Unlike COVID-19 or seasonal influenza, there is no risk of systemic accumulation or correlation among insured populations. There is also no evidence of sustained super spreading dynamics comparable to airborne respiratory viruses, explained SCOR..
Paris: Hantavirus occupies a unique position in the risk matrix: it presents a severity comparable to the Ebola virus, but without any significant transmission dynamics.
Re/Insurers should therefore treat hantavirus as a risk requiring case-specific attention, not as a systemic shock factor said French reinsurer SCOR on Wednesday.
Unlike COVID-19 or seasonal influenza, there is no risk of systemic accumulation or correlation among insured populations. There is also no evidence of sustained super spreading dynamics comparable to airborne respiratory viruses, explained SCOR..
This means hantavirus acts as an exposure-driven, idiosyncratic risk, not a portfolio-wide shock driver.
Consequently, it should be modeled as a severe, but isolated zoonotic hazard, with no epidemic scaling potential. Its impact is material at the level of individual claims, but negligible at the portfolio level: there is no correlation risk, and aggregation potential is limited.
Current situation as of May 20th, 2026
As at the current date, less than 15 cases are confirmed and less than 200 people have been exposed.
Those affected come from more than 20 different countries, all of which are taking measures to monitor the outbreak and isolate suspected cases.