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Advantages and Limitations of Applying Regression Based Reserving Methods to Reinsurance Pricing Thomas Passante, FCAS, MAAA Swiss Re New Markets CAS.

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Presentation on theme: "Advantages and Limitations of Applying Regression Based Reserving Methods to Reinsurance Pricing Thomas Passante, FCAS, MAAA Swiss Re New Markets CAS."— Presentation transcript:

1 Advantages and Limitations of Applying Regression Based Reserving Methods to Reinsurance Pricing Thomas Passante, FCAS, MAAA Swiss Re New Markets CAS Seminar on Reinsurance June 16, 2000

2 Regression Model for In-Period Loss Payments
Pij = AYi ( ) e j ij Log Transformed: ln Pij = ln AYi + ( ) + j + ln ij i + j Õ CY g e k k = yr1 i + j å g ln CY e k k = yr1

3 Example of Fitted Incremental Data
Fitted Points 1994 1995 1996 1997 Assume: CY trend = 7% Then, 100 x 0.84 x = 61 DY decay = 0.8 All AY on same level

4 A Regression Based Model: Why?
Competitive Advantage Additional Information Better Understanding

5 Some Short Term Limitations:
Time Investment Learning how Actually applying the techniques Ability to Explain Colleagues Clients Intuition takes time to develop

6 Regression Modeling - Two Main Advantages:
Obtain a distribution around a point estimate Isolate Calendar Year trends

7 Distribution Around a Point Estimate
Capital Requirement = F( …. , volatility , … ) Volatility measured by: standard deviation, downside result, low percentile result, other… Directly affects Return on Equity (ROE) and therefore influences decision making process

8 Calendar Year Trend Situations may exist where calendar year trends are identifiable using regression techniques, but not with traditional techniques May use information to your advantage

9 Calendar Year Trend Example
Original Paid Data (Cumulative) , , , , , , , , , ,067 , , , , , , , , ,796 , , , , , , , ,149 , , , , , , ,205 , , , , , ,502 , , , , ,952 , , , ,024 , , ,710 , ,304 ,473 LDF's Tail All yr wtd Cum Accident Yr Ult Loss 17, , , , , , , , , ,223

10 Calendar Year Trend Example
CY Trend From To Observed Model Fit Cum % 6.0% % 6.0% 1.124 % 6.0% 1.191 % 6.0% 1.262 % 4.0% 1.313 % 4.0% 1.365 % 4.0% 1.420 % 2.0% 1.449 % 2.0% 1.477 % 1.507 % 1.537 % 1.568 % 1.599 % 1.631 % 1.664 % 1.697 % 1.731 % 1.766 % 1.801 % 1.837 % 1.874 % 1.911 % 1.950 % 1.989 % 2.028

11 Calendar Year Trend Example
Observed Decay: Yr \ From.. Avg Selection Product

12 Fitted Calendar Year Trends
6% 4% 2%

13 Fitted Decay Parameters
1.8 1.1 0.8 0.5

14 Calendar Year Trend Example
Fitted Points Errors (Fitted - Actual) Avg Error Sum Error sum = 0.0

15 Calendar Year Trend Example
Reserve ,243.9 ,487.9 ,061.7 ,047.8 ,550.0 ,697.5 ,637.3

16 Calendar Year Trend Example
Ultimates Paid Reserves* Regression Model LDF Method To Date Regression Model LDF Method 12, , , 12, , , 13, , , 14, , , , ,384 13, , , , ,572 15, , , , ,450 15, , , , ,481 15, , , , ,912 16, , , , ,196 16, , , , ,793 143, , , , ,916 * In this case, LDF Method produces 8.24% higher reserves

17 Regression Modeling - Limitations
Need a good exposure base Ultimate Claim Count is a preferred measure Poorer fits with other measures Loss Portfolio Transfers vs. Prospective Contracts

18 LPT’s vs. Prospective Contracts
Often can estimate claim count very well Prospective: Estimate future claim count using past relationship to some other exposure base (one more easily predictable/verifiable for next year) Use other exposure base

19 Prospective Contract: Example
Corporate Client, Workers’ Compensation Payroll may be easy to predict next year (budget item, and is auditable) Estimate distribution (mean, volatility, etc.) of claim count as a percentage of payroll Incorporate this volatility into estimate for prospective exposure base

20 Prospective Contracts
P(C) Claim count as % of payroll C Co P(L) Conditional Loss distribution given claim count Co L

21 Prospective Contracts
Conditional Loss given Co Conditional Loss given C1 Conditional Loss given C2 P(L) L|Co L|C1 L|C2 L

22 Prospective Contracts
Conditional Loss given Co Conditional Loss given C1 Conditional Loss given C2 L P(L) L|Co L|C1 L|C2 P(X) Unconditional loss distribution X Unconditional Loss distribution

23 Regression Modeling - Limitations
Not always good for excess/ reinsurance data Zero’s in early development periods cannot model log (data) Varying effect of threshold for excess data year by year In traditional methods there are ways to adjust (eg., Pinto Gogol)

24 Regression Modeling - Limitations
Can only use positive incremental data Again, issue with log (data) Rarely can we model incurred data Usually not a problem with paid data, although issues may occur with recoveries appearing at later maturities

25 Regression Modeling - Limitations
Positive incremental data issue: Two possible solutions? Add a constant value to the entire triangle such that all values are now positive Smoothing the data

26 Regression Modeling - Limitations
Solution #1: Adding A Constant NOT RECOMMENDED. Log (x2+c) / Log (x1+c) does not equal Log(x2) / Log (x1)

27 Regression Modeling - Limitations
Solution #1: Example Suppose the following incremental data: 50, 40, 32, 25.6, ... Decay in natural process is 0.8. However, suppose a value of appeared somewhere earlier on in the triangle….

28 Regression Modeling - Limitations
Solution #1: Example (continued…) Now we model: 150, 140, 132, 125.6, …, Decay parameters are no longer constant: .933, .943, .952,… Now modeling a different process What do you select for future decay?

29 Regression Modeling - Limitations
Solution #2: Smoothing the data Our preferred solution However, must be aware of: Higher goodness of fit statistics Lower volatility estimate (must adjust for this in the end)

30 Regression Modeling - Limitations
Difficult to interpret results Difficult to separate out the effects of three dimensions (Development year, Accident year, and Calendar Year) Three dimensions are difficult to interpret / visualize

31 Regression Modeling - Limitations
In Period Loss Payments Development Year Accident Year

32 Regression Modeling - Limitations
Tail behavior Cannot just run regression out to infinity! Still need external sources to determine length of payout May determine number of future years to pay out using industry tail information and decay parameter

33 Regression Modeling - Limitations
Often not good for situations where difficulty exists using traditional development based methods Long tailed latent claims Other poor data sets (regression models can sometimes be as poor as loss development models)

34 Regression Modeling - Conclusions
Often difficult to use when traditional methods fail However, does provide some very useful additional information which is not provided by other more traditional techniques

35 Regression Modeling - Conclusions (continued)
Still continue to analyze using traditional methods, but use additional information from regression techniques, especially when: results make sense output can be explained


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