Chapter 28 Reinsurance Flashcards
Reasons for reinsurance
- limit exposure to risk
- avoid large single losses - cede top slice of potentially large losses to reinsurers. To ensure claim payouts do not threaten solvency of insurer.
- smooth results
- provide expertise - reinsurer may help new insurers with claims management, underwriting. Usually QS with low retention.
- increase capacity to accept risk
- provide financial assistance
health and care insurance payouts will either be linked to?
- sum insured eg under CI insurance
- a sum insured with agreed uplift (some mechanism for automatic increasing of premium)
- indemnify the policyholder against medical costs eg under PMI
The following factors will determine the insurer’s appetite for offsetting its risks by using reinsurance.
- size of reinsurer
- experience in the marketplace
- its available free assets
- size of its portfolio
- the degree to which it is felt that the business outcome is predictable within bounds.
Smoothin of results
- Principle whereby reinsurance covers the large risks or accumulation of smaller risks above certain limits helps to achieve a smooth development of accounts year-on-year especially when portfolio is immature.
- a premium is paid to mitigate these fluctuations and the net result is more predictable for the insurer.
- reduces variance of insurer’s expected experience relative to the mean.
INcreasing capacity to accept larger risks
- Owing to insufficient capital backing, an insurer may be reluctant to accept, or incapable of accepting, particular risks by sector or by volume.
- Solvency requirements for a line of business are normally reduced in line with proportion ceded though this may be subject to an upper limit.
- surplud and excess of loss RI may be used here.
Financial assistance (NB strain, merger/acquisition, improving free-assets)
- reinsurance funds are available to assist financially with particular business propositions.
- reinsurance commission may be paid to the insurer: reinsurer is paying money to improve its cash balance.
- Occassionally where a reinsurer agrees that a block of renewing business should produce regular profits in the future, it may be possible for reinsurer to provide capital to insurer to improve its free asset position by reinsuring this portfolio of profitable existing business.
- RI would pay an initial commission after which reinsurer would be entitled to future surplus arising on this porfolio.
- a similar exercise might facilitate the acquisition of an insurance company where a subset of business within the company being acquired is identified as potentially profitable and the reinsurer is prepared to advance funds in anticipation of this future profit.
Types of reinsurance
- facultative
- treaty
- proportional : Quota share, surplus, coinsurance
- non-proportional :Risk,aggregate,catastrophe
- financial
Reinsurance commission
- used to describe a payment from the reinsurer to the insurer.
- sometimes structured as a deduction from premium paid to the reinsurer, in which case it would typically be called a rebate.
Proportional reinsurance can be ?
- quota share or surplus
- either of which can be written on original terms or risk premium bases.
- for short-term health only quota share is used.
discuss the arrangement under original terms
- applies both to long and short-term contracts.
- reinsurance premiums are in the same proportion to the original premium as the reinsured benefit is to the full benefit level.
- the cedant will provide the reinsurer with the premium rates it is using for the particular class of business it wishes to reinsure.
- commission paid by reinsurer depends on expected profitability of the business ceded.
- The reinsurer helps the finances of the insurer by paying it commission. to fund commission funded by cedant.
- deposits back may be used so that the cedant maintains the reserves for the whole contract.
- deposit back arrangement will also serve to mitigate reinsurer default risk to which cedant is exposed.
discuss arrangement under the risk premium reinsurance
- a proportion of either the full benefit or the sum at risk is reinsured.
- reinsurer does not share the office premium of the cedant but charges a specific premium for the risk:
- reinsurance premiums can be net level payments or yearly increasing.
- level premiums are spread over term of contract. Easy for cedant to load RI premiums to charge policyholders.
- reinsurance premiums may be guaranteed or reviewable
- reinsurance premiums are determined by the reinsurer.
- risks are shared in proportions. For QS this proportion is the same for all risks, but for surplus it varies.
Merits of quota share
+spreading risks
+writing larger portfolios
+encouraging reciprocal business
+financing and improving solvency
Surplus reinsurance merits
+enables insurer to cover individual risk up to an agreed maximum retention level.
+normally used in short-term contracts & group contracts
+used to smooth results by reducing claims fluctuations.
What is the difference between risk premium reinsurance & original terms ?
- under original terms the insurance company sets the premium and then negotiates an amount of commission from the reinsurer.
- Under the risk premium, the reinsurer sets the premium rate which is independent of the premium charged by the insurer.
- with a risk premium structure changes in cedants premiums rates will not necessarily require changes in reinsurance rates.
- therefore gives cedant greater flexibility to respond to competitor changes in premium rates.
Sum-at-risk reinsurance
- a variant proportional reinsurance is the concept of “sum-at-risk” reinsurance on long-term contract.
- here proporitions are applied, not to the whole sum-insured but to the insurer’s “sum-at-risk” ie excess of the stated policy benefit over the reserves that the cedant holds.
- this approach is less usual for unit-linked CI.
- for ease of administration the basis on which reserves are calculated may be stipulated at the outset.
- for unit-linked products the sum-at-risk will be the excess of benefit over the bid value of units.