Allstate Corp., the largest publicly traded U.S. home and auto insurer, said it lost $2 billion in April and May from severe tornadoes and thunderstorms, nearly equaling its catastrophe losses for all of 2010.
The devastating two-month period, taken as one block, now ranks as one of the worst in Allstate’s history, alongside events like the 1994 Northridge earthquake in California and Hurricane Andrew in 1992.
In all of 2010, Allstate’s catastrophe losses totaled $2.21 billion.
The company, which reported $1.4 billion in pretax losses for April, said on Thursday it lost an additional $600 million from seven events in May.
Allstate began reporting monthly disaster losses for the first time in April. It had been under pressure from analysts to offer more disclosure on its exposures.
For the industry as a whole, severe weather events in just one week in late May may result in insured losses of $4 billion to $7 billion, according to risk modeling agency AIR Worldwide. The two major U.S. tornado outbreaks in May and April were the costliest in history, the agency said.
Last week Travelers Companies Inc. said it had at least $1 billion in catastrophe losses in April and May. It said this would result in a second-quarter operating loss and a slowdown in share buybacks.