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Reinsurance Pricing Perspective. Pricing Actuary’s Responsibilities:. Review treaty reinsurance structure Determine the expected loss cost for the proposed reinsurance treaty
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Pricing Actuary’s Responsibilities: • Review treaty reinsurance structure • Determine the expected loss cost for the proposed reinsurance treaty • Compute the reinsurance rate based on the expected loss cost, risk characteristics and volatility (capital requirements) of the treaty
I. Treaty Structure • Understand the ceding company’s motivation behind the reinsurance purchase • Discuss the alignment of the insurer’s and reinsurer’s interests • Determine whether the submission data is sufficient to analyze the proposed structure
I. Treaty Structure • The clock is ticking – manage expectations!
II. Pricing - Summary • Data Issues • Rating Considerations • Parameter Estimation • Interpreting Results
II. Pricing – Data Issues • Identify and quantify changes described in the submission’s narrative • Changes in class and product mix • Changes in policy limits usage and deductible levels • Changes in inuring business or facultative placements • Changes in risk concentrations • Etc.
II. Pricing – Data Issues • Small regional insurers may not be able to break-out their book into component sub-lines • Carriers may not be able to provide robust price monitoring reports • The impact of changes in claims handling or reserving may be based on anecdotal evidence from underwriting or claims rather than from hard data provided by the cedant • Request the independent actuarial reserve study (if available)
II. Pricing – Data Issues • Draw comparisons to the insurer’s peer group • Contact the insurer’s actuary • Develop a strategy to price the proposed reinsurance structure
II. Pricing • Make a concerted effort to understand the exposures being reinsured
II. Pricing – Rating Considerations • Actuarial first principles: “Rates are not to be inadequate, excessive, or unfairly discriminatory.” • Consider stability vs. responsiveness when selecting rating segments • Greater segmentation can lead to increased parameter risk, compounded conservatism, and pricing inaccuracies
II. Pricing – Rating Considerations • If excess loss experience is not credible or is inconsistent with exposure indications, consider experience rating a lower layer • This may be limited by the truncation point of your historical loss experience and your annual severity trends • The relative consistency of experience and exposure indications on a lower layer, may not hold as you extrapolate to a higher layer • Severity layers may require a frequency/severity approach
II. Pricing – Parameter Estimation • Niche carriers may have very different loss trends than national writers • Compare premium and loss trend assumptions to ensure consistency • Increased limits factors or exposure curves based on industry sources may also be inappropriate for niche or regional writers
II. Pricing – Interpreting Results • If attritional experience and exposure loss cost indications vary significantly, take the time to understand the differences • Decisions as to credibility rely on your understanding of these discrepancies • Experience based selections may result in “free cover” if historical experience does not contain losses that exhaust the reinsurance limit
II. Pricing – Interpreting Results • Shock losses may skew experience indications particularly if there are a limited number of years of credible historical experience • Examine both line of business and consolidated treaty experience indications to evaluate the benefit of line of business diversification • For composite rated accounts, shifts in the distribution of the underlying premium by line of business can have a material impact on the overall indicated loss cost
II. Pricing - Example • Consider an excess of loss treaty with the following projected subject premiums and loss cost indications. Note that the personal auto liability does not expose the reinsurance layer
II. Pricing – Example • If the company writes 20% more commercial umbrella business and 2% less personal auto liability business, then the overall loss cost indication increases by 11%
II. Pricing – Non-Attritional Exposures • Small regional insurers may not have sophisticated catastrophe models • Carriers may not capture all the data elements necessary for pricing the catastrophe exposure of the reinsurance treaty • Discuss the catastrophe modeling data and non-modeled catastrophe exposures with the underwriter and the catastrophe modeling unit • Make sure that exposure from secondary perils is not double counted or missed entirely
III. Evaluating The Reinsurance Rate • Aggregate loss distributions should be used to determine the economic value of treaty features • Post treaty feature profit distributions can be used to determine capital requirements for the treaty • Historical loss experience may provide some help in determining the appropriate shape of the aggregate loss distribution • 5 – 10 years of historical data provide little information about the tail of the distribution (1:50 yrs, 1:100 yrs, …) • There is considerable process risk and parameter risk involved in pricing small regional accounts
III. Evaluating The Reinsurance Rate • Don’t underestimate the downside risk!
III. Evaluating The Reinsurance Rate • Reinsurance treaty structures for small regional insurers can become unbalanced quickly: • Reinsurer can be exposed to limits that far exceed the ceded premium • A limit loss in a $4M xs $1M layer with $500k ceded premium will produce a loss ratio of 800% for the reinsurer • Low-frequency/high severity coverages (e.g. property cat, clash, ECO/XPL, and terrorism) can increase parameter risk significantly • The rating process must account for the volatility in results that arises from premium/limit imbalances
III. Evaluating The Reinsurance Rate • Small regional carriers can provide valuable diversification in a reinsurance portfolio: • May write niche products • Regional premium and loss trends are not fully correlated with national trends • Often serve localized markets that don’t aggregate with national accounts • These diversification benefits need to be considered in the rating process
Conclusions: • Take the time to discuss and understand the small regional carriers book of business and motivations • Evaluate the alignment of interests and make recommendations to strengthen the reinsurance partnership • Consider the amount of process/parameter risk in the pricing indications and the portfolio benefit of non-correlated exposures