E N D
1. The Aviation Working Party Justyn Harding (chairman)
David Hart
Phillip Tippin
James Widdows
The working party wish to acknowledge the valuable
assistance provided by:
Richard Power
Cameron Johnston
of BAIG
10. Features of the Aviation Market Rapidly increasing exposure
Rapid technological change
Dominance of small number of insureds, insurers & brokers
Vertical placement
Alliances and code sharing arrangements
Variability of claim sizes
Availability of reinsurance
Cyclical nature of business
11. Increasing Exposure All sectors of the market are growing fast
Large numbers of increasingly expensive new airliners being ordered as fleets are modernised
Rising freight levels
Increasing number of passengers
More flights with smaller jets to provide better service
More frequent flights to wider range of destinations
More satellite launches
12. Technological Changes Accident rate four times higher for non-industrialised nations compared to industrialised
Continuing process, always some accidents
Will reach safety plateau
Future Issues
(a) Privatisation of ATC and possible conflict of interest
(b) Need for secure communications
(c) Regulation of crew drinking
(d) Technological changes: cameras, radar to detect CAT
Better information is available to the public on which airlines and aircraft are safe
13. Airline Safety New ranking system- Flightsafe
Non judgmental - allows for past accidents (number & nature), and ten factors including: average fleet age, type of planes, maturity of airline and the control environment
Air Canada renowned to be the safest airline, with British Airways ranked 9th and all five major US operators in the top 20
Worst operators:
(a) Small ex Soviet Union airlines
(b) Nigeria Airways
(c) Myanmar Airways
(d) Merpati
14. Consolidation in Market Only three brokers and four major manufacturers so have substantial power
Airlines and manufacturers becoming more global, so industry needs to respond
Merger of European and American insurance operations e.g. BAIG and AAU
This has caused the vertical placing strategy
15. Vertical Placing Inefficient system that exploits poor market information
Risk placed with following market first who will not know lead terms
Different terms offered to leaders e.g. claims handling allowance or better rate
Many slips for one risk so terms not obvious
Difference between lead and follow terms can be up to 40% for airlines
16. Alliances & Code Sharing Allow greater range of destinations to be offered
Invisible to public
Passengers on a flight may be travelling under different compensation regimes
Your paint, your claim adopted in practice
17. Claim Size Variation To a large extent caused by differing liability payments
Hull values up to $225m
Liability payments up to $10m per passenger in US ($3m average)
Claims often split with products insurers
Highest overall claim $800m (Swiss Air)
Largest hull claim $150m
Will only rise in the future
Will rise as more operators move to unlimited liability working conventional defences
18. Reinsurance Substantial amount needed to limit exposure
Reinsurance may end up with non aviation insurers - naive capacity
Naive capacity enters market on back of good years for the aviation market and falling returns in its own markets
Someone has to pay claims - this cycle the Australian reinsurers, REAC and GIO
Availability causes extreme cyclical swings
19. Cyclical Market Rates are turning, particularly for airlines and these movements are dramatic
Thai Airlines recently suffered a 20% rise despite its size and having had few losses (none in the last year).
Indian Airlines facing 65% rise after two losses last year (A320 at Yangon and 737-200 at Patna)
This comprises an increase of 14% in liability costs and 90% in hull costs
20. Airline Trends Bigger aircraft
Unlimited liability
US Courts & Inflation
More traffic
Approaching safety plateau
Code sharing and the “deep pockets syndrome”
Overall => losses to increase
21. General Aviation Trends More private wealth
Implies more traffic
Growth rate => airline growth 10%pa
Overall => losses to increase
22. War Trends Middle East?
Air rage and pilot suicide
Hijackings
Overall => losses not set to improve
23. Satellite Trends Cheaper launches
Lower orbit launches
Implies more failures?
US manufacturers losing market share to Chinese
Ageing satellite population increasing in-orbit risk
Overall => losses likely to increase
24. In General Increasing costs
Market WILL turn
But retro market will turn first
Could see a vicious 2000 year for arbitrageurs
25. Vertical Placing Smoke and mirrors placing
Maximises opportunity for imperfect information
Leading to inefficient market results
Result of too few brokers, too many underwriters
26. Players in the market doing better than average by making money from their reinsurers.
Somebody selling reinsurance too cheaply.
Ultimately someone will end up sitting on a very poorly priced liability as losses work through retro layers. This cycle much of losses have ended up with REAC and GIO
Late 1980s saw marine underwriters caught the same way.
There is a macho image associated with aviation XL Lemmings
27. And still companies start up new aviation wings - DP Mann only a month ago.
Situation is theoretically unsustainable, but will last as long as there are lemming insurers prepared to throw capital off a cliff.
The ultimate question is a simple one. Are our lemmings dying off too quickly to survive, or is this ritual suicide a symptom of a constant level of overpopulation?
For non-US risks last year, available capacity equalled 170% of the size of the aviation insurance market.
Who are our next lemmings? Lemmings