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Social inflation: Insurers turn adversity into opportunity

As societal shifts lead to increased litigation, higher jury awards and larger settlements, Fidelity Portfolio Manager Fahim Razzaque is paying close attention to which insurance firms are uniquely positioned to not only adapt but thrive in this environment.

“The higher cost of legal verdicts is driven in part by the general public’s desire to help the ‘little guy’ at the expense of big corporations and insurance companies,” according to Razzaque, who manages Fidelity® Select Insurance Portfolio (FSPCX). “Consequently, awards handed out by juries have skyrocketed.”

For example, he explains that only 10 or 20 years ago, someone injured at work who sued their employer might have been awarded $2 million, whereas today that figure could balloon to $200 million or more.

Social inflation – the term coined by the insurance industry to describe the rising cost of insurance claims beyond the prevailing rate of inflation – has become an increasing driver of both property & casualty insurance claim costs, but also profitability, says Razzaque.

As an investor, his approach to navigating social inflation is to own high-quality companies that he believes can benefit from increased pricing, have appropriate reserves for losses and exhibit reasonable valuations.

Razzaque notes that while social inflation has been evident for many years, its impact on insurers has increased significantly over the past several years, making it one the biggest trends he’s following in the insurance industry.

In managing the portfolio more broadly, he relies on bottom-up, fundamental research, supported by Fidelity’s global financials team, to find insurance firms generating high and sustainable returns on equity, given these businesses’ unique underwriting, distribution and scale advantages. He also prefers to own companies with strong organic reinvestment opportunities that can drive faster earnings-per-share growth.

Social inflation has both negative and positive implications for insurance firms, primarily among P&C insurers, Razzaque points out.

He underscores that higher insurance premiums clearly are unwelcome news for policyholders in an environment where inflation is elevated seemingly everywhere you turn.

P&C providers, on the other hand, are essentially intermediaries that pass on the higher cost of paying claims, says Razzaque. Still, when those costs do rise, insurance carriers initially must absorb them, which can be challenging, particularly for those whose pricing didn’t anticipate the uptick.

“This is not necessarily bad news for all insurers, however, because over the long term, many of them are able to raise premium rates to adjust for higher claim costs, effectively ‘socializing’ losses across the population and getting paid a percentage of it,” Razzaque highlights.

Firms such as Hartford Financial Services Group (HIG), Travelers (TRV) and Chubb (CB) – top fund holdings as of July 31 – fall squarely in that category.

“All three are well-managed companies that have managed through the past year without any major negative surprises, so they look well-positioned to capitalize on the impact of social inflation as it reshapes the property & casualty landscape,” Razzaque concludes.

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Fahim Razzaque
Fahim Razzaque
Portfolio Manager

Fahim Razzaque is a research analyst and portfolio manager in the Equity division at Fidelity Investments.

In this role, Mr. Razzaque covers insurance stocks and is the portfolio manager of the Fidelity Select Insurance Portfolio.

Prior to assuming his current position, Mr. Razzaque was a managing director of research and oversaw the Small Cap Analyst Team. He co-managed Fidelity Enduring Opportunities Fund, Fidelity Disruptive Automation Fund, Fidelity Disruptive Communications Fund, Fidelity Disruptive Finance Fund, Fidelity Disruptive Medicine Fund, Fidelity Disruptive Technology Fund, and Fidelity Disruptors Fund.

Before joining Fidelity Investments in August 2008, Mr. Razzaque worked as an equity research intern at Adage Capital Management in 2007, as a senior engineer at Qualcomm from 2004 to 2006, and as an electrical engineer at HP from 2001 to 2004. He has been in the financial industry since 2007.

Mr. Razzaque earned his bachelor of science degree in computer engineering from the University of Michigan, his master of science degree in electrical and computer engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology, and his master of business administration degree in finance from Cornell University. He is also a CFA® charterholder.

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