Title: Casualty Loss Reserve Seminar
1Casualty Loss Reserve Seminar
- Call Paper Program
- Loss Reserving without Loss Development Patterns
- Beyond Berquist Sherman
2We used a few simplifications to keep this
understandable
- We made up the data
- We select development factors based on the volume
weighted average of the last three diagonals - We tried to keep to a minimum the number of
slides with lots of numbers that are hard to read
3The data is constructed to allow for variations
in reporting and payment patterns
- Ultimate losses based on hypothetical frequency
and severity assumptions - Annual trend of 5 per year
- 1 frequency
- 4 severity
- We include ten years in the data
- Ten year total ultimate losses of 766.5 million
- Hypothetical development patterns applied to the
hypothetical ultimates to derive loss development
data - Variation in the patterns used to create
hypothetical scenarios
4We derived four scenarios to test the accuracy of
various reserving techniques
- Scenario 1 (Base Scenario) - Stable settlement
and reserving patterns - Scenario 2 - Case reserve strengthening
- Assumes about six months acceleration in
reporting pattern - Scenario 3 - Settlement rate acceleration
- Assumes about six month acceleration in claim
settlement and loss payment patterns - Scenario 4 - Case reserve strengthening and
settlement rate acceleration - Assumes about six month acceleration in reporting
and payment patterns
5The loss reporting and payment patterns
underlying the base scenario are as follows
6In a stable environment, loss reserving is easy.
An incurred loss triangle might look like this ...
7 and a paid triangle might look like this ...
8 and simple projections all give the same result
9Introducing changes to the settlement and case
reserving patterns expose weaknesses in
traditional loss development analyses
- Scenario 2 - Case Reserve Strengthening
- Traditional loss development factor (LDF)
projection based on incurred data will
underestimate the amount of strengthening - This results in over-projection of ultimate
losses - Ten year total projection is 796.0 million
- 29.5 million higher than the actual ultimates of
766.5 million
The misestimate for 12 months alone causes the
projected ultimates to be too high by 17.8
(111.4 m vs 94.5 m)
10Changes in the settlement rate and payment
patterns can be even more significant of a
distortion
- Scenario 3 - Settlement Rate Acceleration
- Traditional LDF projection using paid losses
results in over-projection of ultimate losses - Ten year total projection is 840.7 million
- 74.2 million higher than the actual ultimates of
766.5 million
This error causes a 38 over-projection on the
latest year (130.8 m vs 94.5 m)
11Loss reserving in a changing claim settlement or
case reserving environment requires advanced
techniques, and significant judgment
- Berquist-Sherman (PCAS LXIV, p123)
- Judgmental adjustments to prior diagonals to
approximate the settlement rate and or case
reserve levels on the current diagonal
Adjusted Loss Development Factors
Adjusted
Actual
- Adjusted loss development pattern applied to
the unadjusted (actual) data
12The techniques in this call paper adjust the
latest diagonal instead of the prior data
- Ultimate Closed Claim Severity Technique
- Projects ultimate losses using traditional
methods - Calculates implied unpaid loss triangle
- Repeat this approach for claims to get estimated
unclosed claims triangle - Ratio of the unpaid loss triangle to unclosed
claim triangle gives the estimated unclosed claim
severity triangle
Estimated Unpaid
Projected Ultimates
Paid to Date
minus
equals
13The unclosed claim severity triangle is used to
estimate the latest diagonal severities
consistent with the historical data
14When there are changes in patterns, this method
replaces the distorted latest diagonal with an
adjusted diagonal consistent with prior periods
15The second new technique in this paper does not
use loss development factors for any year
- Incremental Closed Claim Severity Method
- Calculates incremental paid losses and closed
claims for each year between evaluation points - Calculates incremental closed claim severity
triangle - The historical incremental closed claim
severities are used to estimate future
incremental severities - Historical closed claim data is used to estimate
future incremental closed claims
Increm. Closed Claims Severity
Increm. Paid Losses
Increm. Closed Claims
divided by
equals
16The sumproduct of severities and closed claims
below the diagonal provides an estimate of the
remaining closed claim severities by year
17When there are changes in patterns, this method
mostly avoids the distorted diagonals
18These severities are used to estimate ultimate
losses
19In summary, the new methods provide significant
improvement in projection accuracy
- As with all techniques, they produce the correct
result in a stable environment - With changes in case reserve adequacy and/or
settlement rates, they are much more accurate
20All methods work when life is stable and
predictable
21But the adjusted methods are more accurate when
things are changing
22These new techniques do not necessarily produce a
better adjustment than the traditional advanced
techniques. However...
- They may be more understandable to company
management - They allow explicit reflection of known changes
in mix of business or other factors that affect
trend - They allow easy combination of case reserve and
settlement rate adjustments - They work equally well with calendar year changes
and accident year changes - They reflect recent claim frequency experience
- They provide reasonableness testing for more
traditional methods
23We used many simplified approaches and
assumptions. Refinements are possible
- Use unpaid claim severities instead of unclosed
- More sophisticated forecasting techniques
- Blending with post-change experience
- Reasonableness testing
- implied loss ratios, severities, pure premiums
- Sensitivity testing