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State Farm: Ain't No Sunshine When You're Gone

By Ed Leefeldt | Feb 9, 2009

Today, the state of Florida receives the records of more than one million State Farm Mutual policy holders it will use to decide if — and how — it wants to hurt the giant insurer for bailing out of its property insurance lines in the Sunshine State.

The battle between the nation’s largest home insurer and Florida’s Republican governor Charlie Crist — who has gone farther than any Democrat in socializing insurance — has national implications and raises an even bigger question: Should government have a bigger say in running financial institutions it bails out?

State Farm says no. Faced with what it claims are huge losses from competing with Florida’s state-run insurance company and a backup fund supported by state bonds, it asked for a 47 percent increase in homeowner rates from the state. When regulators shook their heads, State Farm said it would cancel homeowner policies within two years.

Florida responded with a subpoena for State Farm’s records. Floridians warned State Farm that if it dropped their homeowner policies they’d cancel their auto insurance — a lucrative piece of business that the insurer doesn’t want to lose. Other insurers, albeit high-priced ones, are scrambling to pick up State Farm’s business. The Wall Street Journal editorial page attacked Crist on Feb. 4, and Crist fired back at State Farm in a letter to the WSJ on Feb. 6.

All this may just be gorilla dust, with State Farm browbeating Florida to give the company leverage on rate increases and the state browbeating the company into staying put.

But State Farm isn’t known for backing down. After Hurricane Katrina it took on politically-connected Mississippi lawyer Richard Scruggs in an all-out bloodbath that saw the company slammed on national television. The outcome is that Scruggs is going to jail while State Farm is still around.

A final thought: if another $43 billion hurricane like 2005’s Katrina hits Florida and overwhelms Crist’s state-run system, what’s next? Insurers like Allstate are advocating a National Catastrophe Fund propped up by all property insurers. But that could lead to higher home insurance prices all across the country.

Ed Leefeldt is an award-winning investigative and business journalist who has worked for Reuters, Bloomberg and Dow Jones, and is the author of The Woman Who Rode the Wind, a novel about early flight.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • State Farm wants out of Florida

    Bizjournals - 300 days 14 hours 14 minutes ago

    State Farm Florida Insurance Co. wants to stop writing property insurance in the Sunshine State. It's a decision that doesn't come as much of a surprise to Florida regulators, who said Tuesday they have been hearing about the company's plan for several months. Florida's largest private property insurer blames its decision on its inability to...

  • State Farm Is Warming Up to Florida

    BNET Finance - 2 days 8 hours 57 minutes ago

    After a two-year battle in which the nation’s largest home insurer packed its bags and almost left the Sunshine State, State Farm seems to be

  • State Farm plans to drop property coverage in Florida

    Bizjournals - 300 days 14 hours 36 minutes ago

    State Farm Florida Insurance Co. has told the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation that it plans to discontinue property insurance product lines in the state. The plan includes insurance coverage for homeowners, renters, condominium unit owners, personal liability, boats, personal articles and business property, and liability policies, State...

  • Florida Loosens the Noose on Insurers as Credit Tightens

    BNET Finance - 214 days 18 hours 57 minutes ago

    Insurance firms can handle hurricane losses, but a hurricane of a different sort has been brewing in Florida. Insurers such as State Farm, the largest U.S. home insurer, have folded their tents and left, complaining that they can’t compete with the Sunshine State’s own cut-rate insurance program. But there are signs that the tide is turning....

  • Tarheels Dig in Against the Stateâ??s Auto Insurers

    BNET Finance - 130 days 16 hours 17 minutes ago

    Summer hurricanes haven’t rolled in off the Caribbean yet, but the news from some southern states isn’t good for property insurers, especially Progressive Corp. and GEICO, which specialize in auto coverage. Florida continues to duke it out with State Farm, the nation’s largest property insurer, over whether and when it will leave the...

 

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