Insured losses from CrowdStrike outage could reach $1.5 billion, CyberCube says


FILE PHOTO: Passengers stands in a line at Delta Airlines’ counter following a global IT outage, at Haneda International Airport in Tokyo, Japan July 19, 2024. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo

LONDON (Reuters) - Global insured losses from last week's massive IT outage are likely to range from $400 million to $1.5 billion, cyber analytics firm CyberCube said on Thursday.

A software bug in cyber security firm CrowdStrike's quality-control system caused the software update that crashed computers globally, the U.S. firm said this week, as losses mount following disruption to services from aviation to banking.

The outage may be the single largest cyber insurance loss, CyberCube said in a statement.

It was "a major event for the cyber insurance market but does not come close to the destructive potential that leading insurers are holding capital against", CyberCube said.

Insurer Parametrix this week estimated insured losses from the outage of $540 million to $1.08 billion for Fortune 500 companies, excluding Microsoft, whose computer software was affected by the CrowdStrike bug.

Major cyber insurer Beazley said this week it had no plans to change its guidance on its combined ratio - a key measure of underwriting profitability - after the outage.

The global insurance and reinsurance industry is likely to avoid any major financial impact from the outage, ratings agency Fitch said.

However, reinsurance broker Guy Carpenter said that insurers may face claims on directors and officers' and property insurance as a result of the outage, in addition to cyber insurance claims.

(Reporting by Carolyn Cohn; Editing by Mark Potter)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

   

Next In Tech News

Chinese scientists build the most precise timing machine for electronic warfare
TikTok ban thrusts Apple, Google into US-China geopolitical fray
Apple releases Year of the Snake AirPods 4 with ANC for RM829
Toyota aims to open its futuristic city in Japan this year
Chinese smartphone maker Honor targets Indonesia’s growing appetite for premium handsets
CES 2025: Samsung CEO touts AI fridges and washers after year to forget
Homes talk and tables walk at AI dominated CES 2025
CES 2025: Dell unveils Apple-like rebrand in bid to make PCs cool again
CES 2025: Who’s winning the tech show’s autonomy race? Not cars
What are OpenAI users keen to see this year?

Others Also Read