Palomar cat bond 2026 strategy reached a milestone this week with the close of Torrey Pines Re 2026-1 — a USD 410 million four-tranche catastrophe bond that brings the specialty insurer’s total in-force ILS portfolio to an all-time high of USD 1.28 billion, cementing Palomar’s position as the most capital-markets-dependent specialty P&C insurer in the US market and setting a template for mid-size insurers seeking reinsurance capacity beyond the traditional panel. The same appetite that drove Palomar to new highs also fuelled Florida Citizens’ one-third upsize of its Everglades Re II cat bond to $600M, confirming broad-based ILS market demand across issuer types.
Seven Years, Seven Bonds: How Palomar Built a $1.28B Cat Bond Machine
Palomar’s first Torrey Pines Re catastrophe bond closed in 2017 at USD 166 million, covering California earthquake risk through a collateralized indemnity trigger structure licensed in the Cayman Islands. The group has issued cat bonds every year since 2017 — except 2018–2020 — culminating in seven transactions totaling USD 1.28 billion in current in-force capacity. Each successive issuance has been larger: the 2025 transaction reached USD 525 million, previously Palomar’s largest, before the 2026 deal broke that record at USD 410 million in a tighter structure targeting four distinct tranches.
The annual sponsorship model has given Palomar a capital markets equivalent of a standing reinsurance panel — but one that does not require broker intermediation, annual price renegotiation, or managing relationships with multiple cedent-driven panels. Palomar’s earthquake reinsurance program now totals USD 3.53 billion of coverage as of the June 1, 2026 renewal, with cat bonds providing approximately 33% of total limits.
Torrey Pines Re 2026-1: Structure, Perils, and What Investors Paid
The Torrey Pines Re 2026-1 transaction comprises four tranches with a three-year term. Class A (USD 160 million) and Class B (USD 100 million) cover California earthquake on indemnity triggers. Class C (USD 100 million) adds broader multi-peril earthquake exposure, while Class D (USD 50 million) provides standalone Hawaii named-storm coverage — the latter reflecting investor appetite for diversification beyond California seismic risk. Spreads ranged from 2.75% for the lower-risk Class D to 6% for the higher-severity Class C tranches.
These spreads are competitive with 2025 pricing but reflect the broader ILS market’s healthy supply-demand balance: cat bonds delivered an 11.4% total return in 2025 per Swiss Re’s Cat Bond Total Return Index, and UCITS cat bond fund assets reached USD 20.5 billion as of April 2026. With approximately USD 14 billion in cat bond maturities expected in 2026–2027, reinvestment pressure supports sustained investor appetite for Palomar’s issuances.
Mid-Size Specialty Insurers Are Reshaping the ILS Market
Small and mid-size US domestic insurers now account for 35.2% of annual cat bond issuance in 2026, up from 21.2% in 2024 — a shift that reflects the maturation of the ILS market beyond its historical base of large global primary carriers and reinsurers. This structural trend mirrors Palomar’s own evolution: when it first accessed the cat bond market in 2017, indemnity-triggered transactions for mid-market specialty carriers were uncommon. They are now a defined segment. This geographic diversification is accelerating: Korean Re’s second Solomon Re cat bond now adds parametric Israel earthquake coverage to an ILS programme initially built on US perils, illustrating how non-US reinsurers are reshaping issuance diversity.
Global ILS issuance reached a record USD 24.7 billion in 2025, per Swiss Re market data, with strong investor returns (11.4% in 2025) sustaining demand well into 2026. Palomar’s Q1 2026 net premiums earned of USD 261.4 million, up 59.3% year-on-year, demonstrate that cat bond-backed capacity enables aggressive underwriting growth without proportional balance sheet expansion — a competitive advantage that traditional reinsurance-dependent carriers cannot easily replicate.
The Broker-Bypass Model and Its Implications for the Reinsurance Industry
The most structurally significant aspect of Palomar’s cat bond program is what it eliminates: annual broker-mediated reinsurance renewal. By accessing capital markets directly through a dedicated special-purpose vehicle, Palomar locks in multi-year capacity at transparent, publicly marketed spreads. The 10–15% risk-adjusted rate reductions Palomar has achieved by bundling cat bonds with traditional reinsurance are a direct consequence of this disintermediation.
For traditional reinsurers and specialty brokers, the trend is a structural headwind. As mid-market insurers capture 35% of ILS issuance, the reinsurance placement model built on annual panel renewals faces sustained attrition in the earthquake and named-storm segments. The question for 2027 is whether this model extends beyond natural catastrophe lines — into cyber, casualty, or life risk — where ILS innovation has historically lagged but institutional investor appetite is growing.