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Earnings volatility concerns drive reinsurance buying - Willis Towers Watson

Source: Asia Insurance Review | Aug 2018

Global Reinsurance

According to a recent international survey of insurers by Willis Towers Watson, pressure from investors are causing insurers to become less tolerant of missed earnings targets. They are moving to more sophisticated metrics such as return on equity and economic capital as a result.
 
The Global Reinsurance and Risk Appetite Survey Report 2017/2018 stated that reinsurance is used increasingly for earnings protection and volatility reduction by insurers whose purchasing is guided by ‘risk appetite statements’ deployed to optimise capital management and profitability targets. Eighty per cent of insurers consider their risk appetite statements when defining their reinsurance strategies.
 
Of 260 insurers from 51 countries surveyed, 98% have adopted a formal risk approach, or intend to within three years. Respondents’ enterprise risk management capabilities have improved, but more progress is needed to achieve companies’ risk-culture goals. Meanwhile, most respondents said that cyber is their main risk concern, due largely to difficulties in defining and managing cyber both from the underwriting and operational perspectives.
 
“Managing the volatility of underwriting results is of prime importance to insurers, and reinsurance strategy measured by risk appetite is key to that,” says Willis Re global CEO James Kent. “This is particularly relevant for public companies where perceived volatility can severely impact share price, but also a wider range of insurers are now much more likely to consider a broad range of consolidated earnings metrics such when assessing the impact of reinsurance. Our survey shows that the number of non-life insurers using rate of return on equity as their primary earnings metric has doubled in the past two years. This is in line with what we are currently experiencing in the field when realigning reinsurance programmes to insurers’ strategies.”
 
The survey also shows that although regulatory capital is still the most relevant capital measure, economic and catastrophe risk capital are gaining momentum, and the use of internal capital models has increased substantially from a third to more than half of insurers between 2016 and 2017. A 
 
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