Hurricane Maria Exposes a Common Problem for Puerto Rico Homeowners: No Insurance
Only about half of houses on the island are covered by policies that protect against wind damage
WSJ,
20
September, 2017
Many
Puerto Rican homeowners don’t have insurance policies to help
with rebuilding in the wake of Hurricane Maria, making the
economically depressed island’s recovery more difficult.
Only
about 50% of houses in the U.S. territory are covered by policies
that protect against wind damage, which is far less than is typical
across the U.S., according to catastrophe-risk-modeling firm AIR
Worldwide.
Maria,
the most powerful storm to hit Puerto Rico in nearly a century, made
landfall on the island early Wednesday after
tearing through Dominica. Puerto Rico is still recovering
from Hurricane Irma,
which knocked out power in many households.
Rebuilding
communities is a lot more difficult without insurance proceeds,
said Amy Bach, executive director of United Policyholders, a national
insurance-focused consumer nonprofit based in California. “In terms
of straight-up cash to pay for the work that has to be done,
insurance funds are the best source for most people after a
disaster,” she said.
In
the mainland U.S., owning a house without insurance to pay for
catastrophic wind damage is fairly uncommon, insurance executives and
agents said, though high deductibles can leave people with large
out-of-pocket expenses. And many U.S. homeowners whose houses are
flooded lack the specialized policies of the National Flood Insurance
Program.
Puerto
Rican homeowners without insurance coverage will have to rely on
their own money, aid from the Federal Emergency Management Agency in
Washington and other public or charitable sources as the island faces
what is widely expected to be billions of dollars of damage. On
Monday, President Donald Trump approved an emergency declaration for
Puerto Rico, opening the door to federal assistance.
The
lower penetration of homeowners insurance reflects that annual income
averages about $20,000 in Puerto Rico, which is about a third of
roughly $59,000 in
the 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia, according to
U.S. Census Bureau data. The U.S. territory skidded
into bankruptcy in
the spring after more than a decade of economic distress.
Banks
require people with mortgages to take out homeowners policies to
protect the bank’s financial interest. Puerto Rico, with a
population of more than 3 million, has just over 500,000 active
mortgages, according to Black
Knight Financial Services , a
mortgage and real-estate technology and data provider.
Many
older homes in the Caribbean have been “passed down through
generations in a family [and are] unlikely to have insurance,” said
Tom Sabbatelli, senior product manager at Risk Management Solutions,
another risk-modeling firm.
A
lot of these smaller homes in some poorer communities “are going to
feature far less take-up of insurance” compared with homes owned by
expatriates or commercial buildings, Mr. Sabbatelli said. Insured
properties in the Caribbean tend to be newer, more expensive and of
better quality than uninsured buildings, he said.
Puerto
Rican homes are often built with reinforced concrete and can
withstand some high-speed winds, experts said. But “with this one,
I’m sure there’s going to be significant damages,” said Brian
O’Larte, associate director at ratings firm A.M. Best, on Tuesday.
Local
insurance firms dominate Puerto Rico’s home-insurance marketplace.
The biggest by premium are Universal Insurance Group of Puerto
Rico, Mapfre SA and
Cooperativa Seguros Group, according to A.M. Best. Puerto Rican
insurers tend to buy a lot of “reinsurance,” which kicks in from
specialty insurers contracted to cover losses above designated
levels.
“There’s
really no recent experience” in Puerto Rico with a hurricane of
this intensity, said Alexis Sanchez, chief operating officer
at Mapfre Puerto Rico.
Based
on forecasts for Maria, Mr. Sanchez said, “it’s going to affect,
probably, an area with the highest concentration of people and
values, which is the northeast part of the island.”
Homeowners
insurance in Puerto Rico typically includes a 2% deductible for
windstorms, Mr. Sanchez said. That means these policies will
cover damages from Maria above 2% of a property’s insured value,
which can be thousands of dollars. Such special deductibles for
hurricane damage have been increasingly common in the U.S. since
a spate of costly hurricanes in
2004 and 2005, including Katrina.
Standard homeowners
insurance policies don’t cover flood damage. Fewer than 1% of
Puerto Rico’s 1.6 million housing units have coverage from the U.S.
National Flood Insurance Program, the dominant seller to homeowners
in the mainland, U.S. government data show. Homeowners in Puerto
Rico also buy private-sector flood insurance and spent more on
private-sector flood insurance in 2016 than on government insurance,
according to A.M. Best.
Insurance
on commercial buildings, including condominium towers dotting the
island, is far more common, AIR Worldwide said. About 90% of
properties are covered.
The
biggest commercial multi-peril property insurers are Mapfre, Triple-S
Propiedad Inc., Cooperativa, Universal and Integrand Assurance Co.,
according to A.M. Best.
Maria
struck as many homeowners already were struggling financially. More
than 10% of the just over 500,000 active mortgages in Puerto Rico are
delinquent, according to Black Knight. Puerto Rico’s
delinquency rate is more than double the U.S. rate of 3.8%. Its rate
for serious delinquency, which is 90 days or longer, is 5.8%,
compared with 1.9% for the U.S.
Because
lenders require mortgaged homes to be protected by insurance, there
should be private-sector insurance payments kicking in for these
houses’ rebuilding and repairs. If homeowners fail to maintain the
coverage, banks typically obtain policies to protect their financial
interest in the property, at the homeowner’s expense.
Insurance
coverage for homeowners is even lower on some other Caribbean
islands, including some that have been damaged by hurricanes this
year, insurance-industry executives and risk-modeling specialists
say.
— Coulter
Jones contributed to this article.
Nonetheless, there is no reason to believe any insurance company would honor any claim made. In Florida, you must have hurricane insurance by law. Guess what? Hurricane insurance does not cover damage caused by high winds and flooding. It is essentially a money grab, with no benefits.
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