Measuring Loss Reserve Uncertainty - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 32
About This Presentation
Title:

Measuring Loss Reserve Uncertainty

Description:

What is Loss Reserve Uncertainty (LRU) and why is it important? ... believe that the CV can be legitimately applied to reserve estimates obtained in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:62
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 33
Provided by: irenefe
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Measuring Loss Reserve Uncertainty


1
  • Measuring Loss Reserve Uncertainty
  • William H. Panning
  • EVP, Willis Re
  • Casualty Actuarial Society
  • Annual Meeting, November 2006
  • 2006 Hachemeister Award Presentation

2
Agenda
  • What is Loss Reserve Uncertainty (LRU) and why is
    it important?
  • How does this new method for measuring LRU differ
    from existing methods?
  • How does this new method work and how do we know
    it is accurate?
  • What are the practical advantages and limitations
    of this method?

3
  • What is Loss Reserve Uncertainty (LRU)
  • and why is it important?

4
1.1 What is LRU and why is it important?
  • LRU is a measure of potential loss reserve
    development --the degree to which actual future
    loss payments may ultimately deviate favorably
    or unfavorably from the currently forecast
    amounts that constitute loss reserves
  • LRU differs from pricing uncertainty -- the
    potential deviation between forecast loss (when a
    policy is written) and paid losses plus estimated
    reserve (at the end of an accident year).

5
1.2 Why does measuring LRU matter?
  • ERM LRU is a key component of Enterprise Risk
    Management, which requires measuring and managing
    all of a firms significant risks
  • Capital needs knowing LRU assists a firm in
    determining the appropriate amount of capital to
    hold and whether some risk reduction action may
    be appropriate
  • Interpreting calendar year deviations LRU can
    tell us whether their magnitude is significant
    and worthy of attention
  • Comparisons with other firms are we better or
    worse?

6
1.3 To whom should LRU matter?
  • Issues
  • Estimating surplus adequacy
  • Capital allocation and pricing
  • Managerial feedback is this deviation
    significant?
  • Reinsurance
  • Audiences
  • Management
  • Rating agencies and regulators
  • Analysts and investors
  • Management actuary, CFO, CEO
  • Management
  • Rating agencies
  • Management

7
  • 2. How does this new method for measuring LRU
    differ from existing methods?

8
2.1 How does this new method differ from
existing ones?
  • Existing Methods
  • Most are ad hoc (algorithmic democracy), lack
    criteria for fit
  • Others require costly, opaque software,
    specialized expertise
  • None have been validated
  • Chain ladder focus creates bias
  • Susceptible to statistical pitfalls
  • New Method
  • Based on a standard, minimum squared error linear
    regression
  • Simple, transparent, implemented in Excel
    spreadsheet
  • Validated using simulated data
  • Use of regression minimizes bias
  • Avoids these pitfalls

9
2.2 Additional objectives features of the new
method
  • It should be based on widely-available public
    data
  • Schedule P Part 3 Paid Loss triangles
  • The results should enable comparisons
  • Across different lines of business within a firm
  • For the same line of business across different
    firms
  • Between forecast and actual calendar year
    payments
  • The results should be scalable
  • Unaffected by irrelevant differences in the size
    of reserves
  • Applicable to reserves estimated by other methods

10
  • 3. How does this new method work and
  • how do we know it is accurate?

11
3.1 The starting point Paid Loss Triangles
Note that development years start with DY0
The cumulative numbers in each row converge to
ultimate values.
Reserve sum of ultimates minus boxed diagonal
values
12
3.2 Essential steps in estimating LRU
  • Step 1 Use the numbers already available to find
    a common underlying pattern for estimating future
    loss payments
  • The chain ladder method does this by calculating
    link ratios the average ratio of numbers in a DY
    to the corresponding numbers in the preceding DY
  • Step 2 Measure the variability of the available
    numbers around this underlying pattern
  • Step 3 Use this measure to estimate the
    variability and correlation of forecast future
    payments and total reserve
  • NOTE Steps 2 and 3 depend crucially on doing
    Step 1 correctly

13
3.3 Three statistical pitfalls in Step 1, and
their solutions
  • The chain ladder has no objective criterion for
    measuring and maximizing goodness of fit to
    existing data
  • Solution use linear regression, to minimize
    total squared error
  • The use of cumulative data creates serial
    correlation
  • Solution use incremental data

  • Development year
  • 0
    1
    2 . . .
  • Acc Yr (Aea) (Aea)(Beb)
    (Aea)(Beb)(Cec) . . .
  • 3. Heteroskedasticity (non-constant SD) s(ea)
    ? s(eb) ? s(ec)
  • Solution analyze each development year separately

14
3.4 Estimating reserves from incremental paid
loss data
Use these numbers (X)
To fit these numbers (Y)
Then use these numbers
To forecast these numbers
  • Use linear regression to fit paid losses in
    future DYs (up to DY7), with DY0 as the
    independent variable in all cases
  • Use estimated regression coefficients to forecast
    future loss payments

15
3.5 Steps in calculating the standard deviation
of reserves
  • Use the Salkever (textbook) method to calculate
    the standard deviation of each forecast future
    paid loss
  • Use the linear regression results to calculate
    the variance-covariance matrix of forecast errors
    for each future DY
  • Finally, aggregate these results to obtain LRU by
    Development Year, Calendar Year, and Total Reserve

16
Calculating the SD of Forecast Paid Losses for DY2
17
3.6 How do we know that the method is accurate?
  • We created 10,000 simulated paid loss triangles
    where we knew the true underlying values
    (ultimate paid losses as well as the actual paid
    losses at any given point in the process)
  • We used the new method to estimate ultimate paid
    losses
  • We compared the known true values to the
    estimates obtained from the simulated triangles
  • These estimates were, on average, identical to
    the true values underlying the simulation
  • For estimated reserves
  • For loss reserve uncertainty, which includes
    parameter risk
  • NOTE No other method for estimating LRU has been
    validated (to the best of my knowledge)

18
3.7 Validation statistics
19
  • 4. What are the practical advantages and
    limitations of this method?

20
4.1 Avantage The results of this method are
scalable
  • This method measures LRU in dollars. A better
    measure is the coefficient of variation, or CV,
    which is LRU as a of the estimated reserve
  • CV is unaffected by reserve size, and so can be
    compared
  • across different business lines for the same firm
  • or across the same line for different firms
  • I believe that the CV can be legitimately applied
    to reserve estimates obtained in other ways
    (e.g., using claims data)

21
4.2 Advantage Comparisons across lines of
business
S Coefs Ratio of remaining payments to dollars
paid in initial development year (measures length
of payout) E(Res) Estimated Reserve SD/E(Res)
Coefficient of Variation, or standard deviation
of reserve divided by estimated
reserve SD/E(CY) Coefficient of Variation of
forecast payments in the next Calendar
Year NOTE All results are based on 2003
Schedule P Part 3
22
4.3a Advantage Comparisons across firms PPA
S Coefs Ratio of remaining payments to dollars
paid in initial development year (measures length
of payout) E(Res) Estimated Reserve SD/E(Res)
Coefficient of Variation, or standard deviation
of reserve divided by estimated
reserve SD/E(CY) Coefficient of Variation of
forecast payments in the next Calendar
Year NOTE All results are based on 2003
Schedule P Part 3
23
4.3c Advantage Comparisons across firms WC
S Coefs Ratio of remaining payments to dollars
paid in initial development year (measures length
of payout) E(Res) Estimated Reserve SD/E(Res)
Coefficient of Variation, or standard deviation
of reserve divided by estimated
reserve SD/E(CY) Coefficient of Variation of
forecast payments in the next Calendar
Year NOTE All results are based on 2003
Schedule P Part 3
24
4.4a Comparisons of forecast versus actual
paids WC
25
4.4b Comparisons of forecast versus actual
paids CMP
26
4.5a Limitations of this method data
peculiarities
27
4.5b Limitations of this method data
peculiarities
28
4.5c Limitations of this method data
peculiarities
29
4.6 What are the limitations of this method?
  • Some versions of this method permit a gradual
    speedup or slowdown in payment patterns over
    time, but otherwise it assumes a stable past and
    future environment with regard to
  • Underwriting criteria
  • Exposure types
  • Reinsurance parameters
  • Legal and Regulatory environments
  • Estimating the tail is difficult with this method
    as with others
  • It necessarily relies on public data, and so does
    not reflect claims-level data available only to
    the firm

30
  • 5. Conclusions

31
5.1 Conclusions
  • This method produces validated results
  • It is the only method that has been validated
  • It is reasonably simple
  • It avoids serious statistical pitfalls
  • It is based on standard textbook methods
  • It can be implemented in a spreadsheet
  • It can be explained to colleagues and superiors
  • It enables intra-firm comparisons of different
    lines of business
  • It enables comparisons of a line of business
    across firms
  • It enables detection of emerging problems that
    need attention

32
5.2 How can I learn more about this method?
  • Send me an email at
  • Bill.Panning_at_Willis.com
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com