There are a number of ways to rank the size of insurance companies. Companies can be measured by their market capitalization (the value of the company on a stock exchange) or by using sales figures such as net premiums written in a year or how many policies were sold.
Largest Public Insurance Companies by Market Capitalization
Investors
can buy shares of publicly traded companies in the insurance industry.
The largest insurance companies as of Q1 2014 by market capitalization
on the world stock exchanges are:
Non-health Insurance Companies:
| Company Name | Market Capitalization |
| Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) | $308 billion |
| China Life Insurance (LFC) | $80 billion |
| Allianz (AZSEY) | $76.8 billion |
| American International Group (AIG) | $72.3 billion |
| Ping An of China (PNGAY) | $65.6 billion |
| MetLife (MET) | $59.4 billion |
| AXA (AXA) | $57.8 billion |
| AIA Group Hong Kong (AAIGF) | $54.4 billion |
| ING Groep (ING) | $54.4 billion |
| Zurich Insurance (ZURVY) | $45.4 Billion |
(Source: Thompson Reuters)
Health Insurance and Managed Health Care Companies:
| Company Name | Market Capitalization |
| United Healthcare (UNH) | $91.8 billion |
| Wellpoint (WLP) | $34.3 billion |
| Aetna (AET) | $29.8 billion |
| CIGNA Corp. (CI) | $26.8 billion |
| Humana (HUM) | $21.1 billion |
| Centene Corp. (CNC) | $5.7 billion |
| Health Net, Inc. (HNT) | $3.9 billion |
| WellCare Health Plans (WCG) | $3.1 billion |
| Healthspring (HS) | $3.7 billion |
| Molina Healthcare (MOH) | $2.4 billion |
(Source: Thompson Reuters)
Not all
insurance companies are publicly traded. In fact, many insurers are
structured as mutual companies where policy holders of participating
policies are essentially partial owners of the company. The mutual
company model for an insurance company dates back hundred of years, and
there are certain benefits conferred on policyholders that do not exist
with publicly traded (stock company) insurers. (For more, see: The
Industry Handbook: The Insurance Industry.)
Largest Insurance Companies by Sales and Product Line
It is
useful to differentiate between the type of insurance, or line, that is
being considered when considering the largest insurance companies. Using
sales data is helpful as some of the largest insurance companies in the
United States are not publicly traded and therefore their market value
is not easily ascertained.
Property & Casualty
Property
casualty insurers write policies covering property such as real estate,
dwellings, cars and other vehicles. They also write policies dealing
with liabilities that may be incurred by accident or negligence related
to those properties to defray the cost of lawsuits or medical damages
resulting from such incidents.
The top
U.S. property casualty companies in 2013 by net premiums written (the
amount of money that non-life policies can expect to receive over the
life of the contract, less commissions and costs) are:
| Company | Net Premiums Written |
| State Farm Group | $50.8 billion |
| Allstate Insurance Group (ALL) | $24.8 billion |
| Liberty Mutual | $21.5 billion |
| Berkshire Hathaway (includes GEICO) | $21.4 billion |
| Travelers Group (TRV) | $20.6 billion |
| American International Group (AIG) | $19.7 billion |
| Nationwide Group | $14.5 billion |
| Progressive Insurance Group (PGR) | $14.5 billion |
| Farmers Insurance Group | $14.1 billion |
| USAA Group | $10.7 billion |
(Source A.M. Best)
Life Insurance Companies
Life
Insurance companies promise to pay out a lump sum benefit upon the death
of the insured. Although actuarial science has created mortality
tables to accurately estimate the future liability of policies to be
paid, having financial strength ensures that these companies can meet
all of their obligations while still earning a profit.
Life
Insurance companies in the U.S. can be ranked by direct premium
written (the amount of new policies written directly and not
re-insured). For 2013:
| Company | Total Direct Premium | Market Share |
| MetLife (MET) | $11.5 billion | 7.98% |
| Northwestern Mutual | $9.4 billion | 6.55% |
| Prudential of America (PRU) | $8.4 billion | 5.79% |
| New York Life | $7.8 billion | 5.42% |
| Lincoln National | $6.1 billion | 4.27% |
| MassMutual | $5.1 billion | 3.52% |
| John Hancock | $4.8 billion | 3.37% |
| Aegon (AEG) | $4.1 billion | 2.82% |
| State Farm | $4.0 billion | 2.79% |
| Guardian Life Insurance Co. | $3.4 billion | 2.34% |
(Source: NAIC)
Health Insurance Companies
Health
insurance companies provide policies to cover all or part of
policyholder's health and medical costs. Policies may be purchased
individually or through an employer. Technically, the United States
government is the largest health insurance provider in America through
the Medicare program, Social Security and with Medicaid administered by
individual states.
The largest non-government sponsored U.S. health insurance companies measured by total direct premium collected in 2007 was:
| Company | Total Direct Premium | Market Share |
| United Healthcare (UNH) | $66.8 billion | 11.70% |
| Wellpoint Group (WLP) | $55.7 billion | 9.75% |
| Kaiser Permanente | $43.7 billion | 7.66% |
| Humana (HUM) | $21.7 billion | 3.81% |
| Aetna (AET) | $21.7 billion | 3.81% |
| Health Care Service Corp | $14.9 billion | 2.60% |
| American Family | $11.6 billion | 2.04% |
| Highmark | $11.4 billion | 2.01% |
| Blue Cross/Blue Shield | $9.8 billion | 1.72% |
| Cigna (CI) | $9.6 billion | 1.69% |
(Source: NAIC. Caveat emptor:
The sales data on health insurance companies is from 2007, the last
year of available data. The Affordable Care Act (aka 'Obamacare') may
have altered these standings.)
The Bottom Line
Ranking
the largest insurance companies can be done in a number of ways. Shares
of publicly traded companies can be bought to help build a
well-diversified investment portfolio that has exposure to the financial
and healthcare sectors. Identifying which types of insurance a company
primarily deals with helps determine which firms are competitors and
which really are not. Looking at sales figures, or premiums collected in
a year, one can also see how public companies stack up against
privately held or mutual companies which make up a large segment of the
industry.
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