
Insurer wants more money from policyholders amid growing coverage crisis
The third-largest insurer in the state has asked regulators to approve an average statewide rise of 6.9 percent.
The company blamed the hike on inflationary cost pressures and the risk of catastrophic events such as wildfires in the state.
Mercury is the first insurer to take advantage of a new package of reforms introduced by Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara.
With the new Sustainable Insurance Strategy in California, insurers like Mercury can now use catastrophe models to estimate the likely financial impact of future disasters, rather than just looking at historical claims.
This matters because California is facing more frequent and severe wildfires, plus other extreme weather events.
Using a cat model, Mercury can show regulators that the risk of future losses is higher than past claims suggest.
That gives them a stronger justification for raising premiums, even if past years didn't see massive payouts.
Mercury CEO Gabriel Tirador said: 'As other companies scaled back their California operations, Mercury stepped up to provide more options for our agents and customers, and we are committed to continuing our efforts to help protect our California neighbors well into the future.'
Mercury said the rate increase will not be allocated evenly across all policyholders.
It said residents in higher risk areas could see larger increases, while customers in lower risk areas could see decreases.
To combat hikes for customers in higher risk areas, it added, there will be discounts in place. This includes, for example, expanding existing discounts for homeowners who take steps to reduce wildfire risks.
Mercury said the hike would 'strengthen the company's ability to offer coverage to Californians in distressed areas prone to wildfires, many of which are currently limited to the high-cost, limited-coverage California FAIR Plan.'
Over the last several years, the Los Angeles-based company has scaled up its presence in the California home insurance industry, rising to become the third largest insurer in 2024 behind State Farm General and Farmers Insurance Group.
The company has also raised home insurance rates four times since 2021, according to the San Francisco Chronicle, including a 12 percent increase which went into effect in March.
But Mercury is not the only company which has requested a rate hike in the state.
In May, State Farm General — which is the largest insurer in the state — requested an average rate hike of 17 percent.
This triggered a fierce backlash from consumer advocates, who were outraged at the company's actions so soon after after so many families in the area were affected by deadly wildfires.
As a result of the new reforms, more companies are expected to follow suit in hiking prices for homeowners.
The reforms also allow companies to pass on the cost of reinsurance to customers.
Reinsurance is effectively the insurance taken out by insurers. It transfers some of the risk so that no company has too much exposure to a potential catastrophe.
The cost of reinsurance has boomed in recent years, due to the increased risk of natural disasters in the state.
This, in part, is why insurers have been pulling out of California, and regulators hope the reforms will make the market more attractive to home insurers.
This is also the first time that insurers have been able to pass on the cost to consumers in California, which is a common practice in all other states.
Consumer advocates warned in January that this change would likely lead to immediately higher prices for homeowners, many of whom are already struggling to afford soaring premiums.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
13 minutes ago
- Reuters
Currencies steady as investors ponder Fed independence, await Powell speech
SINGAPORE, Aug 21 (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar drifted on Thursday as investors fretted about the Federal Reserve's independence after yet another attack from President Donald Trump ahead of remarks from Chair Jerome Powell later this week that could influence the outlook for rates. Trump called on Fed Governor Lisa Cook to resign on the basis of allegations made by one of his political allies about mortgages she holds in Michigan and Georgia, intensifying his effort to gain influence over the U.S. central bank. Cook said she had "no intention of being bullied to step down" from her position at the central bank. Trump has also told aides he is considering trying to fire Cook, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday. "It has the potential to raise questions around the Fed's oversight and regulatory functions but it has little to no near-term monetary policy implications," said Prashant Newnaha, senior Asia-Pacific rates strategist at TD Securities. That explained the relatively subdued reaction in the currency markets to the news as the dollar initially dipped but was mostly calm in listless trading in Asian hours. The Japanese yen held onto gains made in previous sessions and was little changed at 147.36 per dollar, while the euro was steady at $1.1646. The dollar index , which measures the U.S. currency against six other peers, was steady at 98.301, on course for a 0.4% rise this week. Sterling last fetched $1.3454, hovering near a one-week low. Data on Wednesday showed inflation hit its highest in 18 months in July, with markets not fully pricing the next rate cut until well into next year. Trump has repeatedly criticised Powell for being too slow to cut rates, stoking investor worries about the central bank's independence and its credibility. Investors expect Trump will replace Powell with a more dovish appointment when his term ends in May. Trump earlier this month said he would nominate Council of Economic Advisers Chairman Stephen Miran to serve out the final few months of a vacant Fed seat after Adriana Kugler unexpectedly resigned. Kristina Clifton, a senior economist at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Sydney, said if Cook resigns it would create another opening for Trump to appoint a Fed Governor who will vote to lower interest rates. "Perceived political interference in the Federal Reserve can undermine its independence, steepening the yield curve and denting the dollar's safe haven status." The main focus this week has been on whether Powell will push back against market expectations for a rate cut at the Fed's September 16-17 meeting when he speaks on Friday at the Jackson Hole meeting, following a weak jobs report for July. "Markets are adamant that recent labour market data necessitates some policy calibration and are expecting Chair Powell to tip his hat in that direction," TD's Newnaha said. The benchmark U.S. 10-year yield was steady 4.291% , while the two-year yield, which is more sensitive to the monetary policy, was at 3.749% . The gap between 2- and 10-year yields was at 54 bps . However, the curve's steepening trend remained intact as the market expects the Fed to resume its rate-cutting cycle as soon as the September meeting. Traders are pricing in an 82% chance of a 25-basis-point rate cut next month, CME FedWatch tool showed. While the odds have lowered from last week after hotter than expected producer price inflation tempered expectations, investors are still pricing in over 50 bps of easing this year. Some analysts cautioned that markets could end up being disappointed by Powell's speech, noting that the impact of Trump's tariffs on inflation remains unclear. In other currencies, the New Zealand dollar was nursing steep overnight losses at $0.58205 after diving 1.2% to its lowest level since April. New Zealand's central bank cut interest rates on Wednesday as expected but left the door wide open to yet more easing if needed. The Australian dollar eased 0.13% to $0.64245, hovering near a two-week low.


The Guardian
35 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Trump has bought more than $100m in bonds while president, disclosure shows
Donald Trump has bought more than $100m in company, state and municipal bonds since taking office in January, according to new disclosures which shed further light on the vast holdings of the US's billionaire president. The forms, posted online on Tuesday, show the Republican former real estate mogul made more than 600 financial purchases since 21 January, the day after he was inaugurated for his second term in the White House. The 12 August filing from the US Office of Government Ethics does not list exact amounts for each purchase, only giving a broad range. They include corporate bonds from Citigroup, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo, as well as Meta, Qualcomm, the Home Depot, T-Mobile USA and UnitedHealth Group. Other debt purchases include various bonds issued by cities, states, counties and school districts as well as gas districts, and other issuers. The holdings cover sectors that could benefit from US policy shifts under his administration, such as financial deregulation. A senior White House official said Trump continued to file mandatory disclosures about his investment portfolio but that neither he nor his family had a role in managing or selecting the bonds, which are managed by a third-party financial institution. Federal ethics officials certified the reports, which are in compliance with applicable laws, according to the official, who declined to be named. Trump, a businessperson turned politician, has said he has put his companies into a trust managed by his children. 'President Trump's net worth has increased substantially, with much of that concentrated in crypto holdings and Trump Media. Given that, there is no evidence currently that his bond purchases are anything other than a prudent diversification within his billions of dollars in assets,' said John Canavan, lead US analyst at Oxford Economics. 'It seems like he was primarily purchasing corporate and municipal bonds and others that are high quality and highly rated, so it's just a way to take a little bit of risk off the table,' he said. Trump's annual disclosure form filed in June showed his income from various sources still ultimately accrues to the president – something that has opened him up to accusations of conflicts of interest. In that disclosure, which appeared to cover the 2024 calendar year, Trump reported more than $600m in income from cryptocurrencies, golf properties, licensing and other ventures. It also showed his push into crypto had added substantially to his wealth. Overall, Trump reported assets worth at least $1.6bn, according to a Reuters calculation at the time.


Reuters
44 minutes ago
- Reuters
EUROPE Jackson Hole to open under Trump's shadow
A look at the day ahead in European and global markets from Kevin Buckland The Federal Reserve has the full attention of global markets, not least because the U.S. central bank's highly anticipated Jackson Hole symposium kicks off later today. Central bankers from around the world will attend, and investors are likely to hang on every word they utter. But chief among them all is Jerome Powell's speech on Friday - his last one at the annual gathering as Fed chairman. Like his predecessors, he's likely to use the opportunity to guide how his tenure is recorded in the history books, particularly considering how harshly he's been attacked by President Donald Trump for refraining from rate cuts this year. What investors are waiting to hear though are any hints for a September cut, and they ramped up bets for easing on the back of a surprisingly soft payrolls report earlier this month. The inflation picture remains hard to read though, with recent consumer price data showing little impact from Trump's aggressive tariffs, but hotter-than-expected producer prices suggesting higher costs could seep into sticker prices in coming months. Market-implied odds of a quarter-point cut on September 17 currently stand at 80%, down from 84% a day ago. That's after Fed minutes from last month's gathering suggested Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman and Governor Christopher Waller were the only ones pushing for a rate cut at the meeting. The other reason the Fed is so much in focus is Trump's growing influence over the direction of monetary policy. The U.S. President's latest target is Fed Governor Lisa Cook, demanding her resignation over allegations made by one of his political allies about mortgages she holds in Michigan and Georgia. If Trump were to oust Cook, that would add to his picks on the Fed's board, with Council of Economic Advisers Chair Stephen Miran set to replace Adriana Kugler following her surprise resignation. Bowman and Waller, of course, are both Trump appointees. And Trump could end up with four of the board's seven members supporting his demands for lower rates. Earlier this year, Trump's threats to fire Powell before his term as governor ends in May of next year unsettled investors, driving big declines in the dollar. The U.S. currency has taken the latest developments in stride, though. And Asian stocks were broadly mixed, generally adjusting to recent sharp rallies or selloffs. Japan's Nikkei (.N225), opens new tab, for example, continued to retreat from a record peak reached earlier in the week, while South Korea's KOSPI (.KS11), opens new tab bounced back strongly from its tumble to a six-week low a day earlier. Wall Street's tech selloff was largely shaken off, with for example Japan's heavyweight chip-testing equipment maker Advantest (6857.T), opens new tab by far the biggest gainer by index points on the Nikkei. Of course, other than sky-high valuations, Trump is being touted as a reason for the rout, with this administration looking into taking equity stakes in chip firms such as Intel (INTC.O), opens new tab, weeks after unprecedented revenue-sharing deals with Nvidia (NVDA.O), opens new tab and AMD (AMD.O), opens new tab. Retailers will get some attention as well today, with Walmart (WMT.N), opens new tab releasing earnings and providing a barometer on the health of the U.S. consumer. Target (TGT.N), opens new tab tumbled on Wednesday after the company named insider Michael Fiddelke as CEO and retained annual forecasts that were lowered in May. Key developments that could influence markets on Thursday: - Jackson Hole symposium opens - U.S. weekly jobless claims, existing home sales for July, Philadelphia Fed's business index - Walmart results - Flash PMIs for euro zone, France, Germany, Britain