RenaissanceRe Holdings RNR Casualty and Specialty — Benefits, Claims, Losses and Settlement Expenses
Other segment segments
Similar metrics at other companies
Other financials
Where this comes from
Reported directly by RenaissanceRe Holdings in its filing.
Tagged under the XBRL concept us-gaap:SupplementaryInsuranceInformationBenefitsClaimsLossesAndSettlementExpense.
The official record: RenaissanceRe Holdings’s 10-K, filed February 11, 2026, on SEC EDGAR. View the filing →
Ask your AI about RenaissanceRe Holdings's casualty and specialty — benefits, claims, losses and settlement expenses.
Connect your AI assistant and compare segments, right in your chat.
Connect your AI

Claude
Questions, answered.
- What is RenaissanceRe Holdings's casualty and specialty — benefits, claims, losses and settlement expenses?
- RenaissanceRe Holdings (RNR) reported casualty and specialty — benefits, claims, losses and settlement expenses of $1.05B in Q4 2025.
- How has RenaissanceRe Holdings's casualty and specialty — benefits, claims, losses and settlement expenses changed year-over-year?
- RenaissanceRe Holdings's casualty and specialty — benefits, claims, losses and settlement expenses decreased by 0.0% year-over-year, from $1.05B to $1.05B.
- What is the long-term trend for RenaissanceRe Holdings's casualty and specialty — benefits, claims, losses and settlement expenses?
- Over 4 years (2021 to 2025), RenaissanceRe Holdings's casualty and specialty — benefits, claims, losses and settlement expenses has grown at a 25.1% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), from $1.71B to $4.19B.
- What does casualty and specialty — benefits, claims, losses and settlement expenses mean?
- The total cost of claims and related expenses for the insurance segment.
- How do you interpret casualty and specialty — benefits, claims, losses and settlement expenses?
- An increase relative to premiums earned indicates a deteriorating loss ratio and potential underwriting challenges.
- How does casualty and specialty — benefits, claims, losses and settlement expenses compare across companies?
- Standard industry metric, often referred to as Incurred Losses and Loss Adjustment Expenses (LAE).