The Winner - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The Winner

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William Saroyan (on his deathbed) The winner's curse applies to reinsurance ... Result from admittedly made-up bid distribution simulations: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Winner


1
The Winners Curse in Reinsurance
  • . . . I have always believed an exception would
    be made in my case."    
  • William Saroyan (on his deathbed)
  • The winners curse applies to reinsurance
  • Easier to understand in fac

Chris Svendsgaard Swiss Re Cas. Actuaries in
Reins. 2004
2
The Winners Curse in Reinsurance Outline
  • What it is
  • Useful applications
  • Why things tend to turn out worse than expected
    (HELLOOOO RED SOX FANS!)
  • Why underwriters whine about the actuaries so
    much
  • The value of accuracyis it worth hiring
    actuaries?
  • How competition affects profit
  • A (the?) source of risk aversion
  • How to measure risk

Chris Svendsgaard Swiss Re Cas. Actuaries in
Reins. 2004
3
The Winners Curse
  • Quotes incorporate randomness
  • The auction is won by the lowest quote
  • This creates a bias
  • The expected value of the minimum of (say) 5
    bids is lower than the expected value of the
    average bid

Chris Svendsgaard Swiss Re Cas. Actuaries in
Reins. 2004
4
Sources of randomness
  • Variations in judgment
  • Selection of data to use, cleaning the data
  • Also sample error sometimes
  • Selection of method(s) to use
  • Getting loss costs
  • Allocating expenses
  • Setting profit provision
  • Reflecting potential investment income
  • Selection of parameters

Chris Svendsgaard Swiss Re Cas. Actuaries in
Reins. 2004
5
Lowest Quote Wins Auction
  • This is true for small certs
  • For larger certs and treaties, reinsurers take
    shares and pricing is often on a best terms
    basis
  • Auction theory can be modified to handle this

Chris Svendsgaard Swiss Re Cas. Actuaries in
Reins. 2004
6
The Bias
  • Do people adjust their bids to counteract
    winners curse bias?
  • "It is important to keep in mind that rationality
    is an assumption in economics, not a demonstrated
    fact." Richard H. Thaler, The Winner's Curse
  • "these paradoxes are of relatively little
    significance for economics." Hirshleifer and
    Riley, The Analytics of Uncertainty and
    Information (discussing departures of
    decision-makers from rationality).

Chris Svendsgaard Swiss Re Cas. Actuaries in
Reins. 2004
7
  • Economists do not agree with one another
  • Duh

Chris Svendsgaard Swiss Re Cas. Actuaries in
Reins. 2004
8
Why things tend to turn out worse than expected
  • Your average bid has ample profit built in
  • The bids you win do not

Chris Svendsgaard Swiss Re Cas. Actuaries in
Reins. 2004
9
Why underwriters complain
  • Were higher than the market 80 of the time.
  • Well, if there are 5 bidders,
  • The average bid tends to be more accurate than
    individual bids and gets more accurate as you add
    bidders
  • The winning bid ( the market) is biased
    downwards and the bias gets worse as you add
    bidders
  • The market is your stupdiest competitor

Chris Svendsgaard Swiss Re Cas. Actuaries in
Reins. 2004
10
The Value of Accuracy
  • Without adjustment More accurate ? lower
    variance of bid ? Less WC bias (BUT hit less
    often)
  • Result from admittedly made-up bid distribution
    simulations
  • Being smarter than everybody else is nice
  • Being stupider than everybody else is horrible

Chris Svendsgaard Swiss Re Cas. Actuaries in
Reins. 2004
11
Extreme values in big populations are more extreme
Chris Svendsgaard Swiss Re Cas. Actuaries in
Reins. 2004
12
The effect of competition
Simulation of gamma-distributed bids (mean 2,
variance as given. iid) Mean winning bid
Chris Svendsgaard Swiss Re Cas. Actuaries in
Reins. 2004
13
Useful facts
  • Random sample X1 Xn
  • X(k) kth largest (order statistic)
  • Distribution function of X(1) is 1 1 - F(x)n.
  • Example Min of n expontials is also exponential
    with new mean old mean/n
  • F(X(k) ) is Beta(k, n k 1)
  • Mean k/(n 1)

Chris Svendsgaard Swiss Re Cas. Actuaries in
Reins. 2004
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