Chapter 6: Reinsurance products - types (F203 Appx. 4) Flashcards

1
Q

Quota share

A

A proportional treaty reinsurance whereby the premiums and claims for all risks covered by the treaty are split in a fixed proportion.

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2
Q

Commissions payable under a quota share agreement

A

The reinsurer pays return and override commission to the insurer.
Profit commission may also be payable.

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3
Q

Return commission

A

The reinsurer will reimburse the direct writer with some percentage of the premium to help cover the acquisition expenses.

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4
Q

Override Commission

A

Commission over and above the return commission, compensating the direct writer for attracting and administering the business.

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5
Q

Ceding commission

A

The sum of return and override commission.

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6
Q

Profit commission

A

Commission the reinsurer pays the direct writer as a reward for passing on good business.

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7
Q

4 Advantages of quota share

A
  • It spreads risk, increasing insurer’s capacity and encouraging reciprocal business
  • Directly improves the solvency ratio (without losing market share)
  • It is administratively simple
  • may provide commission that helps with cashflow
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8
Q

Solvency ratio

A

free assets divided by net written premiums.

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9
Q

4 Disadvantages of quota share reinsurance

A
  • Cedes the same proportion of low and high variance risks
  • cedes the same proportion of risks, irrespective of size
  • passes a share of any profit to the reinsurer
  • it is unsuitable for unlimited covers
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10
Q

Surplus reinsurance

A

A proportional treaty reinsurance, whereby the proportion of risk covered varies from risk to risk depending on the size and type of risk.

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11
Q

Define “Estimated Maximum Loss (EML)”

A

The largest loss that is reasonably expected to arise from a single risk.

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12
Q

Define Minimum retention

A

The minimum level of retention the reinsurer requires to prevent the insurer from having too little interest in the risk.
This requires the insurer to retain all risks that fall below the minimum retention.

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13
Q

Define Number of lines of cover

A

This is specified in the contract and is used to calculate the maximum cover available from the reinsurer.
The maximum cover available is calculated as L multiplied by R, the Maximum retention

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14
Q

What is the main difference between quota share and surplus reinsurance?

A

Whereas quota share has the same proportion of every risk ceded to the reinsurer, the proportion ceded will vary from risk to risk with surplus reinsurance.

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15
Q

5 Advantages of surplus reinsurance

A
  • Enables the insurer to fine-tune its experience
  • Enables the insurer to write larger risks
  • It is useful for those classes where a wide variation can occur in the size of risks
  • It helps spread the risks
  • The commission may help with cashflow
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16
Q

3 Disadvantages of Surplus reinsurance

A
  • It requires more complex administration
  • It is unsuitable for unlimited covers (liability) and personal lines cover
  • The terms may not be flexible enough to cover the largest risks
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17
Q

Excess of loss reinsurance

A

The reinsurer covers the risk (or proportion thereof) between defined layers, the limits of which are often indexed for inflation (using a stability clause).

The higher layer cover(s) come into operation only when the lower layer cover has been fully used (“burnt through”).

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18
Q

3 Main types of excess of loss reinsurance

A
  • Risk XL
  • Aggregate XL
  • Catastrophe XL
19
Q

Risk XL

A

Indemnifies an insurer for the amount of an individual loss in excess of the excess point - in return for a premium.

20
Q

Aggregate XL

A

Relates to cumulative losses, where the aggregation may be by event, by peril or by class.

21
Q

Catastrophe XL

A

A form of aggregate XL covering sever losses (within the hours clause) that result from a specified event.

22
Q

4 Advantages of Excess of loss

A
  • Allows the insurer to accept risks that could lead to large claims
  • Reduces the risk of insolvency from a large claim, an aggregation of claims or a catastrophe
  • Reduces claim fluctuations (and smoothes results)
  • helps to make more efficient use of capital
23
Q

Working layer

A

The first layer above the cedant’s excess point, where moderate to heavy loss activity is expected by the cedant and reinsurer.

24
Q

Indexed limits

A

Where inflation has a significant effect on the cost o claims, a stability clause may be applied to the excess point.
This is so that the reinsurer does not receive a higher proportion of the risks purely because of inflation.

25
Q

Commission on XL Re

A

Return commission and override commission are not normally relevant (since the reinsurer charges a premium to cover the risk, and commission would effectively just lower the premium)

Profit commission is possible (in the lower layers).

26
Q

Deductibles on XL

A

It is possible the reinsurer will cover only a proportion of the claims within the layer, by applying a deductible.

The reason for this type of arrangement is to give the direct writer more incentive to keep the claim settlements low.

27
Q

Define “Hours clause”

A

A clause within a catastrophe reinsurance treaty that specifies the limited period during which claims can be aggregated for the purpose of one claim on the reinsurance contract.

28
Q

Stop loss

A

A form of XL reinsurance that indemnifies the cedant against the amount by which its losses incurred during the specific period exceed either:

  • a predetermined monetary amount or
  • a percentage of the company’s subject premiums (loss ratio) for the specific period.
29
Q

2 Types of financial reinsurance funding arrangements

A
  • Pre-funded arrangements

- Post-funded arrangements

30
Q

Pre-funded financial re arrangement

A

The insurer pays premiums into a fund held by the reinsurer (which earns interest), and claims are paid from the fund.

31
Q

Post-funded financial re arrangement

A

The reinsurer pays the losses and the insurer pays back the losses over time.

32
Q

4 Specific financial reinsurance products

A
  • time and distance deals
  • spread loss covers
  • financial quota share
  • industry loss warranties
33
Q

Time and distance policies

A

The insurer pays the reinsurer a premium and in return, the reinsurer pays an agreed schedule of claim payments;
This has the effect of discounting the reserves of the insurer for the time value of money.

34
Q

Spread loss covers

A

The insurer pays an annual or single premium to the reinsurer for the coverage of specified claims; these may be used to provide liquidity and security to the insurer and may be used for catastrophes.

35
Q

Financial quota share

A

This is quota share purchased in order to obtain reinsurance commissions for financing assistance.

36
Q

Industry loss warranties

A

These are a type of reinsurance that pay out based on industry losses rather than losses to individual insurers.

37
Q

Run-off reinsurance

A

Focus on the full-scale transfer of reserve development risks.
It provides cover against the insurer’s earning volatility arising from past activities.

38
Q

6 Circumstances in which run-off solutions are commonly sought

A
  • corporate restructuring
  • mergers and acquisitions
  • closing lines of business
  • economic changes in the value of the liability
  • regulatory, accounting or tax changements
  • legal developments
39
Q

Adverse development cover

A

Involves the purchase of reinsurance cover for the ultimate settled amount of a block of business above a certain pre-agreed amount.
Reserves are maintained by the insurer.

40
Q

Loss portfolio transfers

A

Involve the purchase of reinsurance cover for the ultimate settled amount of a block of business in its entirety.
Reserves are transferred to the reinsurer along with all remaining exposure to the business.

41
Q

Define “novation”

A

The transfer of the rights and obligations under a contract from one party to another.

42
Q

2 Advantages of Loss portfolio transfers

A
  • They can improve the credit rating of the original insurer.
  • The new insurer will gain diversification if not already in this area and achieve a larger client database.
43
Q

4 Disadvantages of Loss portfolio transfers

A
  • assets may need to be realised to pass across the value of the reserves to the accepting insurer (might be mismatching or tax gains / losses)
  • If the new insurer defaults, this could damage the reputation of the original insurer
  • The transfer may require the buy-in of reinsurers where there are existing reinsurance arrangements covering the portfolio.
  • There will be an associated cost to the original insurer of the risk transfer, which will depend on the current risk appetite of the market.