FOCUS-South African catastrophes, power woes signal end of cheap insurance

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South Africa long considered a low-risk market

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Pandemic, riots, floods have battered country in recent years

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Prospect of a power grid failure is adding to risk

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Reinsurers, insurance companies raising rates, curtailing cover

By Tannur Anders and Promit Mukherjee

JOHANNESBURG, March 30 (Reuters) - Three major jolts in as many years coupled with the once unthinkable possibility of a power grid collapse have spooked reinsurers in South Africa, spelling an end to cheap coverage in the continent's most developed insurance market.

Insurance premiums are climbing worldwide on the back of rising inflation and interest rate hikes. But reinsurance rates in South Africa are outstripping the global trend - in some cases tripling - as insurers grapple with an unprecedented claims load, six industry executives told Reuters.

That's largely down to heavy payouts for business interruption claims in the first year of the pandemic, damage and looting during 2021 riots and heavy flooding last year.

"From a reinsurance perspective, we've had the three biggest catastrophe events that this market has ever had in terms of insured losses," said Andy Tennick, managing director of Africa Reinsurance Corporation's South African subsidiary.

Reinsurance firms cover insurance companies against major catastrophic events that would otherwise overwhelm them, allowing them to manage risk and reduce the capital they must hold for payouts. As reinsurance rates go up, insurance firms tend to pass hikes onto their customers.

That's now helping add higher insurance premiums to the growing list of woes South Africans are already struggling with and could leave many exposed to heavy losses in the event of a power grid failure as reinsurers curtail coverage.

South Africa's relatively wealthy, developed economy and nearly three decades of political stability helped drive industry growth and draw in reinsurers.

The country's seeming insulation from natural disasters like tropical storms and earthquakes, meanwhile, made its risk profile more attractive than Australia, Japan and parts of North America and Europe.

At the onset of the pandemic, South Africa accounted for over 70% of Africa's $68 billion in gross written insurance premiums, according to a 2020 study by business consultancy McKinsey & Company.

It ranked fifth in the world in terms of total premiums as a percentage of gross domestic product.

Then came COVID-19 and a tidal wave of business interruption claims as government restrictions forced many companies to temporarily close shop.