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Solvency II: Future Regulatory Capital Requirements

CAS CARE Seminar, June 2005. Solvency II: Future Regulatory Capital Requirements. Susan Witcraft. Agenda. Changing Financial Environment Changing Regulatory Standards Concept of Solvency II Determination of Solvency Capital Requirement (SCR) Reinsurance Implications of Solvency II

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Solvency II: Future Regulatory Capital Requirements

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  1. CAS CARE Seminar, June 2005 Solvency II:Future Regulatory Capital Requirements Susan Witcraft

  2. Agenda • Changing Financial Environment • Changing Regulatory Standards • Concept of Solvency II • Determination of Solvency Capital Requirement (SCR) • Reinsurance Implications of Solvency II • Alignment of Regulatory and Economic Capital

  3. Financial Conglomerate Bank entities Insurance entities Regulatory Environment Accounting Environment Basel II IFRS Solvency II IFRS Changing Financial Environment • Broad Conclusions: • Higher minimum capital likely • Transparency • Robust risk managementsystem crucial • Consistency • Transparency • More volatility Interdependencies

  4. Changing Regulatory Standards Solvency II – Background • Current Solvency I inadequately reflects risk profile of insurers = establishment of new complex solvency system • Solvency II applicable for EU domiciled (re-)insurers • Solvency II is interlinked with developments of IASB • Consistent definition of capital resources available • Solvency II will likely shift risk management approach in the insurance industry • Burden placed on company to defend its capital adequacy Solvency II moves toward a more risk-based architecture encouraging companies to properly measure and manage risks

  5. Assets Equity & Liabilities Investments (partially) at fair value Capital Insurance Reserves fair value? Impact of IFRS on future Solvency Rules • Main areas IFRS will influence Solvency II regulations: • Determination of capital resources available • Measurement of insurance reserves • Increased transparency

  6. Solvency II - Timetable • Comite Europeen des Assurances (CEA) published comparative study on solvency regimes March 2005 • CEA: The European Federation of National Insurance Associations • Committee of European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Supervisors (CEIOPS) published third-wave call in Spring 2005 • CEIOPS: European umbrella organisation for national regulators • EU publishing framework based on CEIOPS and CEA recommendations, targeted for 2006 • European Framework Directive published Q2 2006? • Framework Directive will determine first substantial results as guideline for insurance industry • Directive finalised and agreed 2008? • Implementation of Directive in local regulations 2009/10?

  7. Pillar I Quantitative requirements • Capital Requirement • Minimum Capital Requirement (MCR) • Solvency Capital Requirement (SCR) • Standardized model • Internal model Quantification insurance reserves Investment rules Solvency II – 3-Pillars 3-Pillar Approach Pillar II Pillar III Supervisory review process Transparency Internal control & risk management Disclosures Intervention powers and responsibilities of supervisors Reporting requirements Within Solvency II framework, determination of SCR will be one of the major issues

  8. Insurance Risk Management Framework Risk Environment Risk Categories

  9. Solvency II – Determination of SCR • SCR likely follows a risk-based capital approach covering all major risk categories of an insurer, not only underwriting risk • Calculation of SCR will be most likely based on • Standardized model or • Internal model or • Combination of both standardized and internal model (partial internal model)

  10. Solvency II – Calculation of SCR • Current approaches to anticipate calculation of SCR vary across Europe • UK, Swiss and Dutch most recently reformed their domestic regimes • ECR calculations have shown that majority of UK non-life insurers are faced with significantly higher capital requirements • German Regulator (BaFin) and Insurance Association (GDV) currently working on a standard model to anticipate Solvency II (expected mid 2005) • Guy Carpenter Recommendation: • Insurers that have not yet started to assess future capital adequacy are advised to benchmark with existing regulatory capital adequacy measures • Capital Adequacy Projector

  11. Solvency IIAnticipated Standardized Factor Based Model Solvency II- solvency capital (Standardised Model) Standardised model Solvency I (net-) Premiums (net-) Premiums lines of business (net-) claims/ -reserves (net-) reserves lines of business Credit risk (reinsurance recoverables) Other risks or risk categories are not addressed investment / asset risk Possibly other risks such as operational risk

  12. Solvency II Evaluation of Capital Requirements Approximation of regulatory capital benchmarks…: Approximation of rating agencies’ capital requirements….:

  13. Solvency II – FSA (UK) – Approach Comparison ofICG to Actual Company Calculation / FSA Review Soft Test Actual Capital Resources Individual Capital Guidance (ICG) BASED ON FSA REVIEW OF ICA AND ECR Hard Test Internal Capital Assessment (ICA) Enhanced Capital Requirement (ECR) Minimum Capital Requirement (MCR) (Solvency I) BENCHMARK

  14. Solvency II – Internal Models • An internal model is a risk-based capital model developed by the management (DFA-concept) • Development of full-scale and partial internal models will be likely encouraged by regulators • Partial internal models would ease the move from standardized models to full-scale internal models • Both full-scale and partial internal models are subject to regulatory approval • Will regulators be prepared? Internally modeled capital will likely be benchmarked with risk capital based on standardized model by regulator

  15. Solvency II – Reinsurance Implications • Reinsurance constitutes exchange of insurance risk (primarily underwriting & accumulation) for asset risk • Asset risk carries a lower capital charge than insurance risk, thus reinsurance can be an effective way to manage regulatory capital needs • Factor based models do not distinguish between proportional and non-proportional reinsurance • Risk mitigating effect of non-proportional reinsurance compared to ceding of profits are reflected more adequately within simulation based models Accumulation risk reduction impact of reinsurance has most likely to be considered in both standardized and internal models

  16. Treatment of Accumulation Risk • Current regulatory guidelines as to ability to withstand catastrophic events • Australia Prudential Requirements • Internal model: reduce probability of default to 1 in 200 year • Prescribed method: add net 1 in 250 PML to minimum capital • U.K Internal Capital Adequacy Standards • Internal model: reduce probability of default to 1 in 200 year • U.S. Risk-Based Capital • No specific requirements • Revised German model (BaFin/GDV) will most likely require additional capital for NATCAT exposure (1 in 200 storm) Will there be pressure to raise limits under Solvency II?

  17. Credit Risk under Solvency II • Concentration in credit risk to be considered • FSA (UK) monitors annual premiums ceded to one reinsurer (group) to 20% • FSA (UK) monitors total recoverables from any one insurance group not to exceed 100% of capital resources • Rating of reinsurers to be factored in • The higher the rating of a reinsurer the lesser capital is needed • Increasing tendency to cover credit risk arising from reinsurance recoverables • Retrospective and prospective coverage reinsurance solutions Diversification and quality of reinsurance recoverables will become more important

  18. Dual Effect of Reinsurance on Solvency Rules • Reinsurance provides: • Capital relief in MCR and especially SCR as discussed • Protection of capital resources available defined as • Equity according to balance sheet (local GAAP or IFRS) adjusted by items such as • Non-admissible assets • Hybrid capital • Off-balance sheet items When evaluating impact of reinsurance both risk capital relief and coverage of capital resources available have to be taken into account

  19. Adequate Capitalization: Competing Interests of Stakeholders Companies generally start with management view and compare against views of other interested parties

  20. Economic Capital Covers Unexpected Losses Potential Losses Expected Losses Unexpected Losses Require capital to protect policyholder interests Taken into account in pricing and valuation decisions Projection of expected result Avoids cyclical pricing behaviour Capital requirements Solvency II The starting point for Solvency II is that financial strength should only cover unexpected losses. Expected losses should be included in pricing and valuation decisions. Henrik Bjerre-Nielsen, Chairman of CEIOPS, 18 June 2004

  21. Regulatory Capital based on Economic Capital • Economic capital as realistic measure for required regulatory capital • Commensurate with risk-based capital • Companies using internal DFA based models are better able to align internal management goals with regulatory requirements • Prerequiste: internal models are approved by regulator • Companies having no internal models in place • Application of standardized model – most likely factor-based - to fulfill regulatory requirements • Factor-based models are conceptually inadequate for internal management purposes • Companies are faced with co-existence of regulatory and management capital perspectives

  22. CAS CARE Seminar, June 2005 Solvency II:Future Regulatory Capital Requirements Susan Witcraft

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