ACTEX Study Manual for CAS Exam 5 - ACTEX / Mad River€¦ · ACTEX Study Manual for CAS Exam 5...
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Learn Today. Lead Tomorrow. ACTEX Learning
ACTEX Study Manual for
CAS Exam 5 Fall 2016 Edition Volume I
Peter J. Murdza, Jr., FCAS
ACTEX LearningNew Hartford, Connecticut
ACTEX Study Manual for
CAS Exam 5 Fall 2016 Edition
Volume I
Peter J. Murdza, Jr., FCAS
Copyright © 2016, ACTEX Learning, a division of SRBooks Inc.
ISBN: 978-1-62542-739-7
Printed in the United States of America.
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Learn Today. Lead Tomorrow. ACTEX Learning
ACTEX CAS Exam 5 Study Manual, Fall 2016 Edition
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ACTEX Learning CAS Exam 5 – Peter J. Murdza
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Volume I
BASIC RATEMAKING TECHNIQUES 1. Werner 1 “Introduction” 1 2. Werner 3 “Ratemaking Data” 11 3. Werner 4 “Exposures” 23 4. Werner 5 “Premium” 45 5. Werner 6 “Losses and LAE” 103 6. Werner 7 “Other Expenses and Profit” 171 7. Werner 8 “Overall Indication” 189 8. Werner 9 “Traditional Risk Classification” 253 9. Werner 10 “Multivariate Classification” 297 10. Werner 11 “Special Classification” 315 11. Werner 12 “Credibility” 395 12. Werner 13 “Other Considerations” 425 13. Werner 14 “Implementation” 433
Volume II
14. Werner 15 “Commercial Lines Rating Mechanisms” 471 15. Werner 16 “Claims-Made Ratemaking” 521 16. ASOP 13 “Trending Procedures in Property/Casualty Insurance Ratemaking” 553 17. CAS Ratemaking “Statement of Principles Regarding P&C Insurance Ratemaking” 561 18. ASOP 12 “Risk Classification Statement of Principles” 573
UNPAID CLAIM ESTIMATION
19. Friedland 1 “Overview” 579 20. Friedland 2 “The Claims Process” 587 21. Friedland 3 “Understanding the Types of Data Used in Estimation of Unpaid Claims” 591 22. Friedland 4 “Meeting with Management” 605 23. Friedland 5 “The Development Triangle” 611 24. Friedland 6 “The Development Triangle as a Diagnostic Tool” 621 25. Friedland 7 “Development Technique” 633 26. Friedland 8 “Expected Claims Technique” 661 27. Friedland 9 “Bornhuetter-Ferguson Technique” 673 28. Friedland 10 “Cape Cod Technique” 713 29. Friedland 11 “Frequency-Severity Technique” 721 30. Friedland 12 “Case Outstanding Development Technique” 761 31. Friedland 13 “Berquist-Sherman Techniques” 775 32. Friedland 14 “Recoveries: Salvage and Subrogation and Reinsurance” 841 33. Friedland 15 “Evaluation of Techniques” 859 34. Friedland 16 “Estimating Unpaid Allocated Claim Adjustment Expenses” 909 35. Friedland 17 “Estimating Unpaid Unallocated Claim Adjustment Expenses” 919 36. ASOP 43 “Property/Casualty Unpaid Claim Estimates” 953 37. CAS Unpaid Claims “Statement of Principles Regarding P&C Unpaid Claims Estimates” 959
ACTEX Learning CAS Exam 5 – Peter J. Murdza
NOTES Questions and parts of some solutions have been taken from material copyrighted by the Casualty Actuarial Society. They are reproduced in this study manual with the permission of the CAS solely to aid students studying for the actuarial exams. Some editing of questions has been done. Students may also request past exams directly from the society. I am very grateful to this organization for its cooperation and permission to use this material. It is, of course, in no way responsible for the structure or accuracy of the manual. Numbers in parentheses at the end of each question identify exam questions. CAS questions have four numbers separated by hyphens: the year of the exam, the number of the exam, the number of the question, and the points assigned. SoA or joint exam questions usually lack the number for points assigned. W indicates a written answer question; for questions of this type, the number of points assigned is also given. A indicates a question from the afternoon part of an exam. MC indicates that a multiple-choice question has been converted into a true/false question. Page numbers (p.) with solutions refer to the reading to which the question has been assigned unless otherwise noted. Although I have made a conscientious effort to eliminate mistakes and incorrect answers, I am certain some remain. I am very grateful to students who discovered errors in the past and encourage those of you who find others to bring them to my attention. I would also like to thank the following who in one way or another contributed to this manual: Tammy Applegate, Ed Jordan, Katy Murdza, Laurrie Raida, and Joanne Spalla. Hanover, NH 5/23/16 PJM
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Geoff Werner and Claudine Modlin, Chapter 1: “Introduction,” in Basic Ratemaking, 2010, pp. 1–12
OUTLINE
I. INTRODUCTION
A. Insurance Pricing
1. Pricing formula
Price = Cost + Profit
2. Unlike many noninsurance products, insurance is a promise to do something in the future and thus its cost is unknown
B. Rating Manuals
1. Premium – “price the insurance consumer pays” a. Based on rate per unit of risk exposed b. Can vary significantly with risk characteristics
2. Rating manual – “document that contains the information necessary to appropriately classify each risk and calculate the premium associated with that risk”
II. BASIC INSURANCE TERMS
A. Exposure
1. Exposure – “basic unit of risk that underlies the insurance premium” 2. Unit varies greatly by line of business 3. Types
a. Written exposures – “total exposures arising from policies issued (i.e., underwritten or written) during a specified period of time
b. Earned exposures – “portion of the written exposures for which coverage has already been provided as of a certain point in time”
c. Unearned exposures – “portion of the written exposures for which coverage has not yet been provided as of that point in time”
d. In-force exposures – “number of insured units that are exposed to loss at a given point in time”
B. Premium
1. Premium – “amount the insured pays for insurance coverage” 2. Types
a. Written premium – “total premium associated with policies that were issued during a specific period”
b. Earned premium – “portion of the written premium for which coverage has already been provided as of a certain point in time”
c. Unearned premium – “portion of written premium for which coverage has yet to be provided”
d. In-force premium – “full-term premium for policies that are in effect at a given point in time”
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C. Claim
1. Policy – transaction whereby the insured pays premium “to an insurer in exchange for a promise to indemnify the insured for the financial consequences” of a covered event
2. Claim – “demand to the insurer for indemnification under the policy” 3. Claimant – insured or a third party making the demand for payment 4. Date of loss, a.k.a. accident date, occurrence date – “date of the event that caused the
loss” 5. Loss may be sudden or result from continuous or repeated exposure 6. Report date – date “the claimant reports the claim to the insurer” 7. Unreported claims a.k.a. incurred but not reported claims (IBNR) – “[c]laims not
currently known by the insurer” 8. Reported claim – claim that is known to the company 9. Open claim – claim that has not been settled 10. Closed claim – claim that has been settled 11. Reopened claim – closed claim on which further activity occurs
D. Loss
12. Loss – “amount of compensation paid or payable to the claimant under the terms of the insurance policy”
13. Paid losses – “amounts that have been paid to claimants” 14. Case reserve – “estimate of the amount of money required to ultimately settle” a claim 15. Case reserves are adjusted over time 16. Reported loss a.k.a. case incurred loss
Reported Losses = Paid Losses + Case Reserve
17. Ultimate loss – “amount of money required to close and settle all claims for a defined group of policies”
18. Reasons ultimate losses and reported losses differ a. Incurred but not reported (IBNR) reserve – “amount estimated to ultimately
settle” unreported claims b. Incurred but not enough reported (IBNER) reserve a.k.a. development on
known claims – “difference between the aggregate amount estimated to ultimately settle these reported claims and the aggregate reported losses at the time the losses are evaluated”
8. Ultimate losses
Ultimate Losses = Reported Losses + IBNR Reserve + IBNER Reserve
E. Loss Adjustment Expense
19. Loss adjustment expense – expenses incurred “in the process of settling claims” 20. Types
a. Allocated loss adjustment expenses (ALAE) – “claim-related expenses that are directly attributable to a specific claim”
b. Unallocated loss adjustment expenses (ULAE) – “claim-related expenses that cannot be directly assigned to a specific claim”
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F. Underwriting Expenses
1. Underwriting expenses – expenses incurred in acquiring and servicing policies 2. Commissions and brokerage – “amounts paid to insurance agents or brokers as
compensation for generating business” a. Usually a percentage of premium written b. Factors affecting percentage
1) New vs. renewal 2) Quality of business 3) Volume written
3. Other acquisition costs – “expenses other than commissions and brokerage paid to acquire business”
4. General expenses – “remaining expenses associated with the insurance operations and any other miscellaneous costs”
5. Taxes, licenses, and fees – “all taxes and miscellaneous fees paid by the insurer excluding federal income taxes”
G. Underwriting Profit
1. Since ultimate policy cost unknown, insurers assume risk that is compensated by an expected profit
2. Sources of profit a. Underwriting profit a.k.a. operating income – “sum of the profits generated
from the individual policies” b. Investment income – money earned by investing insurance premium
III. FUNDAMENTAL INSURANCE EQUATION
A. Introduction
1. Insurance equation
Premium = Losses + LAE + UW Expenses + UW Profit 2. Goal of ratemaking is to balance both sides of the equation 3. CAS principle that rate to provide for all costs involved in risk transfer
B. Ratemaking Is Perspective
1. Ratemaking process involves estimation of various components of the equation 2. Use historical experience but not recoup past losses 3. CAS principle that a rate is an estimate of future expected costs; adjust historical
experience so that it is such an estimate 4. Factors to consider in adjusting historical experience
a. Rate changes b. Operational changes c. Inflationary pressures d. Changes in the mix of business written e. Law changes
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C. Overall and Individual Balance
1. Insurance equation should be balanced at both overall and individual/segment levels 2. CAS principle that rate should cover costs of individual risk transfer 3. Failure to recognize differences in individual risks produces inequitable rates
IV. BASIC INSURANCE RATIOS
A. Frequency
1. Frequency – “measure of the rate at which claims occur”
Frequency = Number of Claims
Number of Exposures
2. Usually claims are reported claims and denominator is earned exposures 3. Uses
a. Identify general industry trends b. Measure effectiveness of specific underwriting actions
B. Severity
1. Severity – “measure of the average cost of claims”
Severity = Losses
Number of Claims
Paid Severity = Paid Losses on Closed Claims
Closed Claims
Reported Severity = Reported LossesReported Claims
2. May include or exclude ALAE 3. Uses a. Provide information on loss trends b. Identify changes in claims handling practices
C. Pure Premium 1. Pure premium a.k.a. loss cost, burning cost – “measure of the average loss per
exposure”
Pure Premium = Losses
Number of Exposures = (Frequency)(Severity)
2. Usually based on reported/ultimate losses and earned exposures 3. May include or exclude LAE 4. Identifies trends attributable to both frequency and severity
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D. Average Premium
1. Average premium
Average Premium = Premium
Number of Exposures
2. Both premium and exposures should be of the same type, i.e., written, earned, in force 3. Identifies shifts in the mix of business
E. Loss Ratio
1. Loss ratio – “measure of the portion of each premium dollar used to pay losses”
Loss Ratio = Losses
Premium = Pure Premium
Average Premium
2. Usually uses total reported losses and total earned premium 3. May include or exclude LAE 4. Measures adequacy of overall and segment rates
F. Loss Adjustment Expense Ratio
1. LAE ratio
LAE Ratio = Loss Adjustment Expenses
Losses
2. Includes both ALAE and ULAE 3. Uses
a. Indicates whether settlement costs are stable b. Comparison with ratios of other insurers
G. Underwriting Expense Ratio
1. UW expense ratio
UW Expense Ratio = UW Expenses
Premium
2. Types
a. Expenses incurred at policy inception measured as a ratio to written premium 1) Commissions 2) Other acquisition 3) Taxes, licenses, and fees
b. Expenses incurred throughout the period measured as a ratio to earned premium, i.e., general expenses
c. Combine the two ratios to produce the overall ratio 3. Uses a. Comparison with changes in inflation
b. Comparison with ratios of other insurers
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H. Operating Expense Ratio
1. Operating expense ratio (OER) – “measure of the portion of each premium dollar used to pay for loss adjustment and underwriting expenses”
OER = UW Expense Ratio + LAE
Earned Premium
2. Used to monitor expenditures and profitability
I. Combined Ratio
1. Combined ratio – “combination of the loss and expense ratios”
Combined Ratio = Loss Ratio + LAE
Earned Premium + Underwriting Expenses
Written Premium
Combined Ratio = Loss Ratio + OER 2. Loss ratio should exclude LAE 3. Used to measure profitability
J. Retention Ratio
1. Retention ratio – “measure of the rate at which existing insured renew their policies upon expiration”
Retention Ratio = Number of Policies RenewedNumber of Potential Policies
2. May exclude certain policies a. Policies canceled because of death
b. Policies not renewed by an underwriter 3. Uses a. Measure competitiveness
b. As input for projecting future premium volume
K. Close Ratio
1. Close ratio a.k.a. hit ratio, quote-to-close ratio, conversion rate – “measure of the rate at which prospective insureds accept a new business quote”
Close Ratio = Number of Accepted Quotes
Number of Quotes
2. May count multiple quotes separately or as just one 3. Used to measure competitiveness
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PAST CAS EXAMINATION QUESTIONS 1. Given the following information, compute the combined ratio.
Written premium $125 Earned premium $100 Losses incurred 77 Loss adjustment expenses incurred 8 Other underwriting expenses incurred 25 Increase in prepaid expenses 5 A. 110.0 B. 103.4 C. 93.0 D. 88.0 E. None of these answers is correct. (81–7–34–1) 2. Given the following, calculate the combined ratio.
Written premium $10,000,000 Earned premium $9,000,000 Investment income 1,000,000 Underwriting expense 2,500,000 Losses and LAE incurred 6,000,000 (82–5–72b–1) 3. Given the following data, compute the combined ratio.
Written premium $9,000 Earned premium $10,000 Commissions and taxes 1,000 All other expenses 2,500 Incurred losses 6,000 (85–5–70–1) 4. What is the combined ratio based on the following data?
Written premium $11,500 Earned premium $11,000 Paid losses 5,000 Incurred losses 8,500 Underwriting expenses 4,200 A. < 100% B. ≥ 100% but < 110% C. ≥ 110% but < 115% D. ≥ 115% but < 120% E. ≥ 120% (90–3B–41–2)
5. Using the following data, calculate the company's combined ratio.
Incurred losses and loss expense $20,000,000 Investment income $3,000,000 Incurred underwriting expense 6.000,000 Earned premium 25,000,000 Written premium 32,000,000 A. < 85% B. ≥ 85% but < 90% C. ≥ 90% but < 95% D. ≥ 95% but < 100%
E. ≥ 100% (94S–3B–55–2) 6. Given the following information, what is the combined ratio?
Written premium $1,000,000 Earned premium $800,000 Expenses 200,000 Paid losses 600,000 Incurred losses 900,000
A. .800 B. .950 C. 1.000 D. 1.325 E. 1.375 (94F–3B–53–1) 7. Giving the following information, calculate the combined ratio:
Incurred underwriting expenses $2,500,000 Incurred loss adjustment expenses 3,650,000 Incurred losses 11,150,000 Written premiums 14,150,000 Earned premiums 19,000,000 A. < .90 B.≥ .90 but < .94 C. ≥ .94 but < .98 D. ≥ .98 but < 1.02 E. ≥ 1.02 (95F–3B–51–1)
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1. Combined Ratio = Incurred Losses + LAE
Earned Premium + Underwriting Expenses Incurred
Written Premium
CR = (77 + 8)/100 + 25/125 = 105.0%, p. 10. Answer: E
2. Combined Ratio = Incurred Losses + LAE
Earned Premium + Underwriting Expenses Incurred
Written Premium
CR = 6M_
/9M_
+ 2.5M_
/10M_
= 91.7%, p. 10. 3. Assume that losses include LAE.
Combined Ratio = Incurred Losses + LAE
Earned Premium + Underwriting Expenses Incurred
Written Premium
CR = 6,000/10,000 + 3,500/9,000 = 98.9%, p. 10.
4. Combined Ratio = Incurred Losses + LAE
Earned Premium + Underwriting Expenses Incurred
Written Premium
CR = 8,500/11,000 + 4,200/11,500 = 113.8%, p. 10. Answer: C
5. Combined Ratio = Incurred Losses + LAE
Earned Premium + Underwriting Expenses Incurred
Written Premium
CR = 20M
_/25M
_ + 6M
_/32M
_ = 98.8%, p. 10.
Answer: D
6. Assume incurred losses include LAE.
Combined Ratio = Incurred Losses + LAE
Earned Premium + Underwriting Expenses Incurred
Written Premium
CR = .9M_
/.8M_
+ .2M_
/1M_
= 132.5%, p. 10. Answer: D
7. Combined Ratio = Incurred Losses + LAE
Earned Premium + Underwriting Expenses Incurred
Written Premium
CR = (11.15M_
+ 3.65M_
)/19M_
+ 2.5M_
/14.15M_
= 95.6%, p. 10. Answer: C
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8. According to Werner and Modlin, which of the following is true regarding the ratemaking process?
A. Pure premiums usually contain a provision for premium taxes. B. Incurred losses are defined to be the sum of paid losses and reported losses. C. An exposure unit is a measure of risk assumed under an insurance contract. D. None of these statements are true. E. All of these statements are true. (93F–3B–61–2)
9. a. Explain how the standard economic formula, Price = Cost + Profit, relates to the fundamental insurance equation.
b. Company ABC replaced inexperienced adjusters with experienced adjusters who have a greater knowledge of the product. Explain the impact of this change on each component of the fundamental insurance equation. (10–5–11–.75/1.25)
10. Given the following information, calculate the combined ratio.
2008 earned premium $200,000 2008 incurred losses $125,000 Loss adjustment expense ratio .14 Underwriting expense ratio .25 (10–5–12–1)
11. Given the following information:
Calendar Year 2010 Written premium $280.00 Earned premium $308.00 Commissions $33.60 Taxes, licenses and fees $9.80 General expenses $36.96 LAE ratio (to loss) 8.2% Combined ratio 100%
Calculate the 2010 operating expense ratio. (11–5–8–1.25)
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8. A. F, p. 8 – They equal the average loss per unit of exposure.
B. F, p. 3 – Substitute "case and IBNR and IBNER reserves" for "reported losses." C. T, p. 2
Answer: C 9. a. “The general economic formula can be tailored to the insurance industry using the basic insurance
terminology outlined in the preceding section. Premium is the ‘price’ of an insurance product. The ‘cost’ of an insurance product is the sum of the losses, claim-related expenses, and other expenses incurred in the acquisition and servicing of policies. Underwriting profit is the difference between income and outgo from underwriting policies, and this is analogous to the ‘profit’ earned in most other industries. . . . Making those substitutions, the prior formula is transformed into the fundamental insurance equation:
Premium = Losses + LAE + UW Expenses + UW Profit,” p. 5. b. The overall effect on future premium is uncertain. The effect on losses is uncertain. More
experienced adjusters may detect more fraudulent claims, reducing losses, but they could also pay out more under policy provisions with which inexperienced adjusters are unfamiliar, increasing losses. The effect on LAE is uncertain. Experienced adjusters may work efficiently, reducing LAE, but will earn higher salaries, increasing LAE. UW expenses should be unaffected. The overall effect on UW profit is uncertain, p. 5.
10. Combined Ratio = (Incurred Losses)(1 + LAE Ratio)
Earned Premium + Underwriting Expenses Incurred
Written Premium
CR = ([(125,000(1 + .14)]/200,000 + .25 = 96.3%, p. 10.
11. Underwriting Expense Ratio = Commissions + Taxes, Licenses, and Fees
Written Premium + General ExpensesEarned Premium
UER = (33.60 + 9.80)/280 + 36.96/308 = .275 Operating Expense Ratio = 1 – (1 – UER)/(1 + LAE/Losses) = 1 – (1 – .275)/(1 + .082) = 33.0%, pp. 9–10.
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Geoff Werner and Claudine Modlin, Chapter 3: “Ratemaking Data,” in Basic Ratemaking, 2010, pp. 36–48.
OUTLINE
I. INTERNAL DATA
A. Overview
1. Quality of rates is dependent on quality and quantity of data 2. Usually ratemaking based on internal historical data of two types
a. Risk information, e.g., exposures, premiums b. Accounting information, e.g., underwriting expenses, ULAE
3. Data systems used vary from systems designed for ratemaking to general company databases
4. Actuary should review database for a. Adequacy of data specifications
b. Reasonableness and quality
B. Risk Data – Policy Database
1. Factors defining a database a. Records – “individual policies or some further sub-division of the policy” b. Fields – “explanatory information about the record”
2. Types of records a. HO – home for one year
b. WC – separate records at the class level c. Personal auto – usually separate records for each coverage and possibly for each
auto d. Separate records for before and after the amendment of a policy
3. Fields a. Policy identifier b. Risk identifier(s) – vehicles and operators c. Relevant dates – effective and termination dates for the policy and separate
coverages, amendment dates d. Premium – written premium by coverage e. Exposure – written exposure by coverage f. Characteristics – rating and underwriting variables
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C. Risk Data – Claims Database
1. Records a. Each record usually reflects a transaction (payment or reserve change) related to
a specific claim b. Claims with multiple coverage or causes of loss may have separate records or are
represented via indicator fields 2. Fields
a. Policy identifier b. Risk identifiers – needed to match claim to policy database record c. Claim identifier d. Claimant identifier e. Relevant loss dates – loss date, report date, transaction date f. Claim status – open, closed, reopened, reclosed g. Claim count – not needed if each record or record collection defines a claim h. Paid loss – for different coverages can be tracked in separate fields or records i. Event identifier – extraordinary event, e.g., catastrophe j. Case reserve – for different coverages can be tracked in separate fields or records k. Allocated loss adjustment expense
1) Definitions a) Loss adjustment expenses (LAE) – “expenses incurred
handling claims” b) Allocated loss adjustment expenses (ALAE) – “expenses that
can be assigned to a specific claim and are included on the claim database”
c) Unallocated loss adjustment expenses – expenses that “cannot be assigned to a specific claim and are handled elsewhere
2) If ALAE subdivided, use additional fields 3) ULAE handled elsewhere 4) ALAE reserves may not be tracked, only payments
l. Salvage/subrogation 1) Salvage – recoveries when damaged property is “reconditioned and sold
to offset part of the payments made for the loss” 2) Subrogation – right “to recover any damages from a third party who was
at fault or contributed fault to the loss event” 3) Link such recoveries to the original claim
m. Characteristics, e.g., type of injury
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D. Accounting Information
1. Definitions a. Underwriting expenses – “expenses incurred in the acquisition and servicing of
the policies” b. Loss adjustment expenses (ALAE) – “expenses incurred in the process of
settling claims” c. Allocated loss adjustment expenses (ALAE) – loss adjustment “expenses
directly attributable to a specific claim and are, therefore captured on the claim extract”
d. Unallocated loss adjustment expense (ULAE) – loss adjustment expenses that “cannot be assigned to a specific claim”
2. Expenses tracked at the aggregate level since most cannot be assigned to individual policies or claims
3. Aggregate figures subdivided by line and state to determine expense provisions for ratemaking
II. DATA AGGREGATION
A. Objectives
1. Accurately match policy losses and premium 2. Use most recent data 3. Minimize data costs
B. Definitions
1. Calendar year aggregation – aggregation including “all premium and loss transactions that occur during the twelve-month calendar without regard to the date of policy issuance, the accident date, or the report date of the claim” a. Premiums and exposures – fixed at the end of the calendar year b. Losses
1) Calendar year paid losses – all losses “paid during the calendar year regardless of occurrence date or report date”
2) Calendar year reported losses – “paid losses plus the change in case reserves during that twelve-month calendar year”
c. Advantages 1) Available quickly 2) As typically collected, no additional expense
d. Disadvantage – premium comes from in-force policies but losses may involve policies issued many years ago
e. Appropriate for lines/coverages where losses are settled quickly
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2. Accident year aggregation a.k.a. calendar-accident year aggregation, fiscal-accident year aggregation – calendar year aggregation of premiums and exposures and aggregation of “losses for accidents that have occurred during a twelve-month period, regardless of when the policy was issued or the claim was reported”
a. Losses 1) Accident year paid losses – “loss payments only for those claims that
occurred during the year” 2) Accident year reported losses – “loss payments made plus case reserves
only for those claims that occurred during the year” 3) Losses change even after the end of the year
b. Advantages 1) Better match of premiums and losses than calendar year 2) Available more quickly than policy year
c. Requires estimation of future development on known losses 3. Policy year aggregation a.k.a. underwriting year aggregation – aggregation including
“all premium and loss transactions on policies that were written during a twelve-month period, regardless of when the claim occurred, or when it was reported, reserved, or paid” a. Premiums and exposures not fixed until all policies have expired b. Losses
1) Policy year paid losses – “payments made on those claims covered by policies written during the year”
2) Policy year reported losses – “payments made plus case reserves only for those claims covered by policies written during the year”
3) Losses change even after the end of the policy year c. Advantage – best match between premiums and losses d. Disadvantage – not available as quickly as calendar or accident year data
4. Report year aggregation – aggregation that “is similar to calendar-accident [aggregation] except [that] the losses are aggregated according to when the claim was reported, as opposed to when the claim occurred;” typically used for claims-made policies
C. Overall Versus Classification Analysis
1. Overall rate level adequacy – can aggregate data by year for the product and location 2. Univariate classification analysis – aggregate by year for each rating variable studied 3. Multivariate classification analysis a. Organize data at the individual policy or risk level
b. Aggregate by year for each combination of rating variables studied
D. Limited Data
1. Use actuarial judgment to overcome data deficiencies 2. Example: use in-force premium by territory if earned premium not available
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III. EXTERNAL DATA
A. Use of External Data
1. For new lines, may be necessary 2. For existing lines, may be helpful as a supplement
B. Statistical Plans
1. Regulators frequently require filing of statistical data according to a summary-based format
2. Texas Private Passenger Statistical Plan is aggregated by territory, deductible, and driver class and has he following uses: a. Set benchmark rates b. Supplement companies’ internal analyses
3. Industry organizations collect and aggregate data a. Specific organizations
1) National Council for Compensation Insurance (NCCI) 2) Insurance Services Office (ISO)
b. Organizations can analyze data or allow companies access c. Analysis may be at either overall or segment levels
4 State regulators may also make ad hoc data calls
C. Other Aggregated Industry Data
1. Fast Track Monitoring System – quarterly loss data for personal lines 2. Highway Loss Data Institute – detailed information by type of car
D. Competitor Rate Filings/Manuals
1. Companies may be required to submit rate filings with actuarial justification 2. Companies may also be required to submit manual pages needed to rate policies a. But obtaining a complete manual may be difficult
1) Only pages that that change have to be filed 2) Not required to file underwriting rules that assign insureds to tiers
b. Need to use other companies’ data with care as companies differ in regard to 1) Insureds 2) Goals 3) Expense levels 4) Operating procedures
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E. Other Third-Party Data
1. General data a. Economic data, e.g., CPI b. Geo-demographic, e.g., population density c. Credit data
2. Specific data useful for certain lines a. Personal auto – DMV records b. HO – distance to fire station c. Earthquake – type of soil d. Medical malpractice – hospital characteristics e. CGL – ownership type f. WC – OSHA inspection data
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ACTEX Learning CAS Exam 5 – Peter J. Murdza
PAST CAS EXAMINATION QUESTIONS 1. Accident year experience is better than policy year experience for determining automobile liability rate
levels in that it produces more accurate experience indications. (73–5–38–MC)
2. Accident year experience is better than policy year experience for determining automobile liability rate levels in that it produces a more mature body of experience at each reporting date. (73–5–38–MC)
3. Discuss briefly the advantages and disadvantages (with respect to ratemaking) of the calendar year and accident year measures of loss experience relative to each other. (77–6–46b–6)
4. Policy year statistics are the purest in that losses are strictly comparable to premiums. (78–6–20–MC) 5. Loss development factors are not required on calendar year incurred losses. (78–6–20–MC) 6. Which of the following loss ratios most accurately match the losses with the premiums intended to fund
those losses?
A. A fully developed policy year loss ratio B. A statutory loss ratio C. A trade basis loss ratio D. A calendar year loss ratio E. A fully developed calendar-accident year loss ratio (80–5–81–1)
7. According to Werner and Modlin, what advantages and disadvantages are associated with the use of
calendar year and policy year data for ratemaking? (Be brief and concise.) (88–6–42–2) 8. According to Werner and Modlin, which of the following are true?
1. Policy year premium statistics can be distorted by significant audit premiums. 2. Compared to calendar year ones, policy year statistics for the same year take longer to develop. 3. Calendar year data and calendar-accident year data differ primarily in calculating premium.
A. 1 B. 2 C. 3 D. 1,3 E. 2,3 (91F–3B–44–2) 9. According to Werner and Modlin, the accident year method of gathering statistics provides an exact
matching of losses and premiums to a specific group of insured entities. (93F–3B–27–1) 10. According to Werner and Modlin, which of the following is false regarding ratemaking using the calendar
year method?
A. The method can result in a single claim affecting several years of loss experience. B. The method is generally less accurate than the accident year method. C. The method estimates earned premium in the same manner as the accident year method. D. None of these statements are false. E. All of these statements are false. (94S–3B–60–2)
11. Of the three methods for gathering ratemaking statistics described by Werner and Modlin, the policy year
method is the only method that provides an exact match between premium and losses for a specific group of insured entities. (95S–3B–23–1)
12. According to Werner and Modlin, the formula for incurred losses is: loss reserves at end of year plus
losses paid during the year less loss reserves at beginning of year. (95F–3B–57–MC) 13. According to Werner and Modlin, calendar year statistics can have parts of a single claim being included
in several years. (95F–3B–57–MC)
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ACTEX Learning CAS Exam 5 – Peter J. Murdza
Solutions are based on pp. 42–44. 1. F – Policy year data provides more accurate experience indications. 2. T.
3. 1) Calendar year data does not require development factors, whereas accident year data requires
such factors to reflect changes in loss valuation. 2) Calendar year losses and premiums do not have a close relationship as losses are affected by
reserve changes, whereas accident year losses and calendar year premiums are more closely related.
4. T. 5. T.
6. A. 7. Calendar year data is available promptly but lacks accuracy in its estimation of incurred losses because of
distortions caused by reserving inaccuracies. Policy year data provides a more accurate matching of losses and premiums but is not available promptly since the data stretch over two calendar years and is more costly since a separate system must be maintained.
8. 1. F – Substitute "calendar" for "policy."
2. T 3. F – The difference is in the calculation of losses. Answer: B
9. F – Substitute "policy" for "accident."
10. D.
11. T. 12. T. 13. T.
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ACTEX Learning CAS Exam 5 – Peter J. Murdza
14. According to Werner and Modlin, the policy year method provides the best match of losses to premiums. (96F–3B–63–MC)
15. According to the Werner and Modlin, the calendar year method is the most accurate method.
(96F–3B–63–MC) 16. According to Werner and Modlin, a disadvantage of the policy year method of compiling ratemaking
statistics versus the accident year method is that the policy year method involves more delays in gathering statistics. (97F–3B–39–1)
17. According to Werner and Modlin, the only method for gathering ratemaking statistics that provides an
exact matching of losses and premiums to a specific group of insureds is the policy year method. (98S–3B–34–1) 18. According to Werner and Modlin, under the policy year method, incurred losses are not affected by
changes in reserves for events that occurred in earlier periods. (99S–3B–54–MC)
19. According to Werner and Modlin, the accident year method uses policy year earned premiums. (99S–3B–54–MC) 20. Werner and Modlin, in "Basic Ratemaking," describe three different types of experience periods by which
insurance data is compiled.
a. Describe how premiums and losses are compiled under each of the three experience periods:
i) Policy year ii) Calendar year iii) Calendar-accident year
b. State one advantage and one disadvantage associated with each type of experience period. (01–5–47–1.5ea.)
21. a. For both premium and loss data, describe the following methods for grouping ratemaking
experience: policy year, calendar year, and accident year. b. For purposes of ratemaking, which method in a. is most responsive and which method is least
responsive? (06–5–32–1.5/.5)
22. a. Briefly define "policy year," "calendar year," and "accident year loss experience." b. Which of the three performs the best with respect to responsiveness? Explain. c. Which of the three performs the best with respect to matching premiums and losses? Explain.
(07–5–53–1.5/.5/.5)
23. Identify one advantage and one disadvantage associated with using policy year incurred losses for ratemaking. (08–5–17d–.5)
24. Provide one advantage and one disadvantage associated with using calendar year incurred losses rather than accident year incurred losses for ratemaking. (09–5–22d–.5)
25. Briefly describe one advantage and one disadvantage of using calendar year losses as compared to accident year losses in a ratemaking application. (10–5–20d–.5)
26. Briefly describe one advantage and one disadvantage associated with using policy year losses for
ratemaking. (11–5–6e–.5)
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ACTEX Learning CAS Exam 5 – Peter J. Murdza
14. T. 15. F – Substitute "least" for "most." 16. T. 17. T. 18. T – Incurred losses are only affected by changes in the reserves for the particular policy year. 19. F – Substitute "calendar" for "policy." 20. a. Policy year experience uses earned premiums and incurred losses arising from policies issued in a
particular twelve-year period. Calendar year experience uses financial data for a particular calendar year. Calendar year earned premium equals premiums written during that year plus the beginning unearned premium reserve less the ending unearned premium reserve. Calendar year incurred losses equals paid calendar year losses plus the ending loss reserve less the beginning loss reserve. Calendar-accident year experience uses calendar year earned premium and losses arising from accidents that occur during the particular calendar year.
b. Policy year experience provides an exact match of premiums and losses as it arises from a defined set of policies. It is less mature than the other experience. Calendar year is fully mature at the end of the year but provides the least exact match of premiums and losses. Accident year experience is a compromise between policy year and calendar year experience. It provides a more exact match of premiums and losses than calendar year experience but a less exact match than policy year experience. On the other hand, it is more mature than policy year experience but less mature than calendar year experience.
21. a. See 20a.
b. See 20b. Responsiveness reflects maturity. Thus calendar year data is most responsive and policy year data the least responsive.
22. a. See 20a. b. See 21b. c. See 20b. Policy year provides the best match. 23. See 20b. 24. See 20b. 25. See 20b. 26. See 20b.
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ACTEX Learning CAS Exam 5 – Peter J. Murdza
27. When aggregating data for ratemaking purposes, two of the three general objectives are:
i) To accurately match losses and premiums for the policy. ii) To use the most recent data available.
Briefly discuss how well the following methods of data aggregation achieve these two general objectives. a. Calendar year b. Calendar/accident year c. Policy year. (13F–5–3–.5ea.)
28. Discuss the appropriateness of applying each of the following data aggregation methods to the given line of business:
a. Calendar year aggregation for auto physical damage b. Policy year aggregation for homeowners c. Report year aggregation for medical professional liability. (15S–5–6–.5ea.)
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27. See 20b. 28. a. It is appropriate because auto physical damage “losses are reported and settled relatively
quickly.” b. Like automobile physical damage coverage, homeowners “losses are reported and settled
relatively quickly” and thus calendar year aggregation is appropriate. c. Report year is appropriate if claims-made policies are used. If occurrence policies are used,
calendar-accident year aggregation is more appropriate.