Executive summary
This update is a general overview of the key developments in the GB cyber insurance market; we will analyse the current conditions for WTW clients both international and UK based companies using the London insurance market to transfer risk.
During Q1 2023 the GB cyber insurance market saw further improvements for clients with additional levels of insurer competition.
In particular:
- Improved buying conditions throughout Q1, most segments of the cyber market benefited from improved rates and pricing, including those previously most affected by the hard market conditions in parts of 2021 and 2022;
- Cyber market insurers offering larger amounts of capacity more frequently and offering capacity for companies that were out of appetite in the past 12-24 months due to increased underwriting flexibility
- Clients often achieved material pricing reductions unless pricing was already very competitive
- Policy retentions/excesses were generally stable but insurers showed increased willingness to offer alternative retention options
- Policy coverage, particularly in respect of systemic risk (war and infrastructure exclusions in particular) remains under very close scrutiny but insurers are increasingly showing more flexibility regarding such exclusions
- Provision of detailed underwriting information, especially context around cyber risk controls, remains essential as insurers show increased willingness to understanding the risk controls in place in order to offer capacity and/or improved pricing
- Claims trends suggest a severity of claims continues to increase, with ransomware threat actors stepping-up attacks against large enterprises
All of these key developments will be covered within this update.
Cyber insurance market capacity
Q1 2023 has seen strong competition from insurers to deploy capacity on both primary and excess layers, with a notable increase in the number of insurers competing for primary positions. This provided options for existing cyber insurance buyers to purchase increased policy limits, a trend which we have observed with increasing frequency, with clients increasingly using savings achieved (in renewing their existing total limits) to purchase additional capacity.
Further new capacity has already entered the cyber market in 2023, with a number of insurers identifying continued demand for cyber insurance capacity from both existing and new buyers.
