SWAN Captive Risk Financing – A Structured Approach 38th Annual OESAI Conference 25 August 2015.

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Presentation transcript:

SWAN

Captive Risk Financing – A Structured Approach 38th Annual OESAI Conference 25 August 2015

Agenda 01Rationale for Captive Structures – Risk spend efficiency – Risk / Cover flexibility – Comparison to no insurance 02Practical Approach – Risk Bearing Capacity – Risk Costing – Structuring – Testing 03Captive Structure Options – Types of vehicles and their advantages / disadvantages – Suitability testing 04Mauritius as domicile – Local business – (South) African business – Other opportunities 05Looking to the future

Rationale for Captive Structures - 01

Risk spend efficiency — Insurers are profit-driven —Insurers require stringently controlled capital bases — Opportunity costs in various risk avenues to insurers — Captives (Risk finance) focused on cost of risk only — Reduced pooling, cross subsidies 01 Rationale for Captive Structures

Risk flexibility — Limited where reliance placed on reinsurance protection — Full retention provides highest flexibility — Cover of uninsurable risks and differences in conditions or limits — Administratively complex structures easier to accommodate — Ease of amendment 01 Rationale for Captive Structures

Captive vs no insurance — No dedicated capacity, direct impact on operating results — Potential for double-whammy at worst possible time — No pooling or cross-subsidies possible — Higher (explicit) administration and cost component require economy of scale — Potential reduction in risk management co-ordination, increasing TCoR. 01 Rationale for Captive Structures

Practical Approach - 02

Approach – The RF Process Financial Capacity Risk Profile -RBC -Risk Appetite -Risk Tolerance -Cost Profile -Characteristics Retention vs Transfer Own Data External Data Exposure Analysis -Options -Limitations -Cost / Benefit RF Structure Conventional Market -Economy of scale -Risk characteristics -Requirements -Flexibility -Price -Security TCo(I)R -Update -Amend -Optimise -Allocate -Manage -Report 02 Practical Approach

Approach – The RF Process Financial Capacity Risk Profile -RBC -Risk Appetite -Risk Tolerance -Cost Profile -Characteristics Retention vs Transfer Own Data External Data Exposure Analysis -Options -Limitations -Cost / Benefit RF Structure Conventional Market -Economy of scale -Risk characteristics -Requirements -Flexibility -Price -Security TCo(I)R -Update -Amend -Optimise -Allocate -Manage -Report Captives 02 Practical Approach

Approach – Captive Development — Understand client & requirements — Process -Risk Bearing Capacity -Risk Costing -Risk Structuring -Structure Testing -Captive type selection -Implement, Integrate, Manage, Update — Important to demonstrate value on on-going basis to client 02 Practical Approach

Approach – Risk Bearing Capacity — Estimate of ability to retain risk without compromising key plans and operations — Effective risk budget of organisation — Considers all risk, need to assess and evaluate comprehensive risk profile — Need to include all sources of RBC contributions and drains

Approach – Risk Bearing Capacity 02 Practical Approach

Approach – Risk Costing — Understand mathematical and operational drivers of risk cost -Develop risk cost curves under all sensible structural scenarios -Overlay operational and financial realities (MPL, MFL, RBC etc.) — Integrate with market realities — Optimise overall TCoR — Integrate into risk management process and reporting 02 Practical Approach

Approach – Risk Costing Attritional Losses Risk Retention Losses Excess Layer Losses Catastrophe Losses Loss Severity 02 Practical Approach

Approach – Risk Structuring 02 Practical Approach

Approach – Risk Structuring IO P Current SIR Retained Transfer Ratios P1 – 2.01 P2 – 1.47 P3 – (IOP) P4 – P5 – Practical Approach

Approach – Risk Structure Testing RBC % 02 Practical Approach

Approach – Risk Structure Testing 02 Practical Approach

Captive Structure Options - 03

Approach – Captive Type Selection Low High Complexity, Flexibility Cost Contingency Policy / RAC PCC Group / Mutual Captive International Captive Domestic Captive 03 Vehicles & Structures

Approach – Captive Type Selection Considerations -Premium volume & Risk exposure -Risk complexity, nature of (insurance) liabilities -Diversification / Concentration of Risk -Relative costs, including risk transfer costs -Planning horizon -Options available -Existing skills / cost of outsourcing -Capital requirements -Governance requirements 03 Vehicles & Structures

Approach – Captive Type Selection Suitability testing -Is a structure possible that minimises TCoR? -Is the criteria for minimisation of TCoR defined and understood? -What structural options are available and what are explicit costs of each? -Does retention structure create sufficient premium to generate economies-of-scale on frictional costs? -Is market efficient / hardening / softening? -Does sufficient access to (re)insurance protection exist? -Options available -What internal capabilities exist? Is suitable training / recruitment possible? 03 Vehicles & Structures

Mauritius as domicile - 04

Mauritius as domicile Regulatory Environment -Dedicated PCC legislation -Pro-(cell)captive solvency and administration requirements Geographic Location & Economic Environment -Proximity to (South) Africa, India and Pacific Rim -Small time differences -Stable socio-political environment -Currency flexibility Cost & Expertise -Frictional expenses lower than many domiciles -Significant expertise available locally or with relative ease 04 Mauritius as domicile

Mauritius as domicile Local Opportunities (on-shore insurers) -Limited economy -Some potential for PCC / Mutual structures (South) African Opportunities -Significant spread of multi-national operations (Africa & Pacific Rim) -Tax and other treaties -Reinsurance regulation under SAM (solvency relief) Other regions -Multi-national companies in India, Malaysia & Pacific Rim -Internet / Virtual & related companies 04 Mauritius as domicile

Looking to the future - 05

Looking to the future Clients and risks are becoming more sophisticated and complex, necessitating specialist input in order to manage their TCoR efficiently. Governance requirements in most countries require risk financing to be sensibly structured within relevant framework of parent to be efficient, compliant, transparent and properly integrated. Captives are a powerful business tool but should be developed and managed as any other venture and held to same requirements to remain relevant within company. 05 Looking to the future

Thank you