Term cover costs set to go up as reinsurers hike life rates
According to insurance distributors, some companies have indicated that rates will go up from April 2021, when the new reinsurance contracts come into force. The companies that are understood to be revising their rates include Max Life Insurance, ...

Reinsurance rates for Indian life companies had been hardening before the pandemic. Global underwriters, led by the US-based RGA, turned wary in the wake of lower rates in the Indian market, which some said were cheaper than the cost of a life cover in European countries with better life expectancy rates. Given that this hike has come during a pandemic, insurers do not have the headroom to absorb the higher costs. Domestic reinsurer GIC Re is also understood to have raised rates on some contracts.
“Some reinsurers changed rates at the start of this fiscal. While others, who may not have fully reflected the hike then, are seeking to change rates now. We believe the current increases are only a catch-up with market rates. In line with our reinsurance arrangements, we reflected the rates in the new product we launched in July,” said Satyan Jambunathan, CFO at ICICI Prudential Life Insurance.
According to insurance distributors, some companies have indicated that rates will go up from April 2021, when the new reinsurance contracts come into force. The companies that are understood to be revising their rates include Max Life Insurance, Tata AIA Life Insurance, IndiaFirst Life and Aegon Life.
“The industry is seeing a worsening of mortality claims among policyholders due to Covid. The actual claims paid is turning out to be higher than what was estimated by actuaries at the time of pricing the policies” said R M Vishakha, MD & CEO of IndiaFirst Life Insurance. “We have received 630 death claims for Rs 41 crore arising out of Covid. These included 291 from individual policies and 324 claims from group policies,” she added.
According to Vishakha, reinsurance cover is provided by multinationals in some cases and they are outside the purview of the insurance regulator. “If domestic insurers do not increase their rates in line with what is quoted by reinsurers, they will end up bearing the risks on their books,” she said.

Over the last two years, reinsurers turned wary of the decline in rates. Insurers have been bringing down rates for high-value policies because policyholders in that income segment had better life expectancy because of frequent medical tests and treatment.
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