Trump Targets CA Wildfire Payouts

Published by The Daily Scout

What happened

Donald Trump publicly criticized California insurers over wildfire payouts and teased a probe into 'horrendous companies' — a political flashpoint that could pressure state regulators and market sentiment around wildfire underwriting. The remarks landed in the middle of a charged insurance‑politics cycle. (x.com)

Why it matters

President Trump posted on Truth Social on April 1, 2026, naming State Farm and saying the insurers “have been absolutely horrible” to wildfire victims and that he would ask EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin to list companies that acted poorly or well. (thehill.com) California’s Department of Insurance opened a market-conduct examination of State Farm on June 12, 2025 after survivors alleged delayed or mishandled claims; the company reported roughly 13,000 wildfire claims and about $4 billion paid at that time. (usnews.com) State Farm reported direct incurred losses of about $7.39 billion tied to the January 2025 wildfires and the broader property & casualty group posted a net underwriting loss of $5.09 billion in Q1 2025. (liveinsurancenews.com) Private carriers have sharply contracted in California: insurers exited writing new policies in 46 of 58 counties, California’s FAIR Plan grew to 642,010 residential policies by September 2025, and FAIR Plan residential insured value reached about $633 billion. (moneygeek.com) Regulators have flagged specific claims-practice problems under review, including frequent reassignment of adjusters with limited continuity, inconsistent handling of similar claims, and weak record-keeping or information‑sharing across claims teams. (beinsure.com) InsurTech vendors and trade outlets began highlighting automated contents‑reconstruction, AI-assisted claims workflows and rapid documentation tools after the fires in early 2025, and several contents‑claims startups and InsurTech features were profiled in CarrierManagement and other industry outlets. (carriermanagement.com)

Key numbers

  • (x.com) President Trump posted on Truth Social on April 1, 2026, naming State Farm and saying the insurers “have been absolutely horrible” to wildfire victims and that he would ask EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin to list companies that acted poorly or well.
  • (usnews.com) State Farm reported direct incurred losses of about $7.39 billion tied to the January 2025 wildfires and the broader property & casualty group posted a net underwriting loss of $5.09 billion in Q1 2025.

What happens next

  • (carriermanagement.com) Donald Trump publicly criticized California insurers over wildfire payouts and teased a probe into 'horrendous companies' — a political flashpoint that could pressure state regulators and market sentiment around wildfire underwriting.

Quick answers

What happened in Trump Targets CA Wildfire Payouts?

Donald Trump publicly criticized California insurers over wildfire payouts and teased a probe into 'horrendous companies' — a political flashpoint that could pressure state regulators and market sentiment around wildfire underwriting. The remarks landed in the middle of a charged insurance‑politics cycle. (x.com)

Why does Trump Targets CA Wildfire Payouts matter?

President Trump posted on Truth Social on April 1, 2026, naming State Farm and saying the insurers “have been absolutely horrible” to wildfire victims and that he would ask EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin to list companies that acted poorly or well. (thehill.com) California’s Department of Insurance opened a market-conduct examination of State Farm on June 12, 2025 after survivors alleged delayed or mishandled claims; the company reported roughly 13,000 wildfire claims and about $4 billion paid at that time. (usnews.com) State Farm reported direct incurred losses of about $7.39 billion tied to the January 2025 wildfires and the broader property & casualty group posted a net underwriting loss of $5.09 billion in Q1 2025. (liveinsurancenews.com) Private carriers have sharply contracted in California: insurers exited writing new policies in 46 of 58 counties, California’s FAIR Plan grew to 642,010 residential policies by September 2025, and FAIR Plan residential insured value reached about $633 billion. (moneygeek.com) Regulators have flagged specific claims-practice problems under review, including frequent reassignment of adjusters with limited continuity, inconsistent handling of similar claims, and weak record-keeping or information‑sharing across claims teams. (beinsure.com) InsurTech vendors and trade outlets began highlighting automated contents‑reconstruction, AI-assisted claims workflows and rapid documentation tools after the fires in early 2025, and several contents‑claims startups and InsurTech features were profiled in CarrierManagement and other industry outlets. (carriermanagement.com)

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