Patrik Flashcards
1
Q
Reinsurance Loss Reserving Problems
A
- Claim report lags to reinsurers are generally longer
- There is a persistent upward development of claim reserves
- Claims reporting patterns differ greatly by reinsurance line, type of contract,etc
- Because of heterogeneity, industry statistics not very useful
- The reports the reinsurer receives may be lacking important info
- Because of the heterogeneity, often have data coding and IT systems problems
- The size of an adequate loss reserve compared to surplus is greater for a reinsurer
2
Q
U.S Tax Reform Act of 1986
A
- Requires discounting of loss reserves for income tax purposes
- Insurers no longer have an implicit risk marging built into loss reserve estimates
- This buffer flows into profits and is taxed sooner, decreasing assets and increasing risk level
3
Q
Components of a Reinsurer’s Loss Reserve
A
- Case reserves reported by the ceding companies
- Reinsurer additional reserves on individual claims
- Actuarial estimate of future development on components 1 and 2
- Actuarial estimate of pure IBNR
- Discount for future investment income
- Risk load
4
Q
General Procedure for Reinsurance Reserving
A
- Partition the reinsurance portfolio into reasonably homogeneous exposure groups
- Analyze the historical development patterns. If possible, consider case reserves and IBNR separately
- Estimate the future development
5
Q
Short Tailed Lines examples
A
- Treaty property proprtional
- Treaty property catastrophe
- Treaty property excess
- Facultative property
6
Q
Methods for Short-Tailed Exposure Categories
A
- Set IBNR equal to some percentage of the latest-year EP
- Reserve up to a selected loss ratio, where the selected loss ratio is larger than the one computed from reported non-cat claims
- If losses are summarized by UW year, then percentage estimates should be used to allocate losses to true AY to avoid overstating AY loss development
7
Q
Medium-Tailed Exposure Categories
A
- Treaty property excess higher layers
- Construction risks
- Surety
8
Q
Methods for Medium-Tailed Exposure Categories
A
- Standard Chain Ladder method
- Advantage - strongly correlates future development w/ an overall lag pattern and with the claims reported for each accident year
- Disadvantage - IBNR is so correlated withreported claims that estimates are not very credible for recent, immature years
9
Q
Long-Tailed Exposure Categories
A
- Treaty casualty excess
- Treaty casualty proportional
- Asbestos, pollution, etc
10
Q
Methods for Long-Tailed Exposure Categories
A
- Chain-Ladder (not great for immature years)
- BF method
- Pro - correlates future development for each year with exposure measure
- Con - dependent upon the selected loss ratio, estimate ignores reported claims for each accident year
- Stanard-Buhlmann (Cape Cod) method
- pro - ultimate expected loss ratio estimated from reported claims experience instead of judgmentally selected
- Con - IBNR by year is dependent upon rate-level adjusted premium
- Simple credibility IBNR estimate
- Other credibility procedures
- Alternative estimation methodolagies (stochastic models, frequency/severity model)
11
Q
A