- Posted by Admin on December 23, 2008
WASHINGTON, Dec 23 (Reuters) - U.S. regulators have asked nine major insurance companies, including Allstate Corp <ALL.N> and Travelers Cos Inc <TRV.N>, to provide information about how they set prices for homeowners' coverage, the Federal Trade Commission said on Tuesday.
The FTC said it ordered the companies to provide data about credit-based insurance scores, essentially the equivalent of a credit rating but one that focuses on how much particular consumers cost their insurance companies.
The U.S. Congress asked the FTC to look at the use of credit-based insurance scores in 2003. An FTC study on automobile insurance released in 2007 found that the scores allowed insurance companies to determine who was likely to be high risk and to charge those people more.
The study found African-Americans and Hispanics tended to have lower insurance scores than whites and Asians and, because of this, tended to pay more for auto insurance.
The other companies queried about the study for homeowners' insurance were Chubb Corp <CB.N>, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, Fire Insurance Exchange, Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co, United Services Automobile Association, Liberty Mutual Holding Co Inc and American Family Mutual Insurance Co.
On the Web
The order itself can be found at the FTC web site at: http://www.ftc.gov/os/2008/12/P044804facta.pdf