pd 38 stress testing for insurers stuart wason senior director actuarial division osfi cia annual...
TRANSCRIPT
PD 38
Stress Testing for Insurers
Stuart WasonSenior Director Actuarial Division
OSFI
CIA Annual Meeting, HalifaxJune 26, 2009
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Stress Testing
Agenda:
Lessons learned from financial crises What is stress testing? OSFI expectations Q&A
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Lessons learned from financial crises
Stress testing is a valuable risk management tool
Improved risk management is required
More up-to-date stress testing results are needed
Increasingly, crises are due to systemic inter-connected events
Greater consideration needs to be given to extreme events
Individual insurers can have difficulty identifying industry-wide contagion impacts.
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Lessons learned from financial crises
Insufficient consideration of extreme events
– “It is hard for us without being flippant, to even see a scenario within any kind of realm of reason that would see us losing one dollar in any of those transactions.” August 2007, Joseph Cassano, a former AIG executive
– “Almost no one expected what was coming. It’s not fair to blame us for not predicting the unthinkable.” Daniel Mudd, former chief executive of Fannie Mae
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What is stress testing?
Stress Testing: Generalized process of determining the impact of a change in one or more risk factors on the operations of an insurer.
Scenario Testing: Form of stress testing which uses a hypothetical future state of the world to define the changes in the risk factors affecting the insurer.
Sensitivity Test: Form of stress testing which typically involves an incremental change in a risk factor to determine the impact on an insurer.
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Complexity
Severity
Stress Testing
Single risk/single time period
Many risks/interactions & time periods
Low stress
Severe stress
Scenario testing
DCAT
Sensitivity testing
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OSFI expectations
Strengthened risk management
Robust capital management plan
Scenario types considered
Stress testing used frequently
Earlier DCAT stress testing
DCAT disclosure improved
OSFI stress tests considered
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Strengthened risk management
Stress testing is an important risk management tool
OSFI expects stronger ERM:
– Demonstrate embedding of stress testing in ERM via “use test”
– Stress testing clearly documented & available for review
– Develop & implement stress testing controls
– Notify OSFI expeditiously of material adverse effects from stress testing
– Ability to run stress tests frequently through the year
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Strengthened risk management
OSFI DCAT expectations
– Senior management engagement with DCAT
– Risk management is more than risk identification
– DCAT report experimentation
– Importance of actuarial opinion in DCAT
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Robust capital management plan
Stress testing (including DCAT) is an important part of internal capital management planning
Board sets risk appetite & senior management implements through internal target capital levels
Management should not rely exclusively on complex models
Stress testing should be used to test the vulnerability of assumptions
Management plans should anticipate both severe and more plausible stresses and scenarios
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Scenario types considered Scenarios enable a complete picture of a crisis to
be constructed Some types of scenarios:
– Reverse Scenarios: start with a given loss and make assumptions about a possible event that could give rise to such a loss
– Macro Scenarios: Scenarios that are defined on a global and market wide level Examples: Global downturn of financial markets, Pandemic
– Historical Scenarios: Scenarios that are defined with reference to a past observed event. Example: Influenza pandemic, Tokyo earthquake
– Company Specific Scenarios: Scenarios that are tailor-made for the risk exposure of a specific company
– Narrowly Specified Scenarios: Scenarios that describe a very specific event. It can be easily implemented consistently but might have a very small probability. Examples: A very specific earthquake, defined by location, magnitude etc.
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Stress testing used frequently
Financial conditions can change rapidly - stress tests more than a few months old may not reflect the current economic reality
Prudent ERM practice dictates that insurers review their future financial condition more frequently than once a year
OSFI expects insurers to prepare on a quarterly basis a comprehensive set of “what if” stress tests commencing with Q3 2009 for the largest insurers and Q1 2010 for all other insurers
OSFI should be informed immediately of a significant change in the condition of a company and an updated DCAT report be prepared and filed with the Board and OSFI within 45 days
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Earlier DCAT stress testing
Annual DCAT report expected to be integral part of risk management & strategic planning process
Starting in 2010, OSFI expects that annual stress testing (including the DCAT report), be presented to Board no later than 6 months after year end
For 2009, the reports must be presented no later than 9 months after year end
The reports must be filed with OSFI within 30 days after presentation to Board.
OSFI expects DCAT report to be used to identify risks that must be addressed in planning process -not the other way around
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DCAT disclosure improved
DCAT reports should utilize better practices currently used by some, but not all, insurers, including:– Displaying financial results for each year in the
projection period, not just the beginning and end of period results
– Displaying the results of the adverse scenario both before and after relevant management reaction
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OSFI stress tests considered
Stress testing will be a part of OSFI’s on-going supervisory regime
Stress testing will enable OSFI to,– analyze insurer specific risk exposures– assess the effectiveness of risk management
Stresses or scenarios which impact all companies, can have industry-wide contagion impacts
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OSFI stress tests considered
Consistent application of these macro scenarios across all companies is the best way to identify these systemic impacts
Standardized stresses or scenarios enable OSFI to– analyze market-wide risk exposures in a jurisdiction or
globally
– assess the resilience of each insurer to similar stresses or scenarios.
OSFI will publish list of standardized stress tests, including underlying assumptions, and revise them from time to time
In conducting these tests for OSFI, insurers may wish to consider such scenarios in their own risk management
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In conclusion
Stress testing is an important risk management tool
OSFI is outlining its expectations for stress testing to build on DCAT experience and lessons learned from current crisis
OSFI will continue to work with the industry and the CIA to strengthen risk management
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Questions and Answers
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