Abstract
In the wake of the recent catastrophes, a new way of transferring insurance risk was born. In 1993, the Chicago Board of Trade began trading contracts on an index sensitive to insurer catastrophe experience. Such indices provide an insurer a means to transfer a portion of its catastrophe risk to the capital markets by buying future and option contracts. The cost of using these contracts to transfer catastrophe risk is compared to the cost of raising sufficient capital to retain the risk, and the cost of conventional reinsurance. We derive equations that give the optimal participation in the future and option contracts, and in reinsurance. A significant factor in these equations is the coefficient of correlation between the insurer’s experience and the index experience. The cost of using the contracts is then compared to the cost of the capital they replace.
Reinsurance Research
Volume
May
Page
273-296
Year
1996
Categories
Financial and Statistical Methods
Risk Pricing and Risk Evaluation Models
Capital Theory
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Capital Management
Business Areas
Reinsurance
Publications
Casualty Actuarial Society Discussion Paper Program