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           ACongressional
           SaResearch Service






The National Flood Insurance Program

(NFIP), Reinsurance, and Catastrophe Bonds



Updated January 8, 2019

Insurance generally serves to transfer risk from one entity who does not want to bear that risk to another
entity that does. An initial insurance purchase, such as homeowners buying a policy to cover damage to
their home, however, is often only the first transfer of that risk. The initial (or primary) insurer may then
transfer (or cede) some or all of this risk to another company or investor, such as a reinsurer. Reinsurers
may also further transfer (or retrocede) risks to other reinsurers. Such risk transfers are, on the whole, a
net cost for primary insurers, just as purchasing insurance is a net cost for homeowners.
The Homeowner  Flood Insurance Affordability Act of 2014 (P.L. 113-89) revised the authority of the
National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) to secure reinsurance from private reinsurance and capital
markets. Risk transfer to the private market could reduce the likelihood of the Federal Emergency
Management  Agency (FEMA)  borrowing from the Treasury to pay claims. In addition, it could allow the
NFIP to recognize some of its flood risk up front through premiums it pays for risk transfers rather than
after-the-fact borrowing, and could help the NFIP to reduce the volatility of its losses over time. However,
because reinsurers charge premiums to compensate for the assumed risk as well as the reinsurers' costs
and profit margins, the primary benefit of reinsurance is to manage risk, not to reduce the NFIP's long-
term fiscal exposure.


Reinsurance

The most common  form of risk transfer is a primary insurer purchasing coverage for its risks from
another (re)insurer. The primary insurer typically continues to service the initial policy, while the
reinsurer operates in the background. Reinsurance is particularly important to smaller insurers who may
not be large enough to spread local risks that are spatially correlated, such as a storm hitting a particular
area, across a broader geographic area. Reinsurers, however, often have the size to diversify risks on a
global scale.

NFIP   Reinsurance Purchases

The NFIP's first large reinsurance purchase was in January 2017, when FEMA purchased $1.042 billion
of reinsurance for an annual premium of $150 million. The reinsurance covered 26% of losses between $4
                                                                Congressional Research Service
                                                                https://crsreports.congress.gov
                                                                                     IN10965

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