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Uncertainty And Property Cat Pricing

Uncertainty And Property Cat Pricing. CARe Seminar, NYC February 28, 2002 Jonathan Hayes, ACAS, MAAA. Agenda. Models Model Results Confidence Bands Data Issues with Data Issues with Inputs Model Outputs Pricing Methods Standard Deviation Downside Risk Role of Judgment Still Needed.

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Uncertainty And Property Cat Pricing

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  1. Uncertainty AndProperty Cat Pricing CARe Seminar, NYC February 28, 2002 Jonathan Hayes, ACAS, MAAA

  2. Agenda • Models • Model Results • Confidence Bands • Data • Issues with Data • Issues with Inputs • Model Outputs • Pricing Methods • Standard Deviation • Downside Risk • Role of Judgment • Still Needed

  3. The Search For Truth “A Nixon-Agnew administration will abolish the credibility gap and reestablish the truth – the whole truth – as its policy.” Spiro T. Agnew, Sept. 21, 1973

  4. Florida Hurricane Amounts in Millions USD

  5. Florida Hurricane Amounts in Millions USD

  6. Modeled Event LossSample Portfolio, Total Event

  7. Modeled Event LossBy State Distribution

  8. Modeled Event LossBy County Distribution, State S

  9. Why Don’t The Models Agree?

  10. Types Of Uncertainty(In Frequency & Severity) • Uncertainty (not randomness) • Sampling Error • 100 years for hurricane • Specification Error • FCHLPM sample dataset (1996) 1 in 100 OEP of 31m, 38m, 40m & 57m w/ 4 models • Non-sampling Error • El Nino Southern Oscillation • Knowledge Uncertainty • Time dependence, cascading, aseismic shift, poisson/negative binomial • Approximation Error • Res Re cat bond: 90% confidence interval, process risk only, of +/- 20%, per modeling firm Source: Major, Op. Cit..

  11. Frequency-Severity UncertaintyFrequency Uncertainty (Miller) • Frequency Uncertainty • Historical set: 96 years, 207 hurricanes • Sample mean is 2.16 • What is range for true mean? • Bootstrap method • New 96-yr sample sets: Each sample set is 96 draws, with replacement, from original • Review Results

  12. Frequency Bootstrapping • Run 500 resamplings and graph relative to theoretical t-distribution Source: Miller, Op. Cit.

  13. Frequency Uncertainty Stats • Standard error (SE) of the mean: • 0.159 historical SE • 0.150 theoretical SE, assuming Poisson, i.e., (lambda/n)^0.5

  14. Hurricane Freq. UncertaintyBack of the Envelope • Frequency Uncertainty Only • 96 Years, 207 Events, 3100 coast miles • 200 mile hurricane damage diameter • 0.139 is avg annl # storms to site • SE = 0.038, assuming Poisson frequency • 90% CI is loss +/- 45% • i.e., (1.645 * 0.038) / 0.139

  15. Frequency-Severity UncertaintySeverity Uncertainty (Miller) • Parametric bootstrap • Cat model severity for some portfolio • Fit cat model severity to parametric model • Perform X draws of Y severities, where X is number of frequency resamplings and Y is number of historical hurricanes in set • Parameterize the new sampled severities • Compound with frequency uncertainty • Review confidence bands

  16. OEP Confidence Bands Source: Miller, Op. Cit.

  17. OEP Confidence Bands Source: Miller, Op. Cit.

  18. OEP Confidence Bands • At 80-1,000 year return, range fixes to 50% to 250% of best estimate OEP • Confidence band grow exponentially at frequent OEP points because expected loss goes to zero • Notes • Assumed stationary climate • Severity parameterization may introduce error • Modelers’ “secondary uncertainty” may overlap here, thus reducing range • Modelers’ severity distributions based on more than just historical data set

  19. The Building BlocksPolicy Records/TIV

  20. Data Collection/Inputs • Is this all the subject data? • All/coastal states • Inland Marine, Builders Risk, APD, Dwelling Fire • Manual policies • General level of detail • County/zip/street • Aggregated data • Is this all the needed policy detail? • Building location/billing location • Multi-location policies/bulk data • Statistical Record vs. policy systems • Coding of endorsements • Sublimits, wind exclusions, IM • Replacement cost vs. limit

  21. More Data Issues • Deductible issues • Inuring/facultative reinsurance • Extrapolations & Defaults • Blanket policies • HPR • Excess policies

  22. Model Output • Data Imported/Not Imported • Geocoded/Not Geocoded • Version • Perils Run • Demand Surge • Storm Surge • Fire Following • Defaults • Construction Mappings • Secondary Characteristics • Secondary Uncertainty • Deductibles

  23. Synthesis/Pricing

  24. SD Pricing Basics • Surplus Allocation • v = z ´ sL – r • v is contract surplus allocation • r is contract risk load (expected profit) • Price • P = E(L) + ´ sL + expenses • Risk Load or Profit •  = [y ´ z/(1+y)] ´ (C + sL/2S) • y is target return on surplus • z is unit normal measure • C is correlation of contract with portfolio • S is portfolio sd (generally of loss) With large enough portfolio this term goes to zero

  25. SD Pricing with Variable Premiums • Â = [Deposit*(1-Expensed%) + E(reinstatement)*(1-Expenser%)-EL]/ sL • E(Reinstatement)= Deposit/Limit *E(1st limit loss) * Time Factor • 2 or 3 figures define (info-blind) price • Aggregate expected loss • Expected loss with first limit(can be approximated) • Standard deviation of loss

  26. Â-Values (No Tax, C=1)

  27. Tax & Inv. Income Adjustments • Surplus Allocation • Perfect Correlation: v = z* sL – r • Imperfect Correlation: v = z*C* sL – r • After-tax ROE • Start: Â = [y*z/(1+y)]*C • Solve for y: y = Â /(z*C –Â) • Conclude: • ya = y*(1-T) = Â *(1-T)/[z*C-r*(1-T)] +if • T = tax rate • ya = after tax return • if = after tax risk free return on allocated surplus

  28. Â-Values (adjusted for tax, inv. income)

  29. Cat Pricing: Loss On Line & Risk Load

  30. Select 2000 Cat PricingRisk Load & Loss on Line

  31. Loss On Line vs. Layer CV

  32. Select 2000 Cat PricingRisk Load & CV

  33. SD Pricing Issues • Issues with C • Limiting case is C=1 • If marginal, order of entry problems for renewals • Perhaps sbook/Sscontract • Need to define book of business • Anecdotally,C=0.50 for reasonably diversified US cat book • Adjust up for parameter risk, down for non-US cat business and non-cat business • Is it correlation or downside that matters? • Issues with  • Assumption of normality • On cat book, error is compressed • Further offsets when book includes non-cat • Or move to varying SD risk loads • Adjust to reflect zone and layer

  34. SD Pricing Issues (Cont.) • Issues with sL • Measure variability: Loss or result? • Variable premium terms • Reinstatements at 100% vs. 200% • Variable contract expiration terms • Contingent multi-year contracts with kickers sL: Downside proxy – can we get precise?

  35. Investment Equivalent Pricing (IERP) • Allocated capital for ruin protection • Terminal funds > X with prob > Y (VaR) • Prefer selling reinsurance to traditional investment • Expected return and volatility on reinsurance contract should meet benchmark alternative

  36. IERP Cash Flows Cedant Premium = Risk Load + Discounted Expected Losses Actual Losses Reinsurer Fund = Premium + Allocated Surplus Return Fund Net to Reinsurer Allocated Surplus Fund Return - Actual Losses

  37. IERP - Fully Funded Version Cedant P = R + E[L]/(1+f) L Reinsurer F = P + A (1+rf)F Fund Expected return criterion: (1+rf)F - E[L] = (1+y)A Variance criterion: Var[L] <sy2A2 Safety criterion: (1+rf)F >S

  38. IERP, Q&D Example

  39. Comparative Risk Loads • SD – sLyz/(1+y) • IERP – (y-rf)(S-L)/[(1+rf)(1+y)] • S is safety level of loss distribution • L is expected loss

  40. SD vs IERP PricingPrice By Layer

  41. SD vs IERP PricingLoss Ratio By Layer

  42. SD vs IERP PricingRisk Load By Layer

  43. Conclusions • Cat Model Distributions Vary • More than one point estimate useful • Point estimates may not be significantly different • Uncertainty not insignificant but not insurmountable • What about uncertainty before cat models? • Data Inputs Matter • Not mechanical process • Creating model inputs requires many decisions • User knowledge and expertise critical • Pricing Methodology Matters • But market price not always technical price • Judgment Unavoidable • Actuaries already well-versed in its use

  44. References • Bove, Mark C. et al.., “Effect of El Nino on US Landfalling Hurricanes, Revisited,” Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, June 1998. • Efron, Bradley and Robert Tibshirani, An Introduction to the Bootstrap, New York: Chapman & Hall, 1993. • Kreps, Rodney E., “Risk Loads from Marginal Surplus Requirements,” PCAS LXXVII, 1990. • Kreps, Rodney E., “Investment-equivalent Risk Pricing,” PCAS LXXXV, 1998. • Major, John A., “Uncertainty in Catastrophe Models,” Financing Risk and Reinsurance, International Risk Management Institute, Feb/Mar 1999. • Mango, Donald F., “Application of Game Theory: Property Catastrophe Risk Load,” PCAS LXXXV, 1998. • Miller, David, “Uncertainty in Hurricane Risk Modeling and Implications for Securitization,” CAS Forum, Spring 1999. • Moore, James F., “Tail Estimation and Catastrophe Security Pricing: Cat We Tell What Target We Hit If We Are Shooting in the Dark”, Wharton Financial Institutions Center, 99-14.

  45. Q&A

  46. APPENDIX A STANDARD DEVIATION PRICING Derivation Of Formulas

  47. Risk Load As Variance Concept

  48. The Basic Formulas • P = m + Â*s + E P = Premium m = Expected Losses  = Reluctance Measure s = Standard Deviation of Contract Loss Outcomes E = Expenses •  = y * z / (1 + y) y = Target Return on Surplus z = Unit Normal Measure

  49. Initial Definitions V = z * S - R (1.1) given, per Brubaker, where V is that part of surplus required to support variability of a book of business with expected return R and standard deviation S R’ = R+ r (1.2) where R’ is expected return after addition of new contract with expected return r V’ = z * S’ - R’ (1.3) required surplus with new contract, as per (1.1)

  50. Required Contract Marginal Surplus V’ - V = z *(S’ - S) - r (1.4) Proof , from (1.1) and (1.3): V’ - V = z*S’ - R’ - (z*S - R) = z*(S’ - S) - (R’ - R) = z*(S’ - S) - r

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