1 / 20

Capital Allocation for Reinsurance Pricing presentation by Ira Robbin

Capital Allocation for Reinsurance Pricing presentation by Ira Robbin. Casualty Actuaries in Reinsurance Seminar on Reinsurance, Boston May 19-20, 2008. Ground Rules and Disclaimers . If anything I say gets me in trouble in the future, you are all witnesses that I never said it.

ruby
Télécharger la présentation

Capital Allocation for Reinsurance Pricing presentation by Ira Robbin

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Capital Allocation for Reinsurance Pricing presentation by Ira Robbin Casualty Actuaries in Reinsurance Seminar on Reinsurance, Boston May 19-20, 2008

  2. Ground Rules and Disclaimers • If anything I say gets me in trouble in the future, you are all witnesses that I never said it. • Nothing I say should be taken too seriously. • Don’t come near to violating Anti-trust guidelines! • No statements of corporate opinion will be made or should be inferred. • Ask questions to clarify the material anytime. • If you rely on ideas contained in this presentation and lose your shirt, remember I am not in the clothing trade.

  3. Overview of Discussion • Overall goal: raise awareness of issues that arise in allocating capital for reinsurance treaty pricing applications • Will provide opinions on answers to some key questions • RORAC context • Risk metrics • Capital for Property CAT treaties • Capital for Casualty treaties • Treaty features • Loss Models • Gauntlet of tests • Conclusion: It is harder than you think to get this right!

  4. Basic Context • Capital allocation in pricing • Hypothetical division: not an actual segregation of real funds • Nothing is actually allocated: total capital stands behind all contracts • Theoretical required amount for each deal • Use in corporate pricing process • Company may decline to write/ impose extra authority clearances on deals with pricing below indicated • Useful in price monitoring: follow indicated vs market price • Creates incentives – are these the ones that are intended?

  5. RORAC Pricing Approach • Return on Risk-Adjusted Capital (RORAC) • Theoretically required capital, not actual! • Indicated Price is price to achieve target ROE • Target ROE is set by management • Should be the same for all deals and LOBs • Should be sum of risk-free rate+ risk margin • Contrast with Risk-Adjusted Return on Capital (RAROC)

  6. Risk-Sensitive Pricing from RORAC • More risk  More capital • More capital  Higher theoretical price needed • Higher price needed to cover margin on larger amount of capital • Risk-sensitive capital leads to risk-sensitive theoretical target pricing • Actual market price driven by supply and demand

  7. Other Risk Pricing Approaches • Process versus parameter risk • Theory says “No charge for process risk” • Theory  CAT gets a small capital allocation  wrong • Non-Diversifiable risk pricing + CAPM • CAPM produces a target return: r = r0 + ( rm – ro) • Beta is Cov of outcome with stock market • A RAROC approach, not a RORAC approach. • Theory  Return on CAT should equal stock market return, on any amount of capital  wrong • Role of capital: amount of capital impacts insurance return, but is essentially irrelevant in CAPM stock pricing

  8. Capital Allocation Issues • Choice of risk metric • Calibration • Differing risks by LOB • Property – CAT risk • Casualty – Mass tort/reserve risk/capital duration • Treaty provision adjustments • Eg. reinstatements • Stand alone basis vs treaty impact on portfolio • Allocation of diversification benefits

  9. Risk Metric Classification Properties • Coherent or not • Coherence = Sensible scaling, shifting, and diversification benefit properties • Tail Focused vs Full Distribution • Capital consumption perspectives • Explicable • Can it be sold to management/ financial gurus? • Do the parameters have any intuitive meaning?

  10. Risk Metrics • Variance and Standard Deviation – not coherent • Includes favorable and adverse deviations • VaR – Value at Risk – not coherent • VaR(A+B) can exceed VaR(A) + VaR(B) • TVaR – Tail Value at Risk- is coherent • TCE = Tail conditional expectation- is coherent • Captures events in the extreme tail • Wang transform –is coherent • What does the power parameter represent? • Capital Allocation by Percentile Layer-Bodoff method • “Hold capital for the 250 year event” versus “Hold capital even for the 250 year event”

  11. Calibration • Total capital over all treaties should reflect management’s overall risk/return perspective • Regulatory and rating agency constraints • IRIS and RBC • S&P and Best’s • Eliminate capital for investment risk – assume risk-free rate in pricing model • Duration of capital for long-tail lines – need for capital to cover reserve inadequacy.

  12. Property CAT Treaty Capital • Per Occ Loss vs Annual Agg Loss • Capital needed to cover large loss event OEP or • Capital needed to cover a bad year AEP • Example: Katrina vs KRW • Treaty Loss vs Treaty Impact on portfolio • Stand-alone treaty – no credit for diversification • Should pricing be used to manage aggregation? • OEP Impact is sometimes $0 or negative • Danger with OEP Impact • Promotes writing of risky business in low PML zones

  13. Casualty Treaty Capital • Reserve risk • Total historic reserve inadequacy is not random • In concept, only need capital for inherent reserve uncertainty • Duration of capital • How to reflect long-term commitment of capital? • ROE = PVI/PVE is one solution • See “IRR, ROE, and PVI/PVE” paper by Robbin

  14. Treaty Provision Adjustments • How to measure downside risk by treaty • Treaty initial loss distribution • Treaty provisions • Reinstatements, Swing Rating, Sliding Scale Commission, Loss Corridor, Profit Commission, etc. • Provisions can impact commissions and premiums as well as losses • Some may not change expected amounts • Some reduce downside risk; others share gains

  15. Model UW Loss to Capture Net Treaty Risk • UW Loss = Loss + Expense - Premium • Loss alone does not fully describe treaty risk • Doesn’t capture impact of treaty features • UW Loss provides a more complete picture • General way to handle different features • Same risk for alternative deals with same UW Loss distribution • Note sign convention: negative UW Loss is a gain • See Robbin and DeCouto paper, “Coherent Capital for Treaty ROE Calculations”

  16. Reinsurance Loss Models • Attritional loss • May have lower truncation • e.g no loss below 25% LR • Usually described via lognormal, gamma, and other well-known programmable distributions. • Excess loss • Low frequency/high severity potential • Focus on per risk XOL impact • CAT • Need to convert event lists to event frequency and severity per event

  17. Simulation Modeling of Loss • A brute-force adaptable approach • Model validation • Run single trials and extreme cases- check sample output • Black box syndrome • Confuse number of trials with accuracy of parameters • Neglect possibility structure is wrong • Practical concerns • Convergence issue - keep running till the answers stabilize? • Reproducibility – fix the random seed? • Pricing alternatives – is differential larger than error bar?

  18. Modeling Losses via Points and Probabilities (PnP) • Insurance loss distributions suitable for PnP modeling • Mass at zero • No mass below a truncation point • Conditional distribution described by a mix of tractable parametric models ( gamma, lognormal, pareto and so forth) • Technique • Choose 100 points of interest including zero • Compute Limited Expected Values (LEVs) • Derive Probs to match LEVs • Reproducible

  19. Gauntlet of Tests • LOB effects • Change in share • Does capital change in proportion to share? • Change in reinsurance rate adequacy • Should rate improvement decrease required capital? • Net rated deals • How much capital is needed for ceding commission? • Reinstatements • Do they reduce or increase reinsurer risk?

  20. Conclusions • Allocating capital is difficult • Presents major theoretical and practical challenges • Know before you go • Run all current treaties through any proposed model • Have line pricing actuaries look at pricing differentials – what incentives will it create? • Calibrate in advance • The proof of the capital method is in the pricing!

More Related