---
title: "AI fears are hitting insurance stocks IAG, SUN and QBE — but is the market overreacting?"
type: "News"
locale: "en"
url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/278974478.md"
description: "Insurance stocks, including IAG, Suncorp, and QBE, are facing pressure as investors fear AI disruption in the industry. New AI tools could automate underwriting and claims processing, potentially compressing margins. However, broker research suggests insurers may benefit from AI adoption. The traditional insurance model is being questioned as AI enhances data analysis and customer engagement. While fears of commoditization and increased competition grow, insurers are already adopting AI to improve efficiency. The broader debate on AI's impact spans multiple sectors, with evidence of disruption remaining limited."
datetime: "2026-03-13T02:40:39.000Z"
locales:
  - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/278974478.md)
  - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/278974478.md)
  - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/278974478.md)
---

# AI fears are hitting insurance stocks IAG, SUN and QBE — but is the market overreacting?

Key points:

-   Insurance stocks including IAG, Suncorp and QBE have come under pressure as investors begin pricing in potential AI disruption across the industry.
-   New AI tools and digital platforms could automate underwriting, claims processing and policy comparisons — potentially compressing margins.
-   But new broker research suggests insurers may benefit from AI adoption as much as they are threatened by it.

Investors are starting to question the traditional insurance model. Shares in major insurers including Insurance Australia Group (IAG), Suncorp (SUN) and QBE Insurance (QBE) have fallen sharply in recent sessions as investors begin pricing in a new risk: AI disruption.

The idea may sound surprising at first. Insurance has historically been viewed as a relatively stable, data-driven industry with strong barriers to entry. But markets are increasingly asking a simple question:

If AI can analyse vast datasets, generate insurance quotes, process claims and handle customer service — what happens to the traditional insurance model?

That concern has already rattled other sectors. Over the past year, finance journalists have coined the term “Saaspocalypse” to describe the sharp valuation compression across software companies as fears grow that AI could automate many tasks previously performed by enterprise software.

Now those same fears appear to be spreading to insurers.

Why AI could disrupt insurance stocks

At its core, insurance is a business built on data, risk analysis and administrative processes — exactly the areas where artificial intelligence excels.

Macquarie’s latest research on AI’s potential impact on the Australian insurance sector highlights a growing ecosystem of tools capable of performing many traditional insurance functions, including data cleansing, underwriting analysis, claims processing and customer engagement. \[1\]

In parallel, a wave of digital insurance platforms is emerging globally. These services allow consumers to compare policies across multiple insurers instantly using automated data integrations.

Insurance Australia Group (IAG) chart — insurance stocks have come under significant selling pressure as the AI-disruption narrative has grown in prominence.

For example, Macquarie notes that US platform Jerry.ai connects to more than 50 insurers to generate personalised quotes and has even launched an insurance comparison application inside ChatGPT. Other digital insurers and price comparison services are rapidly developing similar capabilities.

The fear among investors is that AI-powered tools could dramatically increase price transparency across the insurance industry. If consumers can easily compare policies across dozens of providers, insurance risks becoming more commoditised — potentially forcing insurers to compete more aggressively on price — compressing industry margins.

Steadfast Group (SDF) chart — insurance stocks have come under significant selling pressure as the AI-disruption narrative has grown in prominence.

Arguably, the bigger disruption risk may sit with insurance brokers rather than the insurers themselves. Brokers typically do not underwrite risk or hold policy capital — their business model is built on distributing policies and earning commissions.

If AI-powered comparison platforms make it easier for consumers to obtain quotes and purchase policies directly, some of that intermediary role could be eroded. That dynamic may help explain why broker-focused names such as AUB Group (AUB) and Steadfast Group (SDF) have seen sharper share price declines than the major insurers.

Incumbents are already using AI

Despite those concerns, the disruption narrative may be missing an important point: insurers themselves are already adopting the technology. In many cases, AI is being used to automate internal processes and reduce operating costs.

Suncorp, for example, has significantly increased digital adoption across its business, with 78% of sales and 59% of servicing now conducted digitally, while around 65% of natural hazard claims are lodged online.

Insurance brokers are also embracing the shift. AUB’s BizCover platform has implemented more than 35 AI-driven solutions across customer engagement, compliance and claims workflows, helping automate large portions of the insurance process.

Macquarie believes automation is already improving efficiency across the industry. In some cases, up to 90% of claims processing and 80% of cancellation requests can now be handled automatically. The broker suggests that rather than replacing insurers outright, AI may simply reshape how they operate.

Disruption fears are spreading across markets

More broadly, the debate about AI disruption is playing out across many sectors.

In a recent research note on how AI might disrupt finance in 2026, UBS argued that while the AI cycle is still in its early stages, the technology has the potential to disrupt a wide range of industries — particularly software businesses that rely on seat-based pricing models tied to workforce size. \[2\]

This implies that if AI tools reduce the number of workers needed to perform certain tasks, demand for some traditional software products could decline.

However, UBS also notes that the evidence of large-scale disruption remains limited so far, with strong enterprise demand and rising adoption supporting the technology sector — in other words, markets may be getting ahead of themselves.

The real risk for insurers

For investors, the key question may not be whether AI destroys the insurance industry — but how it changes competition.

Artificial intelligence could improve underwriting models, enhance fraud detection and significantly reduce operating costs. But it could also increase price transparency, making it easier for customers to compare policies and switch providers.

That combination is likely to spell margin pressure for local insurers, but experts are stopping well short of predicting an industry collapse.

It’s worth also considering that insurance remains a heavily regulated industry that requires large capital reserves and sophisticated risk management — barriers that AI-driven tech interlopers may struggle to overcome.

In that sense, insurance companies’ share prices may ultimately follow the same path now unfolding in software: an initial panic about disruption, followed by a clearer separation between companies that successfully harness AI and those that fail to adapt.

For now, markets appear to be pricing in the worst-case scenario. Whether that proves justified remains one of the most interesting questions for investors in the AI era.

References

\[1\] Macquarie Research — Australian Insurance: AI Implications, March 2026.\[2\] UBS Global Research — 9 Key Themes on AI, Tech and Debt Markets for 2026, January 2026.

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