Travelers Companies Inc (TRV) Q4 2019 earnings call dated Jan. 23, 2020
Corporate Participants:
Abbe Goldstein — Senior Vice President of Investor Relations
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Dan Frey — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Gregory C. Toczydlowski — Executive Vice President and President, Business Insurance
Thomas M. Kunkel — Executive Vice President and President, Bond & Specialty Insurance
Michael F. Klein — Executive Vice President and President, Personal Insurance
Analysts:
Michael Phillips — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Larry Greenberg — Janney Montgomery Scott — Analyst
Jimmy Bhullar — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Michael Zaremski — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Meyer Shields — Keefe, Bruyette & Woods — Analyst
Brian Meredith — UBS — Analyst
Ryan Tunis — Autonomous Research — Analyst
Paul Newsome — Piper Sandler — Analyst
Amit Kumar — Buckingham Research — Analyst
David Motemaden — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Fourth Quarter Results Teleconference for Travelers. We ask that you hold all questions until the completion of formal remarks at which time, you will be given instructions for the Q&A session. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded on January 23, 2020.
At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Ms. Abbe Goldstein, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations. Ms. Goldstein, you may begin.
Abbe Goldstein — Senior Vice President of Investor Relations
Thank you. Good morning and welcome to Travelers’ discussion of our fourth quarter 2019 results. Hopefully, all of you have seen our press release, financial supplement, and webcast presentation released earlier this morning. All of these materials can be found on our website at travelers.com, under the Investors section.
Speaking today will be Alan Schnitzer, Chairman and CEO, Dan Frey, Chief Financial Officer and our three segment Presidents, Greg Toczydlowski of Business Insurance. Tom Kunkel of Bond & Specialty Insurance and Michael Klein of Personal Insurance. They will discuss the financial results of our business and the current market environment. They will refer to the webcast earnings presentation as they go through prepared remarks and then we will take your questions.
Before I turn the call over to Alan, I would like to draw your attention to the explanatory note included at the end of the earnings presentation. Our presentation today includes forward-looking statements. The company cautions investors that any forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties and is not a guarantee of future performance. Actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied in the forward-looking statements, due to a variety of factors. These factors are described under forward-looking statements in our earnings press release and in our most recent 10-Q and 10-K filed with the SEC. We do not undertake any obligation to update forward-looking statements.
Also in our remarks or responses to questions, we may mention some non-GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations are included in our recent earnings press release, financial supplement and other materials available in the Investors section on our website.
And now, I’d like to turn the call over to Alan Schnitzer.
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Abbe. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. This morning, we reported record quarterly core income per diluted share of $3.32. Core return on equity was 14.8%. As you’ve heard us say before, the primary measure we use to manage our business is core return on equity over time. And any strategy to deliver industry-leading returns requires a strategy to grow also over time. For the full year 2019, we are very pleased that the continued successful execution of our strategy to grow the top-line at attractive returns resulted in record net written premiums of more than $29 billion.
Looking back over the last three years. Our cumulative top-line growth and its impact on our results are significant. Earned premiums were more than $3.5 billion higher in 2019 compared to 2016. Representing a compound annual growth rate of nearly 5%. That volume has made a meaningful contribution to underwriting income. We have a very high-quality book of business and we’re pleased that retentions have remained high across the board in recent years.
Premium growth in 2019 and over the past three years has been driven by higher pricing with both pure rate and exposure growth contributing. The new business we’ve added has been in products, industries and geographies that we know well. So, we’re growing with confidence. Improvements in productivity and efficiency complement the benefit of volume. This quarter, our expense ratio improved to 29.1%, bringing our full year expense ratio to 29.6%. That marks the steady and substantial improvement over the past three years from an expense ratio, which prior to that had averaged around 32%. This was driven by our efforts to leverage technology investments and workflow enhancements.
Importantly, at the same time, we also continue to make strategic investments in our business, grow our investment portfolio and return substantial excess capital to our shareholders. Achieving further productivity and efficiency gains continues to be a strategic priority for us. As you’ve heard us say improved operating leverage gives us the flexibility to invest further in our strategic priorities, let the benefit fall to the bottom-line and or be more competitive on pricing, without compromising our return objectives.
Over the course of this past year, our results were also impacted by headwinds from a challenging tort environment. Greg will comment on the impact in the current quarter, but I’ll note that we continue to believe that social inflation is an environmental issue, driven primarily by a more aggressive plaintiffs’ bar. For the full year core income exceeded $2.5 billion generating core return on equity of 10.9%. Considering the challenging tort environment and persistent low interest rates, that level of profit in returns speaks to the strength and resilience of our diversified business and our investment expertise.
Our results together with our strong balance sheet, enabled us to grow adjusted book value per share by 6% during the year, to $92.76 after returning $2.4 billion of excess capital to shareholders, consistent with our longstanding capital management strategy.
Turning to production. Our marketplace execution was excellent and fourth quarter net written premiums increased by 6% to $7.1 billion, marking the 12th consecutive quarter in which we generated premium growth in all three business segments. Net written premiums in Business Insurance increased 5%. Domestic renewal premium change was 7.8%, including renewal rate change of 5.1%, in both cases the highest level since 2013, while retention remained very strong.
In Bond & Specialty Insurance, net written premiums increased by 9% with strong growth in both our management liability and surety businesses. Renewal premium changed in our domestic management liability business was 6.6%, up about 2 points over the prior year quarter, and the highest it has been since 2014, while retention remained historically high at 89%.
In Personal Insurance, net written premiums increased by 6%, reflecting growth in both Agency Auto and Agency Homeowners. In our Agency Homeowners business, renewal premium change increased to 7.4%, its highest level since 2014. You’ll hear more shortly from Greg, Tom and Michael about our segment results.
To sum it up, our performing transform called to action served us well this past year. In a challenging environment, we generated a nearly 11% core return on equity. We also made important investments broadly across our value chain, advancing our ambitious innovation agenda. We digitize sales and service capabilities, improve workflows to increased speed and responsiveness, rolled out new products, implemented new analytic capabilities and put claims-related digital tools in the hands of our customers and claim professionals, just to name a few. All of these and other important initiatives are part of our coordinated efforts to deliver on three priorities aimed at positioning Travelers for continued success well into the future. Namely, extending our lead in risk expertise, providing great experiences to our customers, agents, brokers and employees and optimizing productivity and efficiency.
With our relentless focus on execution, deep and talented team, sophisticated analytical approach to underwriting and high-degree of respect for our shareholders’ capital, we are well positioned to continue to deliver meaningful shareholder value over time.
And with that, I’ll turn the call over to Dan.
Dan Frey — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, Alan. Core income for the fourth quarter was $867 million, up from $571 million in the prior year quarter and core ROE was 14.8%, up from 10%. The improvement in both measures from last year’s fourth quarter resulted primarily from a lower level of catastrophe losses. Our fourth quarter results include $85 million of pre-tax cat losses, which consists of $186 million of cat events, partially offset by $101 million of cat recoveries under the new treaty. Recall that under that treaty, we were reinsured for 86% of losses above $1.3 billion retention and that’s through the third quarter, we had accumulated $1.2 billion towards their retention.
PYD in the current quarter for which I will provide more detail shortly was net favorable $60 million pre-tax, the underlying combined ratio of 92.1%, which excludes the impacts of cats in PYD increased by 1 point from the prior year quarter. Our pre-tax underlying underwriting gain of $538 million was down modestly from $578 million in the prior year quarter, reflecting the higher loss level associated with ongoing challenges related to the more aggressive tort environment, partially offset by the volume benefit from higher levels of premium.
The fourth quarter expense ratio of 29.1% brings the full year expense ratio to 29.6%. These results reflect the progress we’ve made in our strategic focus on productivity and efficiency in recent years and this is our lowest full year expense ratio since 2005. After-tax net investment income decreased slightly from the prior year quarter to $525 million, as increases in fixed income were more than offset by lower returns in our non-fixed income portfolio. In 2020, we expect that fixed income NII will decrease by approximately $5 million to $10 million after-tax per quarter compared to the corresponding periods of 2019 as we projected the benefit of higher average levels of invested assets will be more than offset by a lower average yield on the portfolio, given the lower interest rate environment.
All three segments reported modest net favorable prior year reserve development in the fourth quarter. In Personal Insurance both auto and property performed better than expected for multiple accident years. In Bond & Specialty, we experienced better-than-expected loss development in the fidelity and surety line. In Business Insurance net favorable PYD included about $140 million of better than expected loss experience in workers’ comp and unfavorable development in the general liability and commercial multi-peril lines.
When our combined 2019 Schedule P is filed earlier in the second quarter, we expect the results to be consistent with our commentary throughout the year, with strengthening in the commercial liability lines and favorability and workers’ comp fidelity and surety and the personal lines coverages.
Page 22 of the earnings presentation provides information about our January 1st cat treaty renewals. Our longstanding corporate cat XOL treaty renewed on terms in line with the expiring treaty and continues to provide coverage for both single cat events and the aggregation of losses from multiple cat events. As you know for 2019, we added a new Property Aggregate Catastrophe XOL treaty. First, let me take a moment to summarize the impact of that treaty on our 2019 results. For the full year as expected the treaty increased our underlying combined ratio by about 0.5 point. The treaty had essentially no impact on the full year’s total combined ratio, as the impact on the underlying combined ratio was virtually offset by the benefit of cat recoveries under the treaty also very much in line with our assumptions, because we did not surpass our retention level until the fourth quarter, that’s when we began to recognize recoveries under the treaty. So, the impact on the fourth quarter specifically was a benefit to the total combined ratio of more than a point and there was virtually no impact on the underlying combined ratio.
As renewed for 2020 this treaty will continue to address from $1 qualifying PCS designated events in North America for which we incur losses of $5 million or more, providing aggregate coverage of $280 million, part of $500 million of losses above an aggregate retention of $1.55 billion. The aggregate retention for 2020 increased from last year’s $1.3 billion, largely reflecting recent years and anticipated growth in our property book.
Hurricane and earthquake events once again have a $250 million per occurrence cap. Since we placed a lower percentage of the treaty than last year. the cost of the treaty will be proportionately lower in 2020. So, incorporating our assumptions about cat and non-cat weather for 2020, we would expect the full-year impact on our underlying combined ratio to be slightly less than the roughly 0.5 point we experienced in 2019. And we would once again anticipate only a minimal impact on the total combined ratio.
Turning to capital management, operating cash flows for the quarter of $1.4 billion were again very strong. All our capital ratios were at or better than target levels and we ended the quarter with holding company liquidity of approximately $1.4 billion. For the full year, operating cash flow exceeded $5 billion, our highest level since 2007, which wasn’t unusually light cat year loss.
Interest rates increased modestly during the fourth quarter and accordingly our net unrealized investment gains decreased from $2.4 billion after tax as of September 30, to $2.2 billion after tax at year-end. Adjusted book value per share, which excludes unrealized investment gains and losses was $92.76 at year-end, 6% higher than at the beginning of the year. We returned $588 million of capital to our shareholders this quarter, comprising share repurchases of $376 million and dividends of $212 million. For the year, we returned $2.4 billion of capital to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases.
Finally, on a financial modeling note, let me turn your attention to slide 23 of the earnings presentation. As we enter 2020 we thought it would be helpful to point out the seasonality of our cat losses over the prior decade. As you can see the second quarter has regularly and noticeably been our largest cat quarter. Cat losses in the second quarter has been about twice as much as any other quarter on average. And the second quarter has been our largest cat quarter in 6 of the past 10 years.
And now, I’ll turn the microphone over to Greg for a discussion of Business Insurance.
Gregory C. Toczydlowski — Executive Vice President and President, Business Insurance
Thanks, Dan. For the fourth quarter Business Insurance produced $448 million of segment income, a 15% increase over the fourth quarter of 2018. That brings the full year total per segment income to almost $1.4 billion. Earnings for both the quarter and the year benefited from strong profitability and workers’ compensation, our largest product line as well as higher overall business volumes and a lower expense ratio, as we continue to execute on our strategy of growing the top-line at attractive returns and improving our operating leverage.
The underlying combined ratio for the quarter was 96.4%, a point higher than the fourth quarter of 2018. We’ve included information on slide 9 of the earnings presentation that details the components of the change. As you can see on the slide, there is about one-third of a point of net unfavorable impact from items that roll forward from prior quarters. There is also about a point of net unfavorable impact from items that are new in the fourth quarter, including about 0.5 point associated with additional changes in our general liability and commercial auto loss estimates and along with that, the current quarter includes about a 1.5 point related to the re-estimation of the first three quarters of the year.
For the full year, the underlying combined ratio of 96.2% was 0.5 point higher than the full year 2018. Slide 10 of the earnings presentation provides a detailed view of the various items impacting the year-over-year results.
Before turning to the top-line in production, I’ll provide a little more context on the tort environment in our international loss activity. Regarding the tort environment to get our best view of the escalating loss costs, we’ve leveraged our leading data and analytics and importantly the tight feedback loop among our business leaders, underwriters, claim professionals and actuaries. We have a carefully underwritten book of business was largely a main street orientation, which we have targeted, grown and optimized for years. More than 90% of our domestic policies have limits of $2 million or less. Excluding workers’ compensation were limits don’t apply. While we will continue to pursue claim strategies and underwriting actions to mitigate the impacts from the worsening tort environment, our primary action will be to seek more rate. During the quarter, we were once again successful in achieving meaningful improvement in renewal rate change while maintaining very high levels of retention, which is evidence that we’re not alone in driving rate. All of that is consistent with our view that what we’re experiencing is environmental.
As for international. We’ve been experiencing elevated losses in the property lines. We’re pursuing in achieving significant renewal rate increases to address these trends. As you can see within the international production statistics on Page 20 of the earnings presentation. In addition to that, we’re executing a variety of profit improvement initiatives including tightening terms and conditions and paring back exposures and certain lines and accounts. While more work needs to be done. We’re making good progress with all of these efforts.
Turning to the top-line. Net written premiums were up 5% in the quarter and 4% for the full year, driven by strong production results, while renewal premium change continues to be the largest contributor, we also grew our customer base for the year through strong retention and new business. We’re pleased with the continued progress we’re making on our strategic initiatives and remain encouraged by the feedback from our agent and broker partners.
In terms of domestic production, we achieved strong renewal premium change of 7.8% with renewal rate change of 5.1% while retention remained high at 84% a reflection of the quality of our book. The renewal rate change of 5.1% was the highest result since the fourth quarter of 2013 and was up 0.7 point from the third quarter and more than 3.5 points from the fourth quarter of last year. This demonstrates our continued momentum, notwithstanding the downward pressure in workers’ compensation pricing. We are achieving higher rate levels broadly across our book with about three quarters of our middle market accounts getting positive rate increases this quarter, which is up from about two-thirds in the fourth quarter of last year.
A further illustration of the broad nature of our progress is on slide 14 of the earnings presentation. For our core commercial accounts business. This slide reflects the percentage of renewed accounts in three rate bands for the fourth quarter of 2017, 2018 and 2019. As you can see from the graph, the percentage of accounts renewing flat or with the right decrease has declined, while the percentage of accounts renewing with the rate increase is up, with the level of rate increase skewed higher. In other words, a higher proportion of our accounts are getting a rate increase and a higher proportion of our accounts are getting a more significant rate increase, and this progress has been achieved while retention has remained at historically high levels.
From a line of business perspective, outside of workers’ compensation, we achieved higher rate increases in all lines as compared to both the third quarter of this year in the fourth quarter of last year. For the segment, new business of $488 million were strong and consistent with the prior year quarter. As for the individual businesses, in select, renewal premium change of 7.2% and renewal rate change of 1.9% were both up from the third quarter and from the fourth quarter of last year, while retention remained strong at 83%. New business of $105 million was consistent with the strong prior-year quarter. We continue to advance our investments related to product development and ease of doing business and are encouraged with the progress in results to date.
In middle market, renewal premium change was 7.1%, with renewal rate change of 5%, up more than 1 point from the third quarter and more than 3.5 points from the fourth quarter of last year, while retention remained high at 86%. New business of $284 million was up slightly from the prior year quarter, bringing the full year, total to just over $1.2 billion reflecting higher new business pricing as well as benefits from our ongoing strategic initiatives.
To sum up the 4th quarter wrapped up the year in which a lot of things went well and we faced some challenges, most notably the continued pressure from the tort environment. We’re confident that we have the insights and capabilities to a changing environment and that will position us well in the market in 2020 and beyond. We couldn’t be more pleased with our local execution and will continue to seek rate and use all other available levers to meet our return objectives.
Before I turn the call over to Tom to talk about Bond & Specialty results, I want to comment on our outlook for renewal premium change and underlying, underwriting results since we will not be filing our 10-K for a few weeks. For Business Insurance, we expect RPC in 2020 will be higher in 2019. We expect the underlying combined ratio for the full year 2020 will be lower than in 2019. This assumes the anticipated impact of earned price in excess of loss cost trends and improved results in our international business. Underneath that full-year outlook, we expect the improvements in the underlying combined ratio to come in the second through fourth quarters of the year as the first quarter of 2020 will include the roll forward impacts of the actions we took in the second, third and fourth quarters of 2019 for the general liability and commercial auto product lines.
With that, I’ll turn the call over to Tom.
Thomas M. Kunkel — Executive Vice President and President, Bond & Specialty Insurance
Thanks, Greg. Bond & Specialty delivered another quarter of strong returns and growth. Segment income was $167 million, a decrease of $53 million from the prior year quarter, primarily due to a lower level of net favorable prior year reserve development, the combined and underlying combined — underlying combined ratios remained strong at 78.6% and 81% respectively. The underlying combined ratio increased 3.2 points from the prior year quarter, largely reflecting the impact of the roll forward of higher loss estimates for management liability coverages that we discussed with you last quarter. The underlying underwriting gain was slightly lower than the prior year quarter as the earned impact of higher business volumes largely offset the higher underlying combined ratio.
Turning to top-line, net written premiums were up 9% for the quarter, reflecting growth across all our businesses. In our domestic management liability business, we are pleased that the retention remained at a very strong 89% with renewal premium change higher at 6.6%. These production results are consistent with our strategy to maintain strong retention of our high-quality portfolio while executing targeted pricing actions. We will continue to — we will continue to pursue price increases we’re warranted. Domestic management liability new business for the quarter increased 17% to $62 million and domestic surety and our international business, both posted solid growth in the quarter. We remain pleased with our strong field execution and our strategic long-term investments in market-leading products and services together with our commitment of thoughtful and disciplined underwriting and risk selection. So, Bond & Specialty results remain strong and we feel terrific about our ability to continue to deliver top-line growth with strong returns over time.
In terms of our 2020 outlook, we expect RPC for our domestic management liability business will be higher, and the underlying combined ratio will be slightly higher in each case as compared to 2019. Additionally, for 2020, we expect that the underlying underwriting margin will be broadly consistent with 2019 as the impact of higher business volumes will offset the slightly higher underwriting, underlying combined ratio.
And now, I will turn it over to Michael to discuss Personal Insurance.
Michael F. Klein — Executive Vice President and President, Personal Insurance
Thanks, Tom, and good morning, everyone. In Personal Insurance, we’re very pleased with our fourth quarter and full year results. For the fourth quarter, segment income was $327 million and our combined ratio was 88.5%. For the full year, segment income was $824 million, an improvement of $527 million from the prior year and the combined ratio was 94.2%. The results for both periods reflect solid improvements from the prior year driven by significantly lower catastrophes. Underwriting income also benefited from higher levels of earned premium.
Net written premium growth for the fourth quarter and full year was 6% and 5% respectively, with continued strong retention, renewal premium change and new business. Agency Automobile delivered solid results in the quarter with a combined ratio of 99.2% in what is typically our highest combined ratio quarter for the line. The 3.9 point increase relative to the prior-year period is largely reflective of the unusually low level of losses in the fourth quarter of 2018.
The full year combined ratio was an outstanding 94%, which was comparable to the prior year. The underlying combined ratio of 94.6% improved 0.7 points benefiting from earned pricing that exceeded loss trends in the first half of the year as well as favorable frequency throughout 2019. In Agency Homeowners and Other, the fourth quarter combined ratio of 75.8% improved by 34 points in comparison to the prior year quarter, which was significantly impacted by catastrophes, specifically the California wildfires and Hurricane Michael.
On an underlying basis, the combined ratio was 73.6% or 1.1 points higher than the prior year quarter, driven by higher non-weather loss activity. The full year 2019 combined ratio was an excellent 92.5% as lower catastrophe losses drove a 13.1 point improvement from the prior year. The underlying combined ratio was up 4 points to 85.6% for the year, due primarily to higher non-catastrophe weather-related losses and the impact of the new catastrophe reinsurance treaty.
As we’ve discussed with you previously, we continue to take pricing and underwriting actions to address higher levels of underlying loss activity. Shifting to quarterly production, Agency Automobile net written premiums grew 2% with modest growth in new business and policies in force while retention remained strong at 84% and renewal premium change was 2.9%. We continue to make progress in our efforts to grow this profitable line. Agency Homeowners and Other delivered another strong quarter with net written premium growth of 13% driven by higher new business levels, retention at 86% and renewal premium change rising to 7.4%, double the level from the prior year quarter.
We remain pleased with the rollout of our Quantum Home 2.0 product, which is now available on 34 states and the District of Columbia. Quantum Home 2.0 is granular pricing segmentation, customizable coverages and ease of quoting combined to form a solution that is both sophisticated in simple and our increased quote volume and higher average premiums suggested hitting the mark with both agents and customers.
Turning to our outlook, we expect that for 2020 compared to 2019 Agency Homeowners and Other renewal premium changes will be higher, while Agency Automobile renewal premium changes will remain positive but be lower. The underlying combined ratio for both Agency Homeowners and Other and for the Personal and segment — Personal Insurance segment as a whole will be lower. This improvement is expected in the second through fourth quarters of the year assuming lower levels of non-catastrophe weather-related losses. For Agency Automobile, the outlook is for the underlying combined ratio to be broadly consistent.
All in it was a very good year for Personal Insurance with the second consecutive year of strong profitability in auto and strong and significantly improved homeowner’s profitability. In addition, we achieved record levels of domestic net written premiums, new business and policies in force. We have strong momentum going into 2020 and are well positioned to deliver profitable growth, while investing in capabilities that will continue to enhance the value of our franchise.
With that, I’ll turn the call back over to Abbe.
Abbe Goldstein — Senior Vice President of Investor Relations
Thanks, Michael. And we’re ready to take your questions now.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Your first question is from Michael Phillips with Morgan Stanley.
Michael Phillips — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Thank you. Good morning, everybody. My first question, I am thinking about slide 9 and especially the bottom of slide 9. And I know you guys talk about kind of longer-term trends you 4% to 4.5% of the use of 4.5% last time. And I know you focus on long-term trends, but you’ve move that up a bit in the last couple of quarters. More on kind of the catch-up with you again refer to here in slide 9. So, I’m wondering if you still think that 4.5% is something you’re comfortable with or how you think about that going forward now?
Dan Frey — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Hey, Michael. It’s Dan Frey. So, I’ll draw the distinction between sort of the long-term trend assumption and what’s going to roll through any particular quarter or any year. So, in that slide we’re reconciling for you the difference between last year’s combined ratio and this year’s combined ratio. And clearly for the year as a whole, when we look at the change in the loss environment overall. It was more than 4.5%. We did remember raise our view of the long-term trend. I think we’ve talked about that back in the second quarter, but we haven’t changed it since then. So, these are more reactions to data that we’re seeing in the current environment, raising the level of losses, but not the trajectory from this point forward.
Michael Phillips — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Okay. I mean, I guess, obviously, what I’m getting to is a tug-of-war between pricing and loss trends and kind of who wins that tug of war right now and obviously this quarter the tug of war went to — went to loss trends because margins were down, but what are your commentary talked about the outlook being better for the underlying. Certainly, I think you said sort of in second quarter. So, you’re still thinking that pricing earned pricing will get better than loss trends as we get into the back half of this year. It sounds like, is that what you’re saying?
Dan Frey — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, that’s full year. So remember the outlook is really a 12 month broad view of what we think the environment is going to be as opposed to a quarter-by-quarter reconciliation, the comment Greg made is that when we compare Q1 in particular of ’20 to Q1 of ’19, the strengthening that we’ve done for 2019 came in Q2, Q3 and Q4, primarily so that comparison in and out itself is going to be a little different than the year more broadly.
Thomas M. Kunkel — Executive Vice President and President, Bond & Specialty Insurance
Michael, it’s Tom, I would just encourage you to make sure you’re looking at slide 10 too, because there’s a lot of moving pieces in slide 9 that when you look at it on a full year basis, it’s just, it’s a little bit of an easier view to take in.
Michael Phillips — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Okay. No. Thank you. Second question, I guess, I appreciate the color you guys gave on the Business Insurance PYD, $140 million you talked about for comp that was helpful. I guess on the CMP piece I assume the adverse there was on the liability side of CMP. I guess want to confirm that. And then, if so, I guess, what’s driving that. Are you seeing kind of, is that more of kind of the tort environment leaking down from you into the smaller accounts of CMP liability or kind of what’s driving that piece?
Dan Frey — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, Michael. It’s Dan again. So, I’d say broadly yes and I’d remind you, if you go back and look at the results we’ve disclosed throughout the year even going back to Q1 of this year. We did talk about CMP has being an unfavorable contributor to prior year reserve development, and by even going back to Q1. And clearly, as you’re alluding to CMP has got both the property and a liability component. It is the liability component, but as we’ve made comments over the second, third, and our fourth quarters of this year. When we talk about the liability environment in Business Insurance that for us is meant to include the liability component of CMP as opposed to this being something new and different.
Michael Phillips — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Okay. Also thank you very much.
Operator
Your next question is from Larry Greenberg with Janney Montgomery Scott.
Larry Greenberg — Janney Montgomery Scott — Analyst
Good morning and thank you. I guess I’m just asking a qualitative question. Where you sit today, or field today versus where things stood coming out of the third quarter, obviously you’re pushing price. This is all about Business Insurance, obviously, you’re pushing price to some extent here, you’re shooting at a moving target with loss trend and all the issues surrounding that. Is there, you’ve got, you’ve now got another quarter just looking back to from the third, is there, is there any way to say that you are more comfortable with where you sit today and what you’re seeing and the relationship with pricing and loss trend is moving. I’m just looking for some qualitative thoughts on that?
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Larry, it’s Alan. Let me take a stab at that. So first, I would say, we are definitely pleased with the trajectory of rate versus loss trend, that continues to be a good story. And importantly you got to look at retention in that regard. That’s hanging in there, which suggests we think this is an environmental thing and we would say that the pricing actions have room to go here.
In terms of our overall sense of the balance sheet. We are closer to the end of this than we were a year ago, that’s for sure. And what we’re very confident in is, we’re confident in the talent we’ve got looking at this, we’re confident in our processes. We’re confident in our data and analytics, and we’re confident that we understand the environment out there. So, very confident in our best estimate. Can we tell you, this is the end of it, of course not. We couldn’t and nobody could, but that I don’t mean to imply any lack of confidence in, again, data analytics people process here. This is an environmental issue and we think we’re on top of it.
Larry Greenberg — Janney Montgomery Scott — Analyst
Thank you. And then just as a follow-up, you talk about the other levers that you might have in addition to pricing. Are you willing to share any of those other levers to go at this environmental issue?
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Well, certainly, because it is environmental, just the playbooks as you go to rate, that’s just the way you solve those issues. Now, anytime you have the circumstance like this and frankly anytime in any book of business, where we’re always looking to optimize, we’re always pulling books of business apart and understanding where there are opportunities to improve. And that’s true in our best performing businesses and our worst performing businesses. So, you go through that process and there are always things that we can do better and we will do those things. When we look at this environment in particular, relative to our overall book of business. There are around the edges accounts or segments of the business that we think in the current environment don’t make sense and will either get the right rate or will get off them. And then, and then probably to the question you’re really asking is, what we’re doing from a claims perspective, and clearly, the plaintiffs’ far is getting more sophisticated, more clever, more aggressive, and I guess in response to that I would say, so we, I’m not, I’m not anxious to detail our tactics are strategies. I think that would probably be unwise for us to do that, but we’ve got a very large and very sophisticated, claim operation, lawyer’s litigation strategy and so, we will employ all those levers as well.
Larry Greenberg — Janney Montgomery Scott — Analyst
Thank you.
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from Jimmy Bhullar with JP Morgan.
Jimmy Bhullar — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Hi, good morning. I had a couple of questions, first, just on the tort environment overall. You’ve been more vocal than most other companies. I’m just trying to understand, is the environment stabilizing or has it gotten worse as you went through 2019. And then the other question. I just had is on your expense ratio, which was very good for the year. And for the quarter, to what extent is it sustainable versus sort of being an aberration.
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, thanks for the question. I’ll start with the tort environment and then I’ll ask Dan to talk about the expense ratio. Clearly, I think if you look at our results throughout the year, we would say, I don’t know if the environment has gotten worse, but clearly the losses have come in worse than our expectations. And one thing you got to remember is, we are setting reserves for years in various long tail lines of business where there is a very high percentage of IBNR. So, the paid in case is a relatively small percentage of this and so, we’re squaring triangles, we’re looking at the data as it comes in every quarter comparing it to our expectations and that’s what has gotten worse and I will say quarter in and quarter out, we have not responded gingerly. We have responded assertively to this and yet, it’s continued to come in a little bit worse and our expectations. But as I said before, we are five quarters closer to the end of this than we were a year ago. And again, we think we understand the market dynamics, we think we understand, what’s causing this and we feel very good about our analytics in our process. Daniel and to talk about the expense ratio.
Dan Frey — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Sure. So, I’ll focus you on the full year, because there is going to be a little bit of variability from quarter-to-quarter. So, 29.6% for the full year, that’s a range we’re comfortable with now, certainly noticeably better than it was several years ago and steady progress over the last 3 years. I think everything comes back to the way we talk about the business consistently, which is, we’re trying to optimize returns over time. There is not really a specific targeted expense ratio. Although in the current environment, the level that we’re at now is a level that plus or minus, we’re pretty comfortable with in this environment, we’ve been able to get productivity and efficiency gains and at the same time, we’ve been able to make the investments in the business that we think to make, we need to make for our success going forward and we will always balance those things. The fact that it’s come out of 29.6% for the year feels good, and this is a level that we’re pretty comfortable with, in this environment.
Jimmy Bhullar — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
And if I could ask one more, just on personal auto. I think you mentioned you expect margins to be stable in 2020, but if you look over the past couple of years, the pace of price hikes is actually steadily slowed and it seems like for the industry, that’s worse than just loss cost inflation. So, what gives you the confidence that margins in personal auto won’t get worse in 2020?
Michael F. Klein — Executive Vice President and President, Personal Insurance
Sure. Jimmy, this is Michael. Klein, I would say a couple of things, one, most of the rhetoric in the industry about loss trend deterioration focuses on severity. Which is a piece of the puzzle and we certainly are observing some of the same dynamics in terms of collision in physical damage severity that you’ve seen folks talk about as well as bodily injury severity. On the good news front has been frequency and as I mentioned, we continued to see favorable frequency better than our expectations sort of throughout 2019 and we put those frequency and severity results together with a longer-term view of loss trend and view of loss trend is actually an aggregate relatively consistent going into 2020. And then the lower renewal premium change outlook is again on the margin and again lower but continued positive. And so, that’s where we land on broadly consistent. And again, I think much like Greg’s commentary in Personal Insurance, rate versus loss trend is one dynamic that drives you to your outlook for our combined ratio. But the other levers that you use to manage the business including underwriting terms, conditions, claim process., claim efficiencies come into that view of the outlook as well. So, it’s not just a linear roll forward of rate versus loss trend getting it to that answer.
Jimmy Bhullar — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Okay, thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from Mike Zaremski with Credit Suisse.
Michael Zaremski — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Hey, good morning, guys. Sticking with the tort environment, first. Is it more pronounced any geographies or maybe by employer size and the, probably the number one question I get is, could this could we still be in the early innings of this upwards trend. I don’t know if there’s a way to frame historically high year-over-year tort inflation has gotten in the past? Thanks.
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, thanks for the question, Mike. So, you could look at any one quarter and there may be a pocket of heat in terms of geography, your business or line, but I think the right way to answer that question is to take a step back and look at the last year. And when we take a step back and look at the last year, we would say, it’s been broadly across our casualty coverages geographically line of business and so on and so forth. I would point out that the vast majority of the business we write has 500 or fewer employees and as Greg mentioned, more than 90% of our policies have — have a limit of $2 million or less. So, I would say this is relatively broad-based phenomenon is the way to think about it.
Now, you asked about relative to history, we’ve had, we’ve had other liability environments, I’ll say over the last decade or two, but, and there are some people who they try to compare. I don’t know that you really can’t compare. Just the facts and circumstances are different. You’ve got companies had different books of business, we’ve got all of us have different data and analytics available to us. But I think most importantly, if you look at prior liability environments I’ll call them, those have largely been driven by medical inflation. This one is driven by social inflation, and I’m not aware in recent history and another environment where distributed social inflation has been the driver.
Michael Zaremski — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Okay, got it. That’s helpful. And my last question is regarding slide 23 in the deck, on that historical catastrophe losses. Would you say that over the last decade or so hurricane losses in the US have been less than expected and basically trying to get at, should have the 3Q and maybe 4Q cat load look a little differently if we’re thinking about this on a forward basis?
Dan Frey — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Mike, it’s Dan. I’m not quite sure how to answer that question. What you’re seeing here is our numbers and for sure the point I think we’re trying to make here is our experience in this includes as a result of underwriting actions taken over the previous 10 to 15 years to really sort of move the mix of our book so that it’s less coastal than it was decade or more than that ago. So, there’s been a lot of industry commentary around hurricane. I don’t know that anybody feels that there is any less exposure to hurricanes broadly now than there was two years ago, five years ago or 10 years ago. I think as a percentage of where our risks are, we’ve probably on a relative basis mitigated our hurricane risk compared to the other risks. And I think that’s really the point we’re trying to make in this slide is that second quarter for us as has been the issue, which is not aligned with the traditional hurricane, not because I think on a macro basis, the hurricane environment is more benign, I don’t really have an opinion on that. We’re just telling you in our book based on where we write and the exposures we have, this is what our result looks like over the past 10 years.
Michael Zaremski — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Okay. Yeah, I guess I’ll follow-up because it’s still feel so going-forward basis. That’s since not going to what they’re having, there has been less for hurricane activity. I think the street definitely has 3Q being a little more pronounced and it sounds like you’re saying maybe we should wait is a little differently, but I’ll follow-up. Thank you for the insights
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Mike, I’ll just that’s definitely why we provided the slide, we look at models and we scratch our heads a little bit. And obviously we don’t know what 2020 is going to look like or 2021 or any other year, right. We have no idea where the volatility could come from, but certainly when we think about how, what our assumptions are and what our plans are our starting point is the last 10 years and we think it’s relevant for thinking about this year and future years.
Operator
Your next question is from Meyer Shields with KBW.
Meyer Shields — Keefe, Bruyette & Woods — Analyst
Great, thanks, good morning. I think this is a question for Greg, within the BI segment middle market, the delta between renewal premium and renewal rate change was the smallest it’s been in some time. Is there something going on with exposure units there that is worth noting, or is that just the quarterly fluctuation?
Gregory C. Toczydlowski — Executive Vice President and President, Business Insurance
Meyer, this is Greg. Yeah, that’s just quarterly fluctuation. You can see the exposure is down a little bit over the last two quarters and we do a lot of unpacking on that try to understand is that individual accounts are broad economic activity and we think it’s more of the latter. If you compare the economic activity in the back half of this year to 2018. It’s linear with what we’re seeing on the exposure change.
Meyer Shields — Keefe, Bruyette & Woods — Analyst
Okay, fantastic. And then for Michael really quickly, you talked about the combined ratio. I want to say for Personal lines improving assuming or reflecting a return to normalized non-cat weather. Is that just a regression to the mean, or is that reflection of claims actions or underwriting changes?
Michael F. Klein — Executive Vice President and President, Personal Insurance
Sure Meyer, I appreciate the question. I would say two things, one, we do say that it reflects lower, and more normalized expectation for a non-cat weather. That doesn’t mean reversion to the mean, it means a lower expectation than we saw in 2018. And as we’ve been talking about 2018 was, I’m sorry 2019. What we’ve been talking about is non-cat weather has been elevated in 2019. We have an expectation in 2020 that’s lower than the 2019 level, but importantly continues to reflect updated estimate then an updated view of non-cat weather loss activity, which has been rising. So, I wouldn’t want you to assume that the assumption in that outlook is the same assumption we had two or three or four years ago. It in fact includes more loss content than it would have two or three or four years ago. And so, we see margins in the segment and margins in Agency Homeowners and Other improving despite the fact that we have a higher view of the non-cat weather loss content in that outlook than we would have had a year ago or two years ago.
Meyer Shields — Keefe, Bruyette & Woods — Analyst
Okay, that’s very helpful. Thank you so much.
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Meyer.
Operator
Your next question is from Brian Meredith with UBS.
Brian Meredith — UBS — Analyst
Hi, a couple of questions here for you. First one, curious, any update with respect to kind of revival statute just given we’ve seen some other states expand or open the statute limitations?
Dan Frey — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Hey, Brian, it’s Dan. Yeah, so, in the quarter, again a modest amount of reserve activity in our PYD number related to revivers, not big enough to have been called out, but we saw California and reviver this quarter I think North Carolina as well. California is one that gets a lot of attention. It’s a bit, obviously a big state and a very active legal environment. But remember or in case you don’t remember, California had once before open your reviver. And so, that goes into our consideration there. So, there has been activity pretty steadily throughout the year. First quarter was — was the most noticed notable for us and we talked about it time. But there has been modest activity following that and that did occur again in the fourth quarter.
Brian Meredith — UBS — Analyst
Great. And then second question, just quickly on workers’ comp, I mean you’ve noted and others have noted, the really favorable loss cost environment there that is obviously offsetting some of the rate reductions that we’re seeing. Would you expect that to continue going into 2020, is that kind of your expectations given the low unemployment environment. Yes. Although, we’ve seen a pickup of cost inflation?
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Is your question whether we expect PYD to continue in workers’ comp.
Brian Meredith — UBS — Analyst
No, no, no, I’m just a loss trend environment with respect to workers compensation, not so much the PYD, but just the very favorable trends we’re seeing kind of frequency trends in time as well as severity, which is I guess kind of average.
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
The trends have been favorable. We generally assume a reversion to a longer-term mean there. So we don’t, we don’t assume that all the favorability will continue. I mean there has been a very long-term improvement in overall workers comp frequency. So, we certainly take that into account, but results have been even better than that and we don’t necessarily assuming that’s going to continue. Medical inflation, the severity side has been pretty benign as well and similarly, we tend to think that these things revert.
Brian Meredith — UBS — Analyst
Great, thank you.
Operator
The next question is from Ryan Tunis with Autonomous Research.
Ryan Tunis — Autonomous Research — Analyst
Hey, thanks, good morning. I guess this one is just for Alan. And going back to the commentary on thinking we’re closer to the end than the beginning. So, we’ve had a few charges in the past few quarters. This one is a bigger than what we saw 3Q. Just trying to get maybe some sense of, when you took this charge or these tweaks that you made, how does that give you more comfort. Is there more IBNR in these and there have been in the past. Like where we are now relative to the third quarter. That gives you confidence in saying that?
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Well, it’s another quarter. It’s another data point. It’s, every — every time you get a little bit more data you get a little bit better view on where the environment is. And so, from that perspective, we feel better. I can’t look at it and tell you where the first, second and third quarters of next year, coming in. So from that perspective, there continues to be some uncertainty, but we’re another quarter into it, and frankly we’re, five quarters into it. And so, the view we’ve developed over five quarters, our view of the environment. Every quarter we dig into our book a little bit more and test our hypothesis and all that gives us a little bit more confidence. I don’t — I’m not. I can’t comment about what’s going to happen in the first quarter, we just don’t know yet, Ryan.
Ryan Tunis — Autonomous Research — Analyst
So, when you think about your, I guess, your outlook for 2020 in terms of hopefully improving Business Insurance margins, do you still think it’s, if you want to achieve that. Do you still think that would be a result of the tort environment or do you think, it would have more to do with pricing or execution or something on other fronts?
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
I mean, obviously, any of those things could be a contributor, certainly social inflation continues to be a risk factor and some uncertainty for us, but any of those things could be a contributor. We feel, as I said, we’ve got confidence in our processes. We — our objective is always to get this number right. We pricing reserve based on one view of loss cost. And so, it’s important to us to try to get it right. And so, we think we’ve done that.
Ryan Tunis — Autonomous Research — Analyst
Thank you.
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from Paul Newsome with Piper Sandler.
Paul Newsome — Piper Sandler — Analyst
Good morning, thanks for the call. I wanted to ask about commission rates. We’ve seen anecdotal data that there is some pretty high commissions being paid for workers’ comp, is changing its personal line. It’s in the private passenger auto and personal lines commissions. Is Travelers doing anything broadly to, is others are changing commission rates?
Dan Frey — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, I would say broadly, our commission rates are reasonably stable. So, no.
Paul Newsome — Piper Sandler — Analyst
And then on the — you’re back to the tort thing [Phonetic]. Do you have the ability or is it really feasible to lower limits. And with that, in your view, really an industry-wide basis be one of the possible fixes for this outside of rate because that the light-ball, there is more issues on the higher the limit the more of the legal involved?
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, I mean, let me just go back and highlight a comment Greg maintenance prepared remarks and I just referenced. 90% or so of our of our policies in liability lines ex workers’ comp have policy limits of $2 million or less. So, I don’t, I don’t think, there’s been a lot of industry observers that have commented on this relationship between the loss environment and limits profile. We just don’t think that’s true. There’s plenty of activity on the smaller accounts. We haven’t, and we haven’t seen the industry necessarily move to changing the limits profiles. We think our customers are out there and they need a certain level of protection to manage their businesses and we intend to help them manage their risk in their businesses. We just got to charge the right price for it. And so, solving this through broadly changing limits profiles is probably not the answer.
Paul Newsome — Piper Sandler — Analyst
Well, I appreciate the help. Thank you very much.
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from Amit Kumar with Buckingham Research.
Amit Kumar — Buckingham Research — Analyst
Thanks, and good morning. Two follow-up questions, the first question goes back to Brian’s question on CVA. Does your Business Insurance outlook contemplate any potential action from CVA down the road, because by the time we get to the back half of 2020 some of those revival windows, will start closing?
Dan Frey — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
So, Amit, it’s Dan. We were aware the revised does that have been enacted and our open in the period through which they’ll close. What we’ve tried to do in 2019 is book our best estimate of the ultimate loss costs related to that activity. Regardless of the period of time for which the revolvers is open. Obviously, when the windows close, we’ll have a more crystallized view of the volume and types of claims that have actually come in. To this point, we haven’t seen anything in the activity that’s come in that makes us change our view of the reserves related to CVA.
Regarding the 2020 outlook in general, our view one our commentary relates to underlying combined ratio. But I’d make the comment that generally speaking, and we’ve, and we’ve said this consistently. We don’t anticipate prior year reserve development either favorable or unfavorable on a go-forward basis. We think all the information we have regarding the claim environment as it exists today is reflected in our reserves today.
Amit Kumar — Buckingham Research — Analyst
Got it. But the only other question I have is, I don’t want to go back. In terms of the initial question on CMP, but CMP product is towards the small to mid-size accounts, the GL product is towards the larger customer account. I’m curious, just going back to the broader discussion on tort environment. Would it be fair to say that the adjustments have sort of started from the national accounts permitted to middle market and then moved on to select or how should we think about that?
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
No, definitely not. It started in Commercial Auto and I’m looking around the room here, I think 99% of our commercial auto, policies have policy limits of $2 million or less I think. Million. So actually, so this isn’t something that started large and move down. This is something that’s started on the small end and spread on the small end.
Amit Kumar — Buckingham Research — Analyst
Got it, okay. I was just trying to understand the directionality of the total climate because you have consistently heard that the attorney involvement has continued to move down and down and down into the smallest claims versus the larger, larger claims. That’s where I was heading with that question.
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, and again, that’s why we gave you our limits profile and talked about the fact that the vast majority of our commercial lines policies have customers, employees of 500 or fewer. I mean it’s a — we are a main street writer. We’ve got a middle market and small commercial business and we are feeling the heat in those policies that have limits of $2 million or less. We did observe we did observe a year ago that to a large degree the started in Commercial Auto and that made perfect sense to us, because there was a lot of homogeneity to those claims. Those are very easy claims for bring, but it did spread to GL and again largely on, not in the national accounts larger limit size. Those larger accounts with big limits those have always had aggressive attorneys on them. What we’re seeing now is the attorney participation spreading into across the small cap.
Amit Kumar — Buckingham Research — Analyst
Got it. That’s very helpful. I’ll stop here. Thanks for the answers. And good luck for the future.
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Amit.
Operator
Your final question comes from David Motemaden with Evercore ISI.
David Motemaden — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Hi, good morning. Just a question for Alan on the tort environment and the losses in BI. I guess I’m just trying to get a sense for how far above expectations did loss experience come in this quarter compared to last quarter, was it a smaller amount of deviation versus expectations compared to last quarter, has that narrowed over the past five quarters. Just trying to get a sense for how, where we are in terms of seeing more charges here going forward?
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
I think I’m taking a step back and trying to think about the year, which I think is sort of the right way to think about it. Probably the right way to think about it is slide 10 on a full year basis. I don’t really know that the quarter-by-quarter view really give you any insight. But maybe to answer your question is somewhat consistent, Dan, what would you say.
Dan Frey — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, I think in broad magnitude we’ve, we saw bad news in the second quarter, we saw a bad news in the third quarter, we saw a bad news in the fourth quarter. They weren’t noticeably different in terms of the way they felt in terms of magnitude. If you step back and looked at the full year overall related to the tort environment or social inflation those things, things being worse than they had been we’d say in the underlying combined ratio on a full year basis compared to a year ago. It’s probably about a full point higher than it was. And when you think about the fact that there has also been an impact in PYD, we think about that same thing over the full-year basis, it’s hard to attribute, exactly what drove loss changes, but to the best that we can characterize it in Asia, not take this to be, there is a very specific science, but based on the data and analytics we have, we’d attribute it’s probably to the place worth about 2 points of bad news within this year’s full year, prior year reserve development.
David Motemaden — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Got it. Okay. And Alan, you had mentioned just higher attorney involvement. Just on the smaller cases, smaller case sizes. I guess I’m just wondering, I guess, just how much has that increased, like, are you seeing it now on like 30% versus 20%, just trying to get a sense for where that is. And are you assuming that that continues to increase in your loss specs?
Alan D. Schnitzer — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. So, I don’t. I’m not sure we’re going to share the absolute number, but I will share with you is that the percentage of claims on which we’re seeing lawyers has increased by about 10 points over seven years, over six years. With about half of that increase coming in 2019 and 2018. So, that’s sort of gives you a sense of the quantum of the increase over recent years and how much of that has come really in just ’19 and ’18, half of the increase. One of the reasons why we think it’s been such a such a recent and significant share. And just to, Abbe is putting out me that’s a commercial auto statistics.
David Motemaden — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Great, thank you. Thank you.
Operator
At this time there are no further questions. Do you have any closing remarks.
Abbe Goldstein — Senior Vice President of Investor Relations
Thank you very much for joining us. And as always if you have any follow-up, feel free to reach out to investor relations. Have a good day.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]