Title: Reinsurance Structures and On Level Loss Ratios
1Reinsurance Structures and On Level Loss Ratios
- Reinsurance Boot Camp July 2005
2Agenda
- Reinsurance Structures
- Calculating an On Level Loss Ratio
- Adjustments to Premium
- Adjustments to Losses
- Adding in a Catastrophe/Shock load
- Dealing with a change in mix of business
- Filling in the gaps when data is unavailable
3Reinsurance Structures
- Standard Structures
- Pro Rata
- Excess of Loss
- NonStandard Structures
- Stop Loss
- Loss Portfolio Transfer
4What is a Pro Rata Treaty?
- The cedant agrees to share x of the premium and
x of the losses of a book of business. - The reinsurer returns some of the premium to the
cedant in the form of a ceding commission. - One Pro Rata Structure, a Quota Share, cedes the
same percentage on all risks. - A Variable Quota Share may cede different
percentages for different limits. - A Surplus Share allows the cedant to retain a
given amount, called a line, on any one risk
and cede the remaining lines to reinsurers.
5Variable Quota Share
6Surplus Share
7Uses for Pro Rata Treaties
- Surplus Relief
- Pro Rata Structures reduce net premium which
improves (decreases) the cedants net-premium-to
surplus ratio - The ceding commission increases the cedants
surplus, also improving (decreasing) the
net-premium-to-surplus ratio. - Combined Ratio Improvement, in some cases
- Although straight Pro Rata Structures do not
improve loss ratios, the cedants actual overall
results can improve if the ceding commission
received exceeds the cedants actual expenses (an
override). - Cedants overall portfolio results COULD be worse
if they end up ceding out very profitable
business instead of keeping it net. -
8What would I care about if I were pricing a Pro
Rata Treaty?
- Expected Loss Ratio for the covered business
- Volatility of Loss Ratio/Loss Sensitive Features
- Cedants actual expenses
- Alignment of Interests
9Other concerns -
- Variable QS
- Do I have the appropriate data to estimate a loss
ratio by limit? - Surplus Share
- Do I have surplus share data that represents the
current line guide?
10What is an Excess of Loss Treaty?
- For any loss, the cedant retains the first x
dollars and cedes out the next y dollars, in
exchange for premium. - Per Risk
- Per Occurrence
- Example 9M x 1M per occurrence
- For a loss sustained on any given occurrence, the
cedant keeps the first 1M and the reinsurer picks
up the next 9M.
11Uses for Excess of Loss Treaties
- Stabilize loss experience
- Catastrophe Protection
- Increased Risk Capacity
12What would I care about if I were pricing an
Excess of Loss Treaty?
- Frequency of Layer Losses
- Severity of Layer Losses
- Volatility of Loss Ratio/Loss Sensitive Features
- Alignment of Interests
13What is a Stop Loss Treaty and what is it used
for?
- The cedant retains the first x of aggregate
losses and cedes out the next y of aggregate
losses to a reinsurer in exchange for premium. - X can either be a percentage or a fixed dollar
amount - Stabilizes net results
- Example 10 excess of a 70 net loss ratio in
exchange for 3 premium.
14What would I care about if I were pricing a Stop
Loss Treaty?
- Expected Loss Ratio for the covered business
- Volatility around the Loss Ratio
- Special Funding features
- Alignment of Interests
- Accounting considerations
15What is a Loss Portfolio Transfer and what is it
used for?
- The cedant gives a block of loss reserves to a
reinsurer in exchange for premium. - Premium considers the discounted value of those
reserves along with a risk charge. - Enables the cedant to cleanly exit a line of
business and focus on their going concern
portfolio.
16What would I care about if I were pricing a Loss
Portfolio Transfer?
- Loss Reserve Adequacy
- Latent Liabilities
- Interest Rate Assumptions
- Alignment of Interests
17Calculating an On Level Loss Ratio
- Essential for pricing almost any prospective
reinsurance structure. - Historical years of premium are adjusted to the
prospective periods rate and dollar levels. - Historical years of losses are adjusted to an
ultimate settled basis and trended to the
prospective periods dollar levels. - Adjusted losses are ratio-ed to adjusted premium
for an on level loss ratio.
18Data Needs - Premium
- Historical Premium
- Earned Premium if Losses Occurring treaty
- Written Premium if Risks Attaching treaty
- Historical Rate Changes
- Premium/Exposure Trend if Exposure Base is
Inflation Sensitive
19Data Needs - Losses
- Historical Paid a/o Incurred Losses and ALAE
- Accident Year if Losses Occurring treaty
- Policy Year if Risks Attaching treaty
- Loss Development Triangle
- Loss Trend
- Catastrophe/Shock losses separately
20Adjustments to Premium
- Rate On Level Factors
- Parallelogram method
- Premium at Present Rates
- Premium/Exposure Trend
- Yes if exposure base is insured value, sales,
revenues, etc. - No if exposure base is square feet, per vehicle,
per employee, per doctor, etc.
21Rate On Level Factors
- Rate Changes should consider changes to base
rates, schedule credits and debits, tier rating,
LCMs. They should also be adjusted for changes in
limits and attachment points on the underlying
policies. - Parallelogram method uses geometry to calculate
on level factors. - Premium at Present Rates re-rates all historical
policies using prospective rates.
22Rate On Level Factors
23Premium/Exposure Trend
- Trend from
- Average Earned Date of experience period for
Losses Occurring - Average Written Date of experience period for
Risks Attaching - Trend to
- Average Earned Date of prospective period for
Losses Occurring - Average Written Date of prospective period for
Risks Attaching
24Adjustments to Losses
- Catastrophe/Shock losses should be separated out.
- NonCat Incurred Losses need to be adjusted to
ultimate, settled basis. - Use cedants own loss development triangle
- Supplement with industry/peer data if necessary
- Ultimate, settled noncat losses need to be
trended to prospective period. - Trend from average date of loss of experience
period - Trend to average date of loss of prospective
period
25Incurred Loss Development Triangle (in thousands)
26Loss Development (contd)
27Developing Incurred Losses
28Loss Trend
29On Level Loss Ratios Making a Selection
- Select for Stability?
- Select for Responsiveness?
- Somewhere in the middle?
30Stability versus Responsiveness
31Adding a Catastrophe Load
- Catastrophe Load
- By definition, catastrophes are low frequency,
high severity. - Your experience period may not even have had such
a lossyet - There are plenty of catastrophe exposure models
available for property however. - Catastrophe experience should be reviewed, but
given little weight due to its inherently
volatile nature.
32Adding a Shock Load
- Loss Experience versus Loss Exposure
- Calculate a limited loss ratio at low stable
level. - Add a load for larger losses that you are exposed
to, but havent experienced yet. - Use exposure curves to add an excess charge above
that limited level - Amortize in some large but possible loss
33Dealing with a Shift in Business Mix
- A loss ratio analysis done on an all lines
combined basis will miss shifts in the business
mix. - Should analyze each line of business separately
and then weight results on prospective premium by
line.
34Dealing with Start-Ups and No Data
- New line of business for a company
- New company altogether
35What to think about in no data situations
- Competitor experience or rate comparisons, but
consider - Growing pains/distractions in new line
- Competitive advantage?
- Position in the market cycle?
- Burning your way in
- Track record at prior carriers
- Rating of current carrier/current paper
- Company infrastructure established?
- Smaller but growing book and volatility