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One-year and ultimate correlations in dependent claims run-off triangles

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 November 2024

Łukasz Delong*
Affiliation:
Faculty of Economic Sciences, University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland
Marcin Szatkowski
Affiliation:
Risk Department, STU ERGO Hestia SA, Sopot, Poland
*
Corresponding author: Łukasz Delong; Email: l.delong@uw.edu.pl
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Abstract

We investigate bottom-up risk aggregation applied by insurance companies facing reserve risk from multiple lines of business. Since risk capitals should be calculated in different time horizons and calendar years, depending on the regulatory or reporting regime (Solvency II vs IFRS 17), we study correlations of ultimate losses and correlations of one-year losses in future calendar years in lines of business. We consider a multivariate version of a Hertig’s lognormal model and we derive analytical formulas for the ultimate correlation and the one-year correlations in future calendar years. Our main conclusion is that the correlation coefficients that should be used in a bottom-up aggregation formula depend on the time horizon and the future calendar year where the risk emerges. We investigate analytically and numerically properties of the ultimate and the one-year correlations, their possible values observed in practice, and the impact of misspecified correlations on the diversified risk capital.

Information

Type
Original Research Paper
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Institute and Faculty of Actuaries
Figure 0

Figure 1 The ratio of the ultimate correlation (3.3) to the one-year correlation (3.4) under the volatility parameters specified with (3.7).

Figure 1

Figure 2 The maximal changes in the diversified capital for two lines of business if we increase the correlation from $\rho$ to $p$, the changes are only investigated for $\rho \leq p$.

Figure 2

Figure 3 The maximal changes in the diversified capital for multiple lines of business if we increase the correlations from $\rho =0.3$ to $p=0.5$ for $n=2,\ldots, 10$ lines of business.

Figure 3

Figure 4 The loss triangles in the synthetic example.

Figure 4

Figure 5 The one-year correlations in future calendar years (solid lines) and the ultimate correlations (dotted lines) – lines 4 and 7 (top) and lines 4 and 12 (bottom).

Figure 5

Figure 6 The one-year correlations in future calendar years and the ultimate correlations (solid lines) as a function of $\rho$, together with the diagonal (dotted lines) – lines 4 and 7 (top) and lines 4 and 12 (bottom).

Figure 6

Table 1. Risk capitals and their misestimation resulting from misspecified correlations for lines 4 and 7

Figure 7

Table 2. Risk capitals and their misestimation resulting from misspecified correlations for lines 4 and 12

Figure 8

Figure 7 The one-year correlation in the next calendar year (the dotted lines represent the assumed $\rho$).

Figure 9

Figure 8 The relative difference of the ultimate correlation compared to the one-year correlation in the next calendar year.

Figure 10

Figure 9 The misestimation of the Solvency II capital requirement caused by using the ultimate correlation instead of the one-year correlation in the next calendar year.

Figure 11

Figure 10 The misestimation of the Solvency II risk margin caused by using the one-year correlation in the next calendar year instead of the one-year correlations in future calendar years.

Figure 12

Figure 11 The misestimation of the Solvency II risk margin caused by using the ultimate correlation instead of the one-year correlations in future calendar years.

Figure 13

Table 3. The misestimation of the Solvency II capital requirement caused by using the ultimate correlation instead of the one-year correlation in the next calendar year for a portfolio with multiple lines of business