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Research Double-Header

Research Double-Header. Don Mango, FCAS, MAAA CAS Vice President of Research Director of Research and Development, GE ERC Midwest Actuarial Forum September 24, 2003. Agenda. CAS Research Revision: official CAS business as the VP of Research and Development

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Research Double-Header

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  1. Research Double-Header Don Mango, FCAS, MAAA CAS Vice President of Research Director of Research and Development, GE ERC Midwest Actuarial Forum September 24, 2003

  2. Agenda • CAS Research Revision: official CAS business as the VP of Research and Development • Capital Consumption: latest prize-winning paper

  3. CAS Research Revision Don Mango CAS VP Research & Development

  4. Problem Statements • No keepers of the state of the science • Need for survey papers, syllabus material • Research overload via Call Papers • Role/function of the PCAS unclear

  5. Proposed Solutions • Rein in Call Paper programs • Establish Working Paper and Model repository on the CAS Website • Institute Working Parties • Establish Research Corners and Working Party sessions at the major seminars

  6. Why Call Papers? • Bottom-up, fast-track research source. • Stimulate communication, discussion and sharing. • Good in concept, in practice is another story.

  7. Call Paper Forum • Not a top-tier professional journal • Not peer reviewed. • Inclusive editorial policy. • Inconsistent review and prize standards. • Inconsistent appearance and structure of papers. • Not enough editorial oversight. • Contributes to members’ filtration and overload problems.

  8. Call Papers • Not generating discussion • Solitary practitioners produce, present • No context, follow-up, formal discussion • Not leading to systematic progress of the science • No referencing standards, context • No clear advancement of the science

  9. Call Papers  Working Papers • Many CPs are the equivalent of working papers within academia • Posted on websites and discussion forums • Works-in-progress, on their way to peer-reviewed journals • We can still have bottom-up idea generation, idea sharing, and discussion by establishing a Working Paper (and Model) repository on the CAS Website

  10. Working Paper Repository • Categorized by research area • Members can post and comment on posts (mini-reviews) • Items receiving a lot of activity can be the material for the Research Corners at the major seminars

  11. Call Paper Refinement • Less often (~biennial) • More editorial oversight • Subject to the new CAS Research Paper template • Impose length requirements (<30 pages) • Must adhere more closely to the subjects of the Call

  12. Working Parties • Essentially a collective call paper task force • Collective = group effort, single group work product • Ideas come from the members attending major seminar • Seminar has presentation of prior year’s work, selection of next year’s topics

  13. Working Parties • Group effort forces discussion during the production of the product • Oversight by research committee • Can enforce editorial standards, referencing, ensure that current state of the science is documented, as well as context and scope of new research

  14. Working Parties • An easy to implement answer that helps on many fronts: • Solitary  Group • Bottom-up + Top-down • Consistency in format, referencing, etc. • Member involvement • Natural seminar cycle supports it

  15. Working Parties • Four WPs kicked off at 2003 RCM Seminar • Reserve Variability (led by Roger Hayne) kicked off at 2003 CLRS • More to come

  16. Publications Task Force • Impact and notoriety of PCAS outside the CAS is essentially NIL • Forum is used / abused • Large bodies of work published without formal peer review • Considering some radical surgery • Maybe we join the NAAJ

  17. Capital Consumption Don Mango Director of Research and Development GE ERC

  18. Why Even Consider This? • Despite significant efforts throughout the industry, capital allocation has yet to be effectively implemented in (re)insurance • This alternative method also has strong linkages to financial theory, while more accurately representing the actual capital usage of insurance

  19. Problem Statements • Capital allocation is a de facto paradigm  a requirement or necessity • But insurance capital usage is fundamentally different than it is for manufacturing, being in fact the mirror-image in time • For these decision evaluation processes, capital allocation is sufficient but not necessary

  20. Problem Statements • Even worse, the resulting insurance IRR framework is now completely fictional (“imputed”), since no capital is transferred or returned • However, insurance capital is consumed when results are worse than planned

  21. This IS capital allocation for insurance, done right But I needed new terminology to shake loose the old thought processes Actually

  22. Manufacturers need capital committed to support the operation… …and they actually use it, spending it on materials, operations, labor… …and it’s invested in their business, in the production of their goods. Core Paradox

  23. Insurance companies need capital committed to support the operation… …but they can’t actually use it (or not too much of it anyway)… …and it’s not invested in their business, but in financial instruments. Core Paradox

  24. Two Bets • Bet #1 • You pay me $10 now • I might pay you $50 later • Bet #2 • I pay you $10 now • You might have to pay me $50 later

  25. Payoff Diagrams

  26. Bet #1Spend then Maybe Receive • You spend now, hope to receive later • You spend NOW, voluntarily • With the odds I give you, you can compute an expected value and decide if you want to make the bet

  27. Bet #2Receive then Maybe Spend • You receive now, hope you don’t have to spend later • You MAY spend LATER, contingent on something happening • With the odds I give you, you can compute an expected value and decide if you want to make the bet

  28. Capital? • Bet #1 = $10 • You spend $10 capital NOW no matter what • The capital investment is current and certain – i.e., not contingent • The capital is allocated = spent = consumed • Natural capacity constraint = your budget

  29. Capital? • Bet #2 = $??? • I should be sure you have $40 available LATER, but you don’t spend anything NOW • If Bet #2 hits, you spend $40 capital LATER • Capital expenditure (= allocation) is contingent and in the future • Capacity constraints = ???

  30. Allocation vs Consumption • Two different but equally valid frameworks for • Treating capital • Evaluating insurance business segments • Developing indicated prices for reinsurance • Nearly orthogonal

  31. Allocation vs Consumption • Three questions: • What do you do with the total capital? • How do you evaluate business segments? • What does it mean to be in a portfolio?

  32. Allocation vs Consumption

  33. Allocation vs Consumption

  34. Allocation vs Consumption • The difference between having your own kiddie pool and joining a swim club • This is THE CRITICAL SLIDE!

  35. The company capital pool is giving each reserving segment a series of options to draw upon (consume) the capital These options Expire unused if segment meets or beats Plan Are exercised if segment’s results deteriorate Options Framework

  36. Similar to a Line of Credit (LOC) A contingent loan, with full expectation to be reimbursed This is a valid alternative financial analogue Much closer to the way capital actually gets used by an insurer Options Framework

  37. “Options” does not imply Black-Scholes formula For one thing, we cannot hedge our exposure We must price it from first principles  modeled payoff distribution and internal risk charges Options Beware

  38. Scenario analysis Default-free discounting Scenario-level capital consumption Evaluation of capital consumption using a “quasi~utility” approach Details of the Framework

  39. Experience fund From Finite Reinsurance Fund into which goes all revenue, from which comes all payments Bakes in investment income When the fund is exhausted, but further payments still need to be made, exercise the Call Option for capital That capital gets spent  CONSUMED Scenario Capital Consumption

  40. Risk-based overhead expense loading Pricing decision variable Application of utility theory Borch (1961):To introduce a utility function which the company seeks to maximize, means only that such consistency requirements (in the various subjective judgments made by an insurance company) are put into mathematical form. Capital Call Cost Function

  41. Preferences buried in Kreps’ “Marginal Standard Deviation” risk load approach: The marginal impact on the portfolio standard deviation is our chosen functional form for transforming a given distribution of outcomes to a single risk measure. Risk is completely reflected, properly measured and valued by this transform. Upward deviations are treated the same as downward deviations. Implicit Preferences

  42. Make the implicit explicit Express your preferences explicitly, in mathematical form, and apply them via a utility function The mythical “Risk Appetite” Enforce consistency in the many judgments being made Capital Call Cost Function

  43. THANK YOU!

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