Modeling Mortgage Insurance Claims Experience: A Case Study

Abstract
Mortgage insurance indemnifies a mortgage lender against loss on default by the borrower. The sequence of events leading to a claim under this type of insurance is relatively complex, depending not only on the credit worthiness of the borrower but also on a number of external economic factors. Prominent among these external factors are the loan to valuation ratio of the insured loan, the disposable income of the borrower, and movements in property values. A broad theoretical model of the functional dependencies of claim frequency and average claim size on these variables is established in Sections 6 and 7. Section 8 fits these models, extended by other "internal" variables such as the geographic location of the mortgaged property, to a real data set. Section 9 compares the fitted model with the data, and finds an acceptable fit despite extreme fluctuations in the claims experience recorded in the data set.
Volume
24:1
Page
97-129
Year
1994
Categories
Financial and Statistical Methods
Loss Distributions
Extreme Values
Financial and Statistical Methods
Loss Distributions
Frequency
Financial and Statistical Methods
Statistical Models and Methods
Regression
Financial and Statistical Methods
Loss Distributions
Severity
Business Areas
Other Lines of Business
Publications
ASTIN Bulletin
Prizes
Hachemeister Prize
Authors
Greg C Taylor