Title: Capital Allocation and the Price of Insurance Discussion
1Capital Allocation and the Price of
InsuranceDiscussion
Financial Services
Andrew RearBerlin
CONFIDENTIAL www.oliverwyman.com
2Review of paper M A activity of insurers
increases diversification benefits and decreases
the prices charged by the merged entity
- Core of the work presented by Jeungbo Shim is an
empirical analysis of capital allocation and
prices charged by insurers following MA activity - In the M A transactions under consideration,
economic capital requirements (in terms of
capital-to-liability ratios) have been reduced - Bigger portfolio, hence more diversification
benefits - Confirmed by outside-in-analysis of respective
insurers - Following MA activity, insurers have decreased
their prices - Due to lower capital requirements when accounting
for higher diversification benefit - Work establishes empirical link of business
units change in prices and their change in
capital requirement (using a marginal capital
allocation approach) following MA activity
Diversification matters and is reflected in
pricing
3The results of the work are in line with industry
practice and trends
Accounting for diversification in determining
required capital . . .
. . . and using required economic capital in
pricing decisions
- Many insurers capture diversification benefits in
their internal capital models - Solvency II will also account for diversification
benefits - New SP capital model also adjusts for
diversification effects
- Many insurers have developed risk-adjusted
pricing frameworks - Economic return is compared to economic capital
requirements - Often based on economic capital requirements
after diversification benefits - MCEV also accounts for required economic capital,
in particular for unhedgeable risks
4The business question How far should this go?
Is diversification always good?
How far should you reduce pricing
- Reduced capital requirements are a competitive
advantage - but there are two pitfalls
- Expertise
- Investor surprises
- Pricing is the mechanism through which
competitive advantage is demonstrated - but does rational pricing behaviour prompt an
apparently irrational pricing cycle?
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