1992 — Hurricane Andrew: The Event That Reshaped Modern Insurance
Category: Property • Reinsurance • Catastrophe Modeling • Regulation • Capital Markets • Bermuda
Summary
Hurricane Andrew made landfall in South Florida on August 24, 1992 as a Category 5 storm with sustained winds of 165 mph. It caused $15–20 billion in insured losses — the largest insured catastrophe loss in world history at the time.
Andrew didn’t just destroy Homestead. It destroyed the old catastrophe‑insurance system.
Andrew triggered:
- 10+ insurer insolvencies
- a global reinsurance capacity crisis
- the creation of the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund
- the Bermuda reinsurer boom
- the rise of catastrophe modeling (AIR, RMS) as essential tools
- the birth of the cat bond / ILS market
- new building codes and regulatory reforms
- a permanent shift in how insurers understand accumulation and tail risk
Andrew is the hinge between the old, intuition‑driven underwriting world and the modern, model‑driven, capital‑markets‑integrated catastrophe‑risk ecosystem.
I. The Event: A Compact, Devastating Category 5
Andrew was unusual:
- small wind field
- extremely intense core
- rapid intensification
- catastrophic structural damage
- massive concentration of exposure in South Dade
It destroyed:
- 63,000 homes
- damaged 100,000 more
- leveled entire neighborhoods
- wiped out Homestead Air Force Base
- caused 44 direct fatalities
But the real shock was financial.
II. The Insurance Impact: A System Not Built for This
Andrew caused $15–20 billion in insured losses — more than double the previous record.
The industry was blindsided because:
- accumulation was poorly understood
- PMLs were crude or nonexistent
- exposure data was inaccurate
- reinsurance programs were inadequate
- pricing was based on history, not science
The result:
1. Insurer Insolvencies
More than 10 insurers failed, including:
- Florida‑based homeowners carriers
- regional property insurers
- undercapitalized writers with concentrated exposure
2. Reinsurance Crisis
Reinsurers suffered massive losses and withdrew capacity.
3. Capital Shock
The industry realized it had no idea how much tail risk it was carrying.
Andrew exposed the structural fragility of the entire catastrophe‑insurance system.
III. The Regulatory Response: Florida Rebuilds the Market
Andrew forced Florida to reinvent its property‑insurance system.
1. Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund (FHCF)
Created in 1993 to provide:
- mandatory statewide reinsurance
- lower‑cost capacity
- stability for primary carriers
2. Citizens Property Insurance Corporation
Eventually created (2002) to serve as the insurer of last resort.
3. New Building Codes
The Florida Building Code (2002) was one of the strongest in the world.
Andrew permanently changed how Florida regulates and finances catastrophe risk.
IV. The Industry Response: The Birth of Modern Catastrophe Modeling
Andrew validated the early work of:
- AIR (1987)
- RMS (1988)
AIR had estimated that a major Miami hurricane could cause $13+ billion in losses — a figure widely dismissed before Andrew.
After Andrew:
- cat modeling became mandatory
- reinsurers required modeled PMLs
- exposure data quality became a priority
- underwriting became portfolio‑driven
- regulators began referencing modeled losses
Andrew was the moment when science replaced intuition.
V. The Capital Response: The Bermuda Reinsurer Boom
Andrew created a global shortage of reinsurance capital.
Bermuda stepped in with the Class of ’93:
- Renaissance Re
- Mid Ocean Re
- PartnerRe
- IPC Re
- Tempest Re
- Cat Limited
These companies:
- used AIR/RMS models
- specialized in high‑layer cat
- brought billions in new capital
- became the backbone of modern cat reinsurance
This was the beginning of Bermuda as a global reinsurance hub.
VI. The Financial Innovation Response: The Rise of Cat Bonds and ILS
Andrew exposed the limits of traditional reinsurance.
The solution:
- catastrophe bonds
- sidecars
- collateralized reinsurance
- insurance‑linked securities (ILS)
By the mid‑1990s, capital‑markets investors were financing catastrophe risk — a direct legacy of Andrew.
VII. Legacy
Hurricane Andrew is one of the most important events in insurance history.
It reshaped:
- underwriting
- reinsurance
- capital markets
- regulation
- building codes
- catastrophe modeling
- global risk management
Andrew marks the beginning of the modern catastrophe‑risk era.
Everything that came after — Bermuda, ILS, FHCF, Citizens, RMS/AIR dominance — traces back to this storm.
Related Entries
Foundational Catastrophe‑Modeling Milestones
- 1987 — AIR Worldwide — the first commercial catastrophe‑modeling firm; Andrew validated AIR’s early Miami‑hurricane scenarios and forced rapid model evolution
- 1988 — RMS Founding — RMS’s scientific modeling framework became indispensable after Andrew exposed the failure of historical‑loss methods
- 1990s — Rise of Probabilistic Risk Assessment — Andrew accelerated the shift toward stochastic simulation, EP curves, and tail‑risk quantification
Reinsurance, Capital Markets & Global Market Restructuring
- 1990s — Bermuda Reinsurer Boom — Andrew created a global capital shortage that led directly to the Class of ’93 and Bermuda’s rise as a reinsurance hub
- 1990s — Rise of Cat Bonds & ILS — Andrew exposed the limits of traditional reinsurance and catalyzed the development of catastrophe bonds and collateralized reinsurance
- 1990s — Reinsurance Capacity Crisis (forthcoming) — the global shortage of catastrophe capacity triggered by Andrew’s unprecedented losses
Regulatory Reform, State Market Structure & Public Backstops
- 1996 — California Earthquake Authority (CEA) — a parallel example of a state‑created catastrophe‑insurance solution inspired partly by Andrew’s demonstration of systemic market failure
- 1993 — Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund (FHCF) (forthcoming) — the mandatory statewide reinsurance program created directly in response to Andrew
- 2002 — Citizens Property Insurance Corporation (forthcoming) — Florida’s insurer of last resort, created as part of the long‑term restructuring that began with Andrew
- 2004 — Florida Building Code (forthcoming) — the engineering and regulatory overhaul driven by Andrew’s exposure of structural vulnerabilities
Parallel Catastrophes & Systemic‑Risk Lessons
- 1994 — Northridge Earthquake — the West Coast analogue to Andrew, triggering a market collapse and the creation of the CEA
- 1984 — Bhopal Gas Disaster — another event that revealed catastrophic accumulation blind spots and forced insurers to rethink industrial‑catastrophe modeling
- 1985–1986 — The Liability Crisis — a prior systemic shock that, like Andrew, exposed structural fragility in underwriting and reinsurance
Scientific, Engineering & Modeling Evolution
- 1993 — Daubert v. Merrell Dow — reshaped scientific‑evidence standards and later influenced the admissibility and transparency expectations for catastrophe‑model outputs
- 1990s — Modern Wind‑Engineering Reform (forthcoming) — the engineering‑code evolution driven by Andrew’s demonstration of structural vulnerability in South Florida
- 1990s — Exposure‑Data Modernization (forthcoming) — the industry‑wide shift toward geocoding, portfolio aggregation, and high‑resolution exposure data triggered by Andrew