1 / 20

2004 CAS RATEMAKING SEMINAR

2004 CAS RATEMAKING SEMINAR. INCORPORATING CATASTROPHE MODELS IN PROPERTY RATEMAKING (PL - 4) PRICING EARTHQUAKE INSURANCE DAVE BORDER, FCAS, MAAA. PRICING EARTHQUAKE INSURANCE. Overview Earthquake Ratemaking Earthquake Modeling Uses of Earthquake Models Whose Fault is it?.

willem
Download Presentation

2004 CAS RATEMAKING SEMINAR

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. 2004 CAS RATEMAKING SEMINAR INCORPORATING CATASTROPHE MODELS IN PROPERTY RATEMAKING (PL - 4) PRICING EARTHQUAKE INSURANCE DAVE BORDER, FCAS, MAAA

  2. PRICING EARTHQUAKE INSURANCE Overview • Earthquake Ratemaking • Earthquake Modeling • Uses of Earthquake Models • Whose Fault is it?

  3. EARTHQUAKE RATEMAKING • Earthquake insurance is typically a separate optional coverage • Wide usage of deductibles • Fire Following exposure • Great variation of pricing • Territorial • Construction

  4. EARTHQUAKE MODELINGComparison with Hurricane • Separate coverage vs. package coverage • Historical data – Future reliability • Frequency estimates – Landfall vs. Fault Rupture • Damage estimation – Advances in both areas

  5. EARTHQUAKE MODELINGAdvantages • Many years of seismological data • Many good sources of geological and seismological data • Paleoseismology – Science of identifying and dating past earthquakes by geological studies • Damageability information by construction type • Current distribution of insured exposure to risk

  6. EARTHQUAKE MODELINGAlphabet Soup • Many sources of historical information • USGS – United States Geological Service • CDMG – California Division of Mines and Geology • SSA – Seismological Society of America • EERI – Earthquake Engineering Research Institute • AGU – American Geophysical Union • SCEC – Southern California Earthquake Center

  7. MODELING BASICS • Simulate location and magnitude of earthquake • Gutenberg-Richter Magnitude • Modified Mercalli Intensity (MMI) • Estimate components of earthquake • Estimate event intensity • Damage estimation

  8. EARTHQUAKE MODEL • For each simulated earthquake: • Establishes probability of occurrence • Establishes focal depth and rupture length • Determines shaking intensity and liquefaction • Determines damageability ratios • Calculates expected damageability ratios at a location for all simulated events • Distance from rupture • Soil conditions

  9. REVIEW OF MODEL • Consistent with guidelines in ASOP 38 (Using Models Outside the Actuary’s Area of Expertise) • Level of geographic detail available to run the model • Is current book of business representative of future book?

  10. MODEL OUTPUT • Very similar to hurricane output • Average Annual Losses and Mean Damageability Ratios (MDR’s) by: • Zip code or portion of zip code in a territory • Building / contents / ALE coverage • Construction type • Occupancy type

  11. ADDITIONAL CONSIDERATIONS • Aftershocks • Debris Removal • Demand Surge • Loss Adjustment Expense • More internal damage • Additional adjusters needed

  12. USES OF EARTHQUAKE MODEL • Determination of earthquake rates • Territorial determination • Deductible pricing • Manage catastrophe exposure • Underwriting criteria • Deductible usage • Reinsurance usage • Damage estimation following an event

  13. TERRITORIAL CONSIDERATIONS • Known fault lines • Blind-thrust faults • Cascading faults • Seismic zones with estimated frequency

  14. TERRITORIAL RATEMAKING • Model – AAL’s and MDR’s based on percentage deductible • Select Deductible requirement • Price alternative deductibles as appropriate • Group zip codes into territories • Cluster based on MDR’s • Reasonability check based on known fault configuration • Different loss costs by construction type

  15. EARTHQUAKE RATEMAKING • Convert loss costs into rate • Incorporate provision for expenses • Agent commission • Other variable and fixed expenses • Profit provision • Great variability of results • Determine overall indicated change

  16. SPECIAL CONSIDERATIONS • State facility established (CEA) • Losses impacting primary policy caused by earthquake • Fire Following • Sprinkler Damage

  17. FIRE FOLLOWING EARTHQUAKE • Fire Following losses are typically covered under primary policy • Must provide modeler with full set of exposure data • Broader exposure set than Earthquake policies • Damage ratio should be incorporated into package rate • Replace actual fire following losses • Low significance in most areas

  18. WHOSE FAULT IS IT? • Arguments exist regarding variation of rupture intensity • Smoothing provides good estimate, or • Each fault has a single rupture point • Return time consideration in annual pricing • Price to the average, or • Consider time since last occurrence

  19. RETURN TIME ARGUMENTS • Increasing time since last event decreases time until next occurrence • Increasing time since last event increases time until next occurrence • Appropriate to use average annual loss

  20. ADDITIONAL REFERENCES • Pricing the Earthquake Insurance Using Modeling • Debra Werland and Joseph Pitts • 1997 Winter Forum • U.S. Earthquake Frequency Estimation – Ratemaking for Unusual Events • Stuart Mathewson • 1999 Winter Forum

More Related