Monday, June 22, 2026

The Underwriting of Everything : Post 5 title: The Exodus Post 5 subtitle: A backstop meant for a small number of uninsurable homes now holds $725 billion in exposure. The state’s own earthquake authority has a name for what California’s insurance market has become: bifurcated.

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

The Exodus

A backstop meant for a small number of uninsurable homes now holds $725 billion in exposure. The state's own earthquake authority has a name for what California's insurance market has become: bifurcated.



Series header image, reused. This post follows the risk the 85% rule examined in Post IV was supposed to keep in the private market — and where, by the numbers, it actually went instead.
Layer I  ·  Source

An important correction belongs at the start of this post. Earlier research for this series, working from a single data point, suggested California's residual insurance market might be shrinking. It is not. The actual record, once properly assembled, shows the opposite, at a scale large enough to change how this entire series should be read.

The California FAIR Plan — Fair Access to Insurance Requirements — was created decades ago as a narrow, temporary safety net: basic fire coverage for the small number of properties no private insurer would write. As of early 2026, it holds approximately $725 billion in total exposure across nearly 670,000 policies. In the state's very-highest wildfire-risk ZIP codes, the FAIR Plan's market share reached 43 percent by 2024 — up from 2.8 percent in 2015.

Layer II  ·  Conduit
424%
Growth in FAIR Plan residential exposure, September 2020 to June 2025
From a Stanford Climate and Energy Policy Program tracking project: total residential exposure reached $603 billion by June 2025, before the FAIR Plan's overall exposure (including commercial) climbed further toward $725 billion in subsequent reporting.

The mechanism behind that growth is not mysterious, and it is not the FAIR Plan's own doing — the law requires it to insure any qualified property regardless of wildfire exposure, precisely so no homeowner is left with nothing. By March 2024, seven of the state's twelve largest insurers, including Allstate, Farmers, and State Farm, had stopped writing new policies in California entirely, and had declined to renew more than 70,000 existing policies. Every one of those homeowners had to go somewhere. With nowhere else to go, they went to the FAIR Plan — turning a backstop designed for the margins of the market into, in growing parts of the state, the market itself.

January 2025: The Test the Fund Wasn't Built For

The Palisades & Eaton Fires, By the Numbers
Mar 2024
FAIR Plan surplus stands at roughly $200 million, against $336 billion in total property exposure — a ratio Fitch Ratings would later call inadequate for any major loss event.
Jan 7–8, 2025
The Palisades and Eaton fires ignite in Los Angeles County. The Commissioner issues a mandatory one-year moratorium on insurance non-renewals and cancellations in and around the affected ZIP codes.
Feb 2025
FAIR Plan reports an estimated $4.1 billion in losses from the two fires — its $370 million surplus covers less than 10 percent of that figure.
Feb 12, 2025
For the first time in 30 years, the FAIR Plan triggers an industry-wide assessment: $1 billion, charged to admitted insurers based on their statewide market share.
2025, ongoing
Insurers granted permission to recoup the assessment via surcharges — not only on FAIR Plan policyholders, but on their own private-market customers statewide, regardless of those customers' actual wildfire exposure. More than $150 million in surcharges collected to date, per Los Angeles Times reporting.
Oct 2025
FAIR Plan requests a 36% average residential rate increase — its largest in seven years — with effects ranging from a 78% decrease for some lower-risk policyholders to increases exceeding 300% for others.
Who Actually Pays When the FAIR Plan Runs Out of Money
The assessment-and-surcharge mechanism, triggered for the first time in three decades by the January 2025 fires, spreads a concentrated loss across a population far broader than the people who experienced it.
Party
What They Actually Lost
What They're Now Paying For
Palisades & Eaton
Fire Victims
Their homes, in many cases entirely — and, per state analysis cited later in this series, frequently underinsured by 20 to 60 percent relative to actual rebuild cost.
Their own losses, plus a share of the FAIR Plan's 36% rate request as it works through the regulatory process.
Admitted
Insurers
A $1 billion industry assessment, charged in proportion to their statewide market share, regardless of whether they wrote a single policy in the burned ZIP codes.
Permission, under Prop 103's prior-approval framework examined in Post III, to recoup half that cost directly from their own customers — including customers with no wildfire exposure at all.
Ordinary California
Policyholders
Nothing, directly — many live in low-risk coastal or urban ZIP codes with no meaningful wildfire exposure.
A surcharge on their own premium, as their insurer passes along its share of an assessment triggered by a fire hundreds of miles from their home — more than $150 million collected this way so far.
Layer III  ·  Conversion

What gets converted here is concentrated wildfire risk into a diffuse, statewide tax — structurally identical to the mechanism this series previewed in Post II, where institutional reinsurance risk gets transferred to pension-fund capital several steps removed from anyone who can see the connection. The FAIR Plan surcharge mechanism does the same thing in miniature, in plain public view, with dollar amounts attached: a fire in Pacific Palisades becomes a line item on a premium bill in Bakersfield.

"If it's going to keep on growing, it becomes impossible to manage the risk. It's OK if the high risk is just a small pool, but if the private sector is unwilling to take any of the high-risk policies, that model doesn't work anymore."

— Douglas Heller, Director of Insurance, Consumer Federation of America

The state's own analysis has now reached the same conclusion in formal terms. A report from the California Earthquake Authority, which administers the state's wildfire fund, describes California's property insurance market as "effectively bifurcated" — a healthy, competitive private market in lower-risk regions, and a dysfunctional one, propped up almost entirely by the FAIR Plan, in higher-risk areas. The same report estimates the state would need approximately $36 billion to build a wildfire catastrophe fund durable enough to remain solvent for twenty years with reasonable confidence — more than double what 2025's legislative commitments actually provided.

The Exodus — What the Record Shows
What was built
A residual-market insurer of last resort, originally designed as a narrow, temporary safety net, now functioning as the dominant insurer in California's highest-risk wildfire zones — holding $725 billion in exposure as of early 2026, a more than fourfold increase in just five years.
What triggered it
A genuine private-market retreat: seven of the state's twelve largest insurers stopped writing new policies by March 2024, and the January 2025 Palisades and Eaton fires produced $4.1 billion in FAIR Plan losses against a surplus of just $370 million — less than a tenth of what was needed.
Who actually paid
Not only the fire victims, and not only FAIR Plan policyholders. Insurers statewide were assessed $1 billion, then permitted to recoup roughly half of that directly from their own private-market customers — including policyholders with no wildfire exposure whatsoever, via the same Prop 103 prior-approval surcharge mechanism examined earlier in this series.
What FSA reads
A backstop converted, gradually and through no single bad decision, into the market itself across a growing share of the state — with the cost of that conversion spread, by design, across people who never lived anywhere near the fire. The state's own earthquake authority now uses the word "bifurcated" to describe what its insurance market has become. The next post in this series turns to Florida, which built this exact structure first, three decades earlier, and has had far longer to learn what happens when it's tested again and again.
Layer IV  ·  Insulation

Nothing in this post required a hidden document or a leaked statement. Every figure here is published, in state reports, rating agency analysis, and the FAIR Plan's own disclosures. The insulation operates differently than in earlier posts: not through concealment, but through the sheer pace and scale of growth outrunning the public's ability to track what a "backstop" has actually become. A homeowner who bought a FAIR Plan policy in 2020 because no private insurer would write their roof joined what was, statistically, still a true minority arrangement. A homeowner who buys the same policy today joins what the state's own regulator now calls one half of a bifurcated market — a fundamentally different thing, reached through several years of individually reasonable decisions by individual insurers, none of which alone created the $725 billion now sitting on the state's books.

Sub Verbis · Vera.

FSA Wall — Post V · The Exodus

The $725 billion total FAIR Plan exposure and 43% high-risk-ZIP-code market share figures are drawn from a California Earthquake Authority report submitted to the Governor and Legislature under SB 254, as reported by Risk & Insurance, April 2026. The 424% residential exposure growth figure (September 2020–June 2025, reaching $603 billion) is drawn from Stanford's Climate and Energy Policy Program tracking project, August 2025. The insurer withdrawal figures (seven of twelve largest insurers halting new policies by March 2024, 70,000+ non-renewals) and the FAIR Plan structural details are drawn from the California FAIR Plan Wikipedia entry, cross-referenced against Insurance Journal and Kennedys Law reporting on the Plan's financial structure, January-April 2025. The January 2025 fire loss figures, the $1 billion assessment, and the FAIR Plan's $370 million surplus are drawn from Insurance Journal (citing Fitch Ratings analyst Gerald Glombicki and Moody's product management director Firas Saleh) and Kennedys Law's structural analysis, both published in early-to-mid 2025. The surcharge mechanism and $150 million-plus collected figure are drawn from Stateline's October 2025 reporting, which explicitly compares California's mechanism to Florida's "hurricane tax" — the subject of this series' next post. The Douglas Heller quote is drawn from the same Stateline piece. The California Earthquake Authority's "effectively bifurcated" characterization and $36 billion wildfire fund estimate are drawn directly from its own report as covered by Risk & Insurance.

The Underwriting of Everything  ·  Series Navigation
Post IThe Black Box
Post IIThe Concentration
Post IIIThe Mandate
Post IVThe Reversal
Post VThe Exodus

The Underwriting of Everything : Post 4 title: The Reversal Post 4 subtitle: California’s insurance commissioner promised insurers a trade: forward-looking models, in exchange for coverage in the riskiest neighborhoods. Then the New York Times went looking for the riskiest neighborhoods.

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

The Reversal

California's insurance commissioner promised insurers a trade: forward-looking models, in exchange for coverage in the riskiest neighborhoods. Then the New York Times went looking for the riskiest neighborhoods.



Series header image, reused. This post follows the first real attempt, in thirty-six years, to renegotiate the bargain Post III examined — and what happened when the bargain met an investigative reporter with a spreadsheet.
Layer I  ·  Source

In September 2023, facing an insurance market in genuine crisis — major insurers had already paused writing new policies across California, others were non-renewing existing customers at scale — Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara launched what his office calls the Sustainable Insurance Strategy: the most comprehensive overhaul of the state's insurance regulations in more than thirty years, built specifically to work within Prop 103's existing text rather than amend it, since amendment, as Post III established, would have required a near-impossible supermajority.

The strategy's central trade was simple to state and difficult to enforce: insurers would, for the first time in California history, be permitted to use forward-looking catastrophe models and factor reinsurance costs into their rate filings — the black-box layer examined in Post I, finally let in the front door. In exchange, any insurer using that privilege had to commit to writing and maintaining a defined share of new policies in wildfire-distressed areas, calibrated against their statewide market share.

Layer II  ·  Conduit
85%
The coverage commitment, as originally announced
Insurers using catastrophe models or reinsurance-cost pass-through in their rate filings had to write new policies in wildfire-distressed areas equal to at least 85% of their statewide market share — meaning a top California insurer couldn't simply concentrate growth in safe coastal suburbs while using the new modeling tools to justify rate increases everywhere else.

Several major carriers responded as the strategy intended. Mercury, CSAA, Pacific Specialty, Allstate, and Farmers all announced plans to expand or resume writing new policies in California under the new framework, according to the Department's own account. By the Department's count, oversight under Prop 103 and the new strategy combined saved Californians $6.6 billion in property, commercial, and auto insurance premiums between 2019 and 2025.

Then, in late 2025, the New York Times published an investigation into what insurers had actually agreed to write — and found a second, quieter pathway running alongside the 85% rule.

The Offramp the Times Found
The 85% rule was the headline commitment. A second, less-publicized compliance path let insurers satisfy the letter of the bargain without necessarily satisfying its intent.
Mechanism
What It Required on Paper
What the Times Found in Practice
Primary Path:
85% Rule
Write new policies in wildfire-distressed areas at a volume equal to at least 85% of the insurer's overall statewide market share — a direct, proportional commitment.
A genuinely demanding target for any insurer not already deeply present in high-risk zones, which is exactly why the alternate path existed and why insurers gravitated toward it.
Alternate Path:
5% Growth Rule
Increase policy count in designated distressed zones by just 5% over the prior year — a far lower bar, intended as a flexible alternative for insurers already operating responsibly in those areas.
Trivially easy to satisfy for any insurer that had aggressively non-renewed customers the year before, per the Times' reporting — a company that dropped tens of thousands of distressed-zone policies in 2024 could hit a 5% growth target in 2025 with ease, satisfying the rule's letter while still shrinking its real footprint in the riskiest neighborhoods relative to where it had once been.
Layer III  ·  Conversion

What gets converted here is a coverage mandate into a coverage floor measured against an artificially depressed baseline — and the conversion happened through negotiation, not deception. The Times' own framing, by most accounts of the reporting, was careful: this was a critical investigation into a gap between policy and practice, not an accusation that Lara's office had been misled or had acted in bad faith. The "offramps" existed because, as Lara's office has argued in its own defense, the rules were negotiated from a genuine position of regulatory weakness, with an industry already heading for the exits and major insurers refusing to write new policies at all.

Lara's team argues they were negotiating from a position of weakness, feeling "bullied" by an industry heading for the exits. The logic was to stop the bleeding first and build leverage for stricter terms later.

The Underwriting of Everything · Series Analysis, characterizing Lara's defense of the offramp provisions

That defense is not unreasonable on its own terms. A regulator with insurers actively exiting the market has genuinely limited leverage to demand maximalist terms; getting any commitment to write new policies in fire zones, even an imperfect one, is a real outcome compared to the alternative of insurers simply continuing to leave. But the result, whatever the intent behind it, is the pattern this archive has documented across dozens of other systems: a rule with a strong headline number and a much softer operative mechanism, negotiated under real pressure, that produces a market split — healthier and more competitive in low-risk areas, with risk continuing to concentrate in the residual market examined in this series' next post.

A Second Front: The Fight Over Who Gets to Object

At almost the exact moment the offramp story broke, Lara's office opened a second and, by most independent accounts, more openly contentious front: a proposed overhaul of Prop 103's intervenor system — the public-participation mechanism, examined in Post III, that lets consumer groups formally challenge rate filings and recover their costs if they win. Lara's office frames this as modernization, correcting a process unchanged since 2006 and dominated, in the Department's telling, by a small number of recurring participants.

Consumer Watchdog, the organization that authored Prop 103 in 1988 and remains the single most active intervenor under the system, calls the proposal something closer to retaliation. Jamie Court, the group's president, characterized it publicly as a "giveaway" to the insurance industry, not a reform.

The Commissioner's Case

An intervenor system unchanged since 2006, dominated by a small number of repeat participants, that Lara's office says has become a source of unnecessary delay and cost — problems the Department says are slowing exactly the kind of market stabilization its broader strategy is trying to achieve.

Consumer Watchdog's Case

Since 2002, the group says it has saved Californians more than $6 billion in insurance costs while being reimbursed $14.2 million for that work — roughly 25 cents recovered for every $100 saved — and points to a 2025 case in which it helped reduce a State Farm emergency rate hike request from 22% to 17% after wildfire losses, as evidence the system functions as designed.

Both figures are independently citable, and neither resolves the other. A system can have produced genuine, well-documented savings for consumers and still have grown procedurally sclerotic over nearly two decades without updates — those two things are not mutually exclusive, and the November 2025 hearing record on this proposal, by every account reviewed for this post, treated it as exactly that contested.

The Reversal — What the Record Shows
What was promised
A regulatory bargain: forward-looking catastrophe models and reinsurance cost pass-through, permitted for the first time, in exchange for binding new-policy commitments in wildfire-distressed areas — the most significant operational change to California insurance regulation since Prop 103 itself.
What was delivered
Several major insurers did expand or resume writing policies, and the Department's own figures show real, substantial premium savings continuing under the broader Prop 103 framework. Independent investigation found a second compliance path that meaningfully softened the headline 85% commitment for insurers willing to use it, with effects the regulator's office characterizes as early growing pains rather than design failures.
What remains contested
Whether the intervenor reform underway alongside this strategy strengthens or weakens the public's ability to challenge rate filings going forward — a fight between the regulator and the very advocacy group that wrote the underlying law, each citing real, verifiable numbers in support of opposing conclusions.
What FSA reads
A regulator negotiating in real time, under genuine market pressure, producing a bargain that is neither a clean success nor a clean failure eighteen months in. The offramp wasn't hidden — it was found by reporters doing exactly the kind of work this archive tries to do, and the regulator's response to being found out was public defense, not denial. The next post in this series follows where the risk the 85% rule was supposed to keep private actually went: California's FAIR Plan, and the Florida structure that got there first.
Layer IV  ·  Insulation

This post's insulation mechanism is the most ordinary one in the whole series, and possibly the most durable: complexity itself. An 85% coverage rule with a 5% alternate growth path, measured against a prior-year baseline that the same insurer's own non-renewal decisions had already shaped, is not secret — it's published in the regulatory text. It is simply complicated enough that understanding what it actually requires takes the kind of sustained, comparative, multi-filing analysis that an investigative newsroom with time and resources can do, and that the ordinary policyholder reading a premium notice cannot.

That gap — not concealment, just complexity outpacing ordinary public attention — is the same gap that let Post I's black-box models operate behind an NDA and Post III's deemer provision get quietly waived for two decades. Each time, the fix required someone with specialized expertise and sustained attention doing the work of translation. Each time, by the time the translation was published, the policy had already been running long enough to produce real effects on the ground.

Sub Verbis · Vera.

FSA Wall — Post IV · The Reversal

The Sustainable Insurance Strategy's launch (September 2023), the 85% wildfire-distressed-area coverage requirement, and the list of insurers (Mercury, CSAA, Pacific Specialty, Allstate, Farmers) announcing expanded California writing are drawn from California Department of Insurance press releases, insurance.ca.gov, 2025-2026. The $6.6 billion and $3.3 billion savings figures (2019-2025) are drawn from a CDI press release dated approximately February 2026. The "offramp" 5% alternate-compliance-path finding is drawn from New York Times investigative reporting as characterized in coverage by Live Insurance News, November 2025; this post relies on secondary characterization of the Times' findings rather than a direct read of the original investigation, and readers seeking the primary reporting should consult the New York Times directly. The intervenor reform dispute, including Commissioner Lara's stated rationale and Jamie Court/Consumer Watchdog's "retaliation" and "giveaway" characterizations, the $6 billion-since-2002 and $14.2 million reimbursement figures, and the State Farm 22%-to-17% rate reduction example, are drawn from CalMatters reporting (September 2025) and Live Insurance News coverage (October 2025) of the proposed intervenor regulations, cross-referenced against the Department's own September 2025 and February 2026 press releases characterizing the same reforms favorably. Readers should weigh the Department's press releases as an interested party's own account of its reforms' success alongside the independent and advocacy-group reporting cited above.

The Underwriting of Everything  ·  Series Navigation
Post IThe Black Box
Post IIThe Concentration
Post IIIThe Mandate
Post IVThe Reversal
Post VThe Exodus

The Underwriting of Everything : The Mandate Post 3 subtitle: In 1988, California voters won the most expensive ballot fight in American history at the time, and wrote a rule so hard to change that it outlived the climate it was built for.

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

The Mandate

In 1988, California voters won the most expensive ballot fight in American history at the time, and wrote a rule so hard to change that it outlived the climate it was built for.



Series header image, reused. This post steps back thirty-eight years, to the law that determined, for nearly four decades, what California's insurers were even legally permitted to ask the modeling and reinsurance layers examined in Posts I and II to price.
Layer I  ·  Source

On November 8, 1988, California voters approved Proposition 103 by the narrowest of margins — 51.1 percent to 48.9 — after a campaign that, at the time, was the most expensive ballot fight in American history. The insurance industry spent the overwhelming majority of more than $200 million trying to defeat it. It lost, by about two percentage points.

This post is not about California's current insurance crisis. That comes in Posts IV and V. This post is about the law that crisis is now colliding with — a law built to solve a 1988 problem, written with a deliberate constitutional lock to make sure it couldn't be quietly undone, that has now outlasted the world it was designed for by nearly four decades.

Layer II  ·  Conduit

Before Prop 103, California ran what regulators call an "open competition" system, in place since the 1947 McBride-Grunsky Insurance Regulatory Act: insurers set their own rates and simply filed them with the state, with no requirement for advance approval. Voters in 1988, angry at what they saw as unchecked premium increases, replaced that system entirely. Prop 103 rolled back rates by 20 percent immediately, made the previously gubernatorially appointed Insurance Commissioner an elected office, and — most consequentially for everything this series examines — instituted "prior approval": insurers would now need the Commissioner's sign-off before any rate change could take effect at all.

2/3
Legislative supermajority required to amend Prop 103 — or a public vote instead
Section 8(b) of the original ballot text requires any legislative amendment to pass both houses by a two-thirds roll-call vote, or be separately approved by the electorate. This single provision is why the law has remained substantially unchanged since 1988 even as the underlying insurance market it governs has transformed completely.

That supermajority lock is the single most important structural fact in this entire post, and it is worth understanding exactly what kind of choice it represents. The authors of Prop 103 knew, correctly, that an insurance industry which had just spent over $200 million trying to kill the law at the ballot box would spend whatever it took afterward to weaken it through the ordinary legislative process. Locking the law behind a supermajority requirement was a rational, foreseeable defense against exactly that. It also means the law has almost no mechanism for routine modernization — every adaptation requires either an extraordinary political consensus or another statewide vote, which is precisely why the catastrophe-modeling fight examined in Post I took the form it did: not a simple rule change, but a multi-year administrative rulemaking process specifically designed to work within Prop 103's existing text rather than amend it.

Two Records, Same Law — What Both Sides Can Point To
Both the law's defenders and its critics cite real, independently verifiable figures. The disagreement is not about whether the numbers are accurate. It's about which decades and which lines of insurance they describe.
Claim
The Consumer-Protection Record
The Market-Function Record
Auto
Insurance
California's own Department of Insurance, citing Consumer Federation of America analysis, states Prop 103 saved drivers $154 billion over its first 30 years, with California auto premiums actually falling 7% between 1989 and 2004 while national premiums rose 47% over the same period.
Industry-aligned analysts at the International Center for Law & Economics note this success was concentrated in auto insurance specifically — a line with relatively stable, statistically predictable risk — and argue the same rigid framework functions very differently for catastrophe-exposed property lines.
Rate Filing
Speed
Consumer Watchdog, the organization that authored Prop 103, defends the prior-approval hearing process as essential due diligence against excessive rates, noting consumer intervenors have recovered hundreds of millions of dollars for policyholders through formal rate challenges.
ICLE's 2024 analysis finds California has the second-slowest rate-approval system in the nation behind only Colorado, with a five-year average filing delay of 236 days for homeowners insurance — a delay the same analysis argues has become genuinely dangerous now that reinsurance and catastrophe-model costs reprice annually.
The
"Deemer"
As originally written, Prop 103 included a "deemer" provision: if the Department of Insurance took no action on a rate filing within 60 to 180 days, the filing would be automatically deemed approved — a built-in protection against indefinite regulatory delay.
In practice, per ICLE's review, the Department of Insurance routinely asks insurers to waive the deemer as a condition of moving forward, and most do — meaning a consumer-protection mechanism written into the original law has been substantially neutralized through administrative custom rather than repealed through any public vote.
Layer III  ·  Conversion

What gets converted here is a single, blunt regulatory tool into two entirely different outcomes depending on the line of insurance it's applied to — and that divergence is the actual finding this post wants to leave you with, not a verdict on which side is correct. Prior approval works straightforwardly well for a line like auto insurance, where loss costs are large in number, statistically stable, and reasonably predictable year to year. The same mechanism applied to wildfire-exposed homeowners insurance — where a single bad season can produce losses an order of magnitude larger than the historical average, and where the financial instruments backing that risk (examined in Posts I and II) reprice in real time — produces a structurally different result: a regulatory system built for predictable risk, governing a market that has become anything but.

What Prop 103 Got Right

It ended an "open competition" system that had, by the contemporary record, allowed real price-gouging with no regulatory check at all. It created public participation rights — the intervenor process — that gave ordinary consumers standing to challenge rate filings, something almost no other state offers in comparable form. Its auto insurance results, by the state's own data, are genuinely strong.

What It Didn't Anticipate

A regulatory text locked behind a supermajority amendment requirement, in an era before catastrophe models, before securitized reinsurance capital, and before climate-driven loss volatility reached its current scale. The law's rigidity wasn't a flaw in 1988. It became one as the world the law assumed stopped existing.

A law that takes a two-thirds vote or a statewide referendum to amend isn't broken because it's strict. It's exposed because strictness, applied to a market that didn't exist yet when the law was written, eventually stops being protection and starts being a mismatch nobody with the power to fix it is positioned to fix quickly.

The Underwriting of Everything · Series Analysis
The Mandate — What the Record Shows
What was built
A prior-approval insurance rate regulation system, won at the ballot box by a two-point margin after the most expensive ballot campaign in American history to that point, deliberately locked behind a supermajority amendment threshold to protect it from legislative erosion.
What it produced
Genuinely strong, well-documented consumer outcomes in auto insurance over more than three decades — and, by a separate and equally well-documented record, a homeowners insurance rate-filing process now ranked among the slowest in the nation, with at least one of the law's own built-in safeguards (the deemer) effectively neutralized through routine administrative practice rather than public repeal.
Why it didn't adapt
Because adaptation was made deliberately difficult, on purpose, by design, as a defense against the exact industry pressure that spent $200 million trying to prevent the law from passing in the first place. The same provision that protected Prop 103 from being weakened also made it nearly impossible to update.
What FSA reads
A rare case in this archive where the original design choice was neither corrupt nor careless — it was a reasonable, evidence-based response to a real problem, written by people who anticipated exactly the kind of erosion attempt that would follow. The mismatch that emerged decades later is a consequence of time, not of bad faith on anyone's part in 1988. The next post in this series follows what it actually took — politically, administratively, legally — to change this law's core mechanism for the first time in thirty-six years.
Layer IV  ·  Insulation

The insulation here is structural rather than secretive, and it's worth naming as its own category, distinct from every other insulation mechanism this archive has documented. Most of FSA's prior subjects survive through concealment or capture — a regulator that doesn't ask the right question, a contract clause nobody reads closely. Prop 103 survived through the opposite mechanism: total transparency about exactly how hard it would be to change, built into the law's own text, voted on directly by the public, and upheld by the California Supreme Court against every subsequent challenge.

That is, in its way, democracy working exactly as designed — durable, resistant to quiet erosion, answerable only to the people who voted for it in the first place. The cost of that durability, thirty-six years later, sat almost entirely on the other end of the chain examined in this series' next two posts: homeowners in wildfire zones, watching the world's most sophisticated catastrophe models price their risk in real time, governed by a regulatory text that, by design, could not move nearly as fast.

Sub Verbis · Vera.

FSA Wall — Post III · The Mandate

Proposition 103's 1988 vote margin (51.1% to 48.9%), the $200 million-plus campaign spending figure, and the supermajority amendment requirement (Section 8(b)) are drawn from the Wikipedia entry "1988 California Proposition 103" and corroborated by Consumer Watchdog's own historical account of the measure it authored. The $154 billion savings figure and the auto-premium comparison data (California premiums falling 7% from 1989-2004 versus a 47% national increase) are drawn from a California Department of Insurance press release citing Consumer Federation of America analysis, 2018. The characterization of California's homeowners insurance filing delays (236-day five-year average, second-slowest nationally) and the "deemer" provision's practical neutralization through routine CDI waiver requests are drawn from two International Center for Law & Economics reports: "Rethinking Prop 103's Approach to Insurance Regulation" and "The Questionable Value of California's Rate Intervenors," both published by R.J. Lehmann and Ian Adams, 2024. Readers should note ICLE is a market-oriented policy research organization whose published recommendations favor Prop 103 reform or repeal; its factual findings on filing delays are nonetheless independently citable and are treated in this post as data rather than as a neutral source's overall conclusion. Consumer Watchdog is, similarly, an advocacy organization that authored and continues to defend Prop 103; its savings figures are sourced to Consumer Federation of America's independent analysis rather than to Consumer Watchdog's own modeling.

The Underwriting of Everything  ·  Series Navigation
Post IThe Black Box
Post IIThe Concentration
Post IIIThe Mandate
Post IVThe Reversal
Post VThe Exodus

The Underwriting of Everything : The Concentration Post 2 subtitle: The companies that reinsure the planet’s catastrophic risk are fewer than you’d think. The money backing them, increasingly, is not theirs at all — it’s yours, through a pension fund you’ve never heard mention the word “reinsurance.”

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

The Concentration

The companies that reinsure the planet's catastrophic risk are fewer than you'd think. The money backing them, increasingly, is not theirs at all — it's yours, through a pension fund you've never heard mention the word "reinsurance."



Series header image, reused: a control room of catastrophe model output bleeding through the roofline of an ordinary house. This post follows the money one layer further upstream — past the model, into the capital that actually pays the claim.
Layer I  ·  Source

Your home insurer is not the entity actually holding the risk on your house. In almost every case, your insurer has itself bought insurance — reinsurance — transferring a meaningful share of its own potential losses to a second tier of companies most policyholders will never directly interact with or even hear named. This post is about who sits at that second tier, how concentrated it is, and a genuinely significant shift now underway in where the actual capital backing it comes from.

Layer II  ·  Conduit

The traditional reinsurance market is genuinely concentrated. A handful of firms — Munich Re, Swiss Re, Hannover Re, SCOR, and a cluster of Bermuda-domiciled specialists including RenaissanceRe, Arch Capital, and Everest Re — write a disproportionate share of global reinsurance premium. RenaissanceRe alone holds roughly $30.5 billion in assets; Arch Capital Group, $28.7 billion; PartnerRe, $25.4 billion — three Bermuda-based firms among the handful that effectively determine how much capacity exists, globally, to absorb the next major hurricane, earthquake, or wildfire season.

$65.2B
Total insurance-linked security listings on the Bermuda Stock Exchange by end of 2025
The Bermuda Stock Exchange holds roughly 90% of the global market for listing catastrophe bonds and related insurance-linked securities — meaning a single small island jurisdiction has become the dominant venue through which global climate-catastrophe risk is converted into a tradable financial instrument.

That concentration at the underwriting layer is real, well-documented, and has been the conventional story about reinsurance for decades. What's changed, and what most coverage of insurance-market stress doesn't fully register, is where the actual capital increasingly comes from. 2025 was the first year catastrophe bond issuance exceeded $20 billion globally, reaching roughly $25.6 billion — a record, and one widely expected to be exceeded again in 2026. These bonds are bought by institutional investors: pension funds, hedge funds, dedicated insurance-linked-securities funds. When a catastrophe bond's trigger conditions are met — a hurricane of a certain intensity making landfall in a defined zone, for instance — the bondholders lose some or all of their principal, and that money flows directly to the insurer or reinsurer that sponsored the bond.

Who Actually Holds the Risk on Your House
A single homeowner's premium dollar can pass through four or five distinct layers before the actual capital backing it is identifiable — and that capital increasingly does not originate inside the insurance industry at all.
Layer
Who's There
What They Actually Hold
Primary
Insurer
The company on your policy documents — State Farm, Allstate, a regional carrier, or, in California and Florida, increasingly the state's own residual-market plan.
A retained share of the risk, typically the more frequent, lower-severity losses, while the largest potential losses are passed upward through reinsurance.
Traditional
Reinsurer
Munich Re, Swiss Re, Hannover Re, and Bermuda-based firms like RenaissanceRe and Arch Capital, writing reinsurance treaties against their own balance sheets.
A genuinely concentrated share of global catastrophic exposure, still the dominant model, but increasingly supplemented rather than solely relied upon for peak risk.
Catastrophe Bond /
ILS Investor
Pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, and dedicated ILS investment managers buying bonds listed almost entirely through the Bermuda Stock Exchange.
Direct exposure to catastrophic loss, often without the investor's own beneficiaries — pensioners, in many cases — ever being told their retirement fund holds a bet against a California wildfire season.
The
Homeowner
The person actually living in the structure all of the above exists to protect, several layers removed from every party now holding a financial stake in what happens to it.
No visibility whatsoever into how much of their own premium is funding a traditional reinsurer's balance sheet versus a catastrophe bond a teacher's pension fund happens to hold.
Layer III  ·  Conversion

What gets converted here is concentrated institutional risk into diffuse, securitized risk — and it is worth being precise about why that conversion happened, because the reason is not obscure. Insured catastrophe losses surpassed $100 billion globally in 2025, a level the traditional reinsurance balance-sheet model alone has grown less able to absorb cheaply. Catastrophe bonds let reinsurers access additional capacity on demand, without permanently expanding their own balance sheets — in industry parlance, "on-demand capital." That's a rational response to genuinely escalating catastrophic losses, not a scheme. The conversion's consequence, though, is that the actual entity now bearing a meaningful and growing share of climate catastrophe risk is no longer a regulated reinsurer with a public financial-strength rating. It is, increasingly, whoever happened to be in a cat bond fund the year the bond's trigger was hit.

Cat bonds are "structural anchors" now, not emergency capacity. Pension funds aren't dabbling in catastrophe risk anymore — they're allocating to it as a long-term, diversifying asset class, the same way they'd allocate to corporate bonds or real estate.

Paraphrasing industry commentary, Monte Carlo Rendez-Vous reinsurance conference, 2025

None of this is hidden in the way a black-box catastrophe model's methodology is hidden — cat bond issuance, sponsor names, and trigger structures are disclosed in offering documents, and outlets like Artemis cover this market in granular, almost real-time detail. The opacity here is different in kind: it's not that the information is concealed, it's that almost nobody outside the specialist trade press connects "my pension fund holds an insurance-linked securities allocation" to "my retirement income is now partly contingent on whether a 1-in-100-year flood hits a specific U.S. region in a specific year." Moody's has warned the U.S. could face $375 billion in uninsured flood losses from a single 1-in-100-year event — a number large enough that the distinction between "insured" and "who specifically is on the other side of that insurance" stops being a technical footnote and starts being the whole story.

The Concentration — What the Record Shows
What was built
A reinsurance market still meaningfully concentrated among a handful of traditional carriers, now layered with a rapidly growing alternative-capital market — catastrophe bonds, insurance-linked securities, reinsurance sidecars — sourcing capacity from institutional investors rather than reinsurers' own balance sheets.
Why it grew
Genuinely escalating catastrophic losses — over $100 billion insured globally in 2025 alone — outpacing what traditional reinsurance balance sheets could absorb at a price insurers were willing to pay, pushing the industry toward capital markets as a faster, more flexible source of capacity.
What it obscures
Not the existence of the risk transfer — that's disclosed in detail to specialists — but its ultimate destination. The retail investor, the pensioner, the ordinary saver in an allocated fund is now, with real frequency, a direct counterparty to catastrophic climate risk without any plain-language disclosure connecting those two facts for them.
What FSA reads
A genuine and sound financial innovation — spreading catastrophic risk across a deeper, more diverse capital base is, by most expert accounts, a stabilizing development for the insurance system overall — that nonetheless completes a long chain of attenuation. The closer you get to the actual capital now bearing your home's wildfire risk, the further it gets from anyone who has ever seen your house. The next post in this series turns from this global capital layer to the specific regulatory mechanism that determined, for nearly four decades, what California's insurers were even allowed to ask this entire system to price.
Layer IV  ·  Insulation

The insulation in this layer is distance rather than secrecy. Nothing about catastrophe bonds is concealed from regulators or from sophisticated investors — the trade press covers individual bond pricing in more granular real-time detail than almost any other corner of finance. The insulation operates on the other end of the chain: the homeowner whose risk is being transferred has no practical way to trace it, and the pension beneficiary whose retirement fund increasingly holds a slice of that risk is rarely told so in terms that would mean anything to them.

That asymmetry — total transparency among specialists, near-total opacity to everyone the risk actually concerns — is its own kind of architecture, and it sits directly above the regulatory layer this series turns to next.

Sub Verbis · Vera.

FSA Wall — Post II · The Concentration

Reinsurer asset figures (RenaissanceRe ~$30.5B, Arch Capital ~$28.7B, PartnerRe ~$25.4B) are drawn from Beinsure Data's 2026 ranking of top Bermuda reinsurance companies. The Bermuda Stock Exchange's approximately 90% share of global catastrophe bond and ILS listings, and its $65.2 billion total ILS listing figure as of year-end 2025, are drawn from Artemis.bm reporting and Chambers and Partners' 2026 Bermuda insurance practice guide. The 2025 catastrophe bond issuance record (~$25.6 billion, first year above $20 billion) is drawn from Bermuda:Re+ILS industry commentary citing Moody's analysis. The $100 billion-plus 2025 global insured catastrophe loss figure and the characterization of escalating loss trends are drawn from Artemis.bm news coverage (Gallagher Re, Bowen) and IRMI's analysis of 2025 reinsurance and catastrophe bond trends, which also documents the California wildfire losses examined in greater detail in Post V of this series. The $375 billion uninsured U.S. flood loss warning is attributed to Moody's, as reported by Artemis.bm, June 2026. The characterization of catastrophe bonds as "structural anchors" for long-term institutional allocation reflects industry commentary reported by HCMA and cited in Artemis.bm's ongoing reinsurance news coverage; this post's framing of the disclosure gap to pension beneficiaries is this archive's own analytical contribution, not a claim sourced to any single report cited above.

The Underwriting of Everything  ·  Series Navigation
Post IThe Black Box
Post IIThe Concentration
Post IIIThe Mandate
Post IVThe Reversal
Post VThe Exodus