Insurance Capital as a Shared Asset

Abstract
Merton and Perold (1993) offered a framework for determining risk capital in a financial firm based on the cost of the implicit guarantee the firm provides to tis subsidiaries to make up any operating shortfall. Merton and Perold assume the price of such guarantees is observable from the market at large. For an insurer, this may not be a realistic assumption. This paper proposes an insurance-specific framework for determining the cost of those parental guarantees, and utilizing that cost in pricing and portfolio mix evaluation. An insurer's capital is treated as a shared asset, with the insurance contracts in the portfolio having simultaneous rights to access potentially all that shared capital. By granting underwriting capacity, an insurer's management team is implicitly issuing a set of options to draw upon the common capital pool - similar in structure to letters of credit (LOC), except they are not loans but grants. The paper will (i) discuss the valuation of parental guarantees, beginning with Merton and Perold; (ii) off a method for determining insurer capital as a shared asset and explore the dual nature of insurer capital usage; (iii) offer a method for determining insurer capital usage cost; and (iv) demonstrate how this method could be used for product pricing and portfolio mix evaluation using economic value added concepts.
Volume
Fall
Page
573 - 586
Year
2006
Categories
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Enterprise Risk Management
Risk Categories
Hazard Risks
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Capital Management
Capital Requirements
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Dynamic Risk Modeling
Dynamic Financial Analysis (DFA);
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Valuation
Economic Value Added
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Ratemaking
Large Loss and Extreme Event Loading
Financial and Statistical Methods
Risk Pricing and Risk Evaluation Models
RAROC
Publications
Casualty Actuarial Society E-Forum
Authors
Donald F Mango