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Thomas G. Hess FCAS, MAAA, ARM

ACTUARIAL CONSIDERATIONS AROUND RATE CAPPING Implementation, Indications and Implications CANW Fall Meeting September 28, 2012. Thomas G. Hess FCAS, MAAA, ARM. Antitrust Notice.

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Thomas G. Hess FCAS, MAAA, ARM

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  1. ACTUARIAL CONSIDERATIONS AROUND RATE CAPPINGImplementation, Indications and ImplicationsCANW Fall Meeting September 28, 2012 Thomas G. Hess FCAS, MAAA, ARM

  2. Antitrust Notice The Casualty Actuarial Society is committed to adhering strictly to the letter and spirit of the antitrust laws. Seminars conducted under the auspices of the CAS are designed solely to provide a forum for the expression of various points of view on topics described in the programs or agendas for such meetings. Under no circumstances shall CAS seminars be used as a means for competing companies or firms to reach any understanding – expressed or implied – that restricts competition or in any way impairs the ability of members to exercise independent business judgment regarding matters affecting competition. It is the responsibility of all seminar participants to be aware of antitrust regulations, to prevent any written or verbal discussions that appear to violate these laws, and to adhere in every respect to the CAS antitrust compliance policy.

  3. Disclaimer 3 The views expressed in this presentation are those of the speaker at this point in time. These views are not necessarily identical to those of the CAS or the speakers’ employers.

  4. Credits Many thanks to Morgan Bugbee of Farmers, Jeremy Jump of Hanover, & Susan Bermender of USAA Their hard work and input made the original presentation a success. Many of their slides and insights are used in this presentation. Any errors that you find are mine.

  5. Agenda 5 What is Rate Capping? Benefits & Costs of Rate Capping Regulatory Perspective Rate Capping Design Rate Indications Under Capping CY Financial Projections Post-Implementation

  6. What Is Rate Capping? 6 Under rate capping, a customer’s renewal rate change may be capped at a maximum percent increase (or decrease) at each renewal until the approved rate level is reached. Example: • Premium at first renewal: $1,200 Min($1400, $1000 x 1.20) • Premium at second renewal: $1,400 Min ($1400, $1200 x 1.20)

  7. Rate Capping A rating plan gives a premium for insured i at time t of Pi,t With rate capping, Pi,t depends on Pi,t-k or on the % change from the prior premium. 2 identical insureds would be charged different premiums depending on their prior premium. Rate change effective at time t is spread to times t, t+1, . . . , t+n. Alternatively, a rating variable could be capped based on the prior value of the variable

  8. Benefits of Rate Capping 8 Customer preference for stable rate changes Improved retention Lower complaint levels Gradual introduction of significant rating plan changes Appropriate new business rates

  9. Costs of Rate Capping • Unfair Discrimination, Disparate treatment of new & existing customers • Less than optimal rating plan is being used • Increased use of IT resources • Increased use of Actuarial resources • Increased complexity • Possible Anti-selection

  10. Regulatory Perspective 10 • Some states support capping • Fewer large increases = more happy consumers • Some states limit capping • Capping increases okay, but not decreases; and/or • Must roll off within defined timeframe (2 yrs) • Some states will not approve capping (e.g. CA) • Disparate treatment of new and existing customers

  11. Rate Capping Design 11 Capping Structure Cap at a coverage level? Vehicle level? Policy level? Situations to Address Exposure Shift Customer Initiated CompanyInitiated • Coverage changes • Adding/removing vehicles/drivers • Driving activity • Moving • Discount changes • Subsequent rate changes • Tiering • Company placement • Discovery period changes • Customer aging • Model year aging • Other distributional shifts

  12. Rate Indications Under Capping 12 Capped Uncapped How much more/less premium you need than you are currently bringing in. Benefit: Tells you if you’re currently bringing in enough money to cover costs Drawback: What do you apply the indicated rate change to? How much more/less premium you need than your filed rates. Benefit: Applies directly to filed rates. Drawback: Doesn’t answer if current income is adequate to cover costs. Indications should be based on uncapped premium,but more analysis is needed… Should indication be based on capped or uncapped premium?

  13. CY Financial Projections 13 Financial projections ensure company is bringing in enough premium to cover costs in near term • Must reflect capped premium • Requires estimating cap “unwind”, premium trend impact • Mismatch with Actuarial projections used in rates requires understanding and explanation

  14. Financial Concerns Actual premium collected is primary. “When we originally launched our product back in August 2007, we implemented a symmetrical cap of +4/-4%. This symmetrical cap caused us to loose about 1% of our expected premium. With this launch we made the business decision to choose caps that would be more rate neutral.” From an Ohio private passenger auto filing

  15. Post-Implementation • Actuarial / Product • Calculating uncapped premium • Calculating on-leveled uncapped premium, both segmented and in the aggregate • Calculating on-leveled capped premium • IT • Maintaining Capped and uncapped premium in systems • Validating and correcting data errors • Customer • Communicating to customers why they continue to see increases

  16. Questions From a Regulator Why? Acquired Book of Business New/Revised Rating Plan Trade offs How? Can the regulator understand the capping rule? Can your IT staff understand & program the rule? Do you know what your IT staff has programmed? Can consumers understand it? Do they need to understand it? What changes get capped? How long till capping disappears? Over priced risks? Under priced risks? Number of insureds & dollars of premium at each renewal We like everyone to be at the “right rate” by the 3rd renewal.

  17. Questions If Capping in Place How is premium treated in the Indication? See the speaker for another PowerPoint that we don’t go over for today for one potential problem. Is the capping scheme being changed? What change will the Insured see? From this selected change From prior capping of rates From trigger points

  18. Questions? 18

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