indispensable for macroeconomic stability

Businesses have faced difficulties in access to capital and commercial banks want to be able to lend freely to meet market demand. However, experts said the imposition of the credit growth cap is still necessary to keep the country’s macro economy stable in the short run.

 

The credit growth quota regime was officially deployed in 2011 when Vietnam’s economy was experiencing hyperinflation stemming from excessive money supply. The credit growth quota regime, putting a cap on the banking industry’s credit expansion, was announced by the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) at the beginning of each year.

 

Based on the credit growth quota for the entire banking industry, the SBV will determine the credit growth for each commercial bank depending on its financial health, with indicators including capital, asset quality, governance, business performance results, liquidity and sensitivity to market risks. The SBV will consider other criteria related to its implementation in meeting policies and orientations of the Government and the SBV to give credit growth priority, such as reducing lending interest rates to support firms and people, focusing loans on business and production, and participating in supporting the handling of weak banks.

 

The SBV in early September raised the credit cap for 15 banks for the second time in 2022, of which Sacombank got a rise of 4%; Agribank, 3.5%; SHB, OCB and MBB, 3.2%; VIB, 3% and Vietcombank, 2.7%.

 

VNDirect Securities Company’s analysis division said the 15 banks account for about 80% of total outstanding loans of the whole banking industry. With an additional credit growth rate of 1-4%, VNDirect’s analysts estimate about 279 trillion VND was injected into the economy, compared to the end of August 2022.

 

However, not all banks were satisfied with the SBV’s credit growth quota allocation. Some banks said they ran out of the allocated quota from the end of June and applied for an expansion many times, but weren’t on the SBV’s approved list. They were concerned as the credit growth quota regime can mirror the subjective imposition by the SBV without properly attending to the development plan of each commercial bank, which doesn’t conform to the market-oriented economy and results in ‘ask-and-give’ deals. Meanwhile, commercial banks can map out their own credit growth targets based on their financial power and management capacity.

 

Businesses also disagreed with the tightening of the credit growth quota, saying it is unreasonable as the regime has been causing great difficulties for them in accessing loans and leading to the loss of opportunities for the country’s economic recovery and development.

 

Despite the latest credit growth quota extension, firms said it isn’t still easy to get bank loans as the capital remains restricted. Banks also said the SBV’s credit growth adjustment in September is still quite low compared to their expectations.

 

As most banks ran out of the credit growth quota allocated by the SBV at the beginning of the year for more than three months, the waiting list of customers to get loans is very long. Meanwhile, the additional quota is very limited so it will be difficult to finance all the loan borrowing applications dated before September. With the new profile, banks said they may still approve, but are not sure about the disbursement. Many customers have met all loan criteria and have been approved, but customers still have to queue to get loans as banks have no credit quota to disburse.

 

Tran Thi Khanh Hien, Director of VNDirect Securities Company’s analysis division, said the remaining credit growth quota for this year has not been able to quench the ‘capital thirst’ of firms and individual customers, but only partially clear up the congested capital flow in the last few months after banks ran out of the allocated credit quota at the end of June.

 

The SBV’s data showed by the end of August, credit increased by 9.91% against the end of 2021, much higher than the 7.42% rate in the same period last year. The surge proved that the capital demand of the economy was very large and will continue to rise, especially at the end of the year.

 

However, experts said the credit growth quota is designed to boost lending for some banks without encouraging excessive credit growth so the measure is necessary and effective in the short term to stabilise the macroeconomy and control inflation.

 

Nguyen Minh Cuong, principal country economist of the Asian Development Bank in Vietnam, said in the near future, the regulation of the credit cap remains reasonable and has certain positive effects. The 14% credit growth cap for 2022 has been calculated by the SBV based on Vietnam’s targets, such as inflation control at 4% and economic growth at 6-6.5%.

 

Commenting on the SBV’s latest credit growth quota allocation in September, Cuong noted the SBV has made a flexible adjustment as it allowed some banks with safe capital adequacy and short-term/long-term lending ratios to increase the credit quota.

 

He said the flexible credit growth cap policy is effective in the short term, but the SBV should have a roadmap to eliminate it and use another tool to manage the monetary market more effectively in the long term.

 

Lawyer Truong Thanh Duc, Director of ANVI Law Firm, said for nearly 20 years working at four commercial banks, he witnessed huge volatility in the country’s banking industry when credit growth reached up to 51.39% in 2007.

 

According to Duc, risks related to bad debts and inflation often come later in Vietnam than in other countries. The risks will be serious if Vietnam doesn’t actively prevent them. Unlike many other countries, high inflation in Vietnam is very difficult to handle and is much more heavily affected due to psychological and trust factors. Vietnam experienced bitter lessons in the past. Economic growth will become meaningless if inflation is high.

 

It is necessary to impose the credit growth quota and the central bank shouldn’t change the regime, Duc noted, adding if the policy is removed, it must be replaced by another similar measure.

 

According to VNDirect’s Hien, the SBV currently has to shoulder a significant role. Besides harmonising interest rates and credit growth factors to support economic recovery, it has to control inflation and contribute to macro stability.

 

“These are all challenges, which are even tougher under global volatility. Therefore, it is easy to understand that there will always be differing opinions on issues of public concern such as credit growth and interest rates,” Hien said. /.

 

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Many parts of Vietnam see increased fertility rates during pandemic

Fertility rates over the past two years increased across many localities in Vietnam, and it was even higher than the total replacement birth rate, said Director General of the General Department of Population and Family Planning Nguyen Doan Tu.

 

According to the general department of Population and Family Planning under the Ministry of Health, fertility rates increased again in 2020, exceeding replacement fertility in many regions.

 

Specifically, the rate in rural areas increased from 2.11 children per mother in 2010 to 2.29 children per mother in 2020. In addition, rates in the Red River Delta increased from 2.04 children per mother in 2010 to 2.34 children per mother in 2020.

 

HCM City, a locality with the lowest fertility rate in the country, had a fertility rate of 1.35 in 2017, but by 2021, it reached the rate of 1.48 children per mother.

 

The city plans to promote fertility to reach 1.6 children per woman by 2030.

 

Tu said that during the COVID-19 pandemic, couples had more time for each other due to social distancing measures, resulting in increased birth rates.

 

The fertility rate only exceeded the total replacement birth rate in the short term, he said, adding that a short-term increase in fertility rate was not a matter of concern.

 

“In many countries with low fertility rates and unsuccessful reproductive promotion, short-term population growth is not a concern,” he said.

 

However, Vietnam still aims to maintain replacement fertility to ensure each family has two children.

 

According to a hospital survey, about 200,000-250,000 abortions were recorded yearly, Tu said, adding that the number was still much lower than the reality.

 

As the age of first marriage increases and the age of first sex decreases, as reported recently, the risk of abortion would increase, he said.

 

Surveys show that unintended pregnancies account for more than half of abortions./.

 

Source: Vietnam News Agency