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California Flood Risk Expands Beyond Traditional Insurance Boundaries

California Flood Risk Expands Beyond Traditional Insurance Boundaries

Flooding continues to present a persistent risk across California, even as wildfires and earthquakes dominate the state’s disaster narrative. According to a report from Neptune, recent analysis shows that nearly 2.3 million properties face flood risk over the next 30 years, with more than 110,000 expected to flood with near certainty. This exposure highlights a widening gap between actual risk and current insurance coverage.

Modern flood modeling indicates that 1.1 million properties in California face a 1% or greater annual chance of flooding. By comparison, FEMA Flood Insurance Rate Maps identify approximately 495,000 properties at this same risk level. This difference reveals nearly 600,000 additional properties outside FEMA-designated high-risk zones, suggesting that flood exposure extends well beyond traditionally mapped areas.

Key Drivers of Flood Risk

Flood risk in California is driven by several structural and environmental factors. Atmospheric rivers account for 30% to 50% of the state’s annual precipitation and are responsible for the most damaging flood events. Urbanization also plays a role, as 94% of residents live in urban areas where impervious surfaces increase runoff and strain stormwater systems. In addition, nearly 70% of National Flood Insurance Program policies cover pre-FIRM homes, which were built before modern flood standards and are more vulnerable to damage.

Wildfires further contribute to flood exposure. Post-fire conditions can increase runoff and erosion for five years or more, and even moderate rainfall can trigger debris flows in recently burned areas. At the same time, housing designs that prioritize earthquake resilience, such as wood-frame structures built close to grade, may increase susceptibility to flood damage.

Loss Trends and Insurance Gaps

Historical data reflect the cumulative nature of flood losses in California. Since 1978, the NFIP has paid approximately $1.4 billion in inflation-adjusted losses. While major events account for a significant portion of payouts, moderate flooding across multiple years continues to contribute to overall losses. Notably, nearly two-thirds of NFIP losses have occurred in just ten counties, despite low insurance penetration.

Insurance participation has declined in recent years. NFIP policies in force have decreased by 35% since 2016, while residential flood insurance penetration stands at 1.4% statewide and approximately 31% within FEMA-designated Special Flood Hazard Areas. At the same time, 45% of NFIP claims have occurred outside these high-risk zones, where coverage is often not required.

Affordability and Coverage Limitations

Affordability remains a key factor. Average NFIP premiums have increased by more than 33% since 2016, partly due to updated risk-based pricing. In some areas, premiums account for 5% to 8% of household income. Coverage limits also present challenges. With median home values between $750,000 and $800,000, the NFIP cap of $250,000 for residential buildings often falls short of rebuilding costs.

Flood risk in California continues to evolve, driven by environmental conditions, urban development, and gaps in risk recognition. Current data shows that exposure is widespread, while insurance participation and coverage limits remain limited relative to potential losses.

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Allstate Files RICO Lawsuit Alleging $7.9 Million Auto Insurance Fraud Scheme

Allstate Files RICO Lawsuit Alleging $7.9 Million Auto Insurance Fraud Scheme

Seven Allstate entities have filed a federal lawsuit alleging a large-scale auto insurance fraud operation involving a Houston-area family and a network of healthcare-related businesses.

The complaint, filed April 10, 2026, in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas, names four members of the Roopani family: Sohail Roopani, Anil Roopani, Rahil Roopani, M.D., and Barketali Roopani. The suit also names at least 16 associated entities, including medical practices, imaging centers, and management companies operating in the Houston area.

According to the filing, the defendants allegedly operated a network of healthcare businesses through multiple management entities, including Sunny Trail Investments, LLC, doing business as Edloe Ventures, and Edloe Health, LLC. The complaint states that these entities controlled operations such as Core MD Management, Edloe Imaging locations, and several pain management and orthopedic clinics.

Allstate alleges the businesses billed for unnecessary medical services, failed to perform services as represented, or provided services in violation of Texas law. The insurer claims it paid $426,960.67 directly to the defendants and an additional $7,478,757.76 tied to bodily injury claims. The complaint states these payments were based on what Allstate describes as false medical documentation connected to auto insurance claims.

The lawsuit outlines an alleged corporate structure designed to conceal ownership and control. Three of the four named family members are identified in the filing as unlicensed individuals. The fourth, Rahil Roopani, M.D., is described as a nominal figurehead who allegedly did not actively participate in patient care or medical decision-making.

The complaint also details alleged referral practices. It states that cooperating chiropractors used pre-printed forms to refer patients into the network for predetermined treatment plans, regardless of individual medical need. The filing characterizes these actions as unlawful self-referrals and solicitation.

Allstate references its policy language in the complaint, noting that coverage does not apply to medically unnecessary treatments, fraudulent billing, or services that violate state law. The insurer argues that the alleged conduct constitutes a material breach of policy terms that would have resulted in claim denials had they been known at the time.

The lawsuit includes claims under the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, as well as allegations of fraud and conspiracy. Allstate is seeking treble damages, injunctive relief, and a declaration that the defendants are not entitled to collect on any pending or future claims under Allstate policies.

No determination on the merits has been made. The case remains in its early stages.

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AI Exclusions in Insurance Policies Draw Scrutiny as Litigation Expands

AI Exclusions in Insurance Policies Draw Scrutiny as Litigation Expands

As generative artificial intelligence becomes more integrated into commercial operations, insurers are adjusting policy language to address emerging risks. At the same time, litigation tied to AI development, deployment, and disclosure continues to grow, prompting broader use of exclusions and endorsements in liability policies.

Insurers have introduced provisions designed to limit or eliminate coverage for AI-related exposures. However, the scope and enforceability of these exclusions remain uncertain. Some carriers require narrower coverage through endorsements, while others offer policies with affirmative AI-specific coverage. Courts have yet to fully address how these exclusions will apply, particularly where coverage could be significantly limited.

AI-Related Claims Span Multiple Legal Theories

Recent litigation reflects a wide range of AI-related claims. These include copyright and intellectual property disputes tied to training large language models, such as Bartz v. Anthropic, which reportedly settled for $1.5 billion. Product liability and negligence claims have also emerged, including Raine v. OpenAI, Inc., involving alleged real-world harm.

Privacy and data-use claims continue to develop, as seen in Reddit, Inc. v. Anthropic PBC, which challenges the use of scraped data for AI training. Antitrust allegations, such as Chegg, Inc. v. Google LLC, focus on the use of proprietary data in AI systems. Additional cases involve discrimination and algorithmic bias, including Mobley v. Workday, Inc., as well as securities class actions tied to disclosures about AI capabilities, such as D’Agostino v. Innodata Inc.

This breadth of litigation has led insurers to adopt broader exclusionary language.

Insurers Introduce Broad AI Exclusion Language

Some carriers have implemented what they describe as “absolute” AI exclusions in directors and officers, errors and omissions, and fiduciary liability policies. These provisions may apply to claims arising from AI use, related disclosures, regulatory requirements, or alleged violations of AI-related laws.

In some cases, definitions of artificial intelligence are expansive. One insurer defines AI as any machine-based system that generates outputs such as predictions, content, or decisions based on input data. This definition can include tools that have been used in business operations for years.

Other insurers have adopted targeted exclusions focused on generative AI, including systems that produce text, images, audio, or synthetic data in response to user prompts. These provisions may reference tools such as ChatGPT, Bard, Midjourney, or DALL-E.

The Insurance Services Office has also introduced optional endorsements for commercial general liability policies. These include exclusions applying to bodily injury, property damage, personal and advertising injury, and products and completed operations liability when claims arise from generative AI.

Courts May Interpret Exclusions Narrowly

Legal standards governing policy interpretation remain relevant. Courts generally construe coverage provisions broadly and interpret exclusions narrowly. Insurers may still have a duty to defend claims that include both AI-related and non-AI-related allegations.

Coverage may also apply when an alleged injury could occur independently of AI use or when claims do not clearly fall within the exclusion. In cases involving mixed allegations, insurers may be required to defend the entire action if any portion is potentially covered.

Courts have also addressed illusory coverage, holding that exclusions should not eliminate the fundamental protections a policy is intended to provide. Additionally, earlier policies issued before AI-specific exclusions may still offer coverage, as changes in policy language over time can influence how courts interpret prior forms.

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Global M&A Insurance Market Gains Ground Heading Into 2026

Global M&A Insurance Market Gains Ground Heading Into 2026

The global M&A insurance market entered 2026 with continued momentum, even as deal activity remained uneven and macroeconomic conditions stayed uncertain. Transactional risk insurance is now a standard component of deal execution across private equity, corporate M&A, secondaries, carve-outs, restructurings, and financings.

In 2025, the market showed not only resilience but also deeper integration into the transaction strategy. Buyers and sellers increasingly use insurance to improve bid competitiveness, facilitate clean exits, and manage post-closing risk. This trend was especially visible in sponsor-led transactions, where insurance is now embedded in execution planning rather than applied opportunistically.

Private Capital and Insurance Alignment

The relationship between private capital and insurance continued to evolve. Large asset managers are partnering with insurers to combine long-term balance-sheet capital with private-market investment strategies. Platforms such as Apollo and Athene, as well as KKR and Global Atlantic, illustrate this convergence. As a result, insurance is becoming more capitalized and more central to transaction structuring.

Capacity Remains Strong, Pricing Begins to Shift

Capacity remained strong across global markets in 2025. Insurers continued to compete actively, supporting low premiums, broad coverage, and reduced retentions. Tipping-to-nil structures and, in some cases, nil-retention outcomes remained available.

However, pricing began to show early signs of adjustment in certain segments as insurers responded to claims activity. Underwriting discipline is increasing, and pricing is expected to become more differentiated in 2026.

Claims Activity Shapes Underwriting Behavior

Claims trends are playing a larger role in shaping underwriting behavior. Notifications are rising, and paid claims are becoming more visible. While frequency remains manageable, severity is influencing insurer decision-making.

Underwriters are placing greater scrutiny on financial statements, tax exposure, compliance, and sector-specific risks. In addition, claims-handling capability is becoming an increasingly important factor in insurer selection.

Regional Market Developments

Regional trends varied across markets. In the UK and EEA, competition remained strong, particularly in the lower and mid-market. Infrastructure and real estate transactions often achieved favorable terms, while technology and healthcare saw higher retentions.

In the United States, deal value increased due to larger transactions, although middle-market volume remained softer. Insurance use in secondary transactions and continuation vehicles has expanded significantly and is now more widely adopted.

Canada experienced early disruption due to tariff uncertainty but stabilized later in the year. Smaller transactions increasingly use insurance, supported by lower pricing and modest retentions.

In the Asia-Pacific region, M&A activity improved, with strong contributions from India, South Korea, and Japan. Competitive insurance conditions persisted, and seller-initiated structures became more common in Australia and New Zealand.

India continued to demonstrate market maturity, with broader adoption across transaction sizes and increased use of insurance post-closing. In the Middle East, deal activity remained high, but insurance penetration lagged, although growing familiarity and the first reported paid claim may support future adoption. Africa and Latin America also saw gradual expansion, with increased insurer participation and improved pricing in certain sectors.

Expanding Use of Specialized Products

Tax insurance continued to grow across regions and is now used beyond transaction-specific risks. Contingent risk insurance also gained traction as a tool to address specific legal or regulatory issues that could delay deals.

Meanwhile, insurance due diligence expanded in scope, with a greater focus on operational risks and post-closing considerations.

Outlook for 2026

The market remains active, supported by capital availability, product innovation, and ongoing deal demand. However, underwriting discipline and risk assessment are becoming more central as claims experience and external pressures continue to shape the market.

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