2024 Global Insurance Outlook Report
2024 Global Insurance Outlook Report
2024 Global Insurance Outlook Report
Insurance Outlook
Strengthening trust to unlock
innovation and growth
A message from the EY Insurance
leadership team
The 2024 edition of the annual EY Global
Insurance Outlook explores the unique
and evolving industry landscape to inform
Isabelle Santenac
the perspectives of senior leaders. EY Global Insurance Leader
The market continues to be shaped by multiple disruptive forces — from technology
advancement and new competition, to increased regulatory scrutiny and evolving
customer behaviors, to diversifying risk exposures. The pace of change is not likely to
abate any time soon.
Within the turbulence, however, there are clear indicators of future growth, including
strong demand signals, new business models and expanding data access that promises
to transform risk assessment and pricing. Firms that take bold and creative action will
be able to harness the power of these trends and convert it to value for customers,
society as a whole and their own bottom lines.
Ed Majkowski
Restoring trust holds the key to long-term success. Trust isn’t an end goal in itself, but
EY Americas Insurance Sector
and Consulting Leader
rather a means to strengthen customer relationships, collaborate productively with
regulators, business partners and other stakeholders, and reframe the industry’s core
value proposition.
This year’s report focuses on the rise of artificial intelligence (AI), opportunities to
create societal value and the need for innovation as changing customer needs and
behaviors spark competition across traditional industry lines. Pursuing differentiated,
purposeful strategies in each of these areas will help insurers achieve sustainable
performance gains and reduce the huge protection and savings gaps.
We welcome the opportunity to discuss your perspective on these issues and their
impacts on your company.
Philip Vermeulen
EY EMEIA Insurance Leader
Identifying the full range of risks — from data breaches to reputational issues — and designing the right
framework for managing them are the first priorities. Firms that move quickly (in exploring use cases) yet
methodically (in standing up governance) will be best positioned to win in the GenAI era. See page 7
But the moment calls for more than compliance-driven thinking and expanded philanthropic endeavors.
Rather, product innovation, new business models and purposeful investments can help insurers unlock
growth even as they strengthen protections against climate risk, promote financial well-being and encourage
physical and mental health. All of these steps would deliver what customers want and important benefits to
communities around the world. See page 15
More precise customer knowledge is the foundation for more personalized service and richer experiences
delivered via preferred channels. To stave off new forms of competition, personal insurers can engage younger
generations just beginning to exert their market influence, and commercial carriers can seek optimal ways to
integrate traditional coverage within risk mitigation strategies. See page 22
The impacts and opportunities of Limited GDP growth: The global average GDP is expected
macroeconomic uncertainty to grow at a rate of ~2.4% during FY23-FY25, with India and
China projected to outpace other major economies. Various
Multiple macroeconomic and geopolitical trends — inflation, rating agencies and economists recently downgraded China’s
interest rates, regulatory factors, supply chain disruptions, skills GDP outlook.
gaps in key areas, trade tensions and war in Europe and the Middle
East — continue to create widespread uncertainty for the industry.
As a result, individual insurers must prepare for a broad range of
outcomes and developments in all markets where they operate. Global GDP, global inflation and 10–year
Expecting the unexpected is in order. US government bonds
At the time of publication, many of the macroeconomic issues
we highlighted in last year’s Global Insurance Outlook are still
playing out. Interest rates and inflation, which were rising
dramatically at the beginning of last year, appear to have
peaked. Indeed, the worst-case fears for recession have not been
realized and the softer-than-expected financial landing in many
advanced economies has freed some insurers to accelerate their Global GDP, global inflation and 10-year US
transformation journeys and pursue the growth opportunities government bonds
that exist in specific markets and lines of business. Still, much
macroeconomic uncertainty remains, which means business
resilience remains a critical goal. Source: IMF, Oxford Economics, 2023
Mainland
Global US Euro Area UK Japan China India Russia Brazil
2.4% 1.3% 1.1% 0.8% 1.1% 4.5% 6.9% 1.5% 1.8%
Inflation and systemic instability: A monetary policy focused on reducing demand and lowering inflation increases the likelihood of sluggish
growth and higher unemployment rates. Rising costs (including higher capital costs) and falling demand are a dangerous combination,
especially in the context of stagnating premium growth during the last few decades.
9.4%
Hungary 11.75% US 5.18%
7.9%
Columbia 9.75% UK 5.09% 6.9% 7.1%
5.2%
Chile 9.30% Canada 4.63% 4.6% 4.6% 4.7% 4.5% 4.5%
3.6% 3.5%
Brazil 8.52% Euro Area 4.18%
Source: Central bank websites of nations, Oxford Economics Source: NYU Stern database
2023H1 212%
2020Y 194%
2017Y 192%
2016Y 185%
100
1999 2004 2010 2016 2022
52%
Senior leaders across industries — along with pundits, futurists and
philosophers — are thinking deeply about the full range of impacts and
implications of AI, including GenAI. At the same time, the rapid adoption Plan significant investments in AI in the next year
of ChatGPT and other applications has forced businesses to act quickly
in identifying the right use cases for immediate-term performance gains Source: EY CEO Outlook Pulse global survey, July 2023
and charting a course to longer-term transformation.
The most high-impact AI use cases in the insurance market are likely to include:
Actuarial and underwriting: Streamlining the ingestion and Finance, accounting and risk: Preserving organizational
integration of data to free underwriters to focus on high-value knowledge; enabling real-time analysis and summarization
work that leads to stronger risk selection and more profitable of documents; monitoring market and investment trends;
pricing; enhancing product benchmarking. producing more granular insights into financial and
operational performance; creating educational content and
Claims: Automating first-notification-of-loss processes and interactive training for compliance and risk-management
enhancing fraud detection efforts. teams to keep current on the latest regulations.
Information technology: Strengthening cybersecurity by Human resources: Enriching workforce training and
analyzing operations data for attempted fraud, monitoring development curricula and materials; streamlining
for external attacks and documenting such attacks for performance management and generating internal ratings;
regulatory reporting; generating code across languages strengthening knowledge management and policy search.
(e.g., to update COBOL applications) and documenting
infrastructure and software upgrades.
Early adopters are also exploring “human-in-the-loop” Top ways global insurers plan to use AI and data science
applications. For instance, GenAI-based copilots or
co-bots can enhance the productivity and value of
knowledge workers across the business. 1% 43%
Insurers remain somewhat cautious about adopting AI for
Data science and AI will 1% Predict trends and demand to
better meet customer needs
not play a significant role Don’t know
and optimize operations
customer-facing activities. That’s no surprise given the lack
of regulatory clarity. However, the opportunities to use AI 9%
Automating processes
to differentiate the value proposition and enrich customer
to reduce labor costs,
experiences (e.g., virtual “white-glove” service for high- redeploy talent and
improve efficiency
net-worth individuals, high-value commercial customers
and other key segments) can’t be overlooked. In the future,
more ambitious applications will help shrink the protection
9%
Drive product
gap. For instance, data flows from satellites and other
sensors will create detailed models of key infrastructure and
innovation through
new offerings and 37%
personalization Develop self-service tools
digital twins for communities to run ongoing simulations for to improve customer and
stronger and more precise protections. employee experience
Maximizing AI ROI requires a comprehensive understanding of these risks, including those that are unique to individual businesses or
specific parts of the organization. Those risks include:
• Sensitive data: the potential misuse or mishandling of sensitive data, including personally identifiable information (e.g., to fine tune
large language models, or LLMs) can lead to breaches of privacy, a risk intensified by the vast amounts of data AI systems process.
• Transparency issues: the black-box nature of some AI models makes it difficult to explain or understand their decision-making
processes, raising concerns about accountability.
• Biased and false outcomes: AI models, when trained on biased data, can spread or even worsen existing prejudices, leading
to unfair policy terms and pricing or claims denials; hallucinations, where AI applications present false information or fabricate
outputs from LLMs, are another concern.
• Balanced human-AI collaboration: knowing when to apply human judgment versus following AI-generated recommendations
can be challenging.
• Privacy concerns: continuous monitoring (e.g., through telematics and wearable devices) may be seen as invasive by consumers
worried about constant surveillance.
• Reliability and replicability: if not properly maintained or updated as conditions change, AI systems could produce inaccurate
or outdated results that affect policy decisions and claim outcomes. Further, outcomes may begin to vary as inputs and LLMs
change and the use of AI tools within workflows is adjusted.
• Cyber: adversarial prompt engineering, manipulation of inputs and other attacks can lead to unintended fraudulent activities
and the loss of training data or even a trained LLM model. Because LLMs are built on third-party data streams, insurers may be
affected by external data breaches.
Legal liabilities and regulatory exposures are also significant, from potential copyright and IP infringement, to data-use infractions,
to compliance with the General Data Protection Regulation and other rules. Widespread uncertainty about what is allowed and what
companies will be required to report is a major concern. See next page for more on the regulatory outlook for AI. Overall, the lack
of insight into how AI systems use data and make decisions can erode confidence among customers, especially if outputs are not as
expected or override human judgment. To a large degree, future consumer confidence will depend on the ethical deployment of AI and
delivery of unbiased results, a challenge that will be faced by many firms, not just insurers.
Ethical use of AI
will impact future
consumer confidence.
Regulators worldwide are actively working on guidelines and initial Common themes, including transparency and explainability in model
legislation for AI adoption. The widespread availability of GenAI apps design and outputs, have emerged. Many regulators are looking
in 2022 made the task more urgent. Industry groups would like to to existing regulatory regimes, including those designed to be
see the development of cross-jurisdictional standards, but regional technology-agnostic, to frame AI guidelines. The OECD and UNESCO
variations — and a fragmented compliance landscape — seem more have made efforts to coordinate responses from across the industry.
likely in the near term. The US is likely to go slow in adopting The G7 has also called for greater cooperation and consistency,
only limited regulation, while European insurers are preparing for largely through an agreement to promote AI governance that aligns
comprehensive legislation in the form of the EU AI Act. with “shared democratic values” and the creation of the Hiroshima
AI Process, a forum for cooperation.
Europe
• Leading tech companies and venture capitalists have warned that comprehensive regulation could
dampen innovation and hurt competitiveness.
• Ethics guidelines for AI are already in place in the EU, which will apply to future insurance use
cases, including those from the European Commission’s High-Level Expert Group on AI (HLEG)
and from various banking authorities.
• The European Commission’s proposed AI Act divides AI systems into four categories, which
determine whether systems can be used freely, are prohibited or are subject to safety and
transparency requirements.
United Kingdom
• Signed by 28 countries and the European Union at the UK-hosted AI Safety Summit, the
Bletchley Declaration outlined the need for international collaboration to plan for and
manage “frontier” AI risks.
• Proposals introduce a set of non-statutory, risk-based principles to guide policy implementation
for industry-specific regulators.
• A discussion paper in 2022 pointed to several applicable regulations, including the FCA’s Principles for
Business, the Senior Manager and Certification Regime (SMCR) and data protection rules.
• Regulators have suggested how AI-driven pricing could violate the Consumer Duty.
Italy
• Authorities banned ChatGPT immediately over concerns about data privacy, demanding age
verification protocols and explanations of personal data use, which OpenAI provided.
China
• Multiple regulatory agencies have published new requirements since 2017’s Next-Gen AI
Development Plan.
• Draft rules governing GenAI are more restrictive than measures in the US or Europe, and
generally focus on the social impact of AI.
• New legislation requires AI-generated media content (text, video and audio) to be labeled as
synthetic, and that providers ensure training data and content are “true and accurate.”
India
• After an initial “hands-off” position, the IT Ministry announced legislation to protect citizens
from harm.
Australia
• In June 2023, the Australian Government outlined measures for responsible and safe use of
AI, while regulators are drafting AI regulations for the insurance industry.
United States
• Despite high-profile calls for AI regulation (including from high-profile industry leaders), US
lawmakers are moving slowly, and limited Federal guidance is expected.
• The US Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) expects that existing laws will apply to the
use of AI chatbots for customer service.
• A sweeping executive order from the Biden administration set a goal to promote “safe, secure,
and trustworthy development and use of artificial intelligence.”
• Several states are looking to apply guidelines from the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners (NAIC) that emphasize the prevention of biased and unfair decisions.
• The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) can order firms to delete algorithms trained on data
they should not have collected.
Canada
• Authorities have investigated OpenAI’s use of personal information and consent policies
and created a voluntary code of conduct for responsible generative AI systems.
• The proposed AI and Data Act builds on existing legislation mandating algorithmic impact
assessments and includes risk mitigation and management obligations for high-impact
use cases.
Brazil
• Proposed regulation similar to the European Commission’s AI Act outlines requirements based
on perceived risks.
“When combined with granular data, AI has the potential to broaden the market for
existing products and enable new offerings by diminishing the information asymmetry
between insurance buyers and providers,” Schmid asserts. “AI will allow insurers to
assess more accurately where individual customers are located on the risk spectrum
and set premiums accordingly.”
Reducing the risk of adverse selection overcomes a major impediment to expanding the
market for insurance and closing of the coverage gap. By means of more granular pricing,
lower-risk customers may be able to secure coverage at more affordable rates, while
higher-risk policyholders may pay rates commensurate with their risk profiles. This is
unlike a situation of material information asymmetry where insurers are left pricing to the
average risk and only the high-risk customers are willing to purchase coverage. Schmid
identifies this reduction of friction in the insurance market as a primary societal benefit of
the adoption of AI by insurers.
“
In the short term, Gen Re plans to leverage AI to enhance employee productivity,
streamline processes, and reduce operating expenses. However, these advantages are
contingent on having the appropriate technological infrastructure, particularly modernized
cloud-based architecture, which includes data storage and engineering. It is this
architecture that provides the foundation for the effective deployment and orchestration When combined with
of AI services. granular data, AI has
To oversee the implementation of AI, Gen Re has established a Responsible AI (RAI) the potential to broaden
Committee tasked with examining the regulatory, legal and ethical implications, setting AI the market for existing
usage guidelines and supervising education and training. The RAI Committee reports to
the Group Risk Committee.
products and enable new
Managing organizational change poses a significant challenge for technology leaders
offerings by diminishing
striving to implement AI on a large scale. Educating employees about the capabilities the information asymmetry
and limitations of GenAI is essential. “With training and clear communication regarding between insurance buyers
permitted use, making AI tools generally available will instill a sense of competence and
agency among workers, as well as promoting accountability for work products,” said
and providers.
Schmid. “This is how AI can amplify workers’ problem-solving skills, adaptability and Frank Schmid
creativity, as well as their emotional intelligence, good judgment and leadership.” CTO, Gen Re
31%
Privacy
26%
Discrimination, bias and fairness
21%
Transparency and explainability
Those benefits include more accurate pricing, tailored protection, faster claims processing and round-the-clock
customer support (through the use of AI-powered chatbots and virtual assistants). But AI can also open up new
avenues for innovative products and services.
The likelihood of widespread adoption has attracted the attention of government and regulators, which
perceive a need to write new rules for the use of new technologies, as the pending AI Act demonstrates.
“Ideally, new regulations will blend smoothly with existing laws, like the General Data Protection Regulation,
and sector-specific conduct rules,” said Koller. “Balancing the risks and benefits of new technology within a
comprehensive impact assessment, the best regulation promotes effective risk management controls, as well
as product governance and transparency.”
Koller notes that insurers have natural incentives to protect the vast amount of sensitive personal data
customers entrust to them. “Ensuring fairness and protecting the privacy of consumer data are not only legal
and regulatory matters, but also fundamental components of consumer trust,” she added. “By prioritizing
data privacy and fairness, insurers can not only comply with regulatory requirements but also show their
commitment to delivering fair and trustworthy services to all.”
• Shape AI strategies around the highest-priority and lowest- • Promote collaboration between CIOs and CROs in defining
risk use cases, emphasizing human-in-the-loop enterprise-wide risks, creating strong and transparent governance
and copiloting applications models and updating risk-management and control frameworks
• Build business cases that balance middle- and back-office • Closely monitor regulatory developments and determine where
implementations to increase operational efficiency regulators are most likely to apply existing laws and rules
with transformative bets on new business models and
• Engage with industry groups and government authorities to shape
product innovation
potential standards for the industry
• Identify talent and workforce impacts, including both
• Consider risk-based governance models, with flexibility to adjust as
productivity gains and potential reductions in force, and explore
the technology matures
external sourcing and partnership strategies to fill skills gaps
From pandemics and natural disasters to economic inequality As regulators shape the agenda in key areas, they are providing
and demographic shifts, the events of recent years have caused incentives for innovation and collaboration. Insurers that embrace
more people to think about the societal role of business and “impact by design” strategies can increase their societal contributions
the responsibilities that large companies have to citizens and and realize substantial benefits, including stronger customer
communities around the world. The advent of the environmental, acquisition and loyalty, higher employee satisfaction and retention
social and governance (ESG) movement raised the bar on all types and improved access to capital.
of businesses to make purposeful commitments, take meaningful
As highlighted in the rest of this chapter, the highest priorities for
action to execute them and report out their results.
making a positive societal impact include:
The strain on public resources means even more will be asked of
• More understandable, affordable and accessible products
private enterprise in the future. Expanding regulatory requirements
and new disclosure standards blend the E and S aspects of ESG, • Collaborations for increased financial security and wellness for
while placing new emphasis on the G — or firms’ ability to accurately more citizens
track and report on a range of key metrics. • Enhanced protection from climate risk and services to facilitate the
transition to a greener economy
But this isn’t strictly about compliance. Indeed, there is growing
consensus among consumers and investors that insurers can and • Support for gig workers and others in non-traditional employment
must deliver societal value. Insurers are in the spotlight because • Hiring practices that promote a more diverse, equitable and
of their deep risk expertise and unique ability to protect people, inclusive workforce
families and businesses of all shapes and sizes.
• Increased engagement with regulators and more detailed
ESG reporting
1,400
standards will challenge insurers, but also present strategic
opportunities for firms that adopt the right holistic approach.
The most visible initiatives include:
Approximate number of data points required
for compliance with ISSB
• The International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB)
has proposed a single consistent standard for sustainability
disclosures to provide material information for capital markets. >2,600
This baseline would provide a foundation for additional Proposed ESG-related guidelines, frameworks,
jurisdictional requirements. standards and regulations worldwide
• The Task Force for Nature-related Financial Disclosures Source: EY analysis, 2023
(TNFD) recommends that organizations report on their
activities, risks and impacts relative to biodiversity to
“support a shift in global financial flows away from nature-
negative outcomes and toward nature-positive outcomes.” Given the overlap in these directives and their broad impact on the
• The Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD), business, insurers need to approach them holistically. Reporting
in force as of January 2023, requires detailed social and will need to cover products, services, investments, underwriting
environmental reporting in Europe for insurers that meet and claims. Developing the necessary capabilities will be a big
specific financial or workforce criteria. task, but one which can help boost trust through increased
transparency. Firms that embrace distinct change-management
strategies will have the smoothest path to adoption.
These are not the only standards and guidelines that investors,
consumers and other stakeholders will use to assess the sustainability Looking beyond the tactics of compliance, business leaders and
performance of insurers and other businesses. EY researchers boards should explore how they want to position the company
have identified more than 2,500 proposed ESG-related guidelines, relative to societal needs. Setting the right strategy will do more
frameworks, standards and regulations worldwide, though insurers than satisfy regulatory requirements; it can also attract new
will not be subject to all of them. The standards that apply will be customers to the business and thus spark growth. In contrast,
challenging, however, with requirements that insurers capture and a defensive, reactive posture to regulatory activity is unlikely to
validate a huge amount of data. produce value for society or growth for insurers.
>US$2.8t security gaps. Ecosystem partnerships can present traditional insurance policies
alongside annuities, financial planning services and other complementary
offerings. They can help insurers optimize the supply costs for sustainable
Total global insurance protection gap, 2022,
equivalent to at least 3% of global GDP insurance propositions and capture more demand. Group insurers in the US
Pension gap: US$1t are working directly with large employers to develop more holistic solutions
incorporating financial, physical and mental wellness. They are also seeking
Cyber protection gap: US$900b
ways to provide coverage for gig, free-lance and contract workers.
Health protection gap: US$800b
Authorities are seeking to create incentives for innovation. In the UK, regulators
NatCat protection gap: US$100b
have signaled their strong preference for financial services firms to help close
Source: Global Federation of Insurance Associations the pensions gap, encouraging innovation that aligns to firms’ fiduciary duty
and promotes better outcomes for customers. For example, long-term — or
“slow-money” — strategies that direct pension assets into public infrastructure
investments are seen as ways to improve returns for savers and smooth the
transition to a lower-carbon future that benefits all citizens.
“The guaranteed product is the one that consumers want,” Wells pointed
out. “We can deliver on it because we bring very long-term capital to very
long-term promises.” The company executes on its ambitions by investing in
the real economy through direct loans, private equity and infrastructure.
Addressing climate risks with protections and green incentives Public-private partnerships that promote collaboration,
The climate risk protection gap has grown in recent years, as the innovation and long-term solutions can help shrink the NatCat
frequency and severity of floods, freezes, heat waves, droughts, protection gap, too. There are many promising collaborations in
wildfires, winter and tropical storms and other natural catastrophes place worldwide:
(NatCats) have increased. They now occur in more places and on
• The InsuResilience Global Partnership for Climate and Disaster
a larger scale than many in the industry could have predicted. It’s
Risk Finance and Insurance (CDRFI) has brought together more
understandable that insurers would reduce their exposure in some
than 120 governments, civil society organizations, academic
markets, especially when regulators cap premium increases. But
institutions and non-profits, and businesses, including many
the industry’s historical purpose of protecting people, businesses
leading European insurers and reinsurers, to better protect
and communities from serious risks suggests it has a duty to be
vulnerable populations from climate disasters.
part of the solution. Plus, exiting high-risk markets (e.g., Florida,
California) may open the door to new market entrants that are • In the US, the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP),
motivated to take on climate risk and better equipped with new managed by the Federal Emergency Management Agency
technology, data streams and sophisticated predictive models. (FEMA), collaborates with more than 50 insurance companies
and many communities for effective flood mitigation. Coverage
Further, there’s ample growth for companies — and not just
is available via digital portals.
incumbent carriers — that commit to developing a new generation
of climate risk solutions. That upside is now within reach as the • In Asia, MS&AD has developed a dashboard that utilizes real-
data and technology needed to accurately assess and protect time weather data, flood prediction and post-disaster damage
against climate risks are widely available today. Advanced analytics, estimation to support local governments in visualizing and
internet of things (IoT) sensors and other digital technologies mitigating regional disaster risks and losses.
enable insurers to predict, manage and monetize a range of climate
• In Japan, Tokio Marine and Nichido Fire Insurance are leading
risks. Dynamic underwriting and micro-segmentation of risks,
the Disaster Prevention Consortium (CORE) to prevent disasters
real-time pricing, intelligent risk prevention, fully automated claims
and mitigate their impacts in line with the Fundamental Plan for
processing — these capabilities have all matured.
National Resilience. A total of 13 companies are participating.
Several European insurers are using new data streams (e.g.,
satellites, drones, terrestrial sensors) to create new options for
protection against droughts, earthquakes and landslides. Others The transition to a greener economy is another area where the
have adopted advanced AI toolsets to model and predict storm industry can exert leadership. Commercial and P&C insurers can
damage and quickly assess damage after catastrophes occur. directly influence consumer behavior via product features and
Variable pricing models and risk awareness programs based on incentives. As large institutional investors, life insurers can support
transparent information sharing can also create incentives for the development of green infrastructure and promote eco-friendly
clients to reduce their exposures, while digital distribution can investment options for sustainability-minded customers. Some
expand access to coverage. forward-looking life carriers are performing stress and scenario
tests to assess the long-term impacts of extreme heat waves,
flooding and tropical storms on life spans and mortality rates. All of
these steps simultaneously deliver value for individual customers
and society as a whole.
A new generation of
climate risk solutions can
unlock significant growth.
ethnicities, ages, genders and sexual orientations, but also hiring for
neurodiversity. Conditions such as dyslexia and ADHD are increasingly
25%
viewed not so much as disabilities but as alternative mindsets that can
produce unique ideas for and contributions to the business. More engaged
workers can also provide a productivity boost.
Proportion of top 500 US companies
As competition for workers remains intense, insurers must look to engage by revenue that will actively recruit
talent in all its forms. By aiming to become “post-bias” employers and neurodivergent talent by 2027
leveraging unique attributes, insurers will foster competition in the Source: Gartner, 2023
“The nature of the reinsurance business helps drive societal change by offering protection against
risks, providing access to capital, and making insurance more accessible and affordable,” said Ute
Michaelsen, Swiss Re’s Head of P&C Facultative in North America. “Today, younger generations expect
corporations to do their part for society and want to work at firms that embrace a higher purpose.”
Swiss Re believes that transparent reporting and communication on the efforts to deliver societal
value are important for companies to build trust and attract investment. Those activities can
include onboarding diverse business partners, participating in more public-private partnerships and
developing innovative products and solutions.
“Our vision to make the world more resilient and our commitment to ESG goals are ingrained in
everything we do,” said Michaelsen. This commitment is reflected in Swiss Re’s sustainability mission:
“we insure, invest, operate and share our knowledge in a way that tackles sustainability challenges and
creates long-term value.”
An ESG Risk Management Framework enables Swiss Re’s sustainability strategy. The framework is
based on three overarching principles — protecting the environment, respecting human rights and
promoting good corporate governance. It also has seven sector-specific policies where it perceives
major ESG risks. The Framework applies across all areas of the business and is updated regularly. The
company’s reporting tracks other sustainability measures across the organization. Swiss Re is included
in high-profile investment indexes, including the Bloomberg gender equality index, MSCI world industry
leader index, and Dow Jones sustainability index.
Swiss Re launched Public Sector Solutions a decade ago to strengthen its sovereign protections. It
specializes and continues to invest in nontraditional insurance products, including parametric products
and insurance-linked securities. The company is also notable for enabling Nepal’s renewable energy
project financing via parametric insurance, leading the reinsurance of the Mexican government’s
natural disaster fund to protect climate vulnerable farmers, and supporting flood protection for low-
income New York City residents.
• Identify specific market needs and emerging risks where societal • Devise hybrid products that balance unique customer objectives
needs intersect with the goals of the business (e.g., financial protection, long-term income generation, life coverage)
with wellness features
• Explore “impact-by-design” strategies where business objectives
align with positive social outcomes • Orient branding, marketing and communication programs around an
organizational purpose linked to human and societal needs
• Target underserved customer segments open to new offerings
(e.g., climate risk prevention services for small businesses) • Identify metrics to measure the business value of societal impact
strategies (e.g., employee satisfaction, customer loyalty, brand equity)
• Codify why and how products deliver value and find ways to point
customers to those with the most appropriate features and costs • Engage regulators to promote greater risk awareness and specific
• Emphasize prevention services to be seen as a proactive partner outcomes (e.g., retirement readiness)
rather than simply a payer when damage occurs
As with the adoption of AI and societal impact strategies, trust This is what digital leaders in retail, ecommerce and technology
and confidence play a key role. Given the way products and have taught customers to expect. And if insurers don’t deliver
services are evolving and the high stakes around protection and what they want — precisely when, where and how they want it —
savings, consumers are going to turn to providers they trust. customers will take their business elsewhere, including to more
And they will trust those firms that provide the right advice, have trusted brands now entering the insurance market.
the right solutions and do the right thing.
This shifting balance of power helps explain why embedded
The pursuit of more value is the common motivation for changing insurance and ecosystem plays are gaining traction, and why
customer behavior across lines of business. That typically means captive insurers continue to grow at impressive rates. Designed to
tailored products that are easy to purchase and affordable, have satisfy individual customer needs at scale, these business models
modular features and can be enhanced with complementary point the way forward to the future.
services and personalized recommendations.
71%
protections into their daily lives. The next generation of
embedded goes far beyond the simple mobile phone coverage,
travel insurance and product warranties of the past. Global 52% 87% 54%
North America EMEIA APAC
Trust and brand awareness play crucial roles in ecosystems
because roughly 75% of the profit is typically made by the
orchestrator. Insurers entering ecosystems led by others must
Ecosystems provide higher growth
take a balanced view of benefits and risks. Access to new
opportunities over traditional
customers is important, but adverse selection is a concern; when
63%
business approaches
partnering with major brands, insurers may face pressure to
accept all business, which could compromise their control of risks Global 63% 64% 60%
flowing into their portfolios. North America EMEIA APAC
Because annuities and other insurance products are often perceived as complex, Global Atlantic aims to communicate clearly what its
products offer and how to purchase them. “We design a client experience that provides transparency and effective education in a user-
friendly way,” said Emily LeMay, GAFG’s chief operations officer.
Insight generation and data sharing are at the core of the company’s customer-centric transformation. Rigorous quantitative analysis
on widely sourced data helps GAFG understand what customers and financial professionals are looking for. Business leaders also rely on
qualitative feedback, including inputs from a board of advisors and intelligence from sales teams that interact directly with clients and
advisors. “We set our agenda based on what consumer and financial professional behavior tells us,” said LeMay. “Customer input is the
primary driver for solution design.”
GAFG’s goal is to cultivate strong relationships with top distribution partners via ongoing dialogue about their clients’ needs and their own
growth strategies. Collectively, the company undertakes these actions to help it compete with emerging and non-traditional players.
The company is investing in legacy system modernization and new technology deployments with the goal of increasing operational agility,
another critical competitive consideration. “Because of evolving market dynamics, there’s always a risk of falling behind,” LeMay added.
“We have to operate flexibly and attentively to meet the changing dynamics for success.”
“Our global solutions help companies make affinity insurance a strategic and core business vertical, opening new revenue streams
and strengthening customer loyalty,” said Pierfrancesco Ricca, global affinity leader, wefox Group. “We think native technology and
seamless digital journeys will enable success in embedded insurance.”
wefox provides its affinity partners – including some of the most recognizable brands in the industry – exactly the services they need
to develop their own unique insurance offerings. Regardless of the complexity of their business, product solutions and distribution
networks, partners can launch a technically unlimited portfolio of insurance products across channels and markets.
The focus is always on simplicity and scalability. A seamless experience for insurance business management provides an advantage to
affinity partners’ sales teams. Further, wefox is product-agnostic and able to work locally and internationally with any insurer or reinsurer.
The company’s modular technology platform is designed for flexibility and easy integration. Partners can activate the specific insurance
services and processes they need, from product design, to sales training and distribution, to claims and policy administration. Affinity
partners retain complete control and, through detailed analytics, can track the performance of their embedded programs. Robust
reporting tools help streamline compliance processes.
With a vision to make digital insurance easier for everyone, wefox has attracted two million customers to date, with partners in
bancassurance, automotive, energy and utilities. They plan to expand into additional sectors in the future.
Rising competitive stakes in every line of business solutions that more consumers are looking for. Carriers are
Ecosystems and embedded plays are prompting competition from certainly capable of creating such offerings and crafting intuitive
non-traditional players, which is forcing insurers to act. Carriers purchase and consumption experiences, but they must keep in
that move too slowly risk losing more business to these insurgents. mind that informed and empowered customers are more focused
Those that invest in product innovation and new partnerships can on what they want than on whom they buy it from.
still seize the moment to spark growth.
Embedded and ecosystem plays are making headway in
The threats and opportunities are present in every line of reinsurance and large commercial lines, too:
business. Automotive and commercial property insurance are
• Pharmaceuticals use embedded insurance to protect their
likely to see the most dramatic disruption in the near term.
partners in developing and trialing new medications
First-movers in these sectors are aggressively executing
bold strategies in pursuit of stronger and deeper customer • Cloud computing platforms offer cyber coverage and other
relationships. They have made large investments to build out the protections as automatic features in standard contracts
technology, operational capacity and specialty expertise they
• Large brokerages are launching ecosystems for a range of
need to build significant insurance businesses.
advisory services (e.g., provision of risk engineering, coverage
Life insurance, annuities and income replacement products may benchmarking, legal services, data and analytics services)
be embedded in employee benefit plans and mortgage offerings.
Again, all of these efforts are in direct response to shifts in
Ecosystems are particularly well suited for the holistic well-being
market demand.
85%
Are more satisfied with dealerships that provide multiple
what customers want. Product development processes should
be overhauled based on modern platforms that provide pre-built
components and advanced APIs to integrate with partners. By
insurance quotes and immediate purchase options
increasing their use of IoT sensors within embedded offerings,
72%
insurers will equip themselves to manage their loss curves down
to a significant degree. Culturally, leaders must emphasize
Prefer to have insurance presented at the time the need to collaborate freely and iteratively. Design thinking,
of purchase rapid prototyping and Agile ways of working will be hallmarks of
embedded and ecosystem leaders.
Source: 2023 Polly Car and Insurance Buying report
>80%
and sustained, the change won’t happen overnight. After all, few,
if any, non-insurance brands have a great deal of experience in
Cite instant payouts as the number one reason for distribution. None of them yet know how to underwrite. Regulatory
purchasing embedded insurance barriers also remain significant, particularly in Europe and the US.
63%
But insurers should be careful to avoid underestimating the threat
posed by leading brands — especially automotive manufacturers
Would opt for embedded insurance if available at and tech companies — with their ample capital, large and loyal
point-of-sale customer bases and strong track records of innovation. These
attributes will make them formidable competitors.
Source: Companjon Embedded Insurance Study, 2022
To take full advantage of the growth potential, insurers will need
to define strategies that recognize embedded insurance and
ecosystems are more than distribution channels. Finding the right
partners is critical because trust and brand awareness will be key
success factors in the embedded era.
25 | 2024 Global Insurance Outlook
Chapter 3
Captives have grown because companies weren’t finding what they wanted
on the open market. They came to believe they could devise more effective
risk solutions in more direct alignment with their needs than could traditional
carriers. Their outperformance on key metrics confirms they were right.
Superior combined ratios have not only led to remarkable growth in captives’
retained earnings and surplus, but also translated into billions of dollars in
savings for captive owners. As a result, more companies are more comfortable
putting more risk on their balance sheets and keeping it there.
Super captives are now capable of assuming huge amounts of risk, for
example by covering their own supplier networks. They’ve matured their use of
reinsurance to reduce portfolio risks and volatility. And they’re well positioned
to build out ecosystem platforms and unique forms of embedded insurance.
90%
Proportion of 500 largest US companies by revenue
owning captive insurers
US$176b
58% Global premiums written through captives, 2022
13 98%
New captives established in France since 2020 Commercial casualty carriers
50 83.9%
French firms planning to establish captives Captives
• Find ways to balance the twin imperatives of cost efficiency and • Evaluate carefully (but quickly) options for embedded
rich customer experiences insurance — operating independently to leverage brand
equity or partnering with others
• Communicate clearly that the use of customer data is intended to
enhance products and services • Explore more flexible product design, with modular, add-on
features that allow customers to add or remove components
• Look for ways to help financially stressed consumers with tight
as their needs evolve
budgets, including flexible payment options, level or graduated
premiums or premium holidays • Identify potential captive partners and the specific consulting
and advisory services that would benefit their businesses
Key Contributors
Kabari Bhattacharya Patricia Davies James Maher
EMEIA Insurance Sustainable EY Global Insurance EY EMEIA Sustainable
Finance Leader Knowledge Leader Insurance Leader
A special thank you to the following EY executives for their valuable insights:
Alok Bhargava Nikhil Jain Chris Payne Martin Spit
Simon Burtwell Merideth Jones Preetham Peddanagari Julianne Vellante
Sylvain Canu Steven Kauderer Sarah Ponto Bernhard Klein Wassink
Thom Cranley Peter Manchester Saby Roy
Ankit Gupta Nicole Michaels Hanif Sidi
This material has been prepared for general informational purposes only and is not intended
to be relied upon as accounting, tax, legal or other professional advice. Please refer to your
advisors for specific advice.
The views of third parties set out in this publication are not necessarily the views of the
global EY organization or its member firms. Moreover, they should be seen in the context
of the time they were made.
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