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Risk-Based Capital Developments

Risk-Based Capital Developments. Glenn Meyers Insurance Services Office, Inc. CAS/SOA Enterprise Risk Management Symposium July 29, 2003. Introduction.

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Risk-Based Capital Developments

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  1. Risk-Based Capital Developments Glenn Meyers Insurance Services Office, Inc. CAS/SOA Enterprise Risk Management Symposium July 29, 2003

  2. Introduction • A current initiative of the International Association of Insurance Supervisors (IAIS) is to develop a global framework for risk-based capital for insurers. • Acting in support of the IAIS, the International Actuarial Association (IAA) has formed an Insurer Solvency Assessment Working Party (WP) to prepare a paper on the structure for a risk-based solvency assessment system for insurance.

  3. Terms of Reference of the WP • The WP should describe the principles and methods involved in the quantification of the total funds needed to provide a chosen level of confidence to policyholders and shareholders that the insurer’s policyholder obligations will be met.

  4. Terms of Reference of the WP • The paper should be specific and practical enough that its recommended principles and methods could be used as a foundation for a global risk-based solvency capital system for consideration by the IAIS.

  5. Terms of Reference of the WP • The paper should, starting from a coherent risk framework, identify risk measures that explicitly or implicitly can be used to measure the exposure to loss from risk and also any risk dependencies. The paper should also identify measures that are not effective in this regard.

  6. Terms of Reference of the WP • In balancing its focus between practical versus sophisticated methodologies, the working party will place greater weight on those methodologies with the greatest likelihood of practical implementation. However, since simple methodologies that can be applied to many insurers in a territory or across territories may prove insufficiently reliable or capital efficient, the working party should consider whether risk models developed internally by insurers can provide a useful and reliable approach.

  7. Allan Brender (Canada) Peter Boller (Switzerland) Henk van Broekhoven (Netherlands) - Vice-Chairperson Tony Coleman (Australia) Jan Dhaene (Belgium) David Finnis (Australia) Marc Goovaerts (Belgium) Burt Jay (U.S.) R. Kannan (India) Toshihiro Kawano (Japan) Sylvain Merlus (France) Glenn Meyers (U.S.) Teus Mourik (Netherlands) Harry Panjer (Canada) Dave Sandberg (U.S.) Nylesh Shah (U.K.) Shaun Wang (U.S.) Stuart Wason (Canada) - Chairperson Hans Waszink (Netherlands) Bob Wolf (U.S.) Who is on the WP? Represented are several countries, life, health, P/Cinsurance company, consultants, regulators and academics.

  8. Contents of Report • Section 3 – The Purpose of Capital • Section 4 – Supplements to Capital • Section 5 – Working Party’s Approach • Section 6 – Risks and Risk Measures • Section 7 – Standardized Approaches • Section 8 – Company Specific Approaches • Section 9 – Reinsurance • Section 10 – Total Company Requirement

  9. Contents of Report • Appendix A – Life Insurance Case Study • Appendix B – Non-Life Insurance Case Study • Appendix C – Health Insurance Case Study • Appendix D – Market Risk • Appendix E – Credit Risk • Appendix F – Lessons from Insurer Failures • Appendix G – Introduction to Insurance Risk • Appendix H – Analytic Methods • Appendix I – Copulas

  10. General Insurance Case Study • Proposal for “Standardized Approach” • Illustrative “Internal Model”

  11. Desirable Properties of a Standard Formula • Simplicity – The formula can be put on a spreadsheet. This may allow for some complexity in the formulas, as long as the objective of the formulas is clear. • Input Availability – The inputs needed for the formula are either readily available, or can be reasonably estimated with the help of the appointed actuary. • Conservative – When there is uncertainty in the values of the parameters, the parameters should be chosen to yield a conservative estimate of the required capital

  12. A Proposal for a Standard Formula The formula is sensitive to: • The volume of business in each line of business; • The overall volatility of each line of insurance; • The reinsurance provisions; and • The correlation, or dependency structure, between each line of business.

  13. Features of the Formula • Input for insurance losses • Expected losses for current business • Loss Reserves (at expected values of payout) • Parameters - Specified by regulator (??) • Claim severity distribution by line of business • Claim count distribution • Dependency model parameters (see next slide) • Calculates first two moments of aggregate loss distribution. Using lognormal approximation: Capital = TVaR99% – Expected Loss

  14. Dependency Model Parameters • Common shock model • Uncertainty in trend affects all lines simultaneously • Magnitude of shock varies by line of business • Catastrophes treated separately Capital = TVaR99% – Expected Loss + Cat PML • Calculate Cat PML with a catastrophe model

  15. Example on Spreadsheet • Big Insurer – ABC Insurance Company • Small Insurer – XYZ Insurance Company • ABC Volume = 10 times XYZ Volume • Otherwise they are identical

  16. Moving Toward an Internal Model • Recall WP recommendations • That the “Standard Model” be deliberately conservative. • Several modifications to the “Standard Model” are possible. • Insurer internal model are to be subject to standards for risk-based capital formulas.

  17. Requirements for Internal Models • The insurer should have an independent internal risk management unit, responsible for the design and implementation of the risk-based capital model. • The insurer’s Board and senior management should be actively involved in the risk control process, which should be demonstrated as a key aspect of business management.

  18. Requirements for Internal Models • The model should be closely integrated with the day-to-day management processes of the insurer. • An independent review of the model should be carried out on a regular basis. (Amongst other considerations, it should be recognised that evolution of the modelling capabilities is to be encouraged) • Operational risks should be fully considered

  19. Example of Internal Model • More realistic claim severity distributions • Richer dependency structure • Parameter uncertainty in claim frequency as well as claim severity • Parameter uncertainty in claim frequency applied across groups of lines.

  20. Example of Internal Model • Calculates aggregate loss distribution directly rather than by moments • Catastrophe model included directly in aggregate loss calculation, rather than add PML. • Additional details to be published in Summer Forum • “Aggregation and Correlation of Insurance Exposure” – Meyers, Klinker and Lalonde

  21. Results

  22. Next Steps • Complete remaining sections of report (focus on standardized versus advanced approaches; case study illustrations etc.) • Consider input from IAA Insurance Reg’n Committee and interested supervisory bodies (e.g. IAIS, EC, etc.) • Issue “discussion” draft report to Insurance Regulation Committee for email discussion • Issue revised “exposure” draft report to Insurance Regulation Committee on September 30 for Berlin meeting • Identify follow-on initiatives required by the IAA and member associations

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