- 2,377
There is a rather interesting article and insurance source used from an Insuerer in this past weeks Economist magazine. You need a login to access the entire article, but the opening paragraph speaks to the insurance componenet.
How America Inc is coping with rising inflation
Companies face a long-forgotten problem
"Property insurers price policies today but face payouts a year from now. That makes their profits hostage to inflation. As swathes of America's economy have begun rapidly reopening for business in recent weeks, thanks to falling rates of covid-19 infections and rising ones of vaccination, William Berkley has been paying close attention to prices of building materials and anything found inside homes, from lamps to laptops. The replacement value of a home in America may have leapt by 20%, year on year, Mr Berkley thinks. Since the founder of wr Berkley launched his insurance firm over half a century ago, he has never witnessed a time like the past year—not even in the inflationary 1970s.
Economists debate whether the rapid climb in consumer prices, which rose at an annual rate of 5% in May, the fastest since August 2008, will prove as enduring as 50 years ago. Input prices for producers shot up by 6.2% in April, year on year (see chart 1). On June 9th Chinese beancounters reported that producer prices in the world's manufacturing powerhouse rose by 9% in May, year on year, the biggest jump in 13 years...."
How America Inc is coping with rising inflation
Companies face a long-forgotten problem
"Property insurers price policies today but face payouts a year from now. That makes their profits hostage to inflation. As swathes of America's economy have begun rapidly reopening for business in recent weeks, thanks to falling rates of covid-19 infections and rising ones of vaccination, William Berkley has been paying close attention to prices of building materials and anything found inside homes, from lamps to laptops. The replacement value of a home in America may have leapt by 20%, year on year, Mr Berkley thinks. Since the founder of wr Berkley launched his insurance firm over half a century ago, he has never witnessed a time like the past year—not even in the inflationary 1970s.
Economists debate whether the rapid climb in consumer prices, which rose at an annual rate of 5% in May, the fastest since August 2008, will prove as enduring as 50 years ago. Input prices for producers shot up by 6.2% in April, year on year (see chart 1). On June 9th Chinese beancounters reported that producer prices in the world's manufacturing powerhouse rose by 9% in May, year on year, the biggest jump in 13 years...."