Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T16:33:46.885Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Pricing Risk Transfer Transactions1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2014

Morton N. Lane*
Affiliation:
Lane Financial LLC, Kenilworth, USA
*
Lane Financial LLC, 321 Melrose Avenue, Kenilworth, IL 60043-1136, USA
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Should the pricing of reinsurance catastrophes be related to the price of the default risk embedded in corporate bonds?

If not, why not?

A risk is a risk is a risk, in whatever market it appears. Shouldn't the risk-prices in these different markets be comparable? More basically perhaps, how should reinsurance prices and bond prices be set? How does the market currently set them? These questions are central to the inquiry contained in this paper.

Avoiding unnecessary suspense, our answers are: Yes, cat prices should be related to credit prices because both risks contain a characteristic trade-off between the frequency of and severity of adverse events. We leave the question of how prices should be set to others and focus on the empirical question of how they have been set by the markets. In the process, we develop a fairly robust pricing mechanism and explore its potential uses in many different contexts.

The 1999 Insurance-Linked Securities (ILS) market (a.k.a., Cat Bond market) provides the empirical springboard to the discussion. The ILS market is only 4 years old. As such, it represents a new and unique intersection of reinsurance and financial markets. It provides a wonderful laboratory for exploring risk-pricing.

The ILS market, still in its experimental phase, appears to require more generous (cheap) pricing of insurance risk than does the bond market of default risk. So much so that academics have begun to weigh in on the question of why. Previously, insurance pricing discussions had been confined to practicing insurance professionals, particularly actuaries. For finance professionals, insurance pricing, much less reinsurance pricing, seldom made the index of their financial texts – though even that is beginning to change.

Type
Invited Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Actuarial Association 2000

Footnotes

1

This paper was presented on June 22, 2000, as a keynote speech at the AFIR 2000 Colloquium in Tromsø, Norway.

References

1.Bantwal, V.J. and Kunreuther, H. C. (2000) A Cat Bond Premium Puzzle? In The Journal of Psychology and Financial Markets, Vol. 1, No.1, 7691.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2.Blume, M.E., Donald, B.K. and Sa, A.P. (1991) Returns and the Volatility of Low Grade Bonds. Journal of Finance 44: 909922.Google Scholar
3.Canabarro, E., Finkemeier, M., Anderson, R.R. and Bendimerad, F.Analyzing Insurance-Linked Securities,” The Journal of Risk Finance, Volume 1, No. 2, 4975.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
4.DeRosa-Farag, S., Blau, J., Matousek, P., Chandra, I., Jaggi, H. and Reiff, A. (1998) Default Rates in the High Yield Market: An Examination Within the Context of Overall Market Risk. Donaldson, Lufkin 7 Jenrette Securities Corporation.Google Scholar
5.Elton, E., and Martin, J.G. (2000) Explaining the Rate Spread on Corporate Bonds forthcoming. Journal of Finance.Google Scholar
6.Froot, K.A. and Posner, S. (2000) Issues in the Pricing of Catastrophe Risk. Guy Carpenter Marsh & McLennan Securities White Papers. May 2000. <http://www.guycarp.com/publications/white/whitep.html>Google Scholar
7.Kealhofer, S., Kwok, S. and Weng, W. (1998) Uses and Abuses of Bond Default Rates. KMV, LLC: Industry Insider: Technical Papers. 3 March 1998. <http://www.kmv.com/docs/documents.html>Google Scholar
8.Kreps, R.E. (1990) Reinsurer Risk Loads from Marginal Surplus Requirements. PCAS LXXVII, 1990.Google Scholar
9.Kreps, R.E. (1998) Investment-Equivalent Reinsurance Pricing. 1998 PCAS Proceedings. Also available from Guy Carpenter Instrat Publications, 14 February 2000. <http://www.guycarp.com/products/dorweil/kreps.html>Google Scholar
10.Lane, M.N. and Beckwith, R.G. (2000) Trends in the Insurance-Linked Securities Market. Lane Financial L.L.C. Trade Notes, May 31, 2000. <http://www.lanefinancialllc.com>Google Scholar
11.Lane, M.N. and Movchan, O.Y. (1999) Risk Cubes or Price, Risk and Ratings (Part II). Sedgwick Lane Financial LLC Trade Notes, March 15, 1999. <http://www.lanefinancialllc.com>Google Scholar
12.Lane, M.N. (1998) Price, Risk and Ratings for Insurance-Linked Notes: Evaluating Their Position in Your Portfolio. Derivatives Quarterly, Spring 1998. Based on a presentation made before the conference, “Rethinking Insurance Regulation 1998” sponsored by the Competitive Enterprise Institute in Washington, DC on April 13, 1998. <http://www.lanefinancialllc.com>Google Scholar
13.Lane, M.N. (1997) A Year of Structuring Furiously: Promises, Promises… Sedgwick Lane Financial LLC Trade Notes, January 31, 1997. Also published in Energy Insurance Review, Spring 1997. <http://www.lanefinancialllc.com>Google Scholar
14.Litzenberger, R.H., Beaglehole, D.R. and Reynolds, C.E. (1996) Assessing Catastrophe Reinsurance-linked Securities as a New Asset Class. Journal of Portfolio Management (December): 7686.Google Scholar
15.Mango, D. (1999) Risk Load and the Default Rate of Surplus. In Casualty Actuarial Society 1999 Discussion Papers on Securitization Risk, <http://www.casact.org/pubs/dpp/dpp99/index.htm>Google Scholar
16.Modigliani, L. (1997) Investment Strategy: Are Hedge Funds Worth the Risk? In Morgan Stanley U.S. Investment Research (December 12, 1997).Google Scholar
17.Van de Castle, K. and Keisman, D. (1999) Recovering Your Money: Insights Into Losses From Defaults. In Standard & Poor's Credit Week, June 16, 1999, 2934.Google Scholar