PowerPoint Slides for Professors Spring 2010 Version PowerPoint Slides for Professors Spring 2010 Version This file as well as all other PowerPoint files.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Dr. James Kallman, ARM 6-1 Advanced PowerPoint Presentation ©2009 The National Underwriter Company.
Advertisements

Systemic Exposures in the Casualty Market … and how to address them September 2010 Grange Turner, Guy Carpenter & Company Ltd, London Contact:
INTRODUCTION AS (3.3) Apply business knowledge to address a complex problem in a given global business context.
PowerPoint Slides for Professors
RISK MANAGEMENT FOR ENTERPRISES AND INDIVIDUALS Chapter 6 The Insurance Solution and Institutions.
Implications for Caribbean Capital Markets 25 May, 2011 Marlene Murray CFA Society of Trinidad and Tobago.
Planning and Strategic Management
PowerPoint Slides for Professors Spring 2010 Version PowerPoint Slides for Professors Spring 2010 Version This file as well as all other PowerPoint files.
Ch14--In301 Types of Policies Multiple-line 1st party property 3rd party liability 3rd party medical expense Multiple-peril Fire, windstorms, theft, etc.
PowerPoint Slides for Professors Spring 2010 Version PowerPoint Slides for Professors Spring 2010 Version This file as well as all other PowerPoint files.
1 The Disaster Insurance Project Wharton Center for Risk Management and Decision Processes University of Pennsylvania Insurance Information Institute and.
PowerPoint Slides for Professors Spring 2010 Version PowerPoint Slides for Professors Spring 2010 Version This file as well as all other PowerPoint files.
1 What do we call Ourselves? Hazards Risk Managers of Course Greg Shaw GWU ICDRM The George Washington University Institute for Crisis, Disaster, and Risk.
Strategic Financial Decision-Making Framework
Fall 2008 Version Professor Dan C. Jones FINA 4355.
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook The University of West Alabama Copyright © 2006 Thomson Business & Professional Publishing. All rights reserved.
Part 7 PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook Copyright © 2003 South-Western College Publishing. All rights reserved. All rights reserved. Risk and Insurance.
1 Natural Catastrophe Insurance Scheme for Small States Presentation by Peter M Jones - MIGA World Bank Catastrophe Risk Financing Seminar, October 27,
Should There Be A National Reinsurance Catastrophe Pool ? May 8, 2006 Mary Z. Seidel Reinsurance Association of America.
RISK MANAGEMENT FOR ENTERPRISES AND INDIVIDUALS Chapter 5 The Evolution of Risk Management: Enterprise Risk Management.
PowerPoint Slides for Professors Spring 2010 Version PowerPoint Slides for Professors Spring 2010 Version This file as well as all other PowerPoint files.
Sapient Insurance Partners. Overview & Services We have almost four decades of combined experience in the property & casualty insurance and reinsurance.
Session 16: Distribution of Geospatial Data 1 Distribution of Geospatial Data in the Public Environment Hazard Mapping and Modeling.
Disaster Risk Financing Global Approaches 11 August 2010 Reed Bouchelle, New Delhi.
World Bank Conference on Financing Disaster Risk, Washington, 2003 Catastrophe Risk Models for Asia from the User Perspective George Walker Head of Strategic.
1 A Note to the User of This File Visit to check updates for this chapter.
Financial Management Chapter 18. Financial Management Chapter 18.
1 The Asian Banker Summit 2004 Capital Management After Basel II Simon Topping Executive Director (Banking Policy) Hong Kong Monetary Authority 5 May 2004.
OECD Report Catastrophe-linked securities and capital markets Prof. Alberto Monti Bocconi University and OECD Bangkok, Thailand September nd.
Insurance Institute for Business & Home Safety Even if the worst happens, be prepared to stay.
Maximising Investment Opportunities: releasing value from estates Barclays Private Equity 15 th May 2008.
Catastrophic Risks and Insurance Problems and Perspectives Prof. Alberto Monti Bocconi University, Milan (Italy) VI.
Pauline Weetman, Financial and Management Accounting, 5 th edition © Pearson Education 2011 Slide 1.1 Chapter 1 Who needs accounting?
Romania Hazard Risk Mitigation & Emergency Preparedness Project Aurel Bilanici Ministry of Interior and Administrative Reform.
18 September 2000 George Maher John Ryan Evaluating Claims Costs Arising out of Political Disorder and Civil Unrest.
1 A Note to the User of This File Visit to check updates for this chapter.
PowerPoint Slides for Professors Spring 2010 Version PowerPoint Slides for Professors Spring 2010 Version This file as well as all other PowerPoint files.
Andreas Vossberg Senior Underwriter, Property Treaty, Nordic Countries, Central & Eastern Europe, RE, (GERMANY) Saturday,
Role of the Reinsurance Industry in the Management of Catastrophe Related Risks Dr. Anselm Smolka Geo Risks Research Munich Reinsurance Company Global.
INDIA. 1 Is your country is prone to natural disasters such as earthquakes, floods, and storms?
ROLE OF INSURANCE IN CATASTROPHE RISKS - INDIA Hazard Identification Risk Assessment Risk Prevention Mitigation PC James Executive Director IRDA.
Session 161 Comparative Emergency Management Session 16 Slide Deck.
PowerPoint Slides for Professors Spring 2010 Version PowerPoint Slides for Professors Spring 2010 Version This file as well as all other PowerPoint files.
Paper Presented at World Bank Conference on Financing the Risks of Natural Disasters: A New Perspective on Country Risk Management June 2-3, 2003 Washington,
8 - 1 Chapter 8: Location Strategies Outline  The Strategic Importance of Location  Factors That Affect Location Decisions  Labor Productivity.
INSTRUCTOR'S MANUAL Chapter 3 ESTABLISHING A BUSINESS.
RISK MANAGEMENT : JOURNEY OR DESTINATION ?. What is Risk? “ Any uncertain event that could significantly enhance or impede a Company’s ability to achieve.
World Bank Group Hazards of Nature, Risks and Opportunities for Development in South Asian Countries Regional Conference in New Delhi, India All About.
The Four Phases of Plant Biosecurity Management Adapting an emergency management model to protect the U.S. agricultural sector from intentional and unintentional.
The World Bank’s Role in Disaster Mitigation Financing the Risks of Natural Disasters June 3, 2003 Alcira Kreimer Manager, Disaster Management Facility.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Insurance Company Operations.
Sapient Insurance Partners. Overview & Services We have almost four decades of combined experience in the property & casualty insurance and reinsurance.
Finance 431: Property-Liability Insurance Lecture 8: Reinsurance.
Slide 1 INSURANCE BASICS 1.1Insurance and Risk 1.2Basic Policy Types 1.3Purchasing Considerations 1.
1 A Note to the User of This File Visit to check updates for this chapter.
Erman Taşkın. Information security aspects of business continuity management Objective: To counteract interruptions to business activities and to protect.
1 INTERNATIONAL NETWORK ON FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT OF LARGE-SCALE CATASTROPHES Global Conference on Insurance and Reinsurance for Natural Catastrophe Risk.
Dolly Dhamodiwala CEO, Business Beacon Management Consultants
Money and Banking Lecture 27. Review of the Previous Lecture Bank Risk Liquidity Risk Credit Risk Interest Rate Risk Trading Risk Other Risks Globalization.
Risks and Hazards to Consider Unit 3. Visual 3.1 Unit 3 Overview This unit describes:  The importance of identifying and analyzing possible hazards that.
SOGAZ INSURANCE INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION: NEW HORIZONS Dmitry Talaev
Actuarial role/ contributions/ challenges in Reinsurance
Risk and Insurance Part 5 Managing Growth in the Small Business.
Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
Catastrophes Insurable vs. Non-Insurable Catastrophes
Reinsurance and Its Role in the National Flood Insurance Program: A Primer for Public Policy Makers
Professor Dan C. Jones FINA 4355
FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION
SOUTH AFRICAN INSURANCE ASSOCIATION
Presentation transcript:

PowerPoint Slides for Professors Spring 2010 Version PowerPoint Slides for Professors Spring 2010 Version This file as well as all other PowerPoint files for the book, “Risk Management and Insurance: Perspectives in a Global Economy” authored by Skipper and Kwon and published by Blackwell (2007), has been created solely for classes where the book is used as a text. Use or reproduction of the file for any other purposes, known or to be known, is prohibited without prior written permission by the authors. Visit the following site for updates: To change the slide design/background, [View]  [Slide Master] W. Jean Kwon, Ph.D., CPCU School of Risk Management, St. John’s University 101 Murray Street New York, NY 10007, USA Phone: +1 (212)

Risk Management and Insurance: Perspectives in a Global Economy 15. Risk Management for Catastrophes Click Here to Add Professor and Course Information

Study Points  Risk analysis  Risk control  Risk financing 3

Risk Analysis 4

 Analysis of potentially catastrophic events largely identical to those for non-catastrophic event, except: Devotion of greater time and effort to exploring the susceptibility of the entity’s physical structure to damage. Common reliance more heavily on modeling Scenario planning can play a significant role. 5

Susceptibility to Damage  Design features and construction quality The tradeoff between cost and quality Causes of damage Natural Human-made (e.g., terrorists or disgruntled employees)  Age of structures The Great Hanshin (Kobe) Earthquake in Japan in 1995  Infrastructure Transportation and communication facilities of the affected area Critical to a prompt and orderly recovery Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans in 2005 in the U.S. 6

7

Catastrophe Modeling  The use of computer-assisted mathematical techniques to estimate possible losses associated with catastrophic events Use of site and specific property characteristics (the so-called “exposure data”)  Primarily for natural catastrophes such as hurricanes, earthquakes, storms, floods Some for terrorism (e.g., AIR modeling)  Widely used by insurers, reinsurers and intermediaries Figure 15.1 for a natural catastrophe model 8

Natural Catastrophe Risk Modeling (Figure 15.1) 9 Description of the model in pages

Scenario Planning  Analysts generate simulation games that are used by management to consider and develop plans to deal with alternative futures  Scenarios bring forth decisions by the ultimately responsible persons. Subsumes elements that are difficult and often impossible to formalize, let alone quantify  Cause decision-makers to realize that they consciously or unconsciously likely have a preconceived notion of what the “official future” will hold. Insight 15.1 Figure

Closed Strategic Management Loop 11 Construct Multiple Scenarios Devise Strategic Plan Based on Scenarios Implement Strategies Monitor the Environment and Strategic Implementation

Terrorism Risk Analysis  Protection priority High priority Medium priority Low priority  Hazard and vulnerability assessment Defining threats Identifying likely threat event profile and tactics Assignment of a threat rating 12 Go also to FEMA for additional information.FEMA Go also to FEMA for additional information.FEMA

Risk Control 13

Loss Prevention  Land use restrictions  Building codes  Disaster planning The U.S. – A Failure of Initiative, a report about government preparedness against disasters – Hurricane Katrina and New Orleans Insight 15.3 (Home Depot’s reactions to the hurricane) The E.U. – The Environmental Integration Manual 14

Loss Reduction  Crisis management The process of identifying those situations that constitute a crisis, having an organized response to the crisis and ultimately resolving the crisis  The process Engage appropriate employees to consider the range of crises Develop responses for each identified crisis, including a master plan Assign clear recovery responsibilities to individuals Speak with one voice and through one high-level person Keep employees, customers, other stakeholders and the public well informed by honestly and openly sharing the nature of the difficulty and what the organization is doing about it 15

Loss Reduction – Corporate Viewpoint  The importance of effective crisis management – “sustainable risk management”  Corporate catastrophes and shareholder value  Reputation crises and shareholder value  Mass fatality events and shareholder value 16

Loss Reduction  Insight 15.4 (Tylenol case)  Insight 15.5 (Boycott)  Insight 15.6 (Reputation loss)  Figure 15.4 (Reaction of Share Prices to Mass Fatality Events) 17

Share Price and Reputation Crisis (Figure 15.3) 18

Share Price and Mass Fatality Event (Figure 15.4) 19

Risk Financing 20

Retention  Recommended when Insurance is unavailable or unaffordable Property owners have the capability of financing losses internally  Retention is often used along with other risk financing options. For example, excess insurance on top of large retention  The problems with retention are vividly demonstrated when a catastrophe occurs. Especially in developing countries 21

Insurance  Risk financing capacity for catastrophic loss exposures remains a major concern for the insurance industry internationally  Insurance policies often exclude coverage for many catastrophic events. Nuclear-related events Flood damages Earth movement Terrorist act Countrywide variations exist. 22

Insurance – Catastrophe Reinsurance  Often a risk-financing and loss-sharing arrangement between insurance firms  Several reinsurers that specialize in catastrophe reinsurance The Caribbean The London market 23

Insurance – Private Risk Pools  A wide array of uses by insurance companies Residual markets for nonstandard drivers in automobile insurance or employers in workers’ compensation  A case of catastrophic loss exposure – nuclear activity The World Nuclear Association OECD’s Paris Convention on Third Party Liability in the Field of Nuclear Energy of 1960 (amended in 2004) The Price-Anderson Act in 1957 (U.S.) Insight

Nuclear Insurance Coverage (Insight 15.7)  Facility form (liability) policy  Secondary financial protection policy  Master worker policy  Suppliers and transporters policy 25

Insurance – Government Risk Pools (CEA) 26 $1.0 $3.0 $2.0 $1.0 $1.5 $2.0 Assessment against insurers Reinsurance Line of credit Reinsurance Additional commitments from insurers Insurers' Initial Capital Contributions CEA (

Insurance – Terrorism Risk  Australia – Australian Reinsurance Pool  Austria – Terrorpool Austria  France – GAREAT  Germany – Extremus  Israel – The Property and Tax Compensation Fund  The Netherlands – NHT  Spain – CCS  South Africa – SASRIA  The U.K. – Pool Re  The U.S. – Terrorism Risk and Insurance Act 27 Table 15.1

Catastrophe Risk Securitization – Cat Bonds 28 Institutional Investors Catastrophe Risk SPV (Reinsurer + Bond Issuer) Premium Coverage Investment Principal + Return Insurer (Reinsurer) Premium Coverage Investment Bank (Bond Underwriting + Rating) Escrow Account (Bond Investment) Not in the book.

Discussion Questions 29

Discussion Question 1  Older facilities often are more susceptible to damage than newer ones. Explain why this is so and make a case for why the government should not require that the owners of such older facilities to upgrade them to contemporary structural standards? 30

Discussion Question 2  Loss mitigation is a fundamental factor in better managing the physical environment risk. What aspects of loss mitigation do you believe offer the most promise for the future? 31

Discussion Question 3  Develop at least two “alternative futures” for how risk management might change for operators of nuclear power plants. 32

Discussion Question 4  If sound crisis management is as important as suggested in this chapter, why do major corporations seem to accord it so little attention? 33

Discussion Question 5  We have described terrorism risk pools in selected countries. Find the reasons why some governments listed in the table acted upon creation of a terrorism insurance scheme before September 11, Do you find any other governments offering similar programs? (Hint: Examine Brazil, Finland, Hong Kong and Japan for possible programs.) 34