Reinsurance: Managing Catastrophic Risk in a Dangerous World

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

INTRODUCTION

1

SECTION 1: THE IMPACT OF NATURAL AND MAN-MADE DISASTERS ON THE WORLD SCENE

2

A WORLDWIDE PROBLEM: UNDERSTANDING THE DISASTER

2

REVIEW

4

THE COST OF NATURAL DISASTERS ON THE INSURANCE INDUSTRY: A CHALLENGING PROBLEM

5

Table 1.1 – Top Ten Global Insured Loss Events in 2022

6

CALIFORNIA: THE STATE ON FIRE

7

THE FREQUENCY OF WILDFIRES IN CALIFORNIA

8

PROPOSITION 103 AND THE LIMITATIONS OF UNDERWRITING REGULATIONS

9

THE CHALLENGE OF CONSTRUCTION COSTS, SUPPLY ISSUES & INFLATION

9

THE RESULTS: WHAT ARE INSURANCE COMPANIES DOING IN CALIFORNIA?

10

REVIEW

10

LEARNING FROM THE PAST: THE INSURANCE INDUSTRY AND FLOOD COVERAGE

11

REVIEW

12

A VICIOUS CYCLE OR A NATURAL ONE?

12

Graph 1.1 – Number of recorded natural disaster evens from 1900-2022

13

Christchurch Earthquake, New Zealand, February 2011

14

Drought, United States, Summer 2012

14

The Great Flood of 2011, Thailand, November 2011

15

Hurricane Sandy, United States, October 2012

15

Hurricane Irma, U.S. Virgin Islands & the United States, 2017

15

Hurricane Maria, Dominica & Puerto Rico, September 2017

16

Hurricane Harvey, United States, August 2017

16

Hurricane Katrina, United States, August 2005

16

Sichuan Earthquake, China, May 2008

17

Tohoku Earthquake & Tsunami, Japan, March 2011

17

REVIEW

17

CONCLUSION: LOOKING TOWARDS THE FUTURE

18

Table 1.2 – Losses Comparison

18

KEY POINTS

19

SECTION 2: THE HISTORY OF REINSURANCE

20

THE HISTORY OF THE REINSURANCE INDUSTRY

21

REINSURANCE IN THE 1300S-1600S: EARLY MENTIONS OF REINSURANCE

21

REVIEW

22

REINSURANCE IN THE 1900s: THE EMERGENCE OF REINSURANCE COMPANIES

22

  The Great Fire of Hamburg

24

  Carl Von Thieme

25

REVIEW

28

REINSURANCE IN THE 20TH CENTURY: ADAPTING TO A CHANGING WORLD

28

  Risk Management

30

REVIEW

32

REINSURANCE IN THE 21ST CENTURY: A FIGHT AGAINST OVERWHELMING ODDS

32

Figure 2.1 – Loss Distribution By Insurance Type for September 11, 2001

33

TRIA

34

Risk-based pricing

36

Subprime borrowers

37

Credit default swaps & derivatives

38

KEY POINTS

39

SECTION 3: REINSURANCE– MANAGING CATASTROPHIC RISK IN A DANGEROUS WORLD

40

TYPES OF CATASTROPHIC EVENTS: GEOPHYSICAL, METEOROLOGICAL, HYDROLOGICAL AND CLIMATOLOGICAL

41

GEOPHYSICAL EVENTS

41

Table 3.1 – Notable Geophysical Events within the Last Two Decades

42

METEOROLOGICAL EVENTS

43

  Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale

43

  Hurricane Category 1 – 5

44

Table 3.2 – Notable Meteorological Events within the Last Two Decades

45

HYDROLOGICAL EVENTS

46

Table 3.3 – Notable Hydrological Events within the Last Two Decades

46

CLIMATOLOGICAL EVENTS

47

Figure 3.1 – The Fire Triangle

48

Table 3.4 – Notable Climatological Events within the Last Two Decades

49

REVIEW

50

REINSURANCE– DEALING WITH THE CONCEPT OF RISK

50

THE PERCEPTION OF RISK HAS EVOLVED OVER TIME: INFORMATION AT OUR FINGERTIPS

50

MORE MONEY, MORE PROBLEMS

51

THE DECLINE OF A RELIGIOUS PERSPECTIVE OF RISK

52

AN EXTERNALIZATION OF GUILT AND RESPONSIBILITY

53

THE PERCEPTION OF RISK IN THE NEW MILLENNIUM

53

Table 3.5 – Top Five Global Risks over the Last Five Years

54

INSURANCE CHANGES THE PERCEPTION OF RISK

56

REVIEW

58

REINSURANCE– EXPERTS AT MANAGING RISK

58

TAKING CONTROL OF RISK: A FRAMEWORK OF STRATEGY AND FUNCTION

59

ASSESSING AND PRICING INSURANCE RISK WITH PROPER UNDERWRITING

60

  Randomness, Assessability, Mutuality & Economic Viability

61

MANAGING ASSETS: SETTING AND INVESTING EXPECTATIONS

61

MANAGING CAPITAL: THE BUFFER AGAINST UNEXPECTED LOSSES

62

REVIEW

63

INSURANCE VS REINSURANCE: AN ANALYSIS OF TWO DISTINCT INDUSTRIES

64

WHAT ARE THE SIMILARITIES OF REINSURANCE AND INSURANCE?

65

WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS AND ADVANTAGES OF REINSURANCE?

66

CAPACITY

66

STABILIZATION

67

FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT

67

CATASTROPHIC PROTECTION

67

ADVICE

68

REVIEW

68

BASIC TYPES OF REINSURANCE

68

TREATY REINSURANCE: COVERING BROAD GROUPS OF POLICIES

69

FACULTATIVE REINSURANCE: ASSESSING RISK ON A CASE-BY-CASE BASIS

70

PROPORTIONAL VS NON-PROPORTIONAL: WHO GETS THE SHARE?

71

Table 3.6 – Proportional Reinsurance

71

Table 3.7 – Non-Proportional Reinsurance

72

  Loss Cap, Annual Aggregate Limit (AAL), Event Limit

73

A PRACTICAL EXAMPLE OF A REINSURANCE CONTRACT

74

Figure 3.2 – Practical example of a Reinsurance Contract

74

Sample Policy: Article I / Automatic Coverage

75

Sample Policy: Article II / Facultative Reinsurance

76

Sample Policy: Article III / Facultative-Obligatory Reinsurance

77

Sample Policy: Facultative-Obligatory Binding Limits

78

Sample Policy: Article IV / Guaranteed Capacity Reinsurance

79

Sample Policy: Limits of Retention

81

Sample Policy: Policy Plans Reinsured

85

REVIEW

87

APPLYING LINES AND LAYERS TO REINSURANCE TREATIES: A LOOK AT THE BALANCE SHEETS

88

RETROCESSION: REINSURANCE FOR REINSURERS

89

  Spiraling / Excess of Loss (XOL)

90

  Probable maximum loss

91

NEW OR ALTERNATIVE FORMS OF REINSURANCE

92

INSURANCE-LINKED SECURITIES (ILS)

92

Table 3.8 – Alternative Reinsurance – Catastrophe Bond

93

Table 3.9 – Alternative Reinsurance – Industry Loss Warranty (ILW)

93

Table 3.10 – Alternative Reinsurance – Collateralized Reinsurance

94

Table 3.8 – Alternative Reinsurance – Sidecar

94

A CLOSER LOOK AT THE CATASTROPHE BOND

95

  Indemnity Triggers

96

  Parametric Triggers

97

  Industry-loss Triggers

98

  Modeled-loss Triggers

99

A CLOSER LOOK AT THE INDUSTRY LOSS WARRANTY (ILW)

100

KEY POINTS

102

SECTION 4: THEORY VERSUS REALITY– COPING WITH THE PROBLEMS OF THE WORLD

103

THE REAL-WORLD CHALLENGES

104

HOW DOES INFLATION AFFECT REINSURANCE?

104

  Higher Claims Payments

104

  Lower Investment Value

104

  More Risk Taking

105

HOW DO CATASTROPHE AND SECONDARY PERILS AFFECT REINSURANCE?

105

HOW HAS INVESTOR CONCERN AFFECTED REINSURANCE?

106

WHAT ARE REINSURANCE COMPANIES DOING TO MITIGATE THESE PROBLEMS?

107

REVIEW

108

EXPERT ADVICE— NOT SOLVING PROBLEMS, BUT CREATING SOLUTIONS

109

THE REGULATORY SIDE

109

THE MARKET SIDE

111

THE PROFESSIONAL SIDE

111

REVIEW

113

WHAT IS THE FUTURE OF REINSURANCE?

114

HARNESSING DATA AND INVESTING IN NEW TECHNOLOGY AND ANALYTICS CAPABILITIES

114

DIFFERENTIATION AND DESIGNING NEW PRODUCTS AND SERVICES

115

COLLABORATION

115

CONCLUSION: LOOKING TOWARDS THE FUTURE

116

KEY POINTS

117

SECTION 5: COURSE REVIEW

118

SECTION 1: THE IMPACT OF NATURAL AND MAN-MADE DISASTERS ON THE WORLD SCENE

118

SECTION 2: THE HISTORY OF REINSURANCE

121

SECTION 3: REINSURANCE—MITIGATING CATASTROPHIC RISK IN A DANGEROUS WORLD

124

SECTION 4: THEORY VERSUS REALITY— COPING WITH THE PROBLEMS OF THE WORLD

131

REFERENCES

132

 

United Insurance Educators, Inc.

(800) 735-1155