Abstract
Risk management has a central role in corporate America. Insurance companies frequently manage risk by purchasing reinsurance because it reduces the downside risk (i.e., bankruptcy risk) of an insurer. Because reinsurance is costly, Mayers and Smith (1990, Journal of Business, 63: 19-40) argue that reinsurance purchases should be negatively associated with the diversification of the owners' portfolios. Further, institutional owners play a significant role in equity markets yet we know little about their effect on firm behavior. The purpose of this study is to examine empirically the influence of institutional ownership on reinsurance for a sample of widely held property-liability insurers. We hypothesize that insurers with higher levels of institutional ownership purchase less reinsurance. Using a sample of 45 publicly traded property-liability insurers from 1995 to 1997, we demonstrate that the utilization of reinsurance decreases as the level of institutional ownership increases. This suggests that the diversification of the owners' portfolios is a determinant of the insurers' reinsurance decisions.
Volume
Vol. 7, No. 2, Fall
Page
93-106
Year
2004
Categories
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Capital Management
Capital Sources
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Enterprise Risk Management
Practice Areas
Private Entities
Practice Areas
Public Entities
Business Areas
Reinsurance
Practice Areas
Risk Management
Publications
Risk Management and Insurance Review