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Construction rebound boosts surety sector

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Construction surety bond activity has returned to just shy of its 2008 peak, when the U.S. economy began to tank, and the sector has evolved with the construction industry.

U.S. construction spending reached a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $1.036 trillion in May, up just 0.8% from April but up 8.2% compared with May 2014, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Construction spending peaked at $1.167 trillion in 2006, plunged through the Great Recession and began rising again in 2012. For 2014, spending was $962.06 billion, according to the Census Bureau.

With the pickup in overall construction, surety bond sales also have increased, according to the Washington-based Surety & Fidelity Association of America.

Direct written premiums totaled $5.50 billion in 2014, a 4.7% increase compared with 2013 and just $2 million shy of the record in 2008, according to the association.

“There has been an increase in the demand for surety bonds, ... but I believe we are only getting back to where we were in 2008,” said Thomas Niland, vice-president and surety practice leader at Cook Maran & Associates in Melville, New York.

As in much of the property/ casualty market, pricing is advantageous for buyers amid ample capacity.

“Pricing for construction bonds is slightly softer,” said Harry C. Rosenberg, chairman of surety brokerage Rosenberg & Parker Inc. in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania.

“It's a soft marketplace and there's plenty of capacity,” said Drew Brach, surety practice leader at Marsh USA Inc. in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Construction bonds are priced at a rate per $1,000 value of the bond, said Mr. Niland.

Surety bonds, which assure completion of construction projects should a contractor default, can be placed with up to $10 billion in limits, Mr. Brach said.

“Utilization rates, though increasing, are still fairly low overall,” said Curt Grove, senior underwriting officer at Liberty Mutual Surety in Kansas City, Missouri. There is “plenty of surety capacity in all segments of the market.”

Numbers don't tell the whole story, however, as construction projects grow larger and more often are public-private partnerships, dubbed P3s by the industry.

“Public private partnerships continue to grow as a popular way to bridge the financing void primarily for large infrastructure projects,” Mr. Grove said.

Thirty-four states and Puerto Rico have enacted legislation enabling such partnerships, according to the Federal Highway Administration.

Such multiyear, more complex projects require specialized bonds, Mr. Rosenberg said.

Zurich North America has developed a construction bond form for public-private partnership construction projects, said Michael Bond, head of surety at Zurich North America in Owings Mills, Maryland.

“We're seeing a lot of states push this model as a way to fill the infrastructure investment gap and, as a response to that, we at Zurich have been working on a bond form specifically tailored for public-private partnerships,” said Mr. Bond.

The new bond form features a liquidity component which allows advance payment to allow a project to continue during claims in addition to the more traditional performance and payment bond, and has been used to bind five public/private partnership projects in Canada, Mr. Bond said.

Zurich has also developed a surety bond form which allows for expedited dispute resolution among partners.

Ironically, amid the abundance of capacity lies a shortage of new talent in the surety space.

“There is a tremendous demand out there for surety experts, but the supply is just not there,” said Marsh's Mr. Brach.