1 / 15

Financial Frictions: No Country for Old Cost Accountants

John A. Major, ASA. Financial Frictions: No Country for Old Cost Accountants. RCM-1 Logic, Fallacies, and Paradoxes in Risk/Profit Loading in Ratemaking. Modigliani & Miller (1958). If: taxes are neutral capital markets are efficient borrowing and lending are fair

viola
Download Presentation

Financial Frictions: No Country for Old Cost Accountants

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. John A. Major, ASA Financial Frictions: No Country for Old Cost Accountants RCM-1 Logic, Fallacies, and Paradoxes in Risk/Profit Loading in Ratemaking

  2. Modigliani & Miller (1958) • If: • taxes are neutral • capital markets are efficient • borrowing and lending are fair • financing decisions are uninformative • no bankruptcy cost • Then: • Leverage (gearing) doesn’t matter • Dividend policy doesn’t matter • Risk management doesn’t matter • But: • they do!

  3. What is a financial friction? • Something that violates M&M assumptions. • Explains why leverage, dividend policy, and r.m. do matter. • Examples: • taxes • transaction costs • capital market restrictions • agency problems • bankruptcy costs • customer credit sensitivity • information asymmetry

  4. Why care about financial frictions? • Fair value of liabilities • Fair value accounting • Economic balance sheet • Market Consistent Embedded Value • Convergence: securitization / insuratization • CFO as risk manager

  5. Modeling frictions is not just about estimating costs • Typical approach • pick a friction (e.g. agency cost of holding capital) • relate it to an underlying quantity (e.g., amount of surplus) • find or guess a cost rate or spread (e.g., 2%) • multiply • Voilà! We have our frictional cost. • Insert as a line item into valuation. • As you will see in the following example (working paper available) • this makes no sense at all • (possible exception: double taxation)

  6. 1930 Cramér-Lundberg model compound Poisson loss outflow capital (equity, surplus, risk reserve) constant premium inflow ruin W t Filip Lundberg Harald Cramér

  7. 1957 de Finetti model dividends to shareholders Bruno de Finetti

  8. Optimal dividends Optimal dividend strategy maximizes the shareholder value of the firm. (Ignoring signaling effects.) friction: bankruptcy terminates operations and dividend flows

  9. Typical solution is a “dividend barrier” dividend payments instead of retained earnings “dividend barrier” W t

  10.  Expected net profits = $0.5 above, -$0.25 below ratings boundary. Can still make a profit under the boundary – with some luck What is optimal dividend policy? What is market value of the firm? Model insurance company Surplus (W) currently = $9, BCAR = 180, ratings boundary at W = $5. friction: customer risk aversion Inflow = $1/yr above boundary, $0.25/yr below boundary. friction: external finance not available Cat risk l = 0.5; exponential severity: mean = $1. Valuation rate r is 1%.

  11. But wait! Let’s make it more interesting… • Available XOL program modifies net cat losses • Attachment = $3 (41-yr RetPer), limit = $1 (110-yr RetPer). • Full cover Expected Loss = $0.016, r/i premium = $0.070 • Purchase any fraction of cover U, 0-100%, paying prorata premium. • Applies to all cats, no reinstatement premium required. • What is optimal utilization U? What value does it add to the firm? friction: risk management is costly

  12. Solution Ratings cliff Franchise value M-W climbs rapidly around cliff, then levels off. Constant above W=15.4 Value of the firm M Rein- surance strategy Purchase reinsurance when W between 8, 10. Above, not worth it; below, not effective enough U Optimal capital = 15.4; dividend above that, retain earnings below. If W<2, go out of business. Dividend strategy D Dividend back to left edge

  13. Shareholder value added by XOL U Utilization Value added =M(w;Uopt) - M(w;U=0) D M Note: availability of XOL adds value, even for states of W where it is not being purchased; this is the value of holding a reinsurance purchase option.

  14. If recapitalization is available friction: external finance is costly • If costly, depends on cost • As cost is lowered from “infinite” to zero… • optimal capital level (div barrier) steadily moves down • value of the firm steadily increases • “go out of business” threshold is pushed down and out • recapitalization is used everywhere under the ratings cliff (W=5) • XOL purchase at 8 ≤ W ≤ 10 is gradually zeroed out • XOL purchase comes in again at 5 ≤ W ≤ 6 • XOL purchase zeroed out again as recapitalization is used above the ratings cliff • At zero cost, a version of Modigliani-Miller results • optimal capital at W = 7.5: to dividend above, recapitalize below • no reinsurance

  15. Conclusion: “frictional effects” are complex phenomena • Nonlinear • Interact with each other • Dynamic • operate on probability distribution of future earnings trajectories • Interact with management strategies • Not generally amenable to cost-accounting approach

More Related