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2007 Casualty Loss Reserve Seminar Paul J. Struzzieri, FCAS, MAAA September 10, 2007. Reserving for Title Insurance in a Changing Real Estate Market. Outline. Title Insurance Basics Reserving Framework Actuarial Considerations Current Market Challenges. I) Title Insurance Basics.
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2007 Casualty Loss Reserve Seminar Paul J. Struzzieri, FCAS, MAAA September 10, 2007 Reserving for Title Insurance in a Changing Real Estate Market
Outline • Title Insurance Basics • Reserving Framework • Actuarial Considerations • Current Market Challenges Page 2
I) Title Insurance Basics • The Title Insurance Process • Types of Policies • Unique Issues • Coverage Explained • U.S. Market Share Page 3
The Title Insurance Process • Real estate transaction goes to contract • Deposit placed into escrow account • Title search of public records • Documents examined to understand impact on title • Title commitment (evidence) prepared & compared • Inspections performed; surveys examined • Any problems are corrected • HUD-1 form prepared • Closing - prior liens and mortgages paid off; documents executed; title changes hands • Documents recorded at Clerk’s Office, etc. Page 4
Types of Title Insurance Policies • Purchase Mortgages • Loan Policy – based on loan amount • Owner Policy – based on purchase amt. • Simultaneous Issue Policy • Refinance Mortgages • Lender requires new loan policy • Original owners policy still in force Page 5
Issues Unique to Title Insurance • Title insurance is mono-line • Goal = loss prevention • Low loss ratios (< 10%) • High expense ratios (90%+) • Maintain title plants • Search and examination • Cost to resolve problems Page 6
Unique Issues (continued) • Loss is “incurred” prior to effective date • No stated expiration date • Expires when home is sold or when a mortgage expires or is refinanced • How to earn premium? • Title insurers do not know whether policies are still in-force! • Premium = one time; non-refundable • Buyer pays premiums for both Owners and Lenders policies Page 7
Title Insurance Coverage Basics • Lender’s interests are protected (loan policy) • Owner’s interests are protected (owners) • Coverage includes: • Cost to cure the defect (up to policy amount) • Defense costs (approx 30% to 40% of loss) Page 8
Title Insurance Coverage Causes of Claims • Mistakes in recording legal documents • Incomplete public records • Forgery and fraud • Errors in title search, examination or use of surveys or inspections • Improper closing/escrow procedures • Taxes and assessments • Mechanics’ liens Page 9
Title Insurance Coverage Example #1 • Young couple buys home from widow (whose husband died without a will). • Widow’s step-son shows up and claims a share of the home. • Owner’s title insurance policy pays the missing heir the value of his share. Page 10
Title Insurance Coverage Example #2 • Mortgage is refinanced; new loan policy is issued. • Afterwards, a prior lien is discovered. • For example, an unpaid mortgage. • Lenders title insurance policy will respond by satisfying the prior mortgage. Page 11
U.S. Market Share Page 12
II) Reserving Framework U.S. Statutory • Actuarial Reserves • Annual Statement Schedule P • Statement of Actuarial Opinion • Statutory Reserves • Comparison of Statutory and Actuarial Reserves • Supplement Reserve? Page 13
Actuarial Reserves • Form 9 = Statutory Annual Statement • Schedule P • By Policy Year • By Report Year • Statement of Actuarial Opinion – since 1996 Annual Statement • Opine on total Schedule P reserve • Case + Bulk + IBNR + ULAE • Net of reinsurance only Page 14
Statutory Reserves • Known Claims Reserve = • Case reserves • Bulk reserves (if any) • Statutory Premium Reserve (SPR) = “Unknown” Claims • SPR = Unearned Premium Reserve • Formula = Amount & Take-down Pattern • Supplemental Reserve (if any) Page 15
Comparison of Statutory and Actuarial Reserves • Compare Schedule P reserve against Known Claims Reserve + SPR • Schedule P includes Known Claims, so really testing SPR vs. IBNR (incl. ULAE) • If SPR > IBNR, book SPR • If IBNR > SPR, book SPR + Supplemental Reserve • Supplemental = Excess of IBNR over SPR Page 16
Title Insurance Industry Reserve Comparison @ 12/31/06 Known Claims = $752M SPR = $4,291M Supplemental = $13M Total = $5,056M Schedule P = $3,913M Page 17
III) Actuarial Considerations • Data • Loss development patterns • Trend • Expected loss ratios Page 18
Data Considerations • Title insurers do not know the number of policies in-force • Premium and loss data generally not available separately by: • Commercial vs. Residential • Owner vs. Loan policies • Refi vs. Purchase mortgages • State or region • Agent vs. Direct Page 19
Loss Development Patterns • Schedule P triangles available (20 policy years) • But, tail is longer than 20 years • Loss development patterns influenced by • Economic variables in future periods • Demographics; homeownership patterns • Refi’s extinguish exposure on original loan => Some policy years will develop faster (slower) than other policy years Page 20
Trend Considerations • Premium trends vary with home prices • Severity trends vary with several factors (home prices, wages, etc.) • Frequency trends are cyclical • Large defalcations may disguise loss trends • Underwriting/pricing changes very difficult to measure Page 21
Expected Loss Ratio • ELR difficult to estimate due to data limitations and inability to measure coverage/price changes • Alternative to using explicit trends = Econometric modeling • Mortgage interest rates • Refinance percentage • Supply & demand • Affordability index Page 22
Expected Loss Ratios For example: • ELR for refinance policy is lower than purchase policy? • Years with increasing refi percentages historically have had lower loss ratios • Econometric modeling can be useful to develop relationships between title insurance loss ratios and refinance percentages (or other variables) Page 23
IV) Current Market Challenges • Real Estate Environment • Impact on Claims • Actuarial Implications Page 25
Real Estate Environment • 2001-05 “The Golden Years” • Low mortgage rates • Record homes sales • Staggering increases in property values • Affordability index high • Credit markets loosening • Adjustable mortgage/low initial rates • Borrowing the down-payment • Loans in excess of property value • In this environment, people can borrow their way out of trouble (or sell their homes) Page 26
Real Estate Environment • 2007- ?? “The Perfect Storm” • Falling homes sales • Flat or decreasing property values • Tightening credit markets • Owners unable to borrow (or sell) their way out of trouble • Increasing delinquencies, defaults • Spike in foreclosures Page 27
Impact on Claims • Foreclosure searches trigger wave of reported claims • Increase in frequency • Possibly higher % close no pay • Net effect = ?? • Mortgage fraud on the rise • Large defalcations • Claims not discovered in a rising housing market, but are an issue in a declining one • Higher frequency and severity • Policy Years 2004 – 2006 in particular Page 28
Actuarial Considerations • Any speed-up from foreclosures? • Some claims not in historical data • Sophisticated mortgage frauds involving multiple parties • Regional companies may have different experience, depending on market • Foreclosures high in FL, NV, AZ, CA • Just the beginning of the foreclosures Page 29