Risk-Minimizing Hedging Strategies for Unit-Linked Life Insurance Contracts

Abstract
A unit-linked life insurance contract is a contract where the insurance benefits depend on the price of some specific traded stocks We consider a model describing the uncertainty of the financial market and a portfolio of insured individuals simultaneously. Due to incompleteness the insurance claims cannot be hedged completely by trading stocks and bonds only, leaving some risk to the insurer. The theory of risk-minimization is briefly reviewed and applied after a change of measure. Risk-minimizing trading strategies and the associated intrinsic risk processes are determined for different types of unit-linked contracts by extending the model to the situation where certain reinsurance contracts on the insured lives are traded, the direct insurer can eliminate the risk completely The corresponding self- financing strategies are determined. Keywords: Incomplete market, Martingale representation, Minimal martingale measure, Intrinsic risk, Reinsurance.
Volume
28:1
Page
17-48
Year
1998
Categories
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Investments
Portfolio Strategy
Business Areas
Other Lines of Business
Publications
ASTIN Bulletin
Authors
Thomas Moller