Reinsurance as Capital Optimization Tool under Solvency II

This paper compares solvency capital requirements under Solvency I and Solvency II for a sample mid-size insurance portfolio. According to the results of a study, changing the solvency capital regime from Solvency I to Solvency II will lead to a substantial additional solvency capital requirement that might represent a heavy burden for the company's shareholders. One way to reduce the capital requirement under Solvency II is to increase reinsurance protection, which will reduce the net retained risk exposure and hence also the solvency capital requirement. Therefore, this paper proposes an extended reinsurance structure that, under Solvency II, brings the capital requirement back to the level of that required under Solvency I. In a step-by-step approach, the paper demonstrates the extent of solvency relief attained by the insurer by applying different possible adjustments in the reinsurance structure. To evaluate the efficiency of reinsurance as the solvency capital relief instrument, the authors introduce a cost-of-capital based approach, which puts the achieved capital relief in relation to the costs of extending the reinsurance protection. This approach allows a direct comparison of reinsurance as a capital relief instrument with debt instruments available in the capital market. With the help of the introduced approach, the authors show that the best capital relief efficiency under all examined reinsurance alternatives is achieved when a financial quota share contract is chosen for proportional reinsurance.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gurenko, Eugene N., Itigin, Alexander
Format: Policy Research Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2013-01
Subjects:ACCOUNTS, ACTUARIES, AMOUNT OF RISK, BORROWING COSTS, CAPITAL MARKET, CAPITAL MARKETS, CAPITAL REQUIREMENT, CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS, CATASTROPHE BONDS, CATASTROPHES, COMMISSIONS, COST OF CAPITAL, COVERAGE, CREDIT DEFAULT, CREDIT QUALITY, CREDIT RATINGS, CREDIT RISK, CREDIT RISK EXPOSURE, DEBT, DEBT INSTRUMENTS, DEBTORS, DEFAULT PROBABILITIES, DEFAULT RISK, EARNED PREMIUM, EARTHQUAKE, EMERGING MARKET, EMERGING MARKETS, EXCESS OF LOSS REINSURANCE, EXCESS OF LOSS REINSURANCE CONTRACT, FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT, FIRE, FLOOD, INSTRUMENT, INSURANCE CLAIMS, INSURANCE COMPANY, INSURANCE PREMIUM, INSURANCE RISK, INSURED EVENTS, INSURER, INTERNATIONAL BANK, LIABILITY, LIABILITY INSURANCE, LIFE INSURANCE CONTRACT, LIFE INSURANCE CONTRACTS, LOSS RATIO, MARKET BENCHMARKS, MARKET PRICE, MARKET REGULATOR, MARKET RISK, NATURAL CATASTROPHE, NATURAL CATASTROPHES, NON-LIFE INSURANCE, NONPROPORTIONAL REINSURANCE, ORIGINAL CONTRACTS, PENSIONS, POLICYHOLDERS, PORTFOLIO, PREMIUMS, PROFIT MARGIN, PROGRAMS, PROPORTIONAL REINSURANCE, QUOTA SHARE REINSURANCE, RATES, RECOVERABLES, REINSURANCE, REINSURANCE COMMISSION, REINSURANCE COMPANIES, REINSURANCE CONTRACT, REINSURANCE CONTRACTS, REINSURANCE MARKETS, REINSURANCE PREMIUMS, REINSURER, REINSURERS, RELIEF, RESERVE, RESERVES, RETURN, RISK = CAPITAL, RISK CAPITAL, RISK MANAGEMENT, RISK MITIGATION, RISK TAKING, RISK TRANSFER, SHAREHOLDERS, SOLVENCY, TERRORISM, UNDERWRITING, VALUE OF COLLATERAL,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/01/17151391/reinsurance-capital-optimization-tool-under-solvency-ii
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12188
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