Wednesday, June 24, 2026

The Underwriting of Everything : Post 9 (Final) title: The Open Question Post 9 subtitle: Eight posts, three layers of architecture, two states, one converging structural fact: the price of catastrophic risk and the danger of catastrophic risk are no longer reliably the same number, and almost nobody downstream of that gap gets to choose whether they’re exposed to it.

The Underwriting of Everything Post IX of IX  ·  Forensic System Architecture  ·  Series Complete

The Open Question

Eight posts, three layers of architecture, two states, one converging structural fact: the price of catastrophic risk and the danger of catastrophic risk are no longer reliably the same number, and almost nobody downstream of that gap gets to choose whether they're exposed to it.



Series header image, reused for the final time. The house with the "For Sale" sign has been a ghost image inside this control room for eight posts. This one asks what it would actually take to make that house visible to everyone now holding a financial stake in its roof.
Layer I  ·  Source

This series began with a question that sounded narrow: who actually decides what your home insurance costs? Eight posts later, the honest answer runs through three private modeling firms, a concentrated reinsurance market increasingly backed by pension-fund capital, a thirty-six-year-old California ballot initiative locked behind a supermajority amendment threshold, a thirty-three-year-old Florida assessment architecture nicknamed a "hurricane tax," two residual-market insurers now holding well over a trillion dollars in combined exposure, and a global stress test that found the system resilient everywhere except in the two places this series spent the most time.

This final post does not introduce new material. It gathers what eight posts of primary-source research actually established, names what remains genuinely unresolved, and states plainly what this archive's method can and cannot tell you about what happens next.

Layer II  ·  Conduit
Settled — Confirmed Across Independent Primary Sources
SETTLED Three private firms — Moody's RMS, Verisk's AIR Worldwide, and CoreLogic — dominate global catastrophe modeling, with proprietary methodology that regulators in California can review only under NDA, and which even consumer-advocate intervenors can have partially restricted from their own review.
SETTLED Global reinsurance capital is concentrated among a handful of traditional carriers, increasingly supplemented by a record alternative-capital market — catastrophe bond issuance exceeded $20 billion for the first time in 2025 — sourced substantially from pension funds and institutional investors.
SETTLED California's Proposition 103 passed by a two-point margin in 1988 after the most expensive ballot campaign in American history to that point, produced genuinely strong documented consumer outcomes in auto insurance, and was deliberately locked behind a supermajority amendment requirement that left it almost unchanged for thirty-six years.
SETTLED Commissioner Lara's 2023-26 reforms traded catastrophe-model and reinsurance-cost access for binding coverage commitments in wildfire zones; independent reporting found a secondary 5%-growth compliance path that materially softened those commitments for insurers who used it.
SETTLED California's FAIR Plan grew 424% in residential exposure between 2020 and 2025, reaching $725 billion in total exposure by early 2026 and 43% market share in the highest-risk wildfire ZIP codes — up from 2.8% a decade earlier.
SETTLED After the January 2025 Palisades and Eaton fires, a $1 billion industry assessment was triggered for the first time in thirty years, and insurers were permitted to recoup roughly half of it via surcharges on their own private-market customers statewide — including customers with no wildfire exposure.
SETTLED Florida built a structurally near-identical, four-tier assessment architecture (Citizens, regular and emergency assessments, the Hurricane Catastrophe Fund, and FIGA) in 1993, thirty-two years before California's comparable mechanism activated — and at least one prior assessment period took thirteen years to fully retire.
SETTLED Global reinsurance prices fell for two consecutive years (8% in 2025, 14.7% in January 2026) even as insured catastrophe losses exceeded $100 billion for a third straight year, driven by record capital growth and a hurricane season that, while still producing Category 5 storms like Hurricane Melissa, largely missed U.S. landfall.
SETTLED Reinsurers' actual share of global catastrophe losses fell to roughly 11-12% in 2025, down from approximately 20% before the 2023 "reset" raised attachment points — a structural shift that has persisted even as headline reinsurance prices declined.
SETTLED S&P Global Ratings' May 2026 stress test found the global insurance industry's credit quality would likely remain broadly stable under a hypothetical 1-in-250-year catastrophe scenario, attributing this to capitalization and reinsurance structures — while explicitly flagging that concentrated, poorly diversified risk profiles face materially greater strain under the same scenario.
Open — Contested, Unverified, or Structurally Unanswerable
OPEN Whether catastrophe models' actual proprietary methodology is sound, biased, or simply unknowable to the public and most regulators — no source reviewed in this series independently audits these models against outside benchmarks at the level of rigor their market influence would seem to require.
OPEN Whether California's intervenor-system reforms, contested between Commissioner Lara's office and Consumer Watchdog as of this series' publication, will strengthen or weaken the public's practical ability to challenge rate filings going forward.
OPEN Whether the New York Times' "offramp" findings reflect a deliberate negotiating concession, an oversight, or simply the unavoidable cost of securing any coverage commitment from an industry already exiting — this series relied on secondary characterization of that investigation rather than the original reporting directly.
OPEN Whether either the California FAIR Plan or Florida's Citizens has been independently stress-tested against a 1-in-250-year scenario on its own concentrated book — no source identified in this research confirms this has been done, despite both entities being the single most exposed, least diversified actors this series examined.
OPEN What happens, structurally, if a major California wildfire season and a major Florida or Gulf Coast hurricane season occur in the same year, drawing simultaneously on overlapping reinsurance and alternative capital capacity — the correlated, multi-region scenario this series found discussed in general industry literature but not modeled with the same precision as a single-event stress test.
Layer III  ·  Conversion

What this series has converted, across eight posts, is a single household premium notice into a traceable chain running through nine distinct, independently documented layers of institutional decision-making — none of which, on its own, is secret, corrupt, or unreasonable, and all of which, taken together, produce an outcome almost no one inside any single layer is positioned to see in full.

No one lied at any layer of this chain. The modeler built a genuinely sophisticated tool. The regulator negotiated the best deal available from a position of real weakness. The reinsurer priced its capital honestly against its own appetite for risk. The state built an assessment mechanism to keep a market from collapsing entirely. Each decision, examined alone, holds up. The chain they form does not behave the way any single link, examined alone, would suggest.

The Underwriting of Everything · Series Analysis
The Underwriting of Everything — Series Final Accounting
What was built
A nine-layer architecture connecting a homeowner's insurance premium to a global capital market, a proprietary modeling oligopoly, two state regulatory regimes built thirty-six and thirty-three years apart, and a reinsurance pricing cycle that moves on a different rhythm than any of the regulatory mechanisms beneath it.
Who built it
No single architect. Modeling firms building better tools. Reinsurers and capital markets pricing risk rationally. Voters and regulators responding, each time, to a genuine crisis already underway. Every layer in this series was a reasonable response to the layer beneath it. The full structure was never designed as a whole by anyone.
What it costs
Concentrated, in dollar terms this series has documented precisely: $725 billion in California FAIR Plan exposure, $292.6 billion in Florida Citizens exposure, $1 billion-plus assessments triggered by single events, surcharges reaching hundreds of dollars on policyholders with no exposure to the disaster that caused them. The cost is not shared evenly. It concentrates, by design and by accident in roughly equal measure, on whoever happens to live where the private market already decided not to go.
What FSA reads
A genuinely difficult case for this archive's usual method, and a useful one precisely because of that difficulty. Most of FSA's prior subjects had a finding moment — a leaked letter, a denied exemption, a settled lawsuit. This series has no equivalent single document. Its finding is the shape of the whole chain, visible only by holding all nine posts at once — the same kind of structural truth Cartography of Power found in zoning maps and The Repair Architecture found in a TUE letter, here distributed across modeling contracts, ballot initiatives, assessment statutes, and ratings agency footnotes instead of one document. The honest conclusion is not that anyone should panic, and not that the system is fine. It is that the price on a premium notice and the danger underneath a roof have quietly stopped being reliably the same number, for reasons that are individually defensible and collectively almost untraceable — and that the people paying the difference rarely had any say in how it accumulated.
Layer IV  ·  Insulation

This series' insulation mechanism, traced consistently across all eight prior posts, is translation distance rather than concealment. Every figure in this series came from a published source — a court record, a rating agency report, a state press release, an investigative newsroom, a trade publication covering reinsurance renewals in granular real-time detail. None of it was hidden in the way a sealed legal file or a classified document would be hidden. It was simply distributed across nine specialist domains that almost never get read together, by anyone, before a premium notice arrives.

That is this archive's actual function, restated plainly at the end of its longest case to date: not uncovering secrets, but assembling a record that already exists in scattered, public, individually defensible pieces — and presenting it as a single chain, so that the gap between what each layer says and what the whole thing does becomes visible to someone who was never going to read all nine sources on their own.

Sub Verbis · Vera.

Nine posts ago, this series opened on a house with a "For Sale" sign, glowing faintly inside a room full of loss-exceedance curves. The house never moved. It never found out it was being priced. That, in the end, is the actual subject of this series — not fraud, not conspiracy, just distance: the growing space between where a risk is calculated and where someone is still living inside it.
The Underwriting of Everything — Series Complete  ·  Nine Posts  ·  Trium Publishing House Limited  ·  2026
FSA Wall — Post IX · The Open Question

This post synthesizes findings established and individually sourced in Posts I through VIII of this series; no new primary claims are introduced here beyond the explicit "Open" items listed above, which restate gaps already flagged in their originating posts (the NYT "offramp" secondary-sourcing caveat from Post IV, the FAIR Plan/Citizens stress-test gap identified in Post VIII, and the correlated multi-region scenario noted as thinly covered in available sources during research for Post VIII). Readers seeking primary sourcing for any individual figure in the ledgers above should consult the FSA Wall of the corresponding numbered post in this series.

The Underwriting of Everything  ·  Full Series
Post IThe Black Box
Post IIThe Concentration
Post IIIThe Mandate
Post IVThe Reversal
Post VThe Exodus
Post VIThe Precedent
Post VIIThe Good Year
Post VIIIThe Stress Test
Post IXThe Open Question

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

The Underwriting of Everything : Post 8 title: The Stress Test Post 8 subtitle: S&P ran the numbers on a 1-in-250-year catastrophe and found the global industry would probably survive. The honest reading of that result is less comforting than the headline.

The Underwriting of Everything Post VIII of X  ·  Forensic System Architecture

The Stress Test

S&P ran the numbers on a 1-in-250-year catastrophe and found the global industry would probably survive. The honest reading of that result is less comforting than the headline.



Series header image, reused. This post asks what the architecture examined across seven prior posts — the models, the concentration, the regulatory mandates, the assessment cascades, the pricing cycles — actually does when tested against the scenario it was theoretically built for.
Layer I  ·  Source

In May 2026, S&P Global Ratings published the most direct answer available anywhere to the question this series has been building toward: what actually happens to the global insurance and reinsurance system in a true catastrophe scenario — not a bad year, but a statistically extreme one. The agency ran formal stress tests on major global primary insurers and reinsurers against a hypothetical 1-in-250-year catastrophe, and reported that credit quality across the industry would likely remain broadly stable.

That is, on its face, reassuring. It is also worth reading carefully, because "the industry's credit ratings would probably survive" and "the system would absorb the loss without real consequence" are two different claims, and S&P's own report draws a sharper line between them than the headline allows.

Layer II  ·  Conduit
6
Consecutive years (through 2025) of global insured catastrophe losses exceeding $100 billion
S&P's report sets its 1-in-250-year scenario against this backdrop explicitly — pointing to Hurricane Ian's roughly $60 billion in 2022 damage and the Los Angeles wildfires' more than $40 billion in claims as evidence the industry is already absorbing individual events that would once have qualified as the kind of outlier the stress test is modeling.

S&P's credit analyst Craig Bennett attributed the industry's projected resilience to high capitalization and ample use of reinsurance and retrocession — meaning the very architecture this series has spent seven posts examining (the modeling layer, the reinsurance concentration, the alternative capital influx) is precisely what the stress test credits for the system holding together. That's a genuinely important finding, and it should be stated plainly rather than undercut: the system this series has been tracing critically does, by S&P's independent assessment, function as a shock absorber at the scale it was designed for.

What "Broadly Resilient" Actually Covers, and What It Doesn't
S&P's own report draws a distinction between the industry's aggregate credit stability and the experience of any single, more concentrated actor inside it.
Claim
What the Stress Test Found
What That Finding Doesn't Cover
Global
Credit Quality
Most rated insurers' and reinsurers' credit ratings would likely remain stable even under a 1-in-250-year scenario, due to capitalization and reinsurance/retrocession structures.
Not a claim that any individual policyholder, state residual-market plan, or regional insurer would be unaffected — the test measures the largest global carriers' aggregate financial strength, not localized market function.
Diversified
Carriers
Firms with strong diversification across geographies and perils are explicitly cited as better positioned to absorb a single extreme event without rating impact.
S&P explicitly flags the opposite case: "firms with more concentrated risk profiles and weaker diversification may experience greater strain on capital strength and rating stability" — precisely describing California's FAIR Plan and Florida's Citizens, examined in Posts V and VI, neither of which is diversified by design.
A Single
1-in-250 Event
The scenario models one extreme event, consistent with how catastrophe models have traditionally been built — a single landmark hurricane, earthquake, or wildfire season.
It does not model the clustered, correlated scenario several other industry sources flag as the harder, less-tested case: multiple severe events across different regions and perils within the same season or year, compounding faster than balance sheets can replenish between them.
Layer III  ·  Conversion

What gets converted here is a genuinely reassuring global finding into a much more specific, and less reassuring, regional one, the moment you apply S&P's own stated caveat to the architecture this series has actually documented. The global industry's resilience, by S&P's own account, depends on diversification — large, geographically spread books of business where a loss in one region is offset by stability everywhere else. California's FAIR Plan and Florida's Citizens are, structurally, the opposite of that: concentrated, single-state, single-peril-dominant residual insurers that exist specifically because the diversified private market withdrew from the riskiest slice of their exposure. They are, by definition, the least diversified, most concentrated actors in the entire system — sitting directly in the category S&P's report says is most exposed to rating and capital strain.

The global industry passing a 1-in-250-year stress test is real evidence the architecture works at scale. It is not evidence that the two residual-market insurers this series spent two full posts examining would pass the same test on their own books — because they were built, by design, to hold exactly the risk a diversified insurer would refuse.

The Underwriting of Everything · Series Analysis

The Reassuring Reading

The modeling layer (Post I), the reinsurance and alternative-capital concentration (Post II), and the pricing discipline reinsurers have maintained on attachment points since 2023 (Post VII) collectively give the global system real shock-absorbing capacity — independently verified, not self-reported.

The Unresolved Reading

That capacity is concentrated in diversified global carriers. The two residual-market insurers created specifically to hold the risk those carriers wouldn't — the FAIR Plan and Citizens — are exactly the undiversified, concentrated structures S&P's own framework flags as most exposed, and neither has been independently stress-tested against a 1-in-250-year event on its own book in any source reviewed for this series.

The Stress Test — What the Record Shows
What was tested
S&P Global Ratings' formal stress test of major global primary insurers and reinsurers against a hypothetical 1-in-250-year catastrophe scenario, published May 2026, set against a backdrop of six consecutive years of $100 billion-plus global insured catastrophe losses.
What it found
Broadly stable credit quality across the global industry, attributed explicitly to high capitalization and extensive reinsurance and retrocession use — with an equally explicit caveat that concentrated, poorly diversified risk profiles face materially greater strain under the same scenario.
What it didn't test
California's FAIR Plan or Florida's Citizens specifically, as standalone entities — no source reviewed for this series identifies an independent 1-in-250-year stress test conducted on either residual-market insurer's own book. This is the single largest open empirical question this series has identified and not been able to close.
What FSA reads
A real, independently verified finding of systemic resilience, paired with an equally real, independently verified caveat that the system's two most consequential concentration points — the exact structures this series spent Posts V and VI documenting — sit outside the diversified category the resilience finding actually describes. The global industry's good report card is true. It is also not a report card for the two institutions most Americans in wildfire and hurricane zones actually depend on. The final post in this series gathers what's settled, what's open, and what the full architecture adds up to.
Layer IV  ·  Insulation

The insulation in this post is almost structural rather than intentional: S&P's report is genuinely rigorous, genuinely public, and genuinely honest about its own scope — it explicitly names concentration risk as a vulnerability rather than hiding it. The insulation happens downstream, in how a finding like "the global industry is resilient" travels through trade press and eventually public conversation stripped of the caveat that gave it its actual precision. By the time "insurers can handle extreme disasters" becomes a headline, the distinction between a diversified global reinsurer and a single-state residual-market plan holding $725 billion in undiversified wildfire exposure has usually been lost.

That loss of precision isn't unique to this story — it's the same translation gap this series found in Post I's black-box models and Post VII's pricing cycles. The information was never hidden. It just never quite survives the trip from a ratings agency's methodology section to a homeowner's understanding of whether their own coverage would survive the same test.

Sub Verbis · Vera.

FSA Wall — Post VIII · The Stress Test

S&P Global Ratings' 1-in-250-year stress test, the Craig Bennett quotes, the Hurricane Ian ($60 billion, 2022) and California wildfire (more than $40 billion) loss figures, and the explicit caveat regarding concentrated and poorly diversified risk profiles are drawn from S&P's May 4, 2026 report "Charts Show Global Insurers Can Manage Extreme Natural Disaster Scenarios," as reported by Reinsurance News, May 6, 2026. The six-consecutive-year, $100-billion-plus global insured catastrophe loss figure is corroborated by the same report. This post's application of S&P's diversification caveat specifically to California's FAIR Plan and Florida's Citizens is this archive's own analytical synthesis, connecting the global stress-test finding to the entity-specific findings established in Posts V and VI of this series; S&P's report itself does not name either entity directly, and no independent 1-in-250-year stress test specific to either the FAIR Plan or Citizens was identified in the research for this post. This represents a genuine gap in the publicly available record rather than a finding this post is able to close.

The Underwriting of Everything  ·  Series Navigation
Post VThe Exodus
Post VIThe Precedent
Post VIIThe Good Year
Post VIIIThe Stress Test
Post IXNext

The Underwriting of Everything : Post 7 title: The Good Year Post 7 subtitle: Reinsurance prices fell for two straight years not because the climate got safer, but because the storms missed, the bonds sold, and the industry quietly decided to keep more of every future loss for itself.

The Underwriting of Everything Post VII of X  ·  Forensic System Architecture

The Good Year

Reinsurance prices fell for two straight years not because the climate got safer, but because the storms missed, the bonds sold, and the industry quietly decided to keep more of every future loss for itself.



Series header image, reused. This post asks the question every prior post in this series has been building toward: what does the reinsurance industry's own pricing actually say it believes about risk, separate from what every regulator and insurer downstream has been saying about it?
Layer I  ·  Source

Posts I through VI of this series have documented a system under sustained, visible strain: insurers fleeing California, a FAIR Plan ballooning past $700 billion, a Florida assessment architecture stress-tested by three decades of storms. Set against that backdrop, the single most counterintuitive fact in the entire reinsurance market right now is this: reinsurance got cheaper, two years running, by a widening margin, through the exact period this series has been documenting as a crisis.

That is not a contradiction this post is trying to resolve into a tidy story. It's the actual finding — and understanding why it's true tells you more about what reinsurance pricing actually measures than any of the prior six posts could on their own.

Layer II  ·  Conduit
Jan 2025 renewal−8% (avg. property-cat rate)
Jan 2026 renewal−14.7% (accelerating)
Apr 2026 renewal−8.1% (cumulative since Jan, most regions)
Jun 2026 renewalFastest pace of decline yet this year
Still vs. 2018 floor+50% (prices remain well above pre-2023 lows)

This happened despite, not because of, a quiet year on the ground. The Los Angeles wildfires examined in Post V — the single largest insured loss event of 2025 — occurred in early January 2025, before that year's reinsurance renewals had even fully settled. By Moody's own account, those losses "did not create significant support for reinsurance pricing," because the broader Atlantic hurricane season that followed was unusually quiet, and because reinsurer balance sheets had grown so large, so fast, that excess capacity simply overwhelmed any pricing pressure a single regional disaster could generate.

What Actually Drove Two Years of Falling Prices
None of these four forces involve risk actually decreasing. All four involve the market's capacity to absorb risk increasing faster than losses did.
Driver
What Happened
Why It Lowered Prices
Record
Capital
Dedicated reinsurance capital grew roughly 9% in 2025 alone, built on three consecutive years of strong reinsurer profitability — an average return on equity around 17% industry-wide, and 21.1% for the four largest European reinsurers in the first half of 2025.
More capital chasing the same pool of business drives prices down, the same basic supply-and-demand dynamic as any other capital market — unrelated to whether the underlying physical risk changed at all.
Record Cat Bond
Issuance
2025's record catastrophe bond issuance, examined in Post II, added still more capacity competing for the same business, with 15 new sponsors entering the market in 2025 alone.
Alternative capital competes directly with traditional reinsurer balance sheets for the same risk, and that competition pushes pricing down further, independent of storm activity.
A Quiet
Hurricane Season
No hurricanes made U.S. landfall in 2025 for the first time in a decade, despite forecasts pointing to elevated risk — an outcome of where storms tracked, not how many formed or how dangerous the season's storms actually were.
Pricing responds to realized losses, not avoided ones. A dangerous season that simply missed landfall produces the same pricing benefit as a genuinely mild one — the market cannot distinguish luck from safety.
Higher
Attachment Points
Reinsurers raised the loss threshold at which their coverage begins paying out during the 2023 "market reset," and have not lowered it since, even as prices for coverage above that threshold have fallen substantially.
Reinsurers now absorb only about 11–12% of total industry catastrophe losses, down from roughly 20% before 2023 — meaning primary insurers (and ultimately policyholders) retain a much larger share of frequent, smaller losses than they did three years ago, regardless of headline reinsurance pricing.
Layer III  ·  Conversion

What gets converted here, with real precision, is the meaning of a falling reinsurance price. A casual read of "reinsurance got cheaper" implies the underlying risk got smaller — storms got less dangerous, climate risk eased, the world got safer. None of that happened. Global insured catastrophe losses topped $100 billion for the third consecutive year in 2025, and analysts at MS Amlin explicitly warned heading into the 2026 season that "a quieter season can still produce significant losses if a major hurricane strikes a highly exposed location" — exactly what happened when Hurricane Melissa, despite an otherwise quiet Atlantic season, rapidly intensified into a Category 5 storm and caused an estimated $8.8 billion in damage to Jamaica.

"It isn't as if property-cat reinsurance is unprofitable. It's just coming off of the highest pricing peak we have perhaps ever seen." ... "The floor isn't very far away. If the market is rational, we won't go through it, but sometimes human nature is that we have the tendency to overcorrect."

David Flandro, Head of Industry Analysis, Howden Re, via S&P Global

That candor from inside the industry itself is the most important primary evidence in this entire post. The people setting these prices are not claiming the world got safer. They are explicitly describing a market correcting from an unusually high peak, while warning, in nearly the same breath, that the correction could overshoot into territory where prices no longer reflect the actual risk being taken on — the exact scenario MS Amlin's own forecast flagged for the 2026 season specifically because of how sharply pricing has fallen.

The Good Year — What the Record Shows
What happened
Property catastrophe reinsurance prices fell for two consecutive years — an 8% decline at January 2025, accelerating to 14.7% at January 2026, with further softening through April and June 2026 — even as global insured catastrophe losses exceeded $100 billion for the third straight year.
Why it happened
Record reinsurer profitability driving record capital growth, record catastrophe bond issuance adding further competing capacity, a hurricane season that happened to miss U.S. landfall, and attachment points from the 2023 reset that have kept reinsurers' actual share of industry losses near a historic low of roughly 11-12%. None of these four forces describe the underlying risk getting smaller.
What it doesn't mean
That California or Florida homeowners examined in Posts III through VI should expect comparable relief. Reinsurance pricing softening primarily benefits primary insurers' own reinsurance costs; whether that savings reaches a homeowner's premium depends on the separate state regulatory mechanisms this series has spent six posts examining, none of which move at reinsurance-renewal speed.
What FSA reads
The clearest demonstration in this entire series of a principle worth stating plainly: a price is not a measurement of danger. It's a measurement of capital's current appetite for danger, which can move sharply in either direction for reasons that have nothing to do with how dangerous the underlying thing actually is. The same industry that priced risk up sharply in 2023 and down sharply in 2025-26 was looking at a physical world that, by most independent climate measures, grew more hazardous across that entire period, not less. The next and final two posts in this series turn to what happens when that gap between price and danger closes suddenly — and what's actually left to absorb the loss when it does.
Layer IV  ·  Insulation

This post's insulation is, in its way, the most honest of any layer this series has examined — because the reinsurance industry isn't hiding the mechanism at all. Howden, Aon, Gallagher Re, Guy Carpenter, and Moody's all publish detailed, public renewal reports explaining exactly why prices moved the way they did, in language any financially literate reader could follow. The gap isn't disclosure. It's translation, the same gap this series found in Post II's pension-fund cat bond exposure: the information is genuinely public, genuinely well-explained by specialists, and almost entirely disconnected, in ordinary public understanding, from the premium notice that eventually lands in a homeowner's mailbox.

A homeowner whose California or Florida premium rose sharply in 2025 while reading, in the same season, that "reinsurance prices are falling," has every reason to feel like two different stories are being told about the same risk. They aren't, exactly — but reconciling them requires understanding state-level rate regulation, FAIR Plan and Citizens assessment math, attachment points, and alternative capital flows, all at once. That's not a conspiracy to confuse anyone. It's just a genuinely complicated system that nobody has built a single, honest, plain-language bridge across — which is the project this series itself is attempting, nine layers in.

Sub Verbis · Vera.

FSA Wall — Post VII · The Good Year

Rate decline figures for January 2026 (14.7% average global decline, accelerating from 8% in 2025) are drawn from Howden Re data as cited by Insurance Business Magazine, June 2026, and corroborated by S&P Global Market Intelligence's January 29, 2026 reporting, which independently confirms this as the second consecutive January renewal with falling property-catastrophe prices and notes prices remain roughly 50% above the 2018 low. The 8.1% April/mid-year cumulative decline figure is drawn from Guy Carpenter's rate-on-line index as reported by Reinsurance News. The reinsurer share-of-losses figures (11% in 2025, down from ~20% pre-2023, ~12% average across 2023-2025) are drawn from Guy Carpenter (via Artemis.bm, December 2025) and S&P Global's separate corroborating figure citing Gallagher Re's Tom Duffy. The $121 billion 2025 insured catastrophe loss figure and reinsurer capital growth figures (9% capital growth, ~17% sector ROE, 21.1% ROE for the four largest European reinsurers in 1H25) are drawn from Guy Carpenter and Reinsurance News reporting, December 2025. The MS Amlin 2026 hurricane forecast, including the Hurricane Melissa example and the 27% Category 4-5 U.S. landfall probability, is drawn from Insurance Business Magazine, June 2026. The Howden Re/David Flandro quotes are drawn directly from S&P Global Market Intelligence's January 29, 2026 article.

The Underwriting of Everything  ·  Series Navigation
Post IVThe Reversal
Post VThe Exodus
Post VIThe Precedent
Post VIIThe Good Year
Post VIIINext

The Underwriting of Everything : Post 6 title: The Precedent Post 6 subtitle: Florida built California’s exact mechanism thirty-two years earlier, named it three separate ways, and stacked them on top of each other.

The Underwriting of Everything Post VI of X  ·  Forensic System Architecture

The Precedent

Florida built California's exact mechanism thirty-two years earlier, named it three separate ways, and stacked them on top of each other.



Series header image, reused. Florida is where this entire architecture — the modeling validation requirement, the assessment, the surcharge passed to people far from the storm — was actually invented, after a single hurricane in 1992 that no one had modeled correctly.
Layer I  ·  Source

Everything this series has documented in California — the catastrophe-model fight, the residual-market backstop ballooning past anything anyone designed it for, the assessment that turns into a surcharge on people who never experienced the disaster — happened first in Florida, beginning in 1992, in direct response to a single storm whose losses no model of the era had come close to predicting.

Hurricane Andrew struck south of Miami on August 24, 1992, ultimately causing more than $25 billion in damage in today's dollars — a figure that, at the time, exceeded every property insurance premium collected in the entire state of Florida over the preceding twenty-two years combined. Several major national insurers, including Allstate, simply stopped writing new policies in Florida afterward rather than risk a repeat. In 1992, foreign-domiciled national insurers wrote 94 percent of Florida's property and casualty market. Within years, that ratio had reversed.

Layer II  ·  Conduit

The state's response, built in a special legislative session in November 1993, created a three-tier architecture that has remained substantially intact for over thirty years — and that gave Florida residents a colloquial name for it well before California residents needed one: the "hurricane tax."

Florida's Three-Tier Assessment Architecture
TIER 1 — CITIZENS PROPERTY INSURANCE CORP. UP TO 45%
The state's insurer of last resort, created in 2002 by merging two earlier residual entities. When Citizens runs a deficit after a major storm, it first surcharges its own policyholders — up to 45 percent of their premium, in a single hit.
TIER 2 — REGULAR ASSESSMENT UP TO 2%
If Citizens' own policyholder surcharge isn't enough, the state levies up to 2 percent on every other property and casualty policyholder in Florida — people who have never been a Citizens customer, charged to cover Citizens' shortfall.
TIER 2B — EMERGENCY ASSESSMENT UP TO 30%/YR
If the deficit still isn't covered, an emergency assessment of up to 30 percent annually can be levied on nearly every insurance consumer in the state — auto, homeowners, business, renters — continuing year after year until the debt is retired. The 2004–2005 storm season's emergency assessments weren't fully paid off until 2017, twelve years later.
TIER 3 — FLORIDA HURRICANE CATASTROPHE FUND STATE REINSURER
A tax-exempt state trust fund, created directly by the 1993 legislation, that every residential property insurer in Florida is legally required to buy reinsurance from. If the Fund's own reserves run short, it can issue bonds backed by its own separate emergency assessment on insurance premiums statewide.
TIER 4 — FLORIDA INSURANCE GUARANTY ASSOCIATION UP TO 2% + 2%
When a private insurer goes fully insolvent — a real and recurring risk in Florida's specialty-insurer-heavy market — FIGA steps in to pay the bankrupt company's outstanding claims, funded by its own additional assessment of up to 2 percent, plus an extra 2 percent in emergencies, on nearly all property and casualty premiums statewide.
$1.5B
Hurricane taxes collected from Florida policyholders for the 2004–2005 storm seasons alone, as of 2016
Per the Florida Chamber of Commerce's own tracking: non-Citizens policyholders paid roughly 84% of that total — $136 million a year at the time — despite never having been a Citizens customer. The assessments for those two seasons weren't retired until 2017, thirteen years after the storms.
Layer III  ·  Conversion

What gets converted here, with more precision and a longer track record than California has yet produced, is a single catastrophic storm into a statewide, multi-year, multi-tier tax on insurance — not a metaphorical one. Florida's own statute permits insurers to pass these assessments through to policyholders directly as premium increases, meaning the "hurricane tax" name isn't editorial color; it's a structurally accurate description of a mandatory, government-imposed, broadly distributed charge that simply happens to be collected through an insurance bill rather than a tax return.

If Citizens and the Cat Fund experience a deficit, everyone with a home, auto, boat, or business insurance policy pays to cover it — whether or not they live anywhere near the coast, and whether or not they have ever filed a claim.

Insurance Information Institute, "Hurricane Andrew and Insurance," retrospective analysis

This is, structurally, the same mechanism California's FAIR Plan surcharge (Post V) represents — but Florida's version is older, more thoroughly tiered, and has been stress-tested by far more storms. The Florida architecture also reveals something California's newer system hasn't yet been forced to confront at the same scale: what happens to the assessment math when storms keep coming faster than the assessments from the last one are paid off. By 2025, Citizens alone carried more than 933,000 policies and $292.6 billion in total exposure — meaning a single severe season today would trigger an assessment base broader, and a potential shortfall larger, than almost any prior event in the fund's three-decade history.

The Precedent — What the Record Shows
What was built
A four-layer, statutorily defined assessment architecture — Citizens, the Cat Fund, and FIGA, each with its own statutory surcharge ceiling — created in a single emergency legislative session after Hurricane Andrew exposed a private market with no capacity to absorb a true catastrophic loss.
How long it's run
Continuously since 1993 — 33 years, multiple major storm seasons, and at least one documented assessment period (2004-2005 storms) that took thirteen years to fully retire, demonstrating that these "temporary" emergency assessments can function, in practice, as a long-running structural feature of the state's insurance costs rather than a brief post-disaster correction.
What California borrowed
The structural logic, if not the exact statutory language: a residual-market insurer of last resort, an assessment triggered when that insurer's reserves are exhausted, and explicit legal permission for private insurers to recoup their share of the assessment from their own broader customer base. California arrived at this architecture independently, three decades later, facing a structurally similar problem.
What FSA reads
Not a conspiracy and not a coincidence — a converging structural response, invented once in Florida and reinvented once in California, to the same underlying problem: catastrophic risk concentrated geographically, in a market that, left alone, would simply refuse to insure it. Florida's three-decade head start is the clearest evidence available for what California's system will likely look like in 2055 if the underlying trend — more frequent, more severe catastrophic events outrunning any reserve fund's ability to keep pace — continues. The next post in this series follows what that trend has actually done to reinsurance pricing itself, and the uncomfortable truth that much of what homeowners pay is really a bet on whether last season was quiet.
Layer IV  ·  Insulation

Florida's insulation mechanism is almost the opposite of California's. Where the FAIR Plan surcharge examined in Post V is a relatively new addition to a market most Californians still think of as private and competitive, Florida's "hurricane tax" has existed long enough, and been named plainly enough by the state's own Chamber of Commerce and consumer press, that it has become an accepted, almost unremarkable feature of living in the state — priced into the popular understanding of why Florida insurance costs what it costs, the way sales tax is priced into the cost of a meal.

That normalization is its own kind of insulation. A mechanism that's been named, explained, and lived with for three decades is harder to organize political opposition against than a sudden, surprising new charge — even when, dollar for dollar, it transfers exactly the same kind of concentrated risk onto exactly the same kind of diffuse, often unaware population.

Sub Verbis · Vera.

FSA Wall — Post VI · The Precedent

Hurricane Andrew's 1992 damage figures and the FHCF's November 1993 creation under Florida Statutes Section 215.555 are drawn from the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund's own official "About the FHCF" page (fhcf.sbafla.com) and OPPAGA's program summary. The 94%-foreign-carrier-to-domestic-carrier market composition figure is drawn from the Insurance Information Institute's retrospective paper "Hurricane Andrew and Insurance: The Enduring Impact of an Historic Storm." The three-tier Citizens/Cat Fund/FIGA assessment architecture and specific percentage caps (45% Citizens policyholder surcharge, 2% regular assessment, up to 30% annual emergency assessment, FIGA's 2%+2% structure) are drawn from South Florida Reporter's "Navigating the Hidden Costs of Coastal Living" analysis, May 2026, itself citing Fliegelman (2023) and Hildreth (1992) as academic sources. The $1.5 billion 2004-2005 hurricane tax collection figure and the 2017 payoff date are drawn from a Florida Chamber of Commerce "Did You Know" brief, originally published 2016. Current Citizens exposure figures ($292.6 billion, 933,000+ policies) are drawn from the same Florida Chamber source, cross-referenced against more recent reporting; readers should note these figures carry varying publication dates across sources reviewed and should be treated as directionally accurate rather than precisely current to this post's publication date.

The Underwriting of Everything  ·  Series Navigation
Post IIThe Concentration
Post IIIThe Mandate
Post IVThe Reversal
Post VThe Exodus
Post VIThe Precedent