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General Insurance Spring Seminar Facing up to Risk

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... in property claims ... not be multiple severe bodily injuries. What would it take ... Property PML has been reassessed (e.g. whole buildings destroyed ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: General Insurance Spring Seminar Facing up to Risk


1
General Insurance Spring SeminarFacing up to
Risk
abcd
  • 13-14 May 2002
  • Scarman House, University of Warwick, Coventry

2
The Worst Event
abcd
  • Richard Winter
  • K P M G

3
The Worst Event
  • Suggest a title for a workshop to Julian Leigh,
    asking him to find a presenter
  • Get an email by return saying That sounds
    interesting I look forward to hearing you do
    it.
  • Then discover that the workshop has become one of
    the main sessions

4
The easy way to assess the worst possible event
  • Assume that every policy pays out to its maximum
    exposure
  • That is all the capital you need to hold just in
    case
  • Impossible even if you look at just one class
    of business within one company
  • Hold a reasonable level of capital
  • At some point, need to introduce judgement into
    process

5
The Worst Event
  • Prior to 2001 - Biggest UK motor claim 9m
  • Severe injury / very high assumed future earnings
  • Selby estimated cost 40m - 50m
  • WTC step change in property claims
  • Toulouse Explosion estimated insurance bill
    2bn, with properties severely damaged 1km from
    site of explosion

6
Aim of Presentation
  • Consider how to manage extreme catastrophe risk
  • Overlaps with other presentations at this event
  • Manage extreme risks within product lines and
    individual risks
  • Most senior management focus on major risks (what
    could put us out of business / cause insolvency)
  • Product manager / Underwriting / Pricing focus
    risk management at a localised level

7
How do you manage risk?
8
How do you manage risk?
Control
Identify
Administer
Finance
9
Identify Risk
  • This is meant to be what insurers are good at
  • Sinister Risk
  • From an unusual or unexpected source
  • One claim to maximum cover (and massively
    beyond)(WTC)
  • Unexpectedly large consequential loss (Selby)
  • Large number of relatively small claims
    (Asbestos)

10
Why were events so unexpected
  • WTC nothing would happen that could take both
    towers out simultaneously
  • Selby Road Traffic Accident is going to be on
    the road there will not be multiple severe
    bodily injuries

11
What would it take to.
  • Get a claim that exhausts the cover on this
    policy?
  • What is the maximum damage that the entity we are
    insuring could cause?
  • Is there any way that every policyholder could
    claim under a policy?

12
What would it take to.
  • Get a claim that exhausts the cover on this
    policy?
  • WTC
  • What is the maximum damage that the entity we are
    insuring could cause?
  • Dog
  • Toddler
  • Roast Potato
  • Is there any way that every policyholder could
    claim under a policy?
  • Cashback

13
We have a problem
  • This is the second talk this morning
  • You had a heavy time last night
  • Its audience participation time

14
Practical Exercise
  • You are the insurer of 500,000 private vehicles
    under current UK legislation
  • How did the first 100m individual claim happen?
  • How did you lose 15m by 1 in 10 of your
    policyholders making a 300 claim.

15
Identification Realistic Disaster Scenarios
  • Lloyds Market Risk Unit
  • USA Windstorm 50bn loss
  • European Storm / Flood 10bn
  • Japanese Earthquake 15bn
  • Marine Collision (Ultra Large Crude Carrier and
    Cruise Liner)
  • North Sea loss of complex
  • Aviation collision (over major US city)
  • Loss to largest single risk including PML failure
  • Space storm destroys 6 in orbit satellites
  • Political Risk

16
Unrealistic Disaster Scenarios
  • Expect the unexpected
  • If something bad can happen, it probably will
  • Identify key assumptions in thinking
  • Since May 1984 there has been no significant
    flood risk to London because of introduction of
    Thames Barrier

17
Unrealistic Disaster Scenarios
18
Control
  • Limit exposure
  • Dont sell as much cover
  • Ensure exposure to region / one risk / one event
    is understood
  • Restrict cover
  • Terrorism exclusions
  • More risk bands
  • Enforcement of policy conditions
  • Encourage Mitigation
  • Withdraw Cover
  • Government Insurer of last resort

19
Control
  • Needs a long (corporate) memory
  • Not conducive to building market share
  • Easier in a hard market
  • Temptation follow the market practice

20
Finance
  • Ignore it, and hope it doesnt happen

21
Finance
  • Ignore it, and hope it doesnt happen
  • Valid approach
  • Acceptable company failure rate
  • 1 in 1000 year events do happen
  • How would you perform relative to the rest of the
    market?
  • If all insurance companies went insolvent
    together, would the Government bail them out
  • No one is being singled out over WTC because all
    companies have taken a big hit

22
Finance
  • Ignore it and hope it doesnt happen
  • Payback
  • The purpose of commercial insurance is to smooth
    declared profit, not to alter the total amount
    of profit over time
  • Reinsurance is similarly to smooth profit for the
    direct insurer, not to alter the total amount of
    profit over time
  • Personal lines insurance is a means of spreading
    the costs of a natural catastrophe amongst the
    insured population over time, not a transfer of
    risk to the insurer

23
Does Payback work?
  • If make too explicit, ceases to be a contract of
    insurance
  • Assumes barriers to entry and exit
  • In practice, relatively easy to introduce or
    withdraw capacity
  • At extreme, assumes purchaser is willing to
    respond quickly enough to save insurer that gets
    into trouble

24
Finance
  • Ignore it and hope it doesnt happen
  • Payback
  • Reinsurance
  • Limits loss to an acceptable level
  • Can cover be placed?
  • Assumes reinsurer able to pay up
  • What about reinsurers aggregation of risk?

25
Finance
  • Ignore it and hope it doesnt happen
  • Payback
  • Reinsurance
  • Diversify
  • Ideally take on a risk with the opposite
    financial effect
  • Normally not obvious for an insurance product

26
Control / Finance What has happened in practice?
  • Property PML has been reassessed (e.g. whole
    buildings destroyed not just floors)
  • Terrorism cover withdrawn (or not as easy to
    obtain)
  • Some companies reducing exposure
  • Lot of new entrants to market limits upside for
    companies that made heavy losses

27
Administer
  • Aggregation of risk
  • Within class of business
  • Across multiple classes
  • Demonstrate monitoring exposure properly (not
    just have the capability to do so)
  • Review continually
  • Only a fool learns by his own mistakes

28
Key issues
  • It is important to work out the worst that can
    happen both at a macro and micro level
  • Appropriate action may be to do nothing but it
    should be a conscious (and documented) decision
  • If you dont identify a risk you cant control it
  • Is the concept of payback dead and if so, are
    companies acting in a way consistent with this?
  • How short is the memory of the insurance
    industry?

29
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