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An Introduction to Reserving and Financial Reporting Issues for Non-Traditional Reinsurance. Casualty Loss Reserving Seminar September 14, 2004 Derek Jones, FCAS, MAAA. Finite Re Basics. Overview. Customized deals to address specific issues of cedant Limited risk transferred by cedant
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An Introduction to Reserving and Financial Reporting Issuesfor Non-Traditional Reinsurance Casualty Loss Reserving Seminar September 14, 2004 Derek Jones, FCAS, MAAA
Finite Re Basics Milliman
Overview • Customized deals to address specific issues of cedant • Limited risk transferred by cedant • Limited upside for reinsurer Milliman
Common Uses • Deferral of taxes • Discounting • Earnings stabilization • Risk management • Surplus protection Milliman
Types of Deals Retroactive • Adverse development cover • Loss portfolio transfer Prospective • Aggregate stop-loss • Finite quota share • Spread loss Milliman
Loss Portfolio Transfer • Covers prior written business • Move reserves off balance sheet • Premium = PV (reserves) + provision for potential adverse development • Tends to cover smaller segments Milliman
Adverse Development Cover • Cedant retains portfolio • Premium is based on potential for adverse development and related timing of future payments • Tends to cover larger groupings of business than LPTs Milliman
Aggregate Stop-Loss • Stabilize earnings • Typically multi-year deals • Loss ratio corridor above plan ratio • Fixed premium Milliman
Finite Quota Share • Primary benefit = surplus relief • Differences from traditional QS • Loss ratio cap • Loss corridor • Lower net cost Milliman
Common Features • Time value of money (via experience account) • Cedant participation • Sub-limits of liability • Multiple years • Cancellation, commutation provisions Milliman
Reserving Issues Milliman
Understand Deal Structure • Line(s) of business, coverage type • Limits, sub-limits for reinsurer • Reinsurance or deposit accounting • Loss reserve discounting • Experience account • Commutation provision Milliman
Experience Account • EAB = premium – margin – loss payments + interest credit • What if EA is exhausted? Milliman
Monitor Emergence • Issue 1: temporary speed-up • Could exhaust EA too quickly • Issue 2: actual > expected • Initial estimate of nominal loss may be understated • Under-reporting will delay triggering additional premium Milliman
Interest Credit • Based on risk-free rate (e.g., U.S. Treasury spot rates) • Spread is larger for deals on a funds withheld basis Milliman
Sensitivity Testing • Both magnitude and timing of reinsurer payment are key • Nominal loss amounts • Retroactive: usually use more simplistic approach to produce range • Prospective: stochastic simulation • Use alternative payout patterns to evaluate impact of timing Milliman
Bulk Reserves • Law of large numbers doesn’t apply • How is best estimate determined (mode, mean, confidence level)? • Not commonly used in practice Milliman
Financial Reporting Issues Milliman
Type of Accounting • Reinsurance treatment is based on SFAS 113 or SSAP 62 • Reinsurer must assume significant risk • It must be reasonably possible to realize a significant loss • Deposit accounting is required unless both conditions are met Milliman
Prospective vs. Retroactive Reinsurance The following exceptions should be treated as prospective reinsurance • Structured settlements • Novations • Reduced participation in reinsurance treaties • Intercompany agreements that do not produce gain in surplus Milliman
Deposit Accounting • No initial impact on balance sheet or income statement for cedant or reinsurer • Emerges in financial statements as actual payments are made/received • Note: deposit liabilities are not part of lines 1 or 3 on statutory balance sheet Milliman
http://www.casact.org/pubs/forum/04fforum/04ff073.pdf derek.jones@milliman.com 646.473.3416