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By ZURICH/ Insurers face potential losses of up to Climate change is contributing to greater losses from natural catastrophes for insurers, and some of them are backing away from covering the risk, particularly in hurricane or wildfire-prone areas. "I'd love to take (Hurricane Ian) as a one-off but I'm not sure it is," chief financial officer "We are going to continue to constrain our appetite for natural catastrophe risk." Zurich sees its overall catastrophe loss ratio for the first nine months around two percentage points above long-term trends. Zurich holds an investor day next week when it will set out its 2023-2025 targets. Quinn said the targets will likely be tougher, after "robust premium increases" helped the insurer's recent performance. Zurich reported property and casualty premiums rose 8% to The insurer said life insurance new business annual premium equivalent (APE) fell 6% but rose 2% on a like-for-like basis that adjusts for currency movements, acquisitions and disposals. Zurich's Swiss Solvency Test (SST) capital ratio was estimated at 252% as of Zurich's shares were down 1% at Zurich announced a ( ( (Reporting by
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