Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Insurer dropping auto insurance

Federated National plans to purchase majority stake in Monarch National

- By Ron Hurtibise Staff writer

The Sunrise-based parent of Federated National Insurance, a top 5 Florida property and casualty insurer, announced plans to drop its auto insurance line next year and to sell $25 million in debt to finance purchase of a majority stake in Monarch National Insurance Co. from its equity partners.

The stock purchase will give Federated National Holding Co. 100 percent stake in Monarch, a company it co-founded with a 42 percent stake in 2014 to write “standard” homeowner policies that Federated doesn’t write as a “preferred” insurer.

At the time it announced Monarch’s launch, Federated said it wrote only 12 percent of submission­s it received from more than 3,500 agents and that Monarch would enable it to provide those agents with more options, according to a July 2014 report in the trade publicatio­n Insurance Journal.

Monarch had 8,161 policies at the end of September, but a majority — 4,773 — were in Broward, Palm Beach and Miami-Dade counties, according to data collected by the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation. The data shows that Monarch and Federated are among a few companies that have been expanding market share in the tricounty region over the past two years.

Federated National reported 269,218 policies statewide as of Sept. 30. Of those, 67,972 were in the tricounty region. A year earlier, the company had 271,461 policies statewide and 65,561 in the tricounty region.

Federated National is licensed to sell homeowner and auto insurance in Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Georgia, Texas and South Carolina.

Under terms of the agreement announced this week, Federated National will pay $12.3 million for the 42 percent stake in Monarch held by Crosswinds Investor Monarch LP and $4.4 million for the 15.2 percent stake held by Transatlan­tic Reinsuranc­e Co. And $5 million will be used to pay off debt, repurchase shares of the company’s common stock and for other purposes, the company said.

Federated National’s share value has gained 7.8 percent — to $15.90 — since the company announced the developmen­ts in a statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Dec. 19.

For Federated National, dropping its auto insurance line — a process it expects to finish by the fourth quarter of 2018 — will complete its years-long transition away from its original business model.

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