Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ======Property and Casualty (P&C) Insurance====== Property and Casualty (P&C) `[[Insurance]]` is a cornerstone of the modern economy, protecting individuals and businesses from financial loss. Think of it as a safety net for your //stuff// and your //actions//. Unlike `[[Life Insurance]]` or `[[Health Insurance]]`, which cover people's lives and well-being, P&C insurance covers your property (like your house or car) and your legal `[[Liability]]` (if you are found responsible for an accident that harms others or their property). The company you pay for car insurance, your homeowner's policy, and even the malpractice insurance your doctor carries are all part of the P&C world. These companies collect payments, known as `[[Premiums]]`, from a vast number of people to create a large pool of money. This pool is then used to pay for the unfortunate, and often unpredictable, losses suffered by a few. For an investor, understanding how this simple-sounding business actually operates is the first step toward uncovering some of the most durable and profitable companies in the world. ===== How P&C Insurance Companies Make Money ===== At first glance, the insurance business seems simple: collect more in premiums than you pay out in claims. But the real magic, and the reason legendary investors like `[[Warren Buffett]]` adore this sector, lies in //how// they do it. A P&C insurer has two engines for generating profit. ==== The Two Sides of the P&C Coin ==== * **Underwriting Profit:** This is the profit made directly from the business of insuring things. `[[Underwriting]]` is the meticulous process of evaluating risks, deciding whether to insure them, and setting the right price (the premium). If an insurer is skilled at this, the premiums it collects will exceed the `[[Claims]]` it pays out to policyholders, plus all the costs of running the business (salaries, commissions, office rent). The resulting profit is called an `[[Underwriting Profit]]`. While it sounds straightforward, consistently achieving an underwriting profit is incredibly difficult and is the mark of a truly excellent insurance operation. * **Investment Income (The Magic of the "Float"):** Here’s the secret sauce. Insurers collect premiums upfront but pay claims later—sometimes much later. This creates a massive, temporary pool of cash that doesn't belong to the insurer but which they get to hold and invest for their own benefit. This pool of money is called the `[[Float]]`. Buffett describes it as "money we hold but don't own." Investing this float wisely can generate significant `[[Investment Income]]`. The best P&C companies can essentially get paid to hold other people's money, using it to generate returns. If they can also achieve an underwriting profit, they are being paid twice! ===== Key Metrics for Analyzing P&C Insurers ===== To separate the masters of risk from the disaster-prone, investors need to look beyond simple earnings and focus on a few key industry-specific metrics. ==== Measuring Underwriting Skill ==== The single most important metric for evaluating an insurer's core operational skill is the `[[Combined Ratio]]`. It tells you whether the company is making or losing money on its insurance policies, before any investment income. The formula is: Combined Ratio = `[[Loss Ratio]]` + `[[Expense Ratio]]` * **Loss Ratio:** This measures how much the insurer pays out in claims relative to the premiums it earns. A lower number is better. //Loss Ratio = Incurred Losses / `[[Earned Premium]]`// * **Expense Ratio:** This measures the company's operating efficiency—how much it costs to acquire and manage the policies relative to the premiums it writes. //Expense Ratio = Underwriting Expenses / `[[Written Premium]]`// A combined ratio //below 100%// means the company has an underwriting profit. A ratio //above 100%// means it has an `[[Underwriting Loss]]` and is relying on its investment income to turn an overall profit. A value investor prizes a company that consistently maintains a combined ratio under 100%. ==== The "Tail" of the Business ==== Not all insurance policies are created equal. The time between a policy being written and the final claim being paid is called the "tail." * **`[[Short-tail Insurance]]`:** This includes lines like auto or property insurance. When a car is damaged or a house catches fire, claims are usually filed and paid relatively quickly, often within a year. The float from these policies is less permanent. * **`[[Long-tail Insurance]]`:** This includes lines like medical malpractice or workers' compensation. A claim for an injury caused by `[[Asbestos]]` exposure, for instance, might not be filed until decades after the policy was written. This creates a much larger and more durable float, giving the insurer a stable source of capital to invest for many years. However, it also introduces significant `[[Reserving Risk]]`—the danger of underestimating the ultimate cost of claims that are far off in the future. ===== The Value Investor's Perspective ===== P&C insurance is a `[[Value Investing]]` paradise for several reasons. Companies like `[[Berkshire Hathaway]]` have been built on the back of its powerful economics. The attraction comes down to a few core ideas: - **Access to Cheap Capital:** A well-run insurer with a disciplined underwriting culture can generate float at a "cost" of zero (if the combined ratio is 100%) or even a negative cost (if the combined ratio is below 100%). This provides a huge, sustainable advantage over companies that must borrow money from banks or capital markets. - **Rational Management is Key:** The best P&C managers are disciplined. They are willing to shrink their business and refuse to write unprofitable policies when competitors are slashing prices during "soft markets" of the `[[Insurance Cycle]]`. They prioritize long-term profitability over short-term growth. - **A "Moat" of Expertise:** Great underwriting is a skill that is hard to replicate. It requires deep institutional knowledge, robust data, and a culture of risk aversion. This creates a powerful competitive advantage, or `[[Economic Moat]]`. For the patient investor, a P&C insurer with a history of underwriting discipline and a fortress balance sheet isn't just a boring insurance company—it's a cash-generating machine with a built-in investment fund.