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Fronting Carrier Market Growth Driven By Big Move in 2017
M
arkel’s acquisition of State National Group
turned heads and attracted attention to a sector
that previously had gone largely unnoticed.
While State National Group has long been
synonymous with the fronting space, it was Markel’s
acquisition of the carrier in 2017 that gave the entire
market the boost it’s been experiencing since.
“When you’re looking at a company that’s as well
thought of in the specialty commercial realm as
Markel, looking at the business model of a company
like State National and deciding there was a benefit
to them taking on and integrating that into their
operation, I think it just gave more prominence to
that type of business model,” AM Best Associate
Director David Blades said. “It got more people
looking at that business model with heightened
interest.”
State National’s direct premiums written have
grown by more than $1 billion since the acquisition,
according to AM Best data. Markel was among the
top 25 U.S. property/casualty writers through the
first three months of 2023, with $1.64 billion in net
premiums written, according to AM Best data.
As the space has grown, everyone has looked
to State National for inspiration, Everspan Group
President Steve Dresner said. “They built a terrific
platform that was acquired by Markel. Then Clear
Blue started. Then I just think the program space
has exploded because traditional carriers weren’t
really handling this business very well and also faced
a great deal of channel conflict,” he said.
Clear Blue Insurance Group and Spinnaker
Insurance Co. became the first of the newer fronting
companies to receive AM Best ratings, in 2015. To
date, each of the 13 new carriers has achieved either an
A (Excellent) or A- (Excellent) rating from AM Best.
Analysts say in addition to helping inspire the
formation of new rated fronting carriers, the Markel
transaction also helped inspire more major deals.
Earlier this year, for example, Mitsui Sumitomo
Insurance Co. Ltd. completed its acquisition of U.S.
fronting carrier Transverse Insurance Group LLC.
Mitsui’s interest in acquiring New Jersey-based
Transverse was to build a presence in the U.S., the
company said in a statement at the time. It also
allowed the company to access the fast-growing
specialist managing general agent, wholesale and
other broker-led distribution channels for property,
casualty, marine and specialty business.
For Transverse, which entered the market in
2018, it was the company’s second deal in less than a
year. It previously formed a partnership with Mosaic
Insurance, helping that company activate $20
million in U.S. market cybersecurity capacity.
“When I first heard about the proposed
acquisition, I was a little bit surprised, but then
you take a step back and you look at what Mitsui’s
trying to accomplish,” Blades said. “[It’s] based on
opportunity to grow their business domestically in
the U.S. in lines where they thought they might
need a jump-start, and they saw Transverse offering
that somewhat.
“In terms of impact on the market, I wouldn’t put
it on the same level [as the Markel-State National
combination], but I think what it does show is the
growing interest in the fronting companies.”
But that acquisition, and the explosion of the
fronting carrier business into a $10.56 billion
market, likely wouldn’t have happened without the
Markel-State National deal, analysts and insurers say.
“I view it as hugely validating of our strategic
intention and understanding of where opportunity
lies in the marketplace,” State National President
and CEO Matt Freeman said. “I think the fact
that there are so many folks that have chosen to do
something similar is a sign that others have become
convinced of the opportunity and are willing to
commit some capital to that opportunity, as well.”
Freeman said deep legacy relationships between
State National and Markel didn’t exist at the time.
“However, since then, the depth of the
relationships and the positivity there has been
fantastic on both sides,” Freeman said. “Looking back
a few years post-transaction, I think the decision-
makers on both sides would say it thus far played out
at least as well as we expected from both perspectives.”
A little more than five years into the deal,
Freeman says both sides continue to see increasing
potential from the combination over the long
term. “While we have uniquely successful and
independent business franchises that are very
talented at what we do, we also have the ability to
leverage the power of our platform by bringing those
skill sets and capabilities together in support of the
complex needs of our sophisticated partners,” he
said.
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