Title: Casualty Actuarial Society: Overview of Catastrophe Risk Securitization
1Casualty Actuarial SocietyOverview of
Catastrophe RiskSecuritization
- Presented by
- American Re Securities Corporation
- March, 2000
2Table of Contents
- I. Transaction Structures
- II. Transaction Costs
- III. Transaction Timing
- IV. Catastrophe Bond Investors
- Appendix I Gold Eagle Capital Limited
- Appendix II Other Transactions
This presentation has been prepared by American
Re Securities Corporation on behalf of itself and
associated companies, and is provided for
information purposes only. Under no
circumstances is it to be used or considered as
an offer to sell, or a solicitation of any offer
to buy. Neither American Re Securities
Corporation nor any affiliate has acted or will
act as a fiduciary or financial, investment,
commodity trading or other advisor of or for any
recipient of this presentation and any
investment, trading or hedging decision of a
party will be based upon its own independent
judgement after consultation with such tax,
accounting, legal and other advisors as it deemed
appropriate. Although the information in this
presentation has been obtained from sources
believed to be reliable, we make no
representations as to its accuracy or
completeness and it should not be relied upon as
such. Any opinions expressed herein are subject
to change. From time to time, American Re
Securities Corporation, its associated companies
and any of their officers, employees or directors
may have a position, or otherwise be interested
in, transactions in any securities directly or
indirectly the subject of this presentation.
American Re Securities Corporation, or its
associated companies, may from time to time
perform investment banking or other services for,
or solicit investment banking or other business
from, any company mentioned in this
presentation. The information contained herein
is confidential and may not be copied or
otherwise reproduced or quoted to any party other
than the receiving party (including its
directors, officers, employees, or professional
advisors in whole or in part).
3Transaction Structures
4Fundamental Transaction Structure
Investors
Coupon on Principal
Optional
Principal
Premium
Premium
Sponsor
InsuranceIntermediary
Special Purpose Entity
Collateral Trust
Principal
Interest and remaining principal at maturity
Contingent Claims Payment
Contingent Claims Payment
- Insurance Intermediary provides retrocessional
coverage for Sponsor - Insurance Intermediary cedes risk to a Special
Purpose Entity - The Special Purpose Entity fully collateralizes
the maximum recovery by issuing securities to
the Capital Markets
5Indemnity CAT Bond
- Linked to actual losses of Sponsor in excess of
retention - No basis risk
- Co-insurance is required
- Requires extensive disclosure
- Detailed disclosure on underwriting, business
practices and underlying exposures - Bond structure must allow for claims development
period - Investors have extension risk
- No recovery for Sponsor until the end of the
development period
Maximum Possible Exposure
Insurer
Indemnity Cat Bond
Investors and Insurer
Actual Losses
Traditional Reinsurance
Re-Insurers and Insurer
Retention
Insurer
6Parametric CAT Bond
- Linked to physical event parameters
- Location
- Magnitude for Earthquake
- Maximum windspeed or barometric pressure for
Windstorm (no precedent exists for Windstorm) - Introduces basis risk between parametric trigger
and incurred losses - No Co-insurance
- Requires minimal disclosure
- No disclosure on underwriting, business practices
or underlying exposures - No extension risk for Investors
- Less elapsed time before Sponsors recovery than
for an indemnity bond
Maximum Possible Exposure
Insurer
Parametric Cat Bond
Investors
Magnitude of event
Traditional Reinsurance
Re-Insurers and Insurer
Retention
Insurer
7Modeled Index CAT Bond
- Modeled Index Linked Securities e.g. ModILSSM
- Linked to an Index
- Modeled Industry Losses
- Modeled Insurer Losses
- Less basis risk than for a Parametric CAT Bond
- No Co-insurance
- Requires minimal disclosure
- No disclosure on underwriting and business
practices - If an industry index, no disclosure on Sponsor's
exposures - No extension risk for Investors
- Less elapsed time before Sponsors recovery than
for an indemnity bond
Maximum Possible Exposure
Insurer
ModILSSM Cat Bond
Investors
Modeled Losses
Traditional Reinsurance
Re-Insurers and Insurer
Retention
Insurer
8Coping with the Basis Differential
- Basis differential can be placed or retained
- The Sponsor can retain the basis
- No cost related to third party taking basis
- Positive value can be structured to equal or
exceed negative value - May prevent transaction from being treated as
reinsurance for regulatory purposes - Through an Insurance Intermediary, the index or
parametric bond can be transformed into an
indemnity policy, and the Intermediary can place
or retain the basis risk - An Intermediary can arrange for a cap on the
basis differential, thereby ensuring performance
within a collar range
Probability of Exceedance ?
? Loss/Gain ?
0.X
9Transaction Costs
10Costs of Transaction
- Initial transaction costs are constant for any
transaction of 100 million in size or less -
- Ongoing transaction costs depend on the maturity
of the bond. The following estimates are the
spread to LIBOR demanded by Capital Markets
investors for a ModILSSM or Parametric bond of BB
risk
1 Year 3 Year 5 Year 400 bps 450 bps 500 bps
11Annual Costs of Transaction
- All-in, estimated transaction costs, expressed as
an annual Rate-on-Line
12Transaction Timing
13Time Frame
Indemnity Bond
ModILS SM or Parametric Bond
14Catastrophe Bond Investors
15Investors in CAT bonds
- Some Previous Investors
- Bank of Montreal
- Bracebridge
- Capital Research and Trading
- Combined Insurance Company of America
- Everest Re
- John Hancock Mutual Life
- Lazard
- Lincoln Re
- Lutheran Brotherhood
- Pacific Life
- PIMCO
- Renaissance Re
- TIAA
- Travelers
- US Fidelity Guarantee
Mutual Funds
Life Insurers
Hedge Funds
Reinsurers
Banks
Non-Life Insurers
16Gold Eagle Capital Limited
17Transaction Highlights
- Gold Eagle Capital Notes offer diversified
exposure to catastrophic risk - East Coast/Gulf Hurricane
- New Madrid Earthquake
- California Earthquake
- Modeled Index Linked Securities (ModILSSM), where
performance is linked to an index reflecting
modeled, rather than actual, insurance losses,
avoid certain risks associated with indemnity CAT
bonds - Investors exposed solely to frequency of event
occurrence, with no uncertainty as to severity of
loss - No exposure to claims paying practice or changes
in underlying policies - Exposure data and associated attachment points
are placed in escrow and remain static - No uncertainty from secondary perils
- Allows rapid post-event settlement period
- Class A Notes were the first, fully
principal-at-risk, investment grade CAT bond
18Transaction Summary
- Securities 50 million of Class A Floating Rate
Modeled Index Linked Notes - 126.6 million of Class B Floating Rate Modeled
Index Linked Notes - Issuer Gold Eagle Capital Limited, a special
purpose Bermuda company - Index Swap Counterparty American Re Capital
Markets, Inc. (ARCM), a wholly owned subsidiary
of American Re Corporation (ARC) - Use of Proceeds Invested in Permitted
Investments to collateralize the Index Swap - Index Swap
- Calculation Agent Risk Management Solutions,
Inc. (RMS) - Maturity Date April, 2001 (subject to a maximum
extension of 2 months) - Risk Period November 24, 1999 to March 31, 2001,
excluding 1999 Hurricane - Coupon Class A US 3 month LIBOR 295 bps
- Class B US 3 month LIBOR 540 bps
- Ratings Class A Baa3/BBB- Moodys/Fitch
- Class B Ba2/BB Moodys/Fitch
19Gold Eagle Capital LimitedNovember 1999
CIBC, London
Return on permitted investments
LIBOR -XX
Principal Repayment Interest
Fixed Payment
Index Swap Counterparty (ARCM)
Gold Eagle Capital Limited
ModILSSM Investors
Cash Proceeds
Qualifying Event Settlement Amount
Cash Proceeds from Sale of Notes
Return on Permitted Investments
Collateral Account
- Gold Eagle Capital Limited enters into a
cash-collateralized, catastrophe Index Swap with
ARCM. - Gold Eagle Capital Limited collateralizes this
swap by issuing 176.6 million of Modeled Index
Linked Notes to investors. - Gold Eagle Capital Limited enters into an
Interest Rate Swap to smooth investment income.
20Determination of the Index Value
- RMS determines if a given Hurricane or Earthquake
is a Qualifying Event. - Within 60 days
- RMS parameterizes (quantifies the characteristics
of) the Qualifying Event - RMS calculates an Index Value utilizing those
parameters and the escrowed Exposure Dataset - If the final Index Value results in a write down
of principal, such write down will occur on the
Interest Payment Date following the determination
of the Index Value - Any Index Value resulting in a principal
write-down must be supported by an Agreed Upon
Procedures Letter from KPMG to verify the correct
application of the RMS model - Generic event and write-down timing example
January, 2001 Interest Payment Date write-down of
principal
September, 2000 Trigger Event
November, 2000 60 day final Index Value
30 days
5 days
variable
30 days
January, 2001 Determination Date gt60 days after
event
October, 2000 30 day Preliminary Index Value
21Modeled Risk Profile
Class A Notes Attachment Probability (17
month) 0.24 Exhaustion Probability (17 month)
0.24 Expected Loss (17 month) 0.24 Expected
Loss (annualized) 0.17 Class B
Notes Attachment Probability (17 month)
1.10 Exhaustion Probability (17 month)
0.70 Expected Loss (17 month) 0.89 Expected
Loss (annualized) 0.63
Principal Reduction
17 month Exceedance Probability
Class A
177 million
0.24
Entire Class B
127 million
0.70
- Events Qualifying for Calculation
- A Hurricane of category 1 or higher, occurring in
the Eastern Hurricane Region on or after January
1, 2000 - An Earthquake in the New Madrid Seismic Zone or
California exceeding magnitude 5.0 at its
epicenter
2/3 Class B
84 million
0.86
1/3 Class B
42 million
1.10
22New Madrid Modeled Risk Profile
RMS CAT Index Value
17 month Exceedance Probability
Boundaries for Qualifying New Madrid Earthquake
Events
Class A
620
0.11
Entire Class B
470
0.18
2/3 Class B
435
0.22
- Events Qualifying for Calculation
- An Earthquake exceeding certain magnitude
thresholds at its epicenter, in the New Madrid
Region - Mw Mb Ms
- 5.0 5.0 5.0
1/3 Class B
400
0.24
23California Modeled Risk Profile
Boundaries for Qualifying California Earthquake
Events
RMS CAT Index Value
17 month Exceedance Probability
Class A
620
lt0.03
Entire Class B
291
lt0.03
2/3 Class B
260
0.05
- Events Qualifying for Calculation
- An Earthquake exceeding certain magnitude
thresholds at its epicenter, in the California
Region - Mw Mb Ms
- 5.0 5.0 5.0
1/3 Class B
245
0.17
24East Coast/Gulf Modeled Risk Profile
RMS CAT Index Value
15 month Exceedance Probability
Boundaries for Qualifying Hurricane Events
Class A
620
0.11
Entire Class B
410
0.49
2/3 Class B
395
0.59
- Events Qualifying for Calculation
- A Hurricane occurring in the Eastern Hurricane
Region of category 1 or higher. Any named
tropical storm or hurricane that is designated as
such by the NHC prior to January 1, 2000 shall be
excluded as a Qualifying Event.
1/3 Class B
380
0.70
25Historical Events
26Other Transactions
27Some Comparable Transactions