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Chapter Outline 5.1 Insurer Insolvencies

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter Outline 5.1 Insurer Insolvencies"— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter Outline 5.1 Insurer Insolvencies
Frequency and Severity of Insurance Company Insolvencies Causes of Insolvencies Property-Liability Insurer Insolvencies Life-Health Insurer Insolvencies 5.2 Solvency Ratings 5.3 Overview of Solvency Regulation Objectives of Solvency Regulation Regulatory Monitoring Regulatory Controls and Risk-Based Capital Requirements

2 Chapter Outline 5.4 Illustration of Risk-Based Capital
5.5 State Guaranty Systems Coverage Property-Liability Insurance Life-Health Insurance Funding Design Issues Level of Coverage Pre-Insolvency versus Post-Insolvency Funding Risk-Based Assessments 5.6 Summary

3 Frequency and Severity of Insurer Insolvencies

4 Frequency and Severity of Insurer Insolvencies

5 Factors Affecting Property-Liability Insolvencies
High claim costs relative to premiums Catastrophe losses Awards for environmental, malpractice, products liability Why were premiums too low? Bad luck Deliberate risky strategy by some insurers Regulation held rates too low

6 Factors Affecting Life Insurer Insolvencies
Drop in asset values Junk bonds (First Executive) Commercial real estate (Mutual Benefit) “Run on the bank” Illustrate using First Executive case

7 First Executive Case Jan. 1990 announcement:
$515 million write down of its junk bond portfolio (30% of equity value) stock price declined over 57% in two days Concern with insolvency led to $4 billion of withdrawals Bad press concerning junk bonds and CEO (Fred Carr) probably contributed to “run” Seizure by CA insurance department in April 1991

8 Methods of Dealing with Insolvency Risk
Consider three methods: Private Market Regulation Guaranty Funds Tradeoffs: more regulation or more guaranty fund protection ==> less incentive for consumers to worry about insolvencies

9 Effectiveness of Private Marketplace
Without regulation, do insurers have incentives to reduce probability of insolvency? Yes Improve contractual terms with policyholders Protect franchise value The first factor requires that consumers have information

10 Solvency Ratings Private companies gather and report information about insurers’ insolvency risk A.M. Best Moody’s Standard & Poor’s Duff and Phelps Insurers pay these companies to obtain a rating

11 A.M. Best Rating Categories
Table 5-1 Major Category Sub-Category Letter Ratings Secure Superior A++, A+ Excellent A, A- Very Good B++, B+ Vulnerable Adequate B, B- Fair C++, C+ Marginal C, C- Very Vulnerable D Regulatory Supervision E Liquidation F

12 Facts and Issues Related to Ratings
Most insurers receive a rating Most rated insurers receive a high rating Ratings help predict insolvencies Issue: Are ratings biased upward?

13 Overview of Solvency Regulation
Monitoring & intervention Restrictions on activities Pricing, Asset choices, Dividend payments Capital requirements Should regulators attempt to eliminate insolvencies?

14 Regulatory Monitoring - IRIS
IRIS - Insurance Regulatory Information System Early warning system Property & Liability ratios Life & Health ratios If insurer fails 4 or more + other criteria ==> regulatory attention

15 Examples of IRIS Ratios for P-L Insurers

16 Regulatory Monitoring - FAST
FAST - Financial Analysis Tracking System Early warning system Looks at more ratios than IRIS Assigns scores for each ratio and calculates an aggregate score Regulatory attention if score is too low

17 Risk-Based Capital (RBC) Requirements
History Life RBC adopted for 1993 statements P-L RBC adopted for 1994 statements Basic Idea: Riskier activities require more capital Implementation is complicated

18 Implementation of RBC Requirements
Essential aspects of RBC Insurer’s activities (e.g., how much is invested in junk bonds, amount of reinsurance, etc.) are plugged into a formula, which determines the insurer’s dollar value of RBC Regulatory action depends on the ratio of actual capital to RBC

19 Regulatory Actions Based on RBC - Table 5-3
If Ratio is then greater than 200% nothing needs to be done 150% - 200% insurer must file a plan 100% - 150% commissioner investigates 70%-100% legal grounds to rehabilitate or liquidate less than 70% required to seize

20 RBC Example for Hypothetical P-L Insurer
Insurer writes $30 million of auto liability premiums this year, but only $15 is earned this year Expected claim costs = $20 million $10 million incurred this year $5 million in paid losses $5 million in incurred losses, but not paid $10 million incurred next year Expenses = $10 million

21 RBC Example for Hypothetical P-L Insurer
Assets $7.5 million in US government bonds $15 million in investment grade corporate bonds $2.5 million in stock $25 million in total assets No receivables & no off-balance sheet risk

22 RBC Example for Hypothetical P-L Insurer
What is surplus? Assets = $25 million Policyholder liabilities: Loss reserve (losses incurred, but not paid) = $5 million Unearned premiums reserve = $15 million Total = $20 million Surplus = $5 million

23 RBC Example for Hypothetical P-L Insurer
Calculating RBC

24 RBC Example for Hypothetical P-L Insurer
Covariance Adjustment Idea: risk factors reflect risk of individual activities actual risk depends on correlation across activities Implementation: square each required RBC amount sum the squares take square root of sum Finally, as a adjustment factor, multiply by 1/2

25 RBC Example for Hypothetical P-L Insurer

26 RBC Example for Hypothetical P-L Insurer
Finally, Calculate ratio of accounting capital to RBC: Surplus / RBC = 5 / = 191.1% Regulatory Response (Table 5-3)

27 Guaranty Fund Coverage and Funding
Typical limit: $300,000 Funding post insolvency assessment of solvent insurers New York is an exception

28 Guaranty Fund Design Issues
Coverage Limits Effect on incentives to become informed Commercial versus personal limits Pre-Insolvency versus Post-Insolvency Funding Risk-based Assessments


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