Insurance,
fuel and personal finance in the UK following
recent world catastrophes
Released on
= September 6, 2005, 3:17 am
Press Release
Author = Bigmouthmedia
Industry = Financial
Press Release
Summary = Worldwide extreme weather conditions and local terrorist
attacks are leading to increased financial burden for UK businesses
and consumers
Press Release
Body = Following the increase in UK terrorist activities and the
catastrophe that has hit New Orleans, it seems we are all going
to have to foot the bill. The total cost of the catastrophe is currently
predicted to top $25 billion (£13.6bn), however many analysts
predict that the full costs could rise much higher even doubling
to $50bn (£27.2bn), although with attempts to reduce the flood
waters expected to take several months, it will be some time before
a clear picture emerges.
Here in the
UK, the effects of the disaster in the US are already starting to
be felt through higher costs at the petrol pumps, as European reserves
of oil which have been set aside for disaster protection are redirected
to America to help their recovery efforts. Oil prices have already
been rising in recent months hitting record levels as traders have
pushed the price up on fears of supply problems from
the Middle East as terrorism worries have grown. Last week the wholesale
price of petrol charged by suppliers rose again due to hurricane
Katrina and retailers say that more increases are on the way, making
the £1 a litre that is being experienced in some areas inevitable
across the country. Royal Dutch Shell and BP have already
announced that they are set to raise prices still further in the
wake of hurricane Katrina. While US motorists have to cope with
fuel prices now at a record $3 a gallon, the research group Catalist
has found that the average price of a litre of unleaded petrol in
the UK was now 92.3p.
Ray Hollaway
of the Petrol Retailers Association said, "In the coming week
we are going to see increases of 3p or 4p a litre. That's unavoidable
because of what happened in the US...We have to accept that the
days of 80p a litre are behind us.”
In addition
to the actual cost of supplying fuel in the UK, the costs to consumers
is further being exacerbated by the governments refusal to reduce
taxation levels, and as the oil companies are to spend millions
of pounds ahead of all previous expectations, upgrading UK pumps
and station forecourts, to technically enable them to charge higher
prices as prices spiral beyond the £1 a litre mark.
Analysts are
worried that the increases in fuel prices will lead to inflation
rises and decreased public spending, as suppliers transport costs
increase, and experience has shown that petrol price hikes do not
lead to a significant reduction in public fuel demands, but rather
it leads to consumers cutting back their spending in other areas
causing a slowdown in the economy.
The insurance
costs of recent events have caused huge additional expenses to the
insurance companies. The impact of Katrina on companies operating
onshore and offshore in the Gulf of Mexico has meant that insurers
such as Lloyds may be hit fairly hard, with the bill for the Lloyd's
market being tentatively placed at around £1bn to £2bn.
Lloyds stated that the, “terror attacks in London have had
a big
human cost, but our analysis suggests that the economic costs may
be quite low.” Despite Lloyds’ claims that the effect
of the London bombings has cost them relatively little financially,
in light of expected future attacks and calls for terrorist activity
exclusions to be scrapped, it seems likely that premium increases
will be gradually introduced.
Since Katrina,
and the Asian tsunami which struck at Christmas, many insurers are
becoming worried about the rising costs of the increasing number
of serious weather related incidences. As a consequence of the insurance
payouts for the devastation and carnage wrought in Asia and by hurricane
Katrina, many analysts believe it is inevitable that businesses
will also face huge rises in premiums down the line. The
Association of British Insurers (ABI) issued a recent report stating
that, “in the UK, climate change could increase the annual
costs of flooding by almost 15-fold by the 2080s under the high
emissions scenario, leading to potential total losses from river,
coastal and urban flooding of more than $40bn (£22bn).”
The ABI ( http://www.abi.org.uk/
) also released research findings indicating that less than 50%
of small UK firms have a plan in place to ensure that their business
could survive should they be hit by an emergency or disaster, and
only 50% of UK households possess any life insurance with 25% of
mortgage holders actually have insufficient life insurance to cover
their debt therefore placing their home at
risk.
With UK personal
debt over £1 trillion, decreasing levels of investment through
products such as individual savings accounts (ISAs), it is perhaps
understandable that many see insurance protection policies as being
one of the first expenses that
can be put off until money is more plentiful, however it is at these
times when finances are tight that these financial products are
most important.
The growth of
financial services such as UK based Moneynet (
http://www.moneynet.co.uk ), eSure.com, and Confused.com combined
with the proliferation of financial information provided by the
likes of Which?, the Financial Times and the BBC, has helped to
increase competition between insurance providers and assisted in
keeping prices down. However the current outlook seems to be that
prices are going to rise, but by how much is unknown until the full
effect of recent events is calculated. The only thing that is certain
is that it no longer matters where the disaster happens, in the
end the UK consumer will eventually have to pay.
Released by
bigmouthmedia ( http://www.bigmouthmedia.com )
Web Site = http://www.moneynet.co.uk
Contact Details
= E-mail: INFO@MONEYNET.CO.UK
Telephone: 020 8313 9030
Fax: 020 8464 1971
Website: http://www.moneynet.co.uk
Address: Moneynet
Sussex House
8-10 Homesdale Road
Bromley
Kent
BR2 9LZ
Printer
Friendly Format
Back to previous
page...
Back to home page...
Submit your
press releases...
|