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Flashcards in 39 - Monitoring Deck (21)
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1
Q

Give the reasons for monitoring experience.

A
  1. A fundamental part of the actuarial control cycle
  2. Used to update the method and assumptions to be more relevant to future experience
  3. Used to monitor trends in experience, so as to be able to take corrective actions
  4. Provide management information
2
Q

Give the data requirements for experience monitoring.

A
  1. Reasonable volume
  2. Stable and consistent
  3. Divided into sufficiently homogenous risk groups
  4. There should be enough data in each group to be statistically significant
  5. Data on exposure to the risk of a particular product feature or business operation should also be available.
3
Q

Describe the analysis process for statistical factors.

A

Factors such as mortality or withdrawals should be grouped into age bands with the number of deaths divided by the number of lives exposed to that risk and then these results compared to a standard table or other assumptions.

4
Q

Describe the analysis process for economic factors.

A

Interest rates or returns assumptions are simply compared to actual experiences.

5
Q

Give the factors to keep in mind when setting or adjusting assumptions.

A
  1. Significance of a particular assumption the overall result
  2. Relationships/consistency between assumptions
  3. The needs of the client
  4. Legislative or regulatory constraints
  5. Margins in assumptions vs risk discount rate
  6. Time horizons over which assumptions apply
  7. The credibility of results and hence the need for margins
6
Q

Give an important consideration around the source of the data with regards to the use of analysis.

A

Whether the period under investigation was typical and whether the experience is likely to be representative of future experience.

7
Q

Give the factors that should be allowed for in an analysis.

A
  1. Trends
  2. Cycles
  3. Abnormal events
  4. Random fluctuations
  5. Data risks
  6. Modelling risks
8
Q

What are the likely results of experience monitoring?

A
  1. Changes to assumptions or models used - pricing, contributions or provisioning
  2. A change in the assessment of the risks faced by a provider or in its risk management strategy.
9
Q

Give the method for experience monitoring.

A
  1. Division of the data into suitable groups that are homogeneous by risk
  2. Identification of any past trends, cycles, anomalies and random variation in the past data
  3. Using the results to revise models and assumptions used
10
Q

Give considerations when dividing the data into homogeneous groups.

A
  1. The volume of data in each cell
  2. The risk factors for the investigation
  3. Changes that have occurred that will reduce the relevance of old data
11
Q

Give considerations when using the results of a monitoring process when revising assumptions and models.

A
  1. The purpose and hence the need for accuracy and margins for prudence
  2. Allowance for future trends
  3. Likely difference in future experience from past experience
12
Q

List the factors that a monitoring investigation into the sickness experience of an insurer could split the data into.

A
  1. Policy types
  2. Policy conditions - periods or definitions of sickness
  3. Age and gender
  4. Duration
  5. Smoker status
  6. Accepted on normal or special terms
  7. Target market
  8. Occupation
13
Q

List the factors that a monitoring investigation into the withdrawal experience of an insurer could split the data into.

A
  1. Type of contract
  2. Duration in force
  3. Source of business
  4. Target market
  5. Frequency of premiums
  6. Size of premiums - relative to income
  7. Premium payment method - cash or ETF
  8. Age
  9. Gender
14
Q

Give possible reasons for an insurance company to experience high lapse and surrender rates.

A
  1. Inappropriate selling
  2. Product term competitiveness
  3. Poor performance - investment or admin
  4. Mix of business
15
Q

Give the avenues for action that an insurer can take if it finds an experience to be too far from expected.

A
  1. Analysis and investigation
  2. Change the business strategy.
  3. Ensure that products meet customer needs
16
Q

List the main investigations that could be conducted by a financial product provider if there is a reduction in profits.

A
  1. Premium investigation
  2. Claims investigation
  3. Expense investigation
  4. Underwriting profit investigation
  5. Investment income investigation
  6. Legislative changes
  7. Solvency requirements
  8. External factors
17
Q

Give the concerns to be analysed in a premium investigation.

A

Sales volumes:
1. Actual vs expected volumes
2. If there are more attractive variations of the product released by competitors
3. New market entrants that are taking up market share
4. Comparison of business practices with competitors and any major changes
Premium Level:
5. Comparisons to competitors and expected values
6. Investigate any loss leaders that competitors are running that make premiums seem relatively high

18
Q

Give the concerns to be analysed in a claims investigation.

A
  1. Claims analysis to investigate any change in the premium basis
  2. General claim trends - large claims, high frequency, catastrophe, random variation
  3. Analysis of coverage and policy wording
  4. Reinsurance effectiveness
  5. Adequacy of reserving - may be unnecessarily prudent
19
Q

Give the concerns to be analysed in a expense investigation.

A
  1. Effects of any internal changes - sales channels, commission rates
  2. Mix of business - premium contribution rates
20
Q

Give the concerns to be analysed in a underwriting profit investigation.

A
  1. Quality of underwriting - procedures and guidelines

2. Underwriting performance on homogenous cohorts

21
Q

Give the concerns to be analysed in an investment income investigation.

A
  1. Benchmarks

2. Peer groups