Home Breadcrumb caret News Breadcrumb caret Industry Where Aviva Canada CEO sees commercial and auto lines heading Pressures on commercial insurance rates will continue for the near future, but there will still be opportunities to write new business, says Jason Storah, CEO of Aviva Canada. As for auto lines, it remains to be seen how driving levels (and claims) respond in light of recent government announcements easing pandemic restrictions. It looks like […] By Jason Contant | March 2, 2022 | Last updated on October 30, 2024 3 min read iStock.com/FangXiaNuo|iStock.com/sendy lu Pressures on commercial insurance rates will continue for the near future, but there will still be opportunities to write new business, says Jason Storah, CEO of Aviva Canada. As for auto lines, it remains to be seen how driving levels (and claims) respond in light of recent government announcements easing pandemic restrictions. It looks like “telematics is going to be part of the fabric of the auto insurance market, even more so in the future,” Storah says in an interview with Canadian Underwriter Wednesday. “I do think that [commercial lines] pressure is going to continue for a while. But even against that backdrop, I think there’s still lots of opportunity in the commercial market for growth. And I mean real growth, like writing new business, [and] holding on to your existing customers rather than just getting more rate for what you do.” For example, infrastructure spending and construction activity “don’t seem to be tempering any time soon,” Storah says. “I think about our surety business and our large commercial business. I think there’s going to be lots of opportunities there going forward as well.” Inflation continues to put pressure on rates, along with supply chain strain, labour shortages, reinsurance rates, and catastrophic weather losses (which were more than $2 billion for the industry for the past two years). Storah shared his thoughts about the commercial hard market, climate risk and the Paris Agreement, and auto rates as the pandemic comes closer to an end. iStock.com/sendy lu Speaking about auto rates, Storah notes that reduced driving levels witnessed during the pandemic in 2020 and 2021 were just a blip. “’Do I know where levels of driving are going to return to in six months time? No.’ I know that in February, driving was the closest it’s been to pre-COVID levels for the last two years. We’re definitely going to see continued rate pressure with increased driving as people are going back to their offices.” Telematics feels like it’s “going to be part of the fabric of the auto insurance market, even more so in the future,” Storah says. He notes telematics gets very detailed and granular data about customers’ driving behaviour, which is changing significantly. Aviva has launched a telematics product as a “soft test with a few brokers in Ontario, and we’ll be launching it nationwide shortly,” he adds. In terms of the Paris Agreement, more needs to be done, since the window for change appears to be closing fast. “Canada is…not punching our weight,” Storah says. “Nobody ever likes to be at the bottom of the class, but we are at the bottom of the class now,” describing Canada’s proximity to meeting the Paris targets as at a “highly insufficient” level. Overall, while there will be lots of opportunity in the market, it’s going to be volatile, Storah says. Storah’s comments follow the release of Aviva plc’s full-year financial results for 2021. The combined operating ratio for Aviva Canada improved four points year-over-year, from 94.7% in 2020 to 90.7% in 2021. Gross written premiums (GWP) for Canada were up 6% last year to approximately 3.45 billion pounds from £3.27 billion in 2020. GWP increased 3% to £2.18 billion in 2021 (2020: £2.12 billion) in the context of rate reductions in Ontario auto. Commercial lines GWP were up 10% to £1.27 billion (2020: £1.15 billion) “mostly due to increase rate in the prevailing hard market, the strategic shift to mid-market, and higher policy retention.” Commercial lines in Canada saw a dramatic improvement of 23.4 percentage points in the commercial lines’ combined ratio, from 110.2% in 2020 to 86.8% last year. This was “due to decreased claims, mostly as a result of COVID-19.” Personal lines’ combined ratio was up 5.4%, from 87.2% in 2020 to 92.6% in 2021, due in part to higher catastrophic weather losses. Feature image by iStock.com/FangXiaNuo Jason Contant Save Stroke 1 Print Group 8 Share LI logo