Fitch may downgrade half of insurers
NEW YORK (Bloomberg) — More than half of insurers worldwide may be downgraded by Fitch Ratings this year on declines in the value of their investments backing policies.
"Many insurers are feeling significant pressures from the financial crisis," the ratings firm said yesterday in a statement. The industry has "diminished financial flexibility as capital markets remain closed to a number of companies".
Insurance companies have reported profit declines and quarterly losses as the global economic slump pushes down the value of equities, corporate debt and mortgage-related investments. In the US, life insurers including Hartford Financial Services Group Inc. and Genworth Financial Inc. have applied for capital injections from Treasury as private investors shun industry stocks.
"Fitch expects the extent of downgrades to be greater among life insurers" than property-casualty companies, the rating firm said. "If provided, government funded capital or other forms of financial support could potentially temper downward ratings actions."
Insurers worldwide have posted more than $160 billion of losses and write-downs tied to the collapse of the US mortgage market in the past two years. New York-based American International Group Inc., the insurer rescued by the US Government last year, tops the list with about $61 billion.
Hartford and Richmond, Virginia-based Genworth were downgraded by Moody's Investors Service and Standard & Poor's in the last four months. MetLife Inc., the biggest US life insurer, had its outlook changed to "negative" by Moody's on Monday.