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Allstate Down the Tubes

January 29th, 2009

I’ve had Allstate Insurance (ALL: chart, web, Y!) covering my rental property for the last 4 years.  However, last Fall, they sent me a notice that my premiums would go up 52% this year without any explanation whatsoever.

Being the capitalist I am, I understand costs go up over time.  But not 52% at once.

I called for an explanation, and after cutting through the bull, and being passed around to three different people as I worked my way up the ladder, I had a district manager tell me that rates went up on landlord policies due to an increase in fraudulent claims over the past year.

That’s bull!

For one, I’ve never filed a claim, and never had a reason to.  Furthermore, if the company has a problem with fraudulent claims, that’s their problem, not mine.

So I’m doing what every good capitalist would do and exercising my options through my wallet.

Allstate was insuring my single little rental for $950 per year.  Just the structure, mind you, not the contents (that’s what renters insurance is for).  The increase for 2009 brought the annual premium to $1,460 with no increase in coverage.

As a comparison, I insure my personal home with a market value over $150,000 more than my rental, all my personal belongings, AND three vehicles for under the new premium to insure just my rental house.

That just doesn’t smell right.

My new policy is with USAA, whom I carry that home and auto insurance with, and they will insure the rental for the replacement cost, not the value; there’s a big difference.  All the while, USAA’s premium is cheaper than Allstates best quote, even after I assured them I’d not do business with their company unless they offered me something more reasonable.

Allstate’s new premium is based on the market value of the home, while USAA’s premium is based upon rebuilding the same home on the same piece of property with today’s dollars.  So the coverage is for nearly $200,000 more than Allstate would provide.

I’m not buying Allstate’s excuses for a drastic 52% premium increase.  Allstate reported a $1.3 billion net loss, or $2.11 per share, for Q4 of 2008 while expectations were for the company to make $1.35 per share.

In all, I seriously doubt that Allstate needed to raise my premium by 52% due to fraudulent claims.  I suspect they had to raise the premium because they’re not making any money due to poor performance of their own investments.

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