Hannover Re rides Americas growth as Europe, APAC lag at January renewals

The giant reinsurer trails industry peers as soft market bites

Hannover Re rides Americas growth as Europe, APAC lag at January renewals

Reinsurance News

By Kenneth Araullo

Hannover Re increased its premium income in traditional property and casualty reinsurance by 3.3% in the treaty renewals as of January 1, 2026, a result that trails some peers as abundant market capacity drove the sharpest rate decline in a decade.

The company recorded an average risk-adjusted price decline of 3.2% during the renewal period. Treaties with a premium volume of €10.196 billion were up for renewal, of which Hannover Re renewed €9.369 billion. New and restructured treaties contributed €1.165 billion, bringing total renewed premium to €10.535 billion.

Clemens Jungsthöfel (pictured above), chief executive officer, said the company achieved profitable growth in a competitive market. "Our strong market position, long-standing and partnership-focused client relationships, as well as cost advantages were crucial factors," he said.

By region, Hannover Re's premium volume in the Americas grew 6.5%, while Asia-Pacific rose 1.9% amid increased demand for natural catastrophe coverage following recent losses. Europe, Middle East, and Africa recorded modest growth of 0.4%.

In natural catastrophe business, abundant capacity resulted in risk-adjusted rate reductions of 10% to 20% in both international markets and the United States.

Based on preliminary unaudited financials, Hannover Re's Group net income for 2025 grew to €2.64 billion from €2.33 billion. For 2026, the company expects net income of at least €2.7 billion, a combined ratio below 87%, and return on investment of around 3.5%.

Market comparison

The results come in below SCOR, which reported 7.4% growth in P&C reinsurance at the January renewals. SCOR's overall portfolio saw a milder price decline of 1.9%, compared to Hannover Re's 3.2%.

Jean-Paul Conoscente, CEO of P&C at SCOR, said abundant capacity has driven prices down in most lines, especially on non-proportional placements. "Nevertheless, the reinsurance market remained disciplined on structures and terms and conditions," he said.

The January 2026 renewals marked a decisive shift toward buyers. According to Howden Re, risk-adjusted global property-catastrophe reinsurance rates declined by an average of 14.7%, the largest annual decrease since 2014.

Guy Carpenter estimates global reinsurance capital reached a record US$660 billion by mid-2025, driven largely by retained and redeployed earnings. The influence of insurance-linked securities continued to grow, with Gallagher Re noting that alternative capital activity in long-tail lines roughly doubled over the past 12 months.

David Flandro of Howden Re said this is not a return to the underwriting practices of the last soft market. "Attachments remain elevated by historical standards, terms and conditions are tighter; capital is being deployed selectively," he said.

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