Title: Introduction To Reinsurance Reserving
1Introduction To Reinsurance Reserving
Atlanta, Georgia September 11, 2006
Anita Sathe, ACAS, ASA Deloitte Consulting
LLP Christopher Bozman, FCAS, MAAA Towers
Perrin Tillinghast Michael Angelina, ACAS, MAAA
Endurance Specialty Holdings
2Agenda
- Reinsurance Contract Types
- Data Grouping Dimensions
- Differences Between Reinsurance and Primary that
affect Loss Reserving - Other Considerations Development Methods
- Other Reserving Methods
3Agenda
- Reinsurance Contract Types
- Data Grouping Dimensions
- Differences Between Reinsurance and Primary that
affect Loss Reserving - Other Considerations Development Methods
- Other Reserving Methods
4Reinsurance Contract Types
- Type of policies
- Mechanics of cession
5Reinsurance Contract Types Type of Policies
- Treaty Reinsurance
- Covers a book or class of business
- Automatic reinsurance
- Insured/policies are unknown at inception but
become known subsequently - Typical Uses
- Provide stability
- Increase aggregate capacity
- Facultative Reinsurance
- Covers a specific individual risk
- The reinsurer retains the right to accept or
reject each risk - The one insured/policy is known to the reinsurer
at inception - Typical uses
- Unique exposures
- Hazardous exposures
- Provide line capacity
6Reinsurance Contract Types Type of Policies
- Finite Reinsurance
- Non-traditional treaty reinsurance
- Transfers a limited amount of risk
- Involves profit sharing elements
- Typical uses
- Surplus relief
- Smoothing results
7Reinsurance Contract Types Mechanics of cession
- Two mechanics of cession
- Pro Rata reinsurance
- Proportional sharing of premiums and losses
- Excess of loss reinsurance
- Losses in excess of a given dollar retention are
covered - Applicable to both treaty and facultative
reinsurance
8Reinsurance Contract Types Mechanics of cession
- Pro Rata reinsurance
- Quota Share
- Fixed percentage of premium losses shared
- Dollar amount ceded varies by size of risk
- E.g. QS Reinsurance with 25 retention.Total
Premiums 1,000,000Total Losses 700,000
9Reinsurance Contract Types Mechanics of cession
- Pro Rata reinsurance
- Surplus Share
- Fixed amount (line) of losses ceded
- Percentage shared varies by size of risk
- E.g. Surplus share 200,000 xs of 150,000
10Reinsurance Contract Types Mechanics of cession
- Excess Reinsurance
- Per risk
- Applies to property risks
- Limit applies separately to each risk (e.g.
building) - Per occurrence
- Typically applies to liability covers
- Limit applies to total loss for an occurrence
regardless of number of risks or policies
involved - Aggregate excess
- Can apply to both property and liability covers
- Limits and retentions stated in terms of loss
ratio bands - Reinsurers relative participation is NOT
pre-determined, but depends on the size of the
loss or loss ratio
11Reinsurance Contract Types Mechanics of cession
- Excess Reinsurance
- E.g. XOL 3,000,000 xs of 400,000
12Agenda
- Reinsurance Contract Types
- Data Grouping Dimensions
- Differences Between Reinsurance and Primary that
affect Loss Reserving - Other Considerations Development Methods
- Other Reserving Methods
13Data Grouping Dimensions
- Accident Year vs. Underwriting Year
- or Losses Occurring vs. Risks Attaching
- Casualty vs. Property
- Treaty vs. Facultative
- Excess of Loss vs. Proportional
- Broker vs. Direct
14Data Grouping Dimensions
- Accident Year vs. Underwriting Year
- AY allows for easiest application of standard
techniques - Premium fixed as of December 31
- Population of claims fixed at December 31 as
well, though many may be unknown - May not always be an option for reinsurance
- Underwriting year includes experience on all
treaties written during the year - Underwriting Year is often used in reinsurance,
especially for proportional contracts - UY can cover two policy years and three calendar
years for losses. Current UY as of 12 months is
incomplete
15Incomplete Underwriting Year
- UY 2001 includes all treaties written by the
reinsurer in 2001 - Risks Attaching and/or Policies Incepting
- UY 2001 can span two years and three accident
years - At 12/31/2001, UY 2001 is incomplete
- Standard development methods derived from the
past UYs will overstate the development of UY
2001. - Historical development after 12 months includes
exposures yet to be earned - Provision for these losses should not be included
in reserves at the 12/31/2001 accounting date.
16Incomplete Underwriting Year
1/1/2001
1/1/2002
1/1/2003
1/1/2004
Sample Time Line
17Data Grouping Dimensions
- Casualty vs. Property
- Casualty business generally has a longer
development tail - Line of business (LOB) detail is often not
available to the reinsurer, but if it is you
might want to further subdivide by LOB as
different LOBs may develop differently
18Data Grouping Dimensions
- Treaty vs. Facultative
- These display different development patterns, all
else equal
19Data Grouping Dimensions
- Excess of Loss vs. Proportional
- Can be more important to split than line of
business - Different development patterns
- Possible reserve adequacy mix
- Excess of Loss - Case reserves generally reviewed
by reinsurer claim dept and ACRs established - Proportional - Case reserves booked as reported
by ceding company without reinsurer review - Split Excess by layer - low, high, catastrophe
20Data Grouping Dimensions
- Broker vs. Direct
- Reinsurers obtain business either directly from
cedant or through broker (or both) - Data flowing through broker may create additional
reporting lag and result in different development
patterns
21Agenda
- Reinsurance Contract Types
- Data Grouping Dimensions
- Differences Between Reinsurance and Primary that
affect Loss Reserving - Other Considerations Development Methods
- Other Reserving Methods
22Differences Between Primary and Reinsurance
- Reporting Lag/Development Lag
- Data
- Increased Variability
- Tailor-Made or Atypical Contracts or Features
- Accumulation of Issues
23Differences Between Primary and Reinsurance
- Reporting Lag/Development Lag
- Primary losses develop faster than reinsurance
losses due to time lag for data to reach
reinsurer - Proportional business Accounts not due to
reinsurer until 30-90 days after quarter close - It is possible that losses booked by ceding
company in calendar year X will be realized and
booked by reinsurer in calendar year X1 - Excess business Reporting lag compounds with
development lag - Reinsurer not notified immediately of the loss
- The losses do not hit the reinsurers data
until they exceed the threshold established in
the Excess reinsurance contract
24Differences Between Primary and Reinsurance
- Reporting Lag/Development Lag
- Excess business Reporting lag compounds with
development lag - Example
- 400,000 excess of 100,000 per risk cover
- Loss occurs in Year 1, reserved for 25,000
- Year 3 - reserve increased to 50,000, reinsurer
verbally notified that loss MAY eventually reach
their contract - Year 5, reserve increased to 150,000, reinsurer
incurs loss 4 years after the primary company
25Primary vs. Reinsurer
Reproduction of RAA 2001 Historical Loss
Development Study Graph Primary Company Data
Source A.M. Best Company
26Differences Between Primary and Reinsurance
- Reporting Lag/Development Lag
- Premium Estimates
- Needed in reinsurance more than for primary
insurance - Reserves must be set against premium earned as of
the accounting date - Reporting lag can cause large earned premium
amounts to be unreported to the reinsurer as of
the accounting date - Creates a need to estimate premium and losses
associated with this premium
27Differences Between Primary and Reinsurance
- Data
- Quantity
- The infinite detail of primary company data is
often lost when reported to reinsurers as data
gets collapsed along several dimensions - Accident dates not reported
- Lines of business not reported
- Industry benchmarks by line of business or
accident year can thus be difficult to use - Quality affected by varied quantity
- Some ceding companies report more detail to
reinsurers than do others - As reinsurance data for reserving is organized at
the level of common detail in terms of reported
data fields, this has an impact on the quality of
the analysis
28Differences Between Primary and Reinsurance
- Increased Variability
- Primary insurers purchase reinsurance (among
other reasons) to make their results less
variable (i.e. from catastrophes) - Reinsurer data is subject to this reinsured
variation - Depending on the type of reinsurance cover,
reinsurer data may BE this variation
29Primary Experience Gross of Reinsurance
30Primary Experience Net of Reinsurance
31Reinsurance Experience
32Differences Between Primary and Reinsurance
- Tailor-made or Atypical Contracts or Features
- Many (possibly large) reinsurance contracts have
features that affect the way their experience
will develop relative to other contracts with
which they would otherwise be grouped - Examples Stop loss arrangements, loss
corridors, sunset clauses, etc
33Differences Between Primary and Reinsurance
- Accumulation of Issues
- Each primary insurer faces issues (e.g. changes
in reserve adequacy, settlement patterns, etc.) - Issues affect companys loss reserving data, and
reserving analyst has tools to neutralize the
effects - Reinsurance loss reserving data is an
accumulation of primary data each of which may
have these issues - Adds a further complication to the reinsurance
loss reserving process
34Agenda
- Reinsurance Contract Types
- Data Grouping Dimensions
- Differences Between Reinsurance and Primary that
affect Loss Reserving - Other Considerations Development Methods
- Other Reserving Methods
35Applications, Complications, and Considerations
- Application of Projection Methods
- Loss Development Method
- Loss Ratio Method
- Bornhuetter-Ferguson Method
- Other Methods
36Applications, Complications and Considerations
- Complications
- parameter uncertainty
- Volatility in report-to-report (RTR) factors
- Result can be very leveraged by tail factor
selection - Loss trend factors
- Expected loss ratios
- data constraints
- Line of business definition
- Claim count information often lacking
- Other considerations
- qualitative information
- Often lack information on claims and underwriting
changes at cedant level
37Loss Development Method Assumptions
- Assumes the relative change in a given years
reported loss ALAE from one evaluation to the
next will be similar to the relative change in
prior years reported loss ALAE at similar
evaluation points - RTR factors measure change in reported loss
ALAE at successive evaluations - tail factor allows for development beyond the
observed experience - Assumes the relative adequacy of the companys
case reserves has been consistent over time - Assumes no material changes in the rate claims
are paid or reported
38Loss Development Method Suggestions for Tail
Factors
- Industry benchmarks
- RAA for excess
- Reinsurance industry data going back 40 years
- Available for treaty vs. facultative and by
attachment range - Primary sources lagged for pro-rata
- ISO
- A.M. Best
- NCCI
- Curve fitting
- Compare to benchmarks for reasonability
39Loss Development MethodHow to deal with
variability in Historical Development
- Refine data
- Line of business mix
- At the very least need to split property vs.
casualty pro-rata vs. excess - Treaty vs. facultative
- Development patterns may differ
- Attachment points/limits
- Need to understand attachment points on from
ground up (FGU) basis - How are attachment points/limits changing over
time - Assess whether or not data is still credible
after making refinements
40Loss Development MethodHow to deal with
variability in Historical Development
- Adjust for unique situations and claims
- Commutations
- Remove from analysis, otherwise projections will
be distorted - Treat any finite contracts separately
- E.g. aggregate stop loss covers will not
develop similarly to per occurrence excess - Be watchful of traditional contracts with
finite features - Annual aggregate deductibles, loss corridors
- Asbestos, pollution, mass tort claims should be
subdivided and reviewed separately - If these claims are included in development data,
the tail factor will be overstated for more
recent periods - Segregate cats, 9/11 losses, other large/unusual
losses
41Loss Development MethodHow to deal with
variability in Historical Development
- Supplement with benchmarks
- Utilize benchmark (or weighting of benchmarks)
that is most appropriate for the book of business
being analyzed. Consider - Nature of underlying exposure (e.g. products
versus premises) - Attachment points/limits
- Actual historical development
- Ceding company profile
- Insolvent ceding companies will cause reporting
delays
42Development by Line of Business
Source RAA Historical Loss Development Study,
2005 Edition.
43Treaty vs. Facultative General Liability
Source RAA Historical Loss Development Study,
2005 Edition.
44Impact of Attachment Points General Liability
Source RAA Historical Loss Development Study,
2005 Edition.
45Loss Development Method
- Application same as for primary business
- Results leveraged
- no claims no IBNR
- large claims large IBNR
46Loss Development Method
- Paid Loss Development Method not very common for
reinsurance reserving - Payment pattern is often extremely slow and
erratic - may be appropriate for property or low limit
proportional business (e.g. nonstandard auto
liability)
47Loss Ratio Method
- Useful for new business or immature years
- Need premium base and a priori expectation
regarding loss ratio - Advantage stability
- ultimate loss estimate does not change unless the
premium or loss ratio are revised - Potential problem lack of responsiveness
- ignores actual loss experience as it emerges
48Loss Ratio Method
- Ultimate Loss Earned Premium x ELR
49Loss Ratio Method
- Selecting the loss ratio
- historical experience
- paid and incurred loss experience
- LDF projection
- adjusted to appropriate year
- rate changes
- trends
- coverage changes
- underwriting considerations
- underwriting files
- actuarial pricing
- market considerations
- benchmarks (industry results)
50Adjustment for Incomplete Years
- Recent underwriting or policy years may not be
fully earned as of the evaluation date - may need to scale back loss development
projections - apply ultimate loss ratio to earned premium as of
evaluation date - Ensure that resulting IBNR is reasonable
- Ultimate Loss Ratio Ultimate Loss / Ultimate
Premium - Ultimate premium
- project development
- seek underwriter input
51Agenda
- Reinsurance Contract Types
- Data Grouping Dimensions
- Differences Between Reinsurance and Primary that
affect Loss Reserving - Other Considerations Development Methods
- Other Reserving Methods
52Reserving Methods - Bornhuetter-Ferguson
- Essentially a blend of LDF method and Expected
Loss method - begins with an a-priori estimate of expected
losses - IELR (Initial Expected Loss Ratio) x Earned
Premium - splits a-priori estimate into two pieces
- expected reported losses (IEL x reported)
- expected unreported losses(IBNR) (IEL x
unreported) - replaces expected reported losses with actual
reported (case incurred) losses - Restated ultimate loss estimate equals
- expected unreported(IBNR) plus actual reported
(case incurred)
53Bornhuetter-Ferguson Method - an Example
54Bornhuetter-Ferguson Method - an Example (Cont)
55Bornhuetter-Ferguson Method - Advantages
- Allows for smoothing of results
- LDF method understates when case incurred losses
are small - overstates if losses large (ELR may understate in
this instance) - Incorporates changes in the environment
- attachment point, coverage changes, layer
restructuring, price strengthening/deterioration - Balances stability and actual loss emergence
- Estimates IBNR when loss activity is sparse
- ideal for long tailed lines (umbrella, xs
casualty) - redundant for short tailed lines (approximates
LDF method) - Reflects potential information found in
underwriting files - underlying limits profile
56Bornhuetter-Ferguson Method - Disadvantages
- Reporting pattern
- expected percentage reported 1 / LDF
- difficulty in estimating pattern for LDF method
also applies here - Initial expected losses
- IBNR is directly related to a-priori estimate
- double the expected losses ----gt double the IBNR
- importance of IELR may be lost in the analysis
- need to step back and determine of total IBNR
that is loss ratio driven - Ultimate Premium
- most recent year may be difficult to estimate
- booked premium is probably under-reported due to
timing lags - seek underwriting estimate
57Bornhuetter-Ferguson Method -Alternative Sources
of Initial Expected Losses
- Loss Ratio Method (incorporates pricing indices)
- Underwriting estimate from pricing study
- by definition it is the a-priori estimate
- verify that parameters for pricing and reserving
are consistent - Increased limits factors and direct premium
- may be used if you feel primary companys higher
limits pricing is inadequate - should have been incorporated in pricing study
- may also be used for changes in layer and/or
attachment point - Stanard-Buhlman estimates
- Frequency/Severity estimates
58Example of change in layer structuringEffect on
IELR
59Stanard-Buhlman Estimate
- Essentially the Bornhuetter-Ferguson estimate
with on average perfect information - Uses actual loss ratio indices multiplied by
average loss ratio - incorporating loss trend and pricing changes
- Balances the expected average loss ratio so that
- expected reported losses actual reported losses
60Stanard-Buhlman - an Example
61Stanard-Buhlman - an Example (continued)
62Stanard-Buhlman - an Example (continued)
63Stanard-Buhlman - Bornhuetter-Ferguson Method
(continued)
64Frequency Based Method - Basic Steps - Including
Policy Limit Impact
- Estimate the annual number of claims above the
data limit - 37.5 claims greater than 150,000
- Use size of loss curves to project the number of
claims above the reinsurance retention - 11.3 (of 37.5 claims) greater than 300,000
- Use size-of-loss curves to project average
severity of claims in reinsurance layer - 239,751 average severity of claims in 700,000
excess of 300,000 layer - Multiply the frequency and the severity
projections to estimate the total ultimate losses - Incorporate frequency/severity estimate into
Bornhuetter-Ferguson method
65Frequency/Severity - Estimate of claim counts
above data limit
66Frequency/Severity - Estimate of claim counts
above data limit (Cont)
67Frequency/Severity - Estimation of excess losses
using pareto distribution
68Frequency/Severity - Bornhuetter-Ferguson Method
69Recap of Methods - Ultimate Loss and ALAE
70Recap of Methods -Ultimate Loss and ALAE Ratios
71Final Selection of UltimatesRules of Thumb
- LDF methods for older, more mature
accident/policy periods - look at LDF/ percentage reported to determine
maturity - umbrella versus auto physical damage
- Expected Loss techniques for newer, less mature
accident/policy periods - most recent or two most recent accident years
- Bornhuetter-Ferguson/ Stanard Buhlman, anywhere
in between - requires judgment (GL, umbrella, excess
casualty) - Frequency/Severity similar to expected loss
techniques - better estimate when loss ratio is
unstable/unreliable - high layers, single treaties
- Benchmarks
- IBNR to case O/S ratios loss ratios
72Other Thoughts
- Look for trends, stability, shocks
- are they reasonable ?
- Communicate with the underwriting and claims
departments - good fodder for next underwriting audit or
pricing season - Gather knowledge on reserving philosophy (level
of ACRs) - make adjustments where necessary to benchmarks
- How to handle new lines of business with no
history - benchmarks, underwriting files, actuarial pricing
analysis - Incomplete underwriting year
- ultimate loss ALAE ratio using ultimate premium
- apply to estimated earned premium look at actual
case incurred - Difficult Coverages (Agg XS, deductibles,
reinstatements) - requires modeling of underlying exposures
73Other Approaches (Cont)
- Asbestos, Pollution, Other Health Hazards
- Need to handle separately
- Cedant information, industry data, benchmarks
- Results of exposure based modeling techniques
- Large Events / Market Losses (WTC losses)
- Seek input from claims department
- Utilize market information / knowledge
- Property Catastrophes
- Results of models (may need to adjust)
- Underwriter estimates
- Traditional top-down techniques
74Contact Information
- Anita Sathe, ACAS, ASADeloitte Consulting
LLPPhone (860) 725-3093ansathe_at_deloitte.com - Christopher Bozman, FCAS, MAAATowers Perrin
TillinghastPhone (215) 246-7405Christopher.Boz
man_at_towersperrin.com - Michael Angelina, ACAS, MAAAEndurance Specialty
Holdings, LtdPhone (441) 278-0987mangelina_at_end
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