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2. . The views and opinions expressed in this presentation are solely my own, and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of Odyssey America Reinsurance Corporation.. 3. Outline. Workers Compensation Background Quota Share Treaties Excess of Loss Treaties Catastrophe Treaties Facultative.
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1. CARe Reinsurance Boot Camp on Pricing Techniques Workers Compensation
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3. 3 Outline Workers Compensation Background
Quota Share Treaties
Excess of Loss Treaties
Catastrophe Treaties
Facultative
4. 4 Workers Compensation Background Started in U.S. in early 1900’s, before Social Security, before Federal Income Tax Withholding
Benefits were low
Early 1970’s National Commission of State Workers Compensation Laws
Frequency declines, severity increases
5. 5 Workers Compensation Background Independent Bureau states: California, Delaware, Indiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Texas, Wisconsin
Monopolistic state Funds: North Dakota, Ohio, Washington, West Virginia, Wyoming
6. 6 Workers Compensation Background Extremely long tail
Annuity-type benefits for Survivors and Permanent Total claims
Benefits defined by state law, not by courts
Indemnity and Medical benefits
Benefits, to some degree, vary by state
No policy limits
Essentially unlimited medical coverage
No-Fault system
7. 7 Quota Share Treaties Does the treaty cover losses up to a dollar amount, such as the first million, or the ceding company’s Net?
If Net, what happens if the ceding company does not renew its Excess of Loss treaties? What if there is a loss above the top of the ceding company’s reinsurance?
8. 8 Quota Share Treaties Quota Share up to a dollar limit - What is the cost of Excess of Loss reinsurance treaties?
Compare Premium Net of Reinsurance Cost to Expected Losses at dollar limit
Keep Actuaries Honest
9. 9 Quota Share Treaties Is the ceding company writing Retrospectively Rated policies? If so, how are premium adjustments accounted for.
Benefit level changes for states in analysis need to be included in estimate of projected loss ratio
Use state specific trends if ceding company is predominately in only one or a small number of states
In addition to filed rate changes, need to obtain impact of Schedule Rating, Group Discounts, etc.
10. 10 Quota Share Treaties Standard Quota Share Treaty issues including: Ceding commission versus actual expenses, Impact of Sliding Scale Commission or Profit Commission
What is considered ALAE vs. ULAE?
What is included in definition of Subject Premium, e.g. Expense Constant?
For smaller companies and start-up operations you can obtain state specific loss and ALAE ratios from bureaus – usually a little old
11. 11 Quota Share Treaties Quota Share of Excess WC Insurance
Who is handling the ground-up claims?
Reinsurer is relying on Excess Insurer to audit original claims adjustors. There could be many different entities handling the claims – scary!
12. 12 Excess of Loss Treaties Typical layers of $4M xs $1M, $3M xs $2M
Working layers of $750K xs $250K, $500K xs $500K are less common than they used to be
Occasionally there are requests for lower layers, but in most cases the primary company decides to keep the layer Net
Some layers are unusual, such as $6M xs $1M, or $8.75M xs $1.25M
13. 13 Excess of Loss Treaties Many treaties have free and unlimited reinstatements
Some treaties have a limited number of free reinstatements, often expressed as a maximum aggregate recoverable e.g. $4M xs $1M with four reinstatements = $20M aggregate cap
Usually the aggregate cap is set high, so there is a low a probability that it will be exceeded, still nice to have
Some treaties have Annual Aggregate Deductibles
14. 14 Excess of Loss Treaties Most treaties are flat rated
Some treaties have adjustable features such as Swing Rating, Profit Commissions or Reinstatement Premiums
The long loss reporting patterns make the number of potential premium or commission adjustments very large
15. 15 Excess of Loss Treaties Claims WC Injury Types
Death
Permanent Total
Major Permanent Partial
Minor Permanent Partial
Temporary Total
Medical Only
Only the first three impact most Excess of Loss Treaties
16. 16 Excess of Loss TreatiesClaims Some claims are recognized quickly as high cost, e.g. multiple person catastrophes
Many claims are take years and years to develop into excess layer
Injured Worker Mortality – how different from standard population mortality?
17. 17 Excess of Loss TreatiesClaims Workers have lower Mortality than general population
Injured Workers identified as Permanently Disabled have similar Mortality as population
Sometimes severely injured workers die before being classified as Permanently Disabled
Medical care for WC injury may help early diagnoses of other issues
Claims can develop adversely years later
Family stops taking care of claimant
Back injuries “creep” into the layer
18. 18 Excess of Loss Treaties Loss Development Discounting of case reserves is standard
Explicit: indemnity reserves on lifetime pension cases discounted: 3.5% interest rate common
Implicit: medical – by not inflating projected future payments
Mortality assumptions used in setting reserves; Bureau tables are used for Statistical Reporting, some companies have mortality tables that vary with injury severity.
Effect of unwinding of discount can be much larger on an excess layer than the retained layer
19. 19 Excess of Loss Treaties Loss Development Long payment pattern, explicit discounting of indemnity reserves, implicit discounting of medical reserves produces large Excess LDF’s
Account specific LDF’s often have few claims, therefore LDF’s are volatile for higher layers
RAA gathers data from reinsures every other year and publishes LDF’s by line of business
In the 2005 study, WC Treaty data included Accident Years from 2004 back to 1958, 46 years!
20. 20 Excess of Loss Treaties Loss Development My analysis produced a Treaty WC Incurred LDF from 12 months to ultimate of 11. Therefore, less than 10% reported after one year
Gross Incurred LDF from 12 months to ultimate is 1.9
Treaty WC LDF from 156 months to ultimate LDF is 2. Therefore, after 13 years, only 50% of ultimate losses have been reported, the same as Gross LDF at 1 year!
The Incurred LDF from 45 to 46 is 1.01, there is still IBNR at 45 years!
21. 21 Excess of Loss Treaties Loss Development 2005 RAA Study included Paid Loss Development data
My analysis of Treaty WC Paid LDF’s produced a 12 month to ultimate of 190; approximately 0.5% is paid at 12 months. The Gross LDF is 4.5
The Paid LDF to Ultimate reaches 2 at 22 years, i.e. 50% paid at 22 years, the Gross LDF is 2 at 2 years
The Paid to Case Incurred Ratio at 46 years is 96% - there are still open cases
22. 22 Excess of Loss TreatiesImpact on Reinsurer An injured worker is expected to live 10 years.
Weekly indemnity benefits are 500/wk = 26,000/yr
Expected indemnity benefit = 260,000
Discounted value at 3.5% interest = 220,000
Initial stabilizing medical expenses are 150,000
Annual medical expenses are 50,000/yr
Expected medical benefit = 650,000
Undiscounted case reserve = 260K + 650K = 910K
Discounted case reserve = 220K+ 650K = 870K
Expected loss to the 1M xs 1M reinsurer is zero.
23. 23 Excess of Loss TreatiesImplicit Discount Effect Assume medical expenses are inflating at 6% per year
Primary company books the ongoing medical loss at 500K, implicitly discounting them at 6%/yr.
Total undiscounted ongoing medical expenses are really 680K instead of the booked 500K
The total undiscounted loss is 260K + 150K 680K = 1,090K and the 1M xs 1M reinsurer will see 90K of loss development
If the injured worker’s life expectancy is 20, 30, 40 or more years, the impact is much larger
24. 24 Excess of Loss Treaties Mortality Assumption Effect Instead of a certain 10 year survival, there was a 50% probability of this worker living only 5 years and 50% of living 15 years.
Losses paid if the claimant lives 5 years = 530K = 150K + (26K+50K) * 5
Losses paid if the claimant lives 15 years = 1,290K = 150K+(26K+50K) * 15
There is a 50% probability, the 1M xs 1M reinsurer will see no loss development and 50% probability the reinsurers will see 290K of loss development
25. 25 Excess of Loss Treaties Trend The long tail and unlimited medical benefits add to the difficulty in estimating trends for Workers Compensation.
In addition, states can – and do – change the WC benefits, adding to the uncertainty.
26. 26 Excess of Loss TreatiesImpact of Non-uniform Frequency Trend on Excess of Loss Pricing Exposure Rating
Shape of the distribution changes, with more of the losses coming from larger claims
Experience Rating
Measured ground-up severity trend will increase from the reduced frequency of the smaller claims
Assuming uniform trend by size of loss, the measured large loss trend will be lower than the measured ground-up trend
This impact is mitigated by the less-negative frequency trend
27. 27 Excess of Loss TreatiesTrend Example Two types of claims, small and large.
In year 1, small claims have average severity of 100K, while large claims have average severity of 500K.
In year 1, there are an equal number of small and large claims, say 50 of each claim
Total Losses are 30,000,000
Average Severity in year 1 is 300K
= (50*100k + 50*500k)/(50+50)
28. 28 Excess of Loss Treaties Trend Example, continued In year 2, there are now 40 small claims (frequency trend = -20%), while there are still 50 large claims (0% frequency trend). Total frequency trend = -10%
The average severity for each claim type increases 10%
Small claim severity = 110K
Large Claim Severity = 550K
Total losses are not 31,900,000 an increase of 6%
But, the measured overall severity is now 354K
= (40*110K + 50*550K)/(40+50)
This is an 18% increase!
29. 29 Excess of Loss Treaties Benefit Changes Most benefit changes are small, increase in maximum weekly benefit, change in burial allowance, etc.
Large changes occur rarely, but sometimes in quick succession – impact by injury type can be vary
California AB 749 January 1, 2003 PT Benefit Impact +54%, Overall Impact +5%
California AB 227, SB 228 January 1, 2004, Overall Impact -9%
California SB 899 April 19, 2004 Overall Impact -20%, January 1, 2005 Overall Impact -14%
California January 1, 2006 Fatal Benefit Impact + 50%, Overall Impact +3%
30. 30 Excess of Loss Treaties Experience Rating Paid losses projections are not usable
Size of incurred LDF’s gives projections low credibility
Presence or absence of large loss in a recent period produces large impact on projected losses to layer if LDF method is used
B-F method, using Cape Cod method to estimate initial loss cost
31. 31 Excess of Loss Treaties Experience Rating Higher layers may have no reported losses to develop.
I do not want to compare a zero from experience rating to the loss cost obtained from exposure rating.
Use ratio of exposure rating loss cost of higher layer to credible layer to apply to experience rating loss cost of credible layer
32. 32 Excess of Loss TreatiesExposure Rating Workers Compensation is similar to other lines
Compute overall expected losses
Allocate these losses to the layer being priced by an industry size-of-loss curve
33. 33 Excess of Loss TreatiesExposure Rating For lines with policy limits, like GL, the rating bureaus publish ILFs, which are based on size-of-loss curves
But, WC doesn’t have policy limits.
Reinsurers use Retrospective Rating’s Excess Loss Factors (ELF’s), even though they were not designed for reinsurance
34. 34 Excess of Loss TreatiesExposure Rating Excess Loss Factors tables are published by state, typically for loss limits up to $10M, by Hazard Group
Variations by state are due to differences in benefit levels
Variations by Hazard Group are due to differences in the distribution of injury types by Hazard Group
35. 35 Excess of Loss TreatiesExposure Rating 2004 ELF changes
More reliance on state data
Use empirical data for small claims, fit distribution for tail
Distributions fit for Fatal, Permanent Total, Permanent Partial, Temporary Total and Medical Only
Comparison to Prior ELF’s
Percent of total losses in low layers, less than $1M similar to prior factors, some states increased, some decreased
Percent of total losses in layers above $1M dropped significantly in almost every state
36. 36 Excess of Loss TreatiesExposure Rating Comparison to Prior ELF’s
Refitting current data using prior procedure produced ELF’s much closer to new procedure
Conclusion – data, not procedural change, drove most of the reduction in percent of losses in high layers
Decline in claim frequency in 1990’s changed theshape of the loss distributions
37. 37 Excess of Loss Treaties Exposure Rating How Many Hazard Groups? NCCI and the other bureaus used four Hazard Groups, however, 95% of the premium was in Hazard Group II or III. Mining, explosive manufacturing, longshore, in HG IV. Much HG IV was in Assigned Risk Pools, so business written Voluntarily included very little HG IV business – excluded from many treaties – except for “incidental”.
WCIRB adopted nine Hazard Groups A-I, which were subsequently updated to J-R. A four Hazard Group set of LER’s was produced – but class assignments did not match NCCI groupings.
NCCI did there own study and selected seven.
38. 38 Excess of Loss Treaties Exposure Rating Seven Hazard Groups are A through G, collapsible into four (1, 2, 3 and 4) A&B into 1, C&D into 2, E&F into 3, G into 4
Premium by Hazard Group is much more evenly split – Hazard Groups have really increased from 2 to 7
Improves estimates of losses by layer for reinsurers and for primary companies, for example Loss Rated Accounts
39. 39 Excess of Loss Treaties Exposure Rating Suppose we’re pricing the $1M xs $1M layer
Expected Loss Ratio = 70%
ELF(1M) = 0.10; ELF(2M) = 0.06
Losses in the layer = ELF(1M) – ELF(2M) = 4.0%
4.0% of the total losses are in this 1M xs 1M layer
Exposure Loss Cost = 70% * 4.0% = 2.8%
40. 40 Excess of Loss Treaties Combine experience and exposure loss cost
Discount?
Load for internal and external expenses
When do you know true result?
41. 41 Catastrophe Treaties Treaties requiring at least two injured workers, usually above $5M
Maximum Any One Life (MAOL)
Example: $5M xs $5M, $5M MAOL requires the total loss from one occurrence to exceed $5M, with no single injured worker contributing more than $5M
Similarities to Property Cat Treaties
42. 42 Catastrophe Treaties Reinstatement terms – frequently one reinstatement of limit with a premium expressed as a percent of original reinsurance premium.
Reinstatement premiums are typically paid when losses are paid – which can be many years from inception, unlike Property Cat treaties.
43. 43 Catastrophe Treaties WC Catastrophe Layers extend up to $100M and frequently higher, far beyond the ELF’s.
Pricing is frequently expressed as Rate on Line – Premium / Limit
Rates on Line vary by layer and exposure
Higher layers have lower Rates on Line
44. 44 Catastrophe Treaties Exposure is not necessarily correlated to Workers Compensation Premium – the Catastrophe risk is also related to Payroll
Example – two employers with the same WC Premium but the first has a WC rate 10 times as high as the second. The second employer has a Payroll 10 times the first. The Catastrophe risk is not equal.
45. 45 Catastrophe Treaties Earthquake exposed areas have higher Rates on Line
Hurricanes are not considered a significant exposure for Workers Compensation – except for First Responders, most workers are not at work when the storm arrives
Areas considered at higher risk for Terrorism have higher Rates on Line
46. 46 Catastrophe Treaties Similar to Property Cat after Hurricane Andrew, information has increased
Some submissions include information on Payroll/Premium/Employee counts by insured, or zip code, and time of day/shift or maximum exposed employee counts
Similar to Property Cat, a number of reinsurers are needed to provide layers requested. Some participate on lower layers, others on higher layers.
47. 47 Catastrophe Treaties As with Property Catastrophe, modeling firms are analyzing the exposures
As with Property Catastrophe, reinsurers monitor their aggregate exposure to WC Catastrophe losses
Potential exists for a Property Catastrophe loss and a Workers Compensation Catastrophe loss
48. 48 Catastrophe Treaties Much of the business was written in the London market or by Life Insurers
Terrorism was not recognized as a risk
After 9/11, many participants suffered losses and left the market
Rates on Line increased dramatically, attracting traditional reinsurers
Coverage was restricted – i.e. limits on Terrorism
49. 49 Catastrophe Treaties Rates on Line have been declining
Coverage has been expanding – more Terrorism coverage, requests for including NBCR
Fortunately, there have been no significant losses to this book of business since 9/11
Unfortunately, a significant Workers Compensation Catastrophe will eventually happen, whether a natural Catastrophe or a man-made Catastrophe
As with Property Cat pricing after a large event, pricing will increase and coverage will be restricted.
50. 50 Facultative Individual account pricing.
By its very nature facultative reinsurance operates based on adverse selections. Through careful underwriting and pricing the reinsurers can establish the proper pricing and terms which would be profitable to the reinsurer.
The ceding companies will place facultative reinsurance due to: class, exposures, to protect the treaty, a treaty exclusion or cat exposures.
51. 51 Facultative Ceding companies are often looking for reinsurance in Buffer layers such as $750K xs $250K, $500K xs $500K
Underwriters use a combination of loss rating and manual rating
Loss rating up to a loss limit, usually well below reinsurance attachment point, then use ELF’s to estimate layer loss cost
52. 52 Facultative Credibility weight loss rating with manual rating
Load expected loss cost for internal and external expenses
In the current market ceding companies want the WC facultative market to either match their pricing for the layer or be less than what they price it for. In the event that this can't be met then the ceding company would retained the risk Net.
53. 53 Workers Compensation Suggested Reading Commentary on the New Hazard Groups by Jose Couret. Presentation at Spring 2007 CAS Meeting
The 2004 NCCI Excess Loss Factors by Dan Corro and Greg Engl. CAS Forum 2006
An Actuarial Note on Workers Compensation Loss Reserves – 25 Years Later by Lee Steeneck. CAS Forum 1996
Ratemaking for Excess Workers Compensation Insurance, by Owen Gleeson. CAS Forum 2001
Levels of Determinism in Workers Compensation Reinsurance Commutations by Gary Blumsohn. Proceedings 1999