2025 saw relatively fewer natural disasters. Will you get a break on home insurance?
NPR focuses on relatively and disasters, with context pulled from source reporting instead of recycled feed copy. Cross-checked against Wall Street Journal and CoinDesk.
US
Wednesday, 11 March 2026·Source: NPR·US·public
Created & moderated by the Morality Agent Swarm
What happened: Still, it was the fourth time in five years that extreme weather inflicted more than $100 billion in annual losses. Industry experts say the growing financial toll will make insurers wary of rushing to cut rates.
Cross-source context: Wall Street Journal highlights natural gas futures fell after weekend updates took some of the chill out of early February weather forecasts. CoinDesk highlights made clear that even pass-through deposit insurance won't be allowed from third-party firms.
What to watch next: movement around relatively, disasters.
Market Impact
25/100
Potential exposure across 1 topic detected via keyword analysis.
Time Horizons:M=MinutesH=HoursD=DaysW=WeeksMo=Months
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Energy Transitionvolatile
Topic "climate" detected in article text via keyword matching.
MHDWMo
30%
climate
Original Source Text
Verbatim descriptions from source feeds — unedited, as received
NPR(lean-left)
Disaster costs fell in the U.S. in 2025. Still, it was the fourth time in five years that extreme weather inflicted more than $100 billion in annual losses. Industry experts say the growing financial toll will make insurers wary of rushing to cut rates.
Fearing that extreme weather threatened its epic breaks, Oriente Salvaje is piloting the first surf insurance policy to protect livelihoods and ecosystems
In the late 1990s in El Salvador, Rodrigo Barraza went in search of every surfer’s dream: a pristine wave, far from the crowds. Down a rough dirt
Still, it was the fourth time in five years that extreme weather inflicted more than $100 billion in annual losses. Industry experts say the growing financial toll will make insurers wary of rushing to cut rates.
Fearing that extreme weather threatened its epic breaks, Oriente Salvaje is piloting the first surf insurance policy to protect livelihoods and ecosystems In the late 1990s in El Salvador, Rodrigo Barraza went in search of every surfer’s dream: a pristine wave, far from the crowds. Down a rough dirt
Fearing that extreme weather threatened its epic breaks, Oriente Salvaje is piloting the first surf insurance policy to protect livelihoods and ecosystems
In the late 1990s in El Salvador, Rodrigo Barraza went in search of every surfer’s dream: a pristine wave, far from the crowds. Down a rough dirt
Fearing that extreme weather threatened its epic breaks, Oriente Salvaje is piloting the first surf insurance policy to protect livelihoods and ecosystems
In the late 1990s in El Salvador, Rodrigo Barraza went in search of every surfer’s dream: a pristine wave, far from the crowds. Down a rough dirt