After years of low yields and rising macro volatility, investors are taking renewed interest in insurance-linked securities (ILS) for their very low correlation with traditional financial markets. Despite event-driven volatility, the first half of 2025 reaffirmed the market’s strength and growing scale.
According to mid-year industry data, ILS issuance reached $17.2 billion across nearly 60 transactions, making 2025 the second-largest year in the market’s history, with half the year still to go. The total market size has now surpassed $56 billion, having expanded by more than 75% since 2020. This year alone has seen 10 new issuers and three wildfire bonds, signaling growing investor confidence alongside supportive market dynamics.
Drivers of Growth
The surge in issuance is being fueled by both sides of the equation: strong demand from sponsors seeking risk transfer and an equally strong appetite from investors looking for diversification. Elevated collateral yields and a wave of maturing bonds have created liquidity to reinvest. At the same time, diversification within the market has deepened, with new sponsors, new perils, and more sophisticated deal structures emerging.
Recent issuances illustrate this breadth. US hurricane exposures still dominate, but there has also been $182 million of coverage for U.K. flood, $105 million for Canada earthquake and severe convective storms, and $100 million for French terrorism. Such variety highlights the maturing nature of the market and its widening relevance across geographies and perils.
Performance and Investor Experience
Performance has been another bright spot. The Swiss Re Global Cat Bond Index delivered a 9.89% return for the first ten months of 2025, even as global markets contended with tariffs, currency volatility, and other macro shocks. Looking further back, the consistency of returns stands out: since 2002, catastrophe bonds have produced positive monthly results nearly 90% of the time.
Interestingly, inflation — typically a challenge for insurers — can have an indirect positive effect on the ILS market. Higher insured values at risk increase the need for risk transfer, which widens spreads and can enhance investor returns. Additionally, most catastrophe bonds pay floating-rate coupons tied to Treasury money market funds, meaning higher interest rates can directly benefit returns.
For multi-asset allocators, the consistent return pattern of catastrophe bonds has made them a compelling complement to traditional fixed income in high-rate environments.
Risk and Resilience
The start of 2025 underscored the ever-present risks inherent in catastrophe-linked investments. The devastating wildfires in Los Angeles caused approximately $40 billion in insured losses, the largest wildfire-related loss on record. Severe convective storms across the United States added billions more in claims. More recently, Hurricane Melissa triggered a 100% payout of a $150 million World Bank Catastrophe Bond for Jamaica.
Events like these are reminders that cat bonds are not risk-free. However, they also demonstrate the market’s resilience. While some structures were affected, in both cases the broader system absorbed the shocks without widespread disruption. The key lies in understanding and modeling the underlying risks accurately. Investors must know the exposures they are assuming, but they should also expect fair compensation through higher spreads and premiums as those risks increase.
Institutions tend to access the market through specialist funds, with managers leveraging deep catastrophe modeling expertise to construct diversified portfolios. Re/insurers are well positioned in this space due to their access to proprietary data and scientific teams capable of analyzing complex risk factors.
Institutional Adoption
What was once a niche investment is increasingly finding its way into mainstream institutional portfolios. An open question remains: how should investors categorize ILS exposure? Some treat it as part of alternative fixed income, others within hedge fund allocations, and some view it as a standalone diversifier.
Most institutions we speak to would allocate around 1% to 3% of portfolios to ILS. While that may seem modest, even small exposures can meaningfully enhance diversification and income. Modeling suggests that allocations of up to 10% could further improve portfolio metrics, though investors remain cautious and deliberate given the asymmetric risk profile and event-driven nature of returns.
Looking Ahead
The outlook for ILS remains constructive. Risk exposures are growing due to inflation, urbanization, and climate-related pressures, all of which increase the need for capital to absorb catastrophic losses. At the same time, innovation is expanding the range of available structures, including index-based solutions and parametric products that offer faster payouts and more efficient risk transfer.
Continued institutionalization is also likely. As data quality and model transparency improve, investor confidence in the asset class should deepen. However, success will depend on maintaining rigorous risk assessment and disciplined portfolio construction.
Catastrophe bonds and other insurance-linked securities are evolving from a specialist niche into a recognized source of diversification. Their appeal lies in their independence from economic cycles and their potential to provide steady returns even when traditional markets are under stress. For investors searching for correlated returns, ILS can play a valuable role in portfolio resilience.
