Article by Mary Elizabeth Stern and Lucy P. Allen1

Each year, we conduct an annual review of asbestos-related liabilities reported in companies' SEC filings. This information can assist companies in benchmarking their own data against trends observed for other defendants, which can help to forecast asbestos-related liabilities. Analyzing the 2012 data, we find that the asbestos liabilities of solvent firms were relatively unchanged in 2012 compared to 2011. On average, we observe no increasing trend in either total liability spending or pending claims against solvent defendants.

In last year's update, we reported that average dollars per resolved claim had increased dramatically, rising 75% relative to the average cost of a resolved claim in 2010. But we attributed the increase to a changing disease mix of the resolved claims, rather than an increase in firms' asbestos liabilities. Total 2011 indemnity payments rose by a much smaller fraction than the increase in average payments per resolved claim, while the number of claims resolved in 2011 had declined compared with the prior year.

The results observed over the past year are consistent with our conclusions from the 2011 data, indicating a sustained shift in the disease mix rather than a worsening of firms' total liabilities. In 2012, average dollars per resolved claim continued to remain high, but the higher average settlement costs have not led to higher total settlement payments or increased filings. Specifically, we observed that:

  • Total indemnity payments dropped 10%, on average, even though average dollars per resolved claim were similar to 2011 levels;
  • Although defense spending rose on average, historically payments have been variable and the recent increase was within this historical variability;
  • Counts of pending claims continued to decline; and
  • New filings were essentially flat.

Reserves have also remained at levels established since approximately 2004. Thus, on average for firms, asbestos-related liabilities remain largely unchanged over the past year.

Methodology

Using publicly available data, we analyzed trends in asbestos-related liabilities of more than 150 companies. This study represents our fifth annual assessment of these data, and extends our analysis one year to include 2012.

To analyze these trends, we compiled data from over 150 asbestos defendants' Form 10-K filings with the SEC, from 2001 through 2012. We tracked five key metrics2:

  • Total indemnity paid: the aggregate amount a company pays to resolve claims each year
  • Total defense paid: the aggregate amount a company pays in legal fees and expenses each year
  • Number of claims resolved: how many claims a company closes each year either by settling or obtaining dismissals
  • Average settlement paid per resolved claim: the total indemnity paid divided by the number of claims closed each year
  • Percent of claims dismissed: the fraction of claims a company closes without payment
  • Annual filings: the number of new claims a company receives each year

In addition, for those firms reporting asbestos-related reserves, we also tracked the average reserve amount.

Average Dollars per Resolved Claim Remained at 2011 Levels, Approximately 75% Higher than in 2010

  • Average dollars per resolved claim were essentially constant in 2012 (declining only slightly from 2011 levels), after having increased 75% between 2010 and 2011.
  • Average dollars paid per resolved claim remain almost three times the level observed in 2001 and two times the 2004 peak.

  • As we noted in our 2011 report, without information on average settlements per disease, the public filings cannot tell us definitively:
    • whether there has been upward pressure on individual settlements (i.e., whether settlements within each disease category were higher than in prior years), or
    • whether there has been a shift in the disease mix of claims resolved (i.e., if the claims resolved were comprised of a greater mix of malignant diseases than in prior years).
  • Either circumstance would drive up the average cost of claims, but would have different implications for individual claims.
  • Our hypothesis that the recent increase in average resolution values represents a shift in the disease mix is supported by other information, including the experience of individual defendants.
    • One company, Honeywell, reported the disease mix of its pending claims and average settlement values for both malignant and non-malignant claims. From these data, we observe a shift in pending claims toward malignant filings, but no increase in average settlement values paid to either group of claims.
      • In 2008, only 11% of pending claims were malignant claims. By 2012, the percent of active malignant claims more than doubled, with 23% of the pending claims alleging a malignant disease.
      • In 2011 and 2012, average settlement values per resolved claim were almost 30% higher than in 2008. Yet, average dollars per malignant and non-malignant claims fell over this period. Malignant values were approximately 25% lower in 2011 and 2012 than in 2008, while non-malignant values were 7% to 33% lower.
    • Three other companies reported the disease mix of their pending claims, but did not report average settlement values paid by disease. In each case, the disease mix shifted toward more malignant filings in 2012.
    • This shift in the disease mix is also consistent with the experience of a number of defendants for which we have reviewed their individual data.

Total Indemnity Payments Fell 10% in 2012

  • In 2012, total indemnity payments fell 10% below 2011 levels. Total payments in 2012 were two times 2001 levels—in line with averages over the 2005 through 2010 period.
  • From 2005 through 2010, total indemnity payments ranged between 1.5 and 2.0 times 2001 levels, without any upward or downward trend, moving on average 17% each year.

Defense Costs Peaked in 2012

  • Defense costs, on average, increased 12% in 2012, reaching a peak of over four times 2001 levels.
  • From 2001-2003, defense cost spending rose sharply, up to a peak in 2003. But since that time, average defense spending has been variable from year to year, with costs rising or falling on average 11% each year, and ranging from approximately 3.0 to 4.0 times 2001 levels. The 2012 peak is only slightly higher than the previous peak in 2003.

  • The ratio of defense to indemnity payments has also been variable. For the firms reporting both defense and indemnity payments, the average defense-to-indemnity ratio ranged from 1.5 to 3.0 over the 2005 to 2012 period, without any upward or downward trend. Half of the companies reporting defense and indemnity payments in 2012 had defense/indemnity ratios of less than 1.0.

The Average Number of Resolved Claims Remained Flat in 2012

  • The average number of claims resolved in 2012 was essentially flat compared with resolutions in 2011, when the average number of resolutions reached the lowest level since 2001.

  • All claims are not typically resolved in the year filed. Therefore, the claims resolved in 2012 reflect claims filed in years leading up to the resolution date. As we noted in previous updates, filings began dropping mid-decade. The current pace of resolutions likely reflects the lower levels of filings during the second half of the decade.

Dismissal Rates Have Increased in 2012

  • Dismissal rates increased 17%, on average, in 2012, after steadily dropping over the prior three years.
  • The current rates are approximately two and a half times as high as rates in 2001, and only slightly below the 2008 peak in average dismissal rates.

  • In our previous updates, we noted that the increase in dismissal rates through much of the decade coincided with changes in the litigation environment, e.g., tort reforms/increased scrutiny for non-malignant claims by the courts and bankruptcy trusts, which reduced the likelihood that non-malignant claims would be paid. As such, the increasing dismissal rates observed through 2008 were likely driven by the dismissal of non-malignant claims.
  • The recent declines in dismissal rates likely stemmed from a mix of resolutions that was more heavily weighted toward malignant filings (which have been less affected by tort reforms), as companies no longer have such large backlogs of non-malignant claims. As evidence that backlogs have been declining, the average number of claims pending peaked in 2003/2004 and has been falling since then, continuing to decline over the past year.
  • While the results this past year have ended the recent trend of declining dismissal rates, it is too soon to tell whether the increased 2012 average dismissal rate is an anomaly or an indicator of future trends.

Average Claim Filings Have Stabilized at 20% of 2001 Filings

  • Since 2007, filings have been fairly stable, hovering around 20% of the 2001 level. Filings continued at this level in 2012.

  • As we have discussed in our previous studies, the mid-decade drop in filings followed the enactment of legislative and judicial tort reforms in multiple jurisdictions and the tightening of medical documentation requirements by several asbestos trusts.
    • Most companies included in this report did not report malignant versus non-malignant filings in their 10-Ks, but given the changes in the litigation environment, the drop in filings likely represents a drop in non-malignant filings.
    • Moreover, as noted above, a few companies did report the disease mix of their pending claims. For these defendants, the mix of claims has been shifting toward more malignant diseases recently.
    • Anecdotally, in our review of detailed claims data for a number of defendants, we have observed a decline in non-malignant filings since the early-decade highs.

Reserve Levels Declined Slightly in 2012, Continuing the Pattern Observed since 2004

  • In 2012, average reserves declined 4%, dropping slightly below levels observed in 2011, as 54% of companies decreased their reserve.
  • As we noted in last year's update, reserve levels plateaued after large increases at the start of the decade. From 2004 through 2011, reserve levels remained fairly stable at approximately three times the 2001 levels. The recent decline places reserves only slightly below this range.3

Summary of Trends Through 2012

  • Average dollars per resolved claim remained essentially at 2011 levels, which were approximately 75% higher than in 2010. Similar to last year, and as we discussed in our 2011 update, this increase does not appear to indicate a worsening of the litigation environment for companies. Instead, it is consistent with a change in the disease mix of the resolved claims towards malignancies.
  • Although average settlement values per resolved claim remain high, the increase in average resolution values is not correlated with any corresponding increase in total filings or aggregate settlements.
    • Filings have been essentially flat since 2007, and that trend continued in 2012.
    • Average aggregate settlement dollars declined in 2012.
  • Overall, the litigation continues to remain stable for defendants—pending claims are continuing to decline, filings remain constant and aggregate costs have stayed steady. Two indicators for which we observe some change are 1) an increase in average dismissal rates, reversing a three-year trend of declining rates, and 2) an increase in average defense costs. But it is too soon to assess whether these changes represent an anomaly or a new trend. Defense costs in particular have been variable historically, and the current increase is within the range of historical variability.
  • Apparent trends in these metrics can shift from year to year. And company-specific factors may cause the experience of an individual defendant to differ from the average experience of other defendants. When analyzing industry data or a company's own data for a forecast of asbestos-related liabilities (whether for purposes of reserves, acquisitions, or sizing a trust), it is important to delve behind the numbers to assess any underlying trends.

Footnotes

1 The authors would like to thank Wendy Magoronga, Hao Tang, and Ryan Tang for their research and Stephanie Plancich for her comments and suggestions.

2 Data from the most recent Form 10-K were used whenever available. We included only data reported at the individual claim level and for companies reporting at least two consecutive years in the period. The indexes shown below represent an average of trends observed at the company level. Each chart may contain different companies, depending on the data reported by each company, each year. Data for prior years were updated if companies changed previously reported information. As a result, the graphs in the current update may differ from those in the previous update over the earlier period.

3 The index includes companies reporting at least two years of reserve data, so any initial increase due to the year in which a company first started reporting a reserve is excluded.

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