Risk Management with Tail Quasi-Linear Means

We generalize Quasi-Linear Means by restricting to the tail of the risk distribution and show that this can be a useful quantity in risk management since it comprises in its general form the Value at Risk, the Tail Value at Risk and the Entropic Risk Measure in a unified way. We then investigate the fundamental properties of the proposed measure and show its unique features and implications in the risk measurement process. Furthermore, we derive formulas for truncated elliptical models of losses and provide formulas for selected members of such models.


Introduction
One of the most prominent risk measures which are also extensively used in practice are Value at Risk and Conditional Tail Expectation. Both have their pros and cons and it is well-known that Conditional Tail Expectation is the smallest coherent (in the sense of Artzner et al. (1999)) risk measure dominating the Value at Risk (see e.g. Föllmer & Schied (2016), Theorem 4.67). Though in numerical examples the Conditional Tail Expectation is often much larger than the Value at Risk, given the same level α. In this paper we present a class of risk measures which includes both, the Value at Risk and the Conditional Tail Expectation. Another class with this property is the Range Value at Risk, introduced in Cont et al. (2010) as a robustification of Value at Risk and Conditional Tail Expectation. Our approach relies on a generalization of Quasi-Linear Means. Quasi-Linear Means can be traced back to Bonferroni (Bonferroni (1924), p.103) who proposed a unifying formula for different means. Interestingly he motivated this with a problem from actuarial sciences about survival probabilities (for details see also Muliere & Parmigiani (1993), p.422).
The Quasi-Linear Mean of a random variable X, denoted by ψ U (X), is for an increasing, continuous function U defined as where U −1 is the generalized inverse of U (see e.g. Muliere & Parmigiani (1993)). If U is in addition concave, ψ U (X) is a Certainty Equivalent. If U is convex ψ U (X) corresponds to the Mean Value Risk Measure (see Hardy et al. (1952)). We take the actuarial point of view here, i.e. we assume that the random variable X is real-valued and represents a discounted net loss at the end of a fixed period. This means that positive values are losses whereas negative values are seen as gains. A well-known risk measure which is obtained when taking the exponential function in this definition is the Entropic Risk Measure which is known to be a convex risk measure but not coherent (see e.g. Müller (2007); Tsanakas (2009)).
In this paper, we generalize Quasi-Linear Means by focusing on the tail of the risk distribution. The proposed measure quantifies the Quasi-Linear Mean of an investor when conditioning on outcomes that are higher than its Value at Risk. More precisely it is defined by ρ α U (X) := U −1 E U (X)|X ≥ V aR α (X) .
where V aR α is the usual Value at Risk. We call it Tail Quasi-Linear Mean (TQLM). It can be shown that when we restrict to concave (utility) functions, the TQLM interpolates between the Value at Risk and the Conditional Tail Expectation. By choosing the utility function U in the right way we can either be close to Value at Risk or the Conditional Tail Expectation. Both extreme cases are also included when we plug in specific utility functions. The Entropic Risk Measure is also a limiting case of our construction. Though in general not being convex, the TQLM has some nice properties. In particular it is still manageable and useful in applications. We show the application of TQLM risk measures for capital allocation, for optimal reinsurance and for finding minimal risk portfolios. In particular within the class of symmetric distributions we show that explicit computations lead to analytic closed-forms of TQLM. In the actuarial sciences there are already some approaches to unify risk measures or premium principles. Risk measures can be seen as a broader concept than insurance premium principles since the latter one is considered as a "price" of a risk (for a discussion see e.g. Goovaerts et al. (2003); Furman & Zitikis (2008)). Both are in its basic definition mappings from the space of random variables into the real numbers, but the interesting properties may vary with the application. In Goovaerts et al. (2003) a unifying approach to derive risk measures and premium principles has been proposed by minimizing a Markov bound for the tail probability. The approach includes among others the Mean Value principle, the Swiss premium principle and Conditional Tail Expectation.
In Furman & Zitikis (2008) weighted premiums have been introduced where the expectation is taken with respect to a weighted distribution function. This construction includes e.g. the Conditional Tail Expectation, the Tail Variance and the Esscher premium. This paper also discusses invariance and additivity properties of these measures.
Further, the Mean Value Principle has been generalized in various ways. In Bühlmann et al. (1977) these premium principles have been extended to the so-called Swiss Premium Principle which interpolates with the help of a parameter z ∈ [0, 1] between the Mean Value Principle and the Zero-Utility Principle. Properties of the Swiss Premium Principle have been discussed in De Vylder & Goovaerts (1980). In particular monotonicity, positive subtranslativity and subadditivity for independent random variables are shown under some assumptions. The latter two notions are weakened versions of translation invariance and subadditivity, respectively.
The so-called Optimized Certainty Equivalent has been investigated in Ben-Tal & Teboulle (2007) as a mean to construct risk measures. It comprises the Conditional Tail Expectation and bounded shortfall risk.
The following Section provides definitions and preliminaries on risk measures that will serve as necessary foundations for the paper. Section 3 introduces the proposed risk mea-sure and derives its fundamental properties. We show various representations of this class of risk measures and prove for concave functions U (under a technical assumption) that the TQLM is bounded between the Value at Risk and the Conditional Tail Expectation. Unfortunately the only coherent risk measure in this class turns out to be the Conditional Tail Expectation (this is maybe not surprising since this is also true within the class of ordinary Certainty Equivalents, see Müller (2007)). In Section 4 we consider the special case when we choose the exponential function. In this case we call ρ α U Tail Conditional Entropic Risk Measure and show that it is convex within the class of comonotone random variables. Section 5 is devoted to applications. In the first part we discuss the application to capital allocation. We define a risk measure for each subportfolio based on our TQLM and discuss its properties. In the second part we consider an optimal reinsurance problem with the TQLM as target function. For convex functions U we show that the optimal reinsurance treaty is of stop-loss form. In Section 6, the proposed risk measure is investigated for the family of symmetric distributions. Some explicit calculations can be done there. In particular there exists an explicit formula for the Tail Conditional Entropic Risk Measure. Finally a minimal risk portfolio problem is solved when we consider the Tail Conditional Entropic Risk Measure as target function. Section 7 offers a discussion to the paper.

Classical risk measures and other preliminaries
We consider real-valued continuous random variables X : Ω → R defined on a probability space (Ω, F, P) and denote this set by X . These random variables represent discounted net losses at the end of a fixed period, i.e. positive values are seen as losses whereas negative values are seen as gains. We denote the (cumulative) distribution function by F X (x) := P(X ≤ x), x ∈ R. Moreover we consider increasing and continuous functions U : R → R (in case X takes only positive or negative values, the domain of U can be restricted). The generalized inverse U −1 of such a function is defined by we denote the space of all real-valued, continuous, integrable random variables. We now recall some notions of risk measures. In general, a risk measure is a mapping ρ : L 1 → R ∪ {∞}. Of particular importance are the following risk measures.
Definition 2.1. For α ∈ (0, 1) and X ∈ L 1 with distribution function F X we define a) the Value at Risk of X at level α as V aR α (X) := inf{x ∈ R : F X (x) ≥ α}. b) the Conditional Tail Expectation of X at level α as Note that the definition of Conditional Tail Expectation is for continuous random variables the same as the Average Value at Risk, the Expected Shortfall or the Tail Conditional Expectation (see chapter 4 of Föllmer & Schied (2016) or Denuit et al. (2006)). Below we summarize some properties of the generalized inverse (see e.g. McNeil et al. (2005), A.1.2).
Lemma 2.2. For an increasing, continuous function U with generalized inverse U −1 it holds: a) U −1 is strictly increasing and left-continuous.
The next lemma is useful for alternative representations of our risk measure. It can be directly derived from the definition of Value at Risk. Lemma 2.3. For α ∈ (0, 1) and any increasing, left-continuous function f : In what follows we will study some properties of risk measures ρ : (iv) translation invariance: For m ∈ R it holds ρ(X + m) = ρ(X) + m.
(vii) convexity: For λ ∈ [0, 1] it holds that ρ(λX A risk measure with the properties (iii)-(vi) is called coherent. Note that CT E α (X) is not necessarily coherent when X is a discrete random variable, but is coherent if X is continuous. Also note that if ρ is positive homogeneous, then convexity and subadditivity are equivalent properties. Next we need the notion of the usual stochastic ordering (see e.g. Müller & Stoyan (2002)).
Finally we also have to deal with comonotone random variables (see e.g. Definition 1.9.1 in Denuit et al. (2006)); Definition 2.5. Two random variables X, Y are called comonotone if there exists a random variable Z and increasing functions f, g : R → R such that X = f (Z) and Y = g(Z). The pair is called countermonotone if one of the two functions is increasing, the other decreasing.

Tail Quasi-Linear Means
For continuous random variables X ∈ X and levels α ∈ (0, 1) let us introduce risk measures of the following form: Definition 3.1. Let X ∈ X , α ∈ (0, 1) and U an increasing, continuous function. The Tail Quasi-Linear Mean is defined by whenever the conditional expectation inside exists and is finite.
. In what follows we will first give some alternative representations of the TQLM. By definition of the conditional distribution it follows immediately that we can write where P(X ≥ V aR α (X)) = 1 − α for continuous X. Moreover, when we denote bỹ P(·) = P(·|X ≥ V aR α (X)) the conditional probability given X ≥ V aR α (X), then we obtain Thus, ρ α U (X) is just the Quasi-Linear Mean of X with respect to the conditional distribution. In order to get an idea what the TQLM measures, suppose that U is sufficiently differentiable. Then we get by a Taylor series approximation (see e.g. Bielecki & Pliska (2003)) that being the Arrow-Pratt function of absolute risk aversion and is approximately a Lagrange-function of a restricted optimization problem where we want to optimize the Conditional Tail Expectation under the restriction that the tail variance is not too high.
The following technical assumption will be useful: (A) There exists an ε > 0 such that U is strictly increasing on (V aR α (X)−ε, V aR α (X)).
Obviously assumption (A) is satisfied if U is strictly increasing on its domain which should be satisfied in all reasonable applications. Economically (A) states that at least shortly before the critical level V aR α (X) our measure strictly penalizes higher outcomes of X. Under assumption (A) we obtain another representation of the TQLM. Lemma 3.3. For all X ∈ X , increasing continuous functions U and α ∈ (0, 1) such that (A) is satisfied we have that Proof. We first show that under (A) we obtain: Due to Lemma 2.3 we immediately obtain On the other hand we have with Lemma 2.2 b),c) that which implies that both sets are equal. Thus, we get that which implies the statement.
Next we provide some simple yet fundamental features of the TQLM. The first one is rather obvious and we skip the proof.
Lemma 3.4. For any X ∈ X , the TQLM and the Quasi-Linear Mean ψ U are related as follows: The TQLM interpolates between the Value at Risk and the Conditional Tail Expectation in case U is concave. We will show this in the next theorem under our assumption (A) (see also Figure 1): Theorem 3.5. For X ∈ X and concave increasing functions U and α ∈ (0, 1) such that (A) is satisfied we have that Moreover, there exist utility functions such that the bounds are attained. In case U is convex and satisfies (A) and all expectations exist, we obtain Proof. Let U be concave. We will first prove the upper bound. Here we use the representation of ρ α U (X) in (3.2) as a Certainty Equivalent of the conditional distributionP. We obtain with the Jensen inequalitỹ (3.5) Taking the generalized inverse of U on both sides and using Lemma 2.2 a), b) yields The choice U (x) = x leads to ρ α U (X) = CT E α (X). For the lower bound first note that Taking the generalized inverse of U on both sides and using Lemma 2.2 c) yields Defining Taking the generalized inverse of U on both sides and using Lemma 2.2 c) yields which shows that the lower bound can be attained. If U is convex, the inequality in (3.5) reverses.
Next we discuss properties of the TQLM. Of course when we choose U in a specific way we expect more properties to hold.
Theorem 3.6. The TQLM ρ α U has the following properties: a) It is law-invariant.
b) It has the constancy property.
c) It is monotone. Proof.
a) The law-invariance follows directly from the definition of ρ α U and the fact that V aR α is law-invariant. b) For m ∈ R we have that V aR α (m) = m and thusP = P which implies the statement.
Thus it suffices to show that the relation Since we are only interested in the marginal distributions of X and Y we can choose X = F −1 X (V ), Y = F −1 Y (V ) with same random variable V which is uniformly distributed on (0, 1). We obtain with Lemma 2.2 which implies the result.
d) Since we have the representation Remark 3.7. The monotonicity property of Theorem 3.6 seems to be obvious, but it indeed may not hold if X and Y are discrete. One has to be cautious in this case (see also the examples given in Bäuerle & Müller (2006)). The same is true for the Conditional Tail Expectation.
Theorem 3.8. If ρ α U is a coherent risk measure, then it is the Conditional Tail Expectation Measure ρ α U (X) = CT E α (X) . Proof. As can be seen from Theorem 3.6, the translation invariance and homogeneity properties hold simultaneously if and only U is linear, which implies that ρ α U is the Conditional Tail Expectation.

Tail Conditional Entropic Risk Measure
In case U (x) = 1 γ e γx , γ = 0, we obtain a conditional tail version of the Entropic Risk Measure. It is given by (4.1) In this case we write ρ α γ instead of ρ α U since U is determined by γ. For α ↓ 0 we obtain in the limit the classical Entropic Risk Measure. We call ρ α γ (X) Tail Conditional Entropic Risk Measure and get from (3.3) the following approximation of ρ α γ (X): If γ = 0 is sufficiently close to zero, the conditional tail version of the Entropic Risk Measure can be approximated by i.e. it is a weighted measure consisting of Conditional Tail Expectation and Tail Variance (see (3.4)).
According to Theorem 3.6 we cannot expect the Tail Conditional Entropic Risk Measure to be convex. However we obtain the following result: Theorem 4.1. For γ > 0 the Tail Conditional Entropic Risk Measure is convex for comonotone random variables.
Proof. First note that the Tail Conditional Entropic Risk Measure has the constancy property and is translation invariant. Thus, using Theorem 6 in Deprez & Gerber (1985) it is sufficient to show that g (0; X, Y ) ≥ 0 for all comonotone X, Y where g(t; X, Y ) = ρ α γ (X + t(Y − X)), t ∈ (0, 1).
Since X and Y are comonotone we can write them as X = F −1 X (V ), Y = F −1 Y (V ) with same random variable V which is uniformly distributed on (0, 1). Thus we get with Lemma 2.2 (compare also the proof of Theorem 3.6 c)) The same holds true for Y and also for since it is an increasing, left-continuous function of V for t ∈ (0, 1). Thus all events on which we condition here are the same: Hence we obtain This expression can be interpreted as the variance of (Y − X) under the probability measure dP dP = e γX 1 [V ≥α] E e γX 1 [V ≥α] and is thus greater or equal to zero which implies the statement.

Applications
In this Section we show that the TQLM is a useful tool for various applications in risk management.

Capital Allocation
Firms often have the problem of allocating a global risk capital requirement down to subportfolios. One way to do this is to use Aumann-Shapley capital allocation rules. For convex risk measures this is not an easy task and has e.g. been discussed in Tsanakas (2009). A desirable property in this respect would be that the sum of the capital requirements for the subportfolios equals the global risk capital requirement. More precisely, let (X 1 , X 2 , ..., X n ) be a vector of n random variables and let S = X 1 + X 2 + ... + X n be its sum. An intuitive way to measure the contribution of X i to the total capital requirement, based on the TQLM is by defining (compare for instance with Landsman & Valdez (2003) . This results in a capital allocation rule if It is easily shown that this property is only true in a special case: Theorem 5.1. The TQLM of the aggregated loss S is equal to the sum of TQLM of the risk sources X i , i = 1, 2, ..., n, i.e. (5.1) holds for all random variables X i , i = 1, 2, ..., n, if and only if U is linear.
In general we cannot expect (5.1) to hold. Indeed for the Tail Conditional Entropic Risk Measure we obtain that in case the losses are comonotone, it is not profitable to split the portfolio in subportfolios, whereas it is profitable if two losses are countermonotone.
Theorem 5.2. The Tail Conditional Entropic Risk Measure has for γ > 0 and comonotone X i , i = 1, . . . , n the property that In case n = 2 and X 1 , X 2 are countermonotone the inequality reverses.
Proof. As in the proof of Theorem 4.1 we get for comonotone X, Y that X = F −1 X (V ), Y = F −1 Y (V ) with same random variable V which is uniformly distributed on (0, 1) and that since the covariance is positive for comonotone random variables. Here, as beforeP is the conditional distribution given by dP dP = 1 1−α 1 [V ≥α] . Taking 1 γ log on both sides implies the result for n = 2. The general result follows by induction on the number of random variables. In the countermonotone case the inequality reverses.

Optimal Reinsurance
TQLM risk measures can also be used to find optimal reinsurance treaties. In case the random variable X describes a loss, an insurance company is able to reduce its risk by splitting X into two parts and transferring one of these parts to a reinsurance company. More formally a reinsurance treaty is a function f : R + → R + such that f (x) ≤ x and f as well as R f (x) := x − f (x) are both increasing. The reinsured part is then f (x). The latter assumption is often made to rule out moral hazard. In what follows let be the set of all reinsurance treaties. Note that functions in C are in particular Lipschitz- Of course the insurance company has to pay a premium to the reinsurer for taking part of the risk. For simplicity we assume here that the premium is computed according to the expected value premium principle, i.e. it is given by (1 + θ)E[f (X)] for θ > 0 and a certain amount P > 0 is available for reinsurance. The aim is now to solve This means that the insurance company tries to minimize the retained risk, given the amount P is available for reinsurance. Problems like this can e.g. be found in Gajek & Zagrodny (2004). A multidimensional extension is given in Bäuerle & Glauner (2018).
In what follows we assume that U is strictly increasing, strictly convex and continuously differentiable, i.e. according to (3.3) large deviations in the right tail of R f (X) are heavily penalized. In order to avoid trivial cases we assume that the available amount of money for reinsurance is not too high, i.e. we assume that The optimal reinsurance treaty is given in the following theorem. It turns out to be a stop-loss treaty.
Theorem 5.3. The optimal reinsurance treaty of problem (5.2) is given by where a is a positive solution of (1 + θ)E[(X − a) + ] = P.
Note that the optimal reinsurance treaty does not depend on the precise form of U , i.e. on the precise risk aversion of the insurance company.
Proof. First observe that z → E[(X − z) + ] is continuous and decreasing. Moreover by assumption P < (1 + θ)E[(X − V aR α (X)) + ]. Thus by the mean-value theorem there exits an a > V aR α (X) such that (1 + θ)E[(X − a) + ] = P. Since U −1 is increasing, problem (5.2) is equivalent to Since f ∈ C we have by Lemma 2.3 that V aR α (R f (X)) = R f (V aR α (X)) and since R f is non-decreasing we obtain On the other hand it is reasonable to assume that f (x) = 0 for x ≤ V aR α (X) since this probability mass does not enter the target function which implies that R f (x) = x for x ≤ V aR α (X) and thus In total we have that Hence, we can equivalently consider the problem Next note that we have for any convex, differentiable function g : R + → R + that g(x) − g(y) ≥ g (y)(x − y), x, y ≥ 0. Now consider the function g(z) := U (x − z)1 [x≥V aRα(X)] + λz for fixed λ := U (a) > 0 and fixed x ∈ R + . By our assumption g is convex and differentiable with derivative Let f * be the reinsurance treaty defined in the theorem and f ∈ C any other admissible reinsurance treaty. Then

Rearranging the terms and noting that
The statement follows when we can show that In the first case we obtain for X ≥ a by definition of f * and λ (note that a > V aR α (X)): In the second case we obtain for X < a that f (X) − f * (X) = f (X) ≥ 0 and since U is increasing: U Hence the statement is shown.

TQLM for symmetric loss models
The symmetric family of distributions is well known to provide suitable distributions in finance and actuarial science. This family generalizes the normal distribution into a framework of flexible distributions that are symmetric. We say that a real-valued random variable X has a symmetric distribution, if its probability density function takes the form where g (t) ≥ 0, t ≥ 0, is the density generator of X and satisfies The parameters µ ∈ R and σ 2 > 0 are the expectation and the scale parameter of the distribution, respectively, and we write X S 1 (µ, σ 2 , g). If the variance of X exists, then it takes the form For the sequel, we also define the standard symmetric random variable Z S 1 (0, 1, g) and a cumulative generator G(t), first defined in Landsman & Valdez (2003), that takes the form with the condition G(0) < ∞. Special members of the family of symmetric distributions are: a) The normal distribution, In what follows we will consider the TQLM for this class of random variables.
For the special case of Tail Conditional Entropic Risk Measures we obtain the following result: Theorem 6.2. Let X S 1 (µ, σ 2 , g). The moment generating function of X exists if and only if the Tail Conditional Entropic Risk Measure satisfies Proof. For a function U we obtain: y 2 )dy.
Hence it follows that Also note that ρ α γ (X) < ∞ is equivalent to the existence of the moment generating function.
In the following theorem, we derive an explicit formula for the Tail Conditional Entropic Risk Measure for the family of symmetric loss models. For this, we denote the cumulant function of Z by κ (t) := log ψ − 1 2 t 2 where ψ is the characteristic generator, i.e. it satisfies E[e itX ] = e itµ ψ( 1 2 t 2 σ 2 ). Theorem 6.3. Let X S 1 (µ, σ 2 , g) and assume that the moment generating function of X exists. Then the Tail Conditional Entropic Risk Measure is given by Here F Y (y) is the cumulative distribution function of a random variable Y with the density f Y (y) = e γσy ψ − 1 2 γ 2 σ 2 g 1 2 y 2 , y ∈ R and F Y is its tail distribution function.
Proof. From the previous Theorem, we have that ρ α γ (X) = µ + σρ α σγ (Z) where Z S 1 (0, 1, g). Then, from , the conditional characteristic function of the symmetric distribution can be calculated explicitly, as follows: Observing that the following relation holds for any characteristic generator ψ of g (see, for instance , Dhaene et al. (2008 and finally, where κ (γσ) = log ψ − 1 2 γ 2 σ 2 is the cumulant of Z.
Example 6.4. Normal distribution. For X N 1 (µ, σ 2 ), the characteristic generator is the exponential function, and we have This leads to the following density of Y f Y (y) = e γσy− 1 2 γ 2 σ 2 1 √ 2π e − 1 2 y 2 (6.4) where φ is the standard normal density function. Then, the Tail Conditional Entropic Measure is given by Here Φ, Φ are the cumulative distribution function and the tail distribution function of the standard normal distribution, respectively.
Remark 6.5. The formulas of Theorem 6.1 and 6.3 can be specialized to recover existing formulas for the Conditional Tail Expectation, the Value at Risk and the Entropic Risk Measure of symmetric distributions. More precisely we obtain from Theorem 6.3 that where the first lim γ↓0 γ −1 κ (γσ) = 0 using L'Hopital's rule and the second limit is the stated expression by again using L'Hopital's rule. This formula can e.g. be found in and for the Value at Risk we finally get with Theorem 6.1 and using Thus our general formulas comprises several important special cases.

Optimal Portfolio Selection with Tail Conditional Entropic Risk Measure
The concept of optimal portfolio selection is dated back to Markowitz (1952) andde Finetti (1940), where the optimization of the mean-variance measure provides a portfolio selection rule that calculates the weights one should give to each investment of the portfolio in order to get the maximum return under a certain level of risk. In this Section, we examine the optimal portfolio selection with the TQLM measure for the multivariate elliptical models. The multivariate elliptical models of distributions are defined as follows: Let X be a random vector with values in R n whose probability density function is given by (see for instance Landsman & Valdez (2003)) Here g n (u) , u ≥ 0, is the density generator of the distribution that satisfies the inequality where µ ∈ R n is the expectation of X and Σ is the n × n positive definite scale matrix, where, if exists, the covariance matrix of X is given by and we write X E n (µ, Σ, g n ). For n = 1 we get the class of symmetric distributions discussed in the previous section. For a large subset of the class of elliptical distributions, such as the normal, Student-t, logistic, and Laplace distributions, for X E n (µ, Σ, g n ) and π ∈ R n be some non-random vector, we have that π T X E 1 (π T µ, π T Σπ, g), g := g 1 . This means that the linear transformation of an elliptical random vector is also elliptically distributed with the same generator g n reduced to one dimension. For instance, in the case of the normal distribution g n (u) = e −u / (2π) n/2 , then g (u) := g 1 (u) = e −u / (2π) 1/2 .
In modern portfolio theory, the portfolio return is denoted by R := π T X where it is often assumed that X N n (µ, Σ) is a normally distributed random vector of financial returns.
Proof. From the linear transformation property of the elliptical random vectors, and using Theorem 6.2, the theorem immediately follows.
Using the same notations and definitions as in , we define a column vector of n ones, 1, and 1 1 as a column vector of (n − 1) ones. Furthermore, we define the n × n positive definite scale matrix Σ with the following partition Σ = Σ 11 σ 1 σ T 1 σ nn .

Discussion
The Tail Quasi-Linear Mean is a measure which focuses on the right tail of a risk distribution. In its general definition it comprises a number of well-known risk measures like Value at Risk, Conditional Tail Expectation and Entropic Risk Measure. Thus, once having results about the TQLM we are able to specialize them to other interesting cases. It is also in line with the actuarial concept of a Mean Value principle. Moreover, we have shown that it is indeed possible to apply the TQLM in risk management and that it yields computationally tractable results.