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Global trends in insurance and risk management

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Title: Global trends in insurance and risk management


1
Global trends in insurance and risk management
  • Mike Cullen
  • Managing Partner - Markets

2
Overview
  • The main theme of this presentation is value
  • Where is the value to the customer in insurance
    and risk management?
  • Where is the value to the investor in financial
    services companies?

3
How the world used to be
  • Customers
  • Professional service firms
  • Insurance brokers
  • Insurers

4
Broker Consolidation
1990
2000
2005
  • Marsh McLennan
  • Alexander and Alexander
  • Bain Clarkson
  • Hudig Langeveldt
  • CT Bowring
  • Arthur J. Gallagher
  • Hogg Robinson
  • Alexander Howden
  • Sedgwick
  • Stewart Wrightson
  • Willis Faber Dumas
  • Johnson and Higgins
  • Lowndes Lambert
  • Fenchurch
  • Jardines
  • Lloyd Thomson
  • CE Heath
  • Nicolson Jenner Leslie
  • Alwen Hough Johnson
  • Marsh
  • Aon
  • Willis Corroon
  • Arthur J. Gallagher
  • HLF Insurance Holdings
  • Jardine Lloyd Thompson
  • Alwen Hough Johnson

?
More than half of the 1990 top 20 Insurance
Brokers no longer exist.
The future is oligopoly
5
Convergence of broking and professional services
  • Massive consolidation of broking sector
  • Where will broker growth and profit come from?
  • Disintermediation
  • Commoditisation of placing risks
  • Self-insurance
  • Diversification of brokers into risk management
    and general consulting
  • ..but thats what we do

6
Convergence of broking and professional services
  • What next?
  • Broking becomes a cash cow for the remaining
    broking companies
  • Ernst Young, Slaughter May, Marsh and Aon all
    operating in the same market
  • A few giant financial service firms that do
    everything?

7
Advising customers
  • Professional service firms and brokers are not
    the only ones seeking to provide advice to
    customers
  • Is an insurer a product provider or a solutions
    composer?

8
Product provider or solutions composer?
  • Private car insurance smooths the cost of
    repairs or keeps you mobile?
  • Personal injury insurance rehabilitation and
    risk management

9
Personal Injury rehabilitation and risk
management
  • Social inflation outstripping publics
    willingness to pay premium inflation
  • Medical improvements help people live longer
  • Judicial and legal developments
  • Expectation of care at home rather than in
    hospital
  • Government plans to recoup NHS costs from insurers

10
Personal Injury rehabilitation and risk
management
  • Reactive and adversarial claims management
    proving to be inefficient and ineffective
  • Introduces delay into the process of diagnosis
    and treatment
  • Litigation exacerbates the delays and greatly
    increases the ultimate cost
  • Move towards proactive and cooperative approach

11
Proactive and cooperative approach to personal
injury
  • Risk management advice to help reduce claim
    events
  • Early expert diagnosis and treatment greatly
    reduces potential cost, eg whiplash claims
  • Active management of claims helps claimants
    return to work earlier
  • Treat third parties in the same way as
    policyholders

12
Constituent parts of an insurer
  • Customer relationship business
  • Product innovation business
  • Infrastructure business
  • Asset management business
  • Capital management business

13
Customer relationship business
  • Potential for value where the customer wants
    advice and is willing and able to pay
  • Commodity products and services will be sold on
    price through the most cost efficient sales
    channels

14
Product innovation business
  • Sustainable advantage from product design?
  • Increase value to segments of the insured
    population through risk adjusted pricing

15
Risk adjusted pricing
  • Reveals the cross-subsidisation between
    policyholders
  • Niche players can take advantage to make
    short-term gains
  • Increase the number of uninsured risks?
  • Vigilante consumerism
  • Impact on society and Government reaction?

16
Measures that matter to equity markets
17
  • As industries evolve, trusted ways of creating
    value are also evolving
  • managing physical and financial assets and
    managing earnings are no longer sufficient ways
    of growing value
  • non-financial activities are key drivers for
    growing future value
  • The FS sector is no exception
  • Ernst Young study identifies the key
    non-financial drivers for the sector
  • through interviews, survey and statistical
    analysis
  • and concludes there is a huge potential for
    improvement
  • by actively managing their critical non-financial
    activities

18
Evidence Past performance is not a good
indicator of market value
SP 500 (10 yr. example)
4
Mkt. Value
3.5
3
2.5
2
Normalized Value
Earnings
1.5
Book Value
1
0.5
0
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
19
For financial services, continued success in
growing earnings...
Earnings Per Share
20
has done little to make it a high performance
industry
Price / Book
21
Conclusion
  • Market expectations
  • past financial growth and past physical
    investment
  • are increasingly unreliable indicators of the
    future
  • then what are reliable indicators?

22
Much of the future value is in the performance of
non-financial activities
  • such as strategy, management quality, corporate
    governance, human capital, innovation ..

23
Why?
  • Because reports on non-financial activities
  • provide investors with information not contained
    in financial reports
  • are often leading indicators of future
    performance
  • At least 35 of market valuation is attributable
    to non-financial activities
  • as shown by EY study Measures that Matter
    across a range of non-FS sectors
  • and analysts forecasts are considerably more
    accurate when non-financial activities are
    incorporated

24
For FS companies
  • Both analysts and executives say that
    non-financial activities are very important
  • about 45 of market valuation is attributable to
    these activities

25
Discussion of the Results
  • Obviously considerable overlap
  • both stressed branding and the importance of the
    customer relationship
  • Key points of difference
  • investors stressed consolidation, ie. successful
    completion of strategies and the commoditisation
    of high quality products
  • CEOs stressed convergence, ie. increasing
    breadth of reach and products
  • investors wanted improved communication, CEOs
    did not!
  • Our interpretation market perceives focused
    excellence to be better than broad mediocrity

26
The Survey
  • Scope
  • covered 255 investors and 55 buy-side analysts
    across all market sectors
  • including 40 FS companies
  • Method
  • provided with list of non-financial activities
  • including the multi-sector study Measures that
    Matter
  • asked to list in order of priority

27
  • Results of the Survey
  • Non-financial activities for FS companies
  • in order of priority
  • Execution of strategy
  • Quality of management
  • Innovation
  • Customer franchise reach strength of
    distribution
  • Quality of strategy
  • Customer franchise brand
  • Human capital attract and retain talent
  • Customer franchise quality of CRM

28
The Results
  • Our Interpretation
  • develop a consistent vision, then focus on
    delivery of strategy
  • credible management to ensure efficient delivery
  • everything else follows ...
  • This is consistent with interview findings
  • In addition the survey covered relative
    performance across the sectors
  • FS companies performed consistently badly
    compared to all other sectors surveyed
  • in all non-financial activities
  • which is consistent with poor market performance

29
Back to the Investor Interviews
  • We asked about comparative performance
  • FS companies were perceived as poor in
  • strategy execution and delivery
  • quality and experience of management
  • lack of meaningful vision for both product and
    service
  • strength of customer relationships
  • strength of investor relationships
  • corporate governance
  • with a small number of exceptions
  • perceived to be strong across all activities,
    such as ABN AmRo, AMEX and MSDW

30
The Outcome Main non-financial activities
Non-financial Category
Degree of Influence
Strategy
Very high
Human Capital
High
Medium
Management
Company Image ie. brand, customer
social responsibility
Medium
  • all other non-financial categories were not
    statistically significant

31
The Outcome Our Interpretation
  • Results reinforce conclusions from interviews and
    survey
  • successful implementation of strategy is critical
  • human capital and credible management also
    important
  • corporate image is also important
  • Non-financial activities are significantly
    important contributors to stock value

32
Overall Conclusions
  • Non-financial activities are important for FS
    companies
  • approximately 45 of market value is driven by
    non-financial activities
  • strategy, human capital including management
    quality, and company image are the most important
    in driving company value on capital markets
  • not all non-financial activities are effective
    differentiators
  • FSI performs non-financial activities badly
  • financial analysts give relatively low ratings on
    the non-financial activities of FS companies
  • executives and investors disagree on some of the
    most important activities
  • Statistics can identify highly-rated activities
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