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On The Cost of Financing Catastrophe Insurance. Presentation to the Casualty Actuarial Society Dynamic Financial Analysis Seminar By Glenn Meyers and John Kollar Insurance Services Office, Inc. July 13 &14 , 1998. Catastrophes and Insurer Capital.
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On The Cost of Financing Catastrophe Insurance Presentation to the Casualty Actuarial Society Dynamic Financial Analysis Seminar By Glenn Meyers and John Kollar Insurance Services Office, Inc. July 13 &14 , 1998
Catastrophes and Insurer Capital • Two major insurers lost more than their “capital” in Hurricane Andrew • They are solvent today, because they had “rich” parents. • You need a LOT of capital to cover catastrophes. • Is holding sufficient capital to cover catastrophes efficient?
Capital Substitutes • Reinsurance • Does not have the capacity to cover the really big catastrophes • Cat Limits are usually small compared to surplus • Securitization • Large potential capacity • Index trading has been slow • Recent over the counter deals are insurer specific, like reinsurance
Potential Advantages of Catastrophe Indices • Low transaction costs • No counter-party risk • Ease of entry for investors and insurers • Liquidity
Problems with Catastrophe Indices • Investors don’t understand the risk • Insurers don’t know how much their risk will be reduced (i.e. basis risk) • The insurer-specific deals have found investor support because they could quantify the risk using a catastrophe model on the insurer’s exposures.
ISO’s Contribution • Quantify risk for investors • Quantify risk for insurers • Use a catastrophe model and underlying exposure for catastrophe indices and insurers. • Agreements with AIR and RMS • Can use GCCI or PCS options
A Quick Explanation of Hurricane Models • Multiple Events • Each Event • Affects a collection of ZIP codes • Each ZIP code has a wind speed • Insurer • Has exposure for each class and ZIP code
A Quick Explanation of Hurricane Models • For each event • For each ZIP • Get wind speed • For each class • Get Value of buildings • Get Damage Ratio for wind speed • Loss = Value × Damage ratio • Add up all losses for the event
The Guy CarpenterCatastrophe Index (GCCI) • Consists of the combined experience of 39 insurers who report their data to ISO • Contracts on the GCCI are traded on the Bermuda Commodities Exchange (BCOE) • The underlying exposures are available, so it is possible to use a catastrophe model to quantify the risk to both investors and insurers.
Covered Events Aggregate Loss Largest Event Second Largest Event Contracts pay $5000 if Index exceeds the posted strike price Geographic Regions National Southeast Northeast Mid/West Florida Gulf Bermuda Commodities ExchangeTraded GCCI Contracts Strike prices traded on BCOE - 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 100, 150, 200, 250, 300, 350, 400, 450, 500, 550, 600, 650, 700
The Examples Use an Illustrative Index Similar to the GCCI • Programming GCCI rules is under way • Used proxy GCCI for now. • Ran cat model through 50 insurers • Set the largest event = 100 • Industry Equivalent - 100 Billion + • Maximum event contracts for $1,000 • Strike prices at 5,10, …, 95,100
Catastrophe Options vs Other Investments One way to compare risk and cost • Moody’s - Projected 12-month default rate of speculative-grade bonds is 2.5%. • Average spread of speculative-grade bonds over risk-free bonds is 3.5% • Probability of exercising a catastrophe option with a strike price of 20 is 2.3%
Insurer Objectives Using Catastrophe Options • Reduce the cost of financing insurance • Expected insurer costs • Cost of Capital • Cost of Capital Substitutes • Reinsurance • Contracts on a catastrophe index • Find the right mix of capital and capital substitutes
Quantifying the Cost of Capital • Depends on the variability of the insurer’s business • Standards will depend on the insurer management • An “easy” formula • Cost of Capital = K T • Where: • = Standard deviation of total insurer loss • T = Factor reflecting risk aversion • K = Rate of return needed to attract capita
Quantifying Basis Risk Ran hurricane model through insurers and index. + about 9000 more • Compare variability before and after • Is the risk reduction worth the cost?
Minimize Sum of Cost Elements • Insurer Capital • Cost of Capital = K T (Net Losses) • Reinsurance • Transaction Cost + Expected Cost • Cat index contracts • Transaction Cost + Expected Cost • Use cat model results to back out transaction costs.
Analysis of Three Insurers • Insurer #1 - A medium national insurer • Highly correlated with the index • Insurer #2 - A large national insurer • Moderately correlated with the index • Insurer #3 - A small regional insurer • Slightly correlated with the index
Search for Best Strategy to Minimize Cost of Financing Insurance • Search for the combination of index and reinsurance purchases that minimizes total cost of providing insurance. • Questions • How many index contracts at each strike price? • What layer of reinsurance?
The Marginal Cost of Financing Catastrophe Insurance • The effect of Catastrophe Options and reinsurance in rates. • Calculate the cost of financing with and without catastrophe coverage.
The Next Steps • Analyze regional and state indices • Embed catastrophe options within reinsurance contracts • Reinsurer hedges combined risk of its primary insurers • Reinsurer covers customized indices — adverse selection is not an issue.