US insurers get inside cars, mouths, grocery carts in profit search

By Suzanne Barlyn

NEW YORK, Jan 15 (Reuters) - Twice a day, Scott Ozawa's Bluetooth-enabled toothbrush tells his dental insurer if he brushed for a full two minutes. In return, the 41-year-old software engineer gets free brush heads and the employer which bought his insurance gets premium discounts.

The scheme, devised by Beam Technologies Inc, is just one of the latest uses of technology by insurers hungry for more real-time information on their customers that they say lets them assess risk more accurately and set rates accordingly.

In theory, everybody wins, as policyholders adopt better habits and insurance companies save money on claims.

However, there are concerns that insurers will eventually use the data they get to cherry-pick the best and most profitable customers, while hiking rates or even denying coverage to people who choose not to participate.

"It's not expected today, but in the near future it will be used to penalize people," said Mitchell Wein at Novarica Inc, who advises clients on insurance technology.

Insurers are still in the data collection stage, said Wein, but he predicts that in about five years, tracking tools will have a direct impact on pricing and coverage on a range of policies.

Insurers recognize the dangers but consumers have nothing to fear, according to Michael Barry, a spokesman for the Insurance Information Institute, an industry-funded communications group.

"Insurance is such a heavily regulated industry that insurers must justify, in actuarial terms, the reason for any rate increase they're seeking in almost any line of business," he said.

Moreover, the insurance marketplace is competitive. "If any insurer raises rates to the point where a consumer is dissatisfied, the consumer can go elsewhere," he added.

TECH LEAP

Beam's technology follows auto insurers using devices in cars to find out how far and how safely policyholders drive - known as telematics - and life and health insurers giving customers wearable devices such as Fitbit and Apple Watch to keep track of their activity.

U.S. insurers and their customers have generally been slow to adopt new monitoring techniques, which have been common in auto insurance in South Africa, Italy, Brazil and Britain for years.

But the world's biggest insurance market, with $1.3 trillion in premiums in 2015 - more than a quarter of the global total - is catching up.

Mayfield, Ohio-based Progressive Corp, an early leader in the area, said its telematics-based 'Snapshot' auto policy allows it to "attract, identify and reward good drivers while also retaining those customers longer." Progressive has more than 2 million Snapshot policies in force, about a fifth of its total U.S. auto business.