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Personal Auto Special Reserving Issues Casualty Loss Reserve Seminar September 11, 2006 By Bill Carpenter. Agenda. Why discuss Auto Physical Damage … Benchmarking / Adding Value Estimating Salvage / Subrogation Recoverables. Why Auto Physical Damage ?. What is this negative development?.
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Personal Auto Special Reserving IssuesCasualty Loss Reserve SeminarSeptember 11, 2006By Bill Carpenter
Agenda • Why discuss Auto Physical Damage … • Benchmarking / Adding Value • Estimating Salvage / Subrogation Recoverables
Why Auto Physical Damage ? What is this negative development?
Even With Paid Losses ? Yes … after 24 months. Usually after 15 months if it were shown here
Removing Salvage / Subrogation Back to a “normal” pattern
Definitions • Salvage: Damaged property an insurer takes over to reduce its loss after paying a claim. • Subrogation: The legal process by which an insurance company, after paying a loss, seeks to recover the amount of the loss from another party who is legally liable for it.
Characteristics • Total amount: $8.14 billion • Most of the recoveries are from subrogation • 16.8% of paid losses • Develops slower than losses All numbers are 2005 industry calendar year amounts for auto physical damage only
Agenda • Why discuss Auto Physical Damage … • Benchmarking / Adding Value
Adding Value • Job 1 is “getting it right” for the reserving actuary • But … also look for the opportunity to add value in other ways
Paradox • When you are focused on the balance sheet, the danger is being viewed primarily as an expense (i.e., a drag on the income statement) • When you can contribute to reducing costs on the income statement, you will be valued as an asset
A Chance to Play Offense Instead of reacting to losses on defense, subrogation provides the opportunity for a company to play offense
Why the Differences? • Some state differences • Mainly company practices • Front line adjusters • Trained only to identify subrogation potential • Measured on numbers of referrals with potential • Centralized subrogation unit • Work adjuster referrals • Measured on recoveries per referral and/or recoveries per referred loss dollars • Smaller companies without the scale to centralize can outsource • Companies recognize the customer service value in recovering customer deductibles
Benchmarking Wrap-up • $2.5 billion potential industry opportunity • Extrapolating from top 50 company results • Represents 6.5% of auto physical damage net paid losses • Even larger opportunity for companies performing at below average levels • Higher levels contribute to customer satisfaction and retention when more deductibles are recovered • So … next time you review salvage / subrogation recoverables, compare yourself to peer companies and report the results
Agenda • Why discuss Auto Physical Damage … • Benchmarking / Adding Value • Estimating Salvage / Subrogation Recoverables
Estimating Recoverables • Best methods – calculate directly from salvage / subrogation data • Other methods • Allocation methods
Recoverables by Coverage • Split of collision / comprehensive salvage / subrogation amounts may be desired for internal purposes • Usually best to estimate directly • Allocation approach is also possible • Allocate total estimated recoverable in proportion to the amount received to date (by accident year)
Other Approaches • Bornheutter – Ferguson approach using paid ultimate paid losses as the denominator or exposure base • Calculate as the difference between gross and net loss projections (gross and net of salvage / subrogation) • Received to paid approach is problematic
Incremental Received to Paid Ratios This example is typical with incremental received to paid ratios increasing consistently for several annual periods