http://immobilier-en-yvelines.com/article/To-The-New-York-Times--What-Goes-Around.html
The institute said estimates from 22 companies indicate damages likelyexceeded $88.9 million in the wake of winds that blew into the region Feb. 11, some clockedf at 70 mph. That storm at one point knocked out powefr toabout 167,500 of ’s (NYSE:AEP) 1.5 million customerss in the state. The instituts cautioned that the damage estimatefor February’s stor includes data from most, but not all, of the state’ s automobile and homeowners’ insurance companies, putting the true total Of the 39,501 claims logged with the 22 surveye d insurers, more than four in five were for home which accounted for $71.5 million in Commercial insurance lines recorded $11.
1 million in losses, with automobile lossesa totaling $2.5 million. The damage was only a fraction of the projecteds losses in the state as a result ofthe 14, 2008, windstorm that roared through the Midwesg as a remnant of Hurricane Ike. About 270,0009 claims tied to that stormtotaling $1.14 billion are expected in Ohio. That would set a new statde record. Estimated insurance losses in Texas, the epicenterr of Hurricane Ike damage, stand at abou $9 billion. As Ohio claimds data stands now, insured losses tied to the September stormm have risenabove $720 million, up about 30 percent from the $553.1 millionh total reported a month after the storm hit.
More than 80 percent of claimx and about 75 percent of losses were tiedto homeowners’
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