Risks and Rewards For The Insurance Sector: The Big Issues, and How To Tackle Them
Risks and Rewards For The Insurance Sector: The Big Issues, and How To Tackle Them
Risks and Rewards For The Insurance Sector: The Big Issues, and How To Tackle Them
Table of Contents
Foreword...........................................................................................................1
The Key Issues Facing Insurance Companies Today......................................2
Ensuring that Customers Are at the Center of Everything............................3
Developing New, Competitively Priced Products..........................................4
Integrating Delivery Channels.......................................................................5
Enhancing Operational Efficiency and Effectiveness....................................5
Maintaining Relations with Governments and Regulators............................7
Retaining Strong Capital Positions and Achieving Good
Investment Returns...................................................................................8
Strengthening Risk Management.................................................................9
Embedding Sustainability into Core Insurance Processes and into an
Insurer’s Wider Activities.........................................................................10
How to Deal with the Issues Using
the Power of Business Analytics...................................................................11
Putting Customers at the Center................................................................13
Developing a Wide Choice of Insurance Products That the Market
Needs, and Which Are Competitively Priced............................................14
Integrating Delivery Channels.....................................................................15
Enhancing Operational Efficiency and Effectiveness..................................15
Maintaining Good Relations with Governments and Regulators ................16
Retaining Strong Capital Positions and Achieving Good
Investment Returns ................................................................................17
Strengthening Risk Management...............................................................18
Embedding Sustainability into Core Insurance Processes and into
an Insurer’s Wider Activities....................................................................19
Taking Action..................................................................................................20
About SAS.......................................................................................................22
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RISKS AND REWARDS FOR THE INSURANCE SECTOR
An Industry View
“The risks we face keep changing shape and in particular we need to keep thinking
about the longer term challenges. Long after we have proven our mettle by rising
to current economic difficulties, we need to show that we can respond quickly and
effectively to rising global competition and more mobile capital flows.”
Andrew Moss, Group Chief Executive, Aviva, in the foreword to the UK’s
Insurance Industry Working Group’s report, Vision for the Insurance Industry in
2020, London, July 2009.
A Regulatory View
“The recent financial crisis clearly demonstrated that risks to the financial system can
arise not only from banks, but also from other financial firms – such as investment
banks or insurance companies – that traditionally have not been subject to the type
of regulation and consolidated supervision applied to bank holding companies.
“To close this gap, the Congress should ensure that all systemically
important financial institutions are subject to a robust regime for consolidated
prudential supervision.”
Alastair Sim is Senior Director of Global Marketing (EMEA) for SAS. He also
leads the company’s Global Marketing Program for Risk Management, and
is a key member of SAS’ Global Marketing Board. Sim is a fellow of the
Chartered Institute of Marketing.
Acknowledgements
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RISKS AND REWARDS FOR THE INSURANCE SECTOR
Foreword
The economic, social and environmental changes that have taken place around
the world in the past decade have been difficult for everyone. Many of those
changes took on a greater level of complexity following the financial crisis and
global economic downturn of the past two years. Who knows what is in store for
us next year, next month or even tomorrow?
Insurance companies – as risk managers, risk carriers and major investors – are
in the front line when dealing with these upheavals and the challenges they
create. The role of insurance is to bring some predictability, manageability and
stability in what is, in essence, a chaotic world.
So what are the main issues that face insurers? That is the first question this
white paper seeks to answer, and the answer is easy. We have set it out in
Chapter 1; it ranges from how to put customers at the center of everything an
insurer does, to strong risk and capital management (as required, for example, by
the EU’s Solvency II directive), to how to incorporate sustainability factors in core
insurance processes and business operations.
How should insurers deal with these issues? That is the second question, and
the answer is far from easy. We deal with it in Chapter 2, focusing on the role that
business analytics has to play in helping insurers cope with the challenges they
must confront. We explain how – in dealing with these issues – it is important to
have an integrated view that brings together everything necessary for improving
the organization’s performance, such as managing customers, new business,
claims, fraud, rate making and assets.
This is where SAS has a role to play, as more than 3,000 financial institutions
worldwide use SAS® Business Analytics software – many of them insurance
companies. It is the recognized leader in business analytics solutions and
services, delivering insight to allow business leaders to make fact-based
decisions on strategy and operations.
This white paper is aimed at senior executives worldwide in all types of insurance
companies – life insurance, general insurance, reinsurance, composites – who
want to gain greater insight into the challenges they face. They can be sure they
will be well-equipped to tackle these challenges if they do so within a business
analytics framework.
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RISKS AND REWARDS FOR THE INSURANCE SECTOR
The insurance industry is truly huge and the figures almost beyond comprehension.
Worldwide premium income reached $4.2 trillion in 2008. Insurers’ global assets
under management stood at $19.8 trillion in 2007. The value of the risks insured by
insurance companies for individuals and entities today is estimated to be around
$400 trillion.
New risks are rapidly emerging that need covering; not just short-term risks related
to the financial crisis and global economic downturn, but longer term ones such
as climate change, poverty, aging populations and new varieties of international
terrorism. Insurers have developed policies to cover these risks for their customers,
and are working on new products. Yet insurers face risks and challenges of their own
that they must plan for and manage, above and beyond what they do for others.
That is what this white paper is about.
Insurance companies, just like any commercial enterprise, want to improve market
share and gain new business. Therefore the design and build of new, innovative
products (such as rate making) is key. The business also has to understand
its customers properly if it is to increase revenue profitably and manage risk.
This understanding must include an appreciation of likely future claims trends
in order to decide how much capital must be set aside to meet internal and
regulatory requirements.
So, in summary, what are the big issues for insurers? We have identified many, which
we have put into eight broad categories:
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RISKS AND REWARDS FOR THE INSURANCE SECTOR
We do not, therefore, claim that this white paper is fully comprehensive, if you will
pardon the motor insurance analogy. Nor do we have the space to look at how
different types of insurers – in particular life insurers versus general insurers – are
affected. Nevertheless, we feel that this chapter neatly summarizes the main issues
affecting insurance companies.
“Know your customer” and “put the customer at the center of everything you do”
are key business principles. They are the modern equivalents of what previous
generations of executives knew as “the customer is king” and “the customer is
always right.” But just because customer-centricity has long been recognized as
crucial does not mean to say that businesses are good at it.
Most insurance companies need to do more to put their customers at the center.
Even those that can justifiably claim they are truly customer-centric have to work
hard to stay focused on the principle. But the effort is worth it because the prize is
worth it. An insurance company that really does put customers at the center will
boost customer confidence and loyalty. This, in turn, will translate into increased
sales revenue, higher profits and, ultimately, enhanced shareholder value.
The fact that insurers need to do more to engage with customers was highlighted
in a mid-2009 report from the UK’s Insurance Industry Working Group (IIWG), co-
chaired by Alistair Darling, then the Chancellor of the Exchequer, and Andrew Moss,
Chief Executive of Aviva. The report, Vision for the Insurance Industry in 2020, makes
four broad recommendations, the first of which is that insurers, working with the
government and regulators, should establish “a more customer-focused approach”,
not only “to increase customers’ confidence and trust in the insurance industry” but
also to improve financial literacy.
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RISKS AND REWARDS FOR THE INSURANCE SECTOR
Where do new product opportunities lie? One very fertile area is in working with
governments to allow the private sector to take on some of the risks predominantly
covered by the state – mainly pensions, unemployment benefit and health care –
to reduce the burden on the state and taxpayers, and at the same time provide a
profitable source of new business for insurers.
Great Eastern, the largest insurance group in Singapore and Malaysia, places great
importance on offering customers a wide and innovative range of products for
protection, savings and investment. “It constantly researches the market so that it
can launch new products and enhance its product offerings,” the company says in
its corporate profile. “This way, it remains competitive and provides customers with
product solutions that can suit their different financial goals and insurance needs.”
Japanese insurer Nippon Life, 120 years old in July 2009, is devoting much time to
developing “easy to understand” products, it says in its annual report. It received
a great deal of feedback from people complaining that the wording of some of its
policies was too complex, so it took action to simplify them.
Despite the favorable impressions that insurers give in their reports and statements,
the CSFI found in its Insurance Banana Skins 2009 survey that many respondents –
three-quarters of whom were insurers or brokers – believed that insurers have a poor
reputation for product development. One respondent commented that there were
currently “hardly any new products in general insurance and reinsurance.” Another
said insurers were “slow, cumbersome and not very imaginative,” and another
believed that price was the only differentiator. Respondents believed that the crisis
will slow down product development and leave the insurance sector more exposed
to competition, particularly from banks in the long-terms savings market.
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RISKS AND REWARDS FOR THE INSURANCE SECTOR
The delivery of insurance products to customers has changed in the past decade,
but not as much as in banking. First Internet-enabled computers, and now smart
phones, have proved in some cases to be efficient methods of marketing distribution,
whether used by own sales forces, tied agents or brokers. However, branches, face-
to-face meetings, post and telephone are still used much more than digital channels.
The challenge today is to integrate all of these channels so that the insurer has a
single view of the customer and can deliver exactly what the customer wants.
The CEA, the European insurers federation, published a report in March 2010,
Insurance Distribution Channels in Europe, which highlighted the ways in which new
technologies, in particular the Internet, have had a modest impact on the distribution
of life and general insurance products.
The report found that general insurance products are mainly provided by traditional
intermediaries, that is, agents and brokers. Agents are more important than brokers
in most countries, the main exceptions being Belgium, Ireland and the UK where
brokers account for more than 50 percent of general insurance premiums. The
report showed that face-to-face contact is still the predominant sales method: “Sales
through the internet, phone or mail were generally not significant in most countries
(market share below 5 percent) except in the Netherlands (45 percent) and the
UK (21 percent). The high proportion recorded in the Netherlands is, among other
factors, correlated with the recent privatization of the health insurance scheme,
health insurance products being mainly distributed by distance selling. In the UK,
the broad use of the internet and telephone, particularly for acquiring motor policies,
explains the high ratio.”
As for life products, bancassurance is the main distribution channel in many western
European countries. It represents 84.5 percent of the total life business in Portugal,
for example. On the other hand, bancassurance remains limited in Germany and the
UK. Sales through the Internet remain low throughout Europe because life policies
are expensive complex products for which customers require advice. “The lower
market share of distance selling does not mean that the internet is not used by
buyers to gather information about insurance cover or to compare various offers,
but rather demonstrates some difficulties in underwriting a contract via this specific
channel,” notes the report.
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RISKS AND REWARDS FOR THE INSURANCE SECTOR
Zurich Financial Services, the Swiss-based global insurer, earlier this decade made
a high-profile decision to change its business practices and embark on a series of
transformational initiatives, including a rigorous operational focus known as “The
Zurich Way.” This produced measurable improvements across all areas, but the job
is far from over. “Through operational transformation we continue to build strength
at our core – in such areas as risk management, underwriting and claims – while
maintaining flexibility, dynamism and innovation in our chosen markets,” explains
Zurich in its 2009 Business Review.
Allianz also places operational efficiency at the center of its strategy. It attributed its
resilience in the midst of the financial and economic crisis to three key factors:
• Its long-standing 3+One program, which sets out its most important
management objectives.
• Its goal of continuous improvement in its insurance core skills: risk pricing,
claims management and investment management.
“These measures ensure that all our business units use the highest standards to
meet the needs of our customers while delivering benefit for our shareholders. We
call this approach Delivering the Best of Allianz,” said the company in its annual
report. This final point is a crucial point, because it explicitly links a successful
operating model with customer-centricity and shareholder value.
Finally, it is worth relating how the General Insurance Association (GIA) of Singapore
two years ago adopted a new Motor Claims Framework (MCF) for its members to
instill greater discipline and efficiency into the claims process. Large underwriting
losses were being made on motor accounts, and in 2008 losses more than doubled
to the largest ever, severely denting profits. GIA President Derek Teo wrote in the
association’s annual report that “this kind of result shows that something is radically
wrong in the way we conduct motor insurance business in Singapore.”
The solution was the MCF. Almost immediately after being introduced there were
impressive increases in the efficiency of claims management that the GIA said would
contain the rising cost of motor claims and premiums.
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RISKS AND REWARDS FOR THE INSURANCE SECTOR
With one or two notable exceptions, insurance companies were not to blame for
the global financial crisis. Yet they are worried they will become innocent victims of
the regulatory backlash that has taken place against banks. The G20 leaders, the
Financial Stability Board, the International Association of Insurance Supervisors, the
Committee of European Insurance and Occupational Pensions and Supervisors, and
national finance ministries and financial regulators are laying down new laws and rules
that threaten the profitability, and even viability, of many insurers.
Even if the financial crisis had never happened, the regulatory burden would have
increased. In the EU, for instance, the Solvency II directive had been long in the
planning, even though the key principles were only agreed on last year. Solvency II,
when it comes into effect on January 1, 2013, will oblige insurers to improve their risk
management and ensure they set aside enough capital to cover all their risks – not
just insurance risk, but credit, market, operational and other additional identified risks.
The directive’s creators intend that, through better risk and capital management,
the likelihood of insurers failing will be reduced, thus strengthening protection for
policyholders and reducing the likelihood of market disruption. EU insurers, and those
doing business in the EU, are working hard to ensure they comply.
Rising taxation is also a challenge. Many countries have, or intend to, raise personal
and corporate tax to levels that will curtail demand in insurance markets and reduce
post-tax profits on the business that can still be done. Competition from emerging
financial centers – especially in the Arab Gulf, India and Asia, which have lighter-touch
regulation and, more significantly, lower tax rates and lower costs – is increasing and
could damage the home bases of some of the world’s longest established insurers.
Consequently, insurers and their trade associations are becoming more active in
lobbying governments and regulators. They want assurances that red tape and
tax will not stifle their activities. They also want politicians to take positive steps to
support their insurance sectors, at home and abroad.
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RISKS AND REWARDS FOR THE INSURANCE SECTOR
In the US, the American Insurance Association (AIA) has welcomed the Obama
administration’s comprehensive plan for financial regulatory reform. However, it is
worried that other attempts at regulatory change will unnecessarily affect insurers. In
March 2010, Leigh Ann Pusey, AIA President, issued a statement expressing “serious
concerns” about proposed legislation released by Senator Chris Dodd, Chairman
of the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs. She said that the
proposals would penalize insurers “for the mistakes of riskier financial firms.”
They have taken three hits from the financial crisis and economic downturn. First,
their capital reserves have been depleted in several ways: by lower revenues
and lower retained profits; by a shortage of equity and debt investors; by liquidity
demands; by low interest rates; and by a fall in the value of securities, property
and other asset classes, although the recent market bull runs have gone some
way to reverse the trend. Having less capital threatens insurers’ solvency positions
and their ability to meet customers’ claims, exposes them to the risk of regulatory
noncompliance with capital adequacy rules (such as the EU’s existing solvency
requirements and the new Solvency II directive), and makes it harder to write
new business.
Secondly, their proprietary investment portfolios have lost value, hitting profits
that have traditionally been buoyed by asset appreciation. Thirdly, their clients’
investments have fallen in value; life company policyholders’ long-term savings,
pensions pots and other assets have fallen in value, resulting in disappointed and
disaffected customers. Insurance companies offering guaranteed returns have been
especially vulnerable.
CSFI’s Insurance Banana Skins 2009 survey showed that poor investment
performance, equity markets and capital availability were regarded as the first,
second and third biggest risks identified by respondents, and “are all connected with
the fall-out from the credit crunch, and its impact on the strength and profitability of
the insurance industry.”
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RISKS AND REWARDS FOR THE INSURANCE SECTOR
The IIWG’s report showed how European insurers had suffered from “capital erosion
from falls in equity, property and bond values” (see Figure 1, Capital Strength
of European Insurers – Total Capital Ratio (TCR)). Having said that, their capital
positions are still strong.
200%
150%
100%
50%
UK Insurers UK and other European Insurers
September 2008
January 2009
January 2009 after stress test
January 2009 after stress text, excluding diversification benefits
Notes: The Total Capital Ratio is the relationship between the amount of capital held by the business and the amount
of capital needed to support the insurer’s business and financial strength rating. A TCR above 100 percent therefore
indicates that the insurer is adequately capitalized. The TCRs allow for diversification benefits unless stated otherwise.
Source: ABI Research based on Morgan Stanley Research. ‘The insurance industry: rebuilding confidence in Europe,’
ABI (2009a).
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RISKS AND REWARDS FOR THE INSURANCE SECTOR
Effective corporate risk governance at the top of the organization is essential. AIG’s
major risks, for example, are addressed at the corporate level through enterprise
risk management (ERM), which is headed by AIG’s chief risk officer (CRO). ERM
reports to the CEO and is responsible for assisting AIG’s business leaders, executive
management and board of directors to identify, assess, quantify, manage and
mitigate the risks incurred by AIG.
Regulators are also taking a closer interest in how insurers manage risks, an
important example of which is the EU’s Solvency II directive, work on which started
well before the financial crisis. The directive was adopted in 2009 and comes into
effect in 2013. Its main objective is to force insurance companies to improve their risk
management and set aside enough capital to cover all the risks they take.
Like the Capital Requirements Directive, which implements the Basel II framework in
Europe, Solvency II is organized in three pillars. Pillar 1 requires firms to show they
have enough capital to cover the risks (insurance, credit, market and operational
risks) to which they are exposed and to remain solvent, according to two measures:
the Solvency Capital Requirement (SCR), which is the ideal level; and the Minimum
Capital Requirement (MCR), which is the lowest level below which a firm must not
fall. A firm can choose to calculate its SCR and MCR using its own internal model
(which must be approved by the regulator) or the European Standard Formula.
Pillar 2 is the Supervisory Review Process. This requires firms to demonstrate that
their risk management systems and capital allocation processes are effective, which
they do through an Own Risk and Solvency Assessment (ORSA). Pillar 3 requires
firms to disclose publicly certain information about their risk and capital management.
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RISKS AND REWARDS FOR THE INSURANCE SECTOR
Having said that, the financial crisis has caused insurers to lower the importance
of sustainability issues as they focus on more pressing matters. In the Insurance
Banana Skins 2009 survey, “climate change” was only 28th on the list of insurers’
concerns, falling from fourth place in 2007, and “pollution” was 34th, down from
21st, reflecting a sense of declining urgency about these issues. “How fashions
change!” wrote the survey’s authors. “The only obvious reason for the sharp decline
of what respondents last time described as ‘the hot topic’ is that green issues
have been downgraded by the recession.” Some respondents thought it would be
only a temporary blip, and that climate change would bounce back up the listings
very quickly. Others thought it was not a genuine issue, but one “got up” by the
green lobby.
Some of the world’s biggest insurers are members of the United Nations
Environment Programme Finance Initiative (UNEP FI), the partnership between UNEP
and more than 170 financial institutions worldwide, whose role is to promote best
environmental and sustainability practices. The Insurance Working Group (IWG)
within UNEP FI looks at sustainability issues in the insurance sector and how firms
can integrate environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors into their core
business strategies and operations.
The IWG says it believes “that the systematic analysis, integration and management
of ESG risks and opportunities in core insurance processes (e.g., underwriting,
product development, investment, claims management, and sales and marketing)
is material to enhancing long-term company value.” The IWG talks about the need
for “sustainable insurance,” consistent with “the triple bottom line of people, planet
and profit.”
We have outlined the issues facing insurance companies today. The question now is
how in practice should they be dealt with? Part of the answer to that question is to
understand and exploit the full power of business analytics.
Business analytics is the collection and analysis of data about a business which is
then used to help the business make better-informed decisions. It uses the latest
software and technology, but it also embraces processes and people to become
part of the corporate culture. A business analytics framework therefore contains
solutions, software and services that help companies navigate challenges and
capitalize on opportunities.
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RISKS AND REWARDS FOR THE INSURANCE SECTOR
It starts with the automated collection of reliable, relevant and timely data on all
aspects of the business. The data is then cleansed, managed and analyzed, and
used in one of five ways: to provide standard and ad hoc management reports
and dashboards; to profile and segment groups of people, risks or transactions;
to forecast what will happen in the future; to engage in predictive modeling; and to
optimize business decisions (see panel for details).
The outcome is to provide decision makers with automated insight into their
organizations; not only into what happened in the past, but why it happened, what
may happen in the future and how the organization can manage its business to take
into account unknown events and achieve the best possible outcome. This insight –
coupled with management’s personal knowledge and experience – is used to make
fact-based decisions, decisions that will optimize and transform the business.
3. Forecasting. This enables insurers to estimate what will happen in the future,
based on the statistical evaluation of current and historic aggregate data.
4. Predictive modeling. Aimed at deriving the CLV (customer lifetime value), this
predicts future behavior or performance based on an analysis of transactional
data, third-party data (like claims history, geo-demographic data, and
structured financial product performance) or derived data often calculated
from one or more data elements. Examples include pricing adequacy based
on costs, possible losses and required margin; and the likelihood of fraud.
For more details relating specifically to the insurance sector, refer to the white paper
The Optimized Insurer: Using Analytics to Optimize Business Performance, which is
available from www.sas.com.
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RISKS AND REWARDS FOR THE INSURANCE SECTOR
Business analytics therefore has a vital role to play in helping insurers meet the
challenges of today, and should become part of a firm’s culture. It will allow an
insurer to gather accurate intelligence on its customers, intelligence that will
deepen customer insights to put customers at the center. Sound data analysis
will form the basis of new product development and pricing, and enhance
operational efficiency and effectiveness. Accurate information and regular reporting
are prerequisites of regulatory compliance, and also risk management. Finally, a
business analytics framework will assist an insurer in assessing key sustainability
factors – environmental, social and ethical – when underwriting and pricing policies,
developing new products and investing, as well as when measuring its own
sustainability credentials.
This chapter takes the key issues outlined in the previous chapter and shows
how they can be managed using the business analytics capabilities described
above. The result will be better business performance, greater profitability and
satisfied shareholders.
As outlined in the first section, for all the progress made in recent years on customer
relationship management and getting to know customers better, insurance
companies are still not focusing on customers as much as they should be. A truly
customer-centric organization that improves the customer experience will reap the
rewards, in terms of increased loyalty, revenues and profitability.
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RISKS AND REWARDS FOR THE INSURANCE SECTOR
Firstly, to gain insight into what customers will do in the future, a company must
understand what they have done in the past. Business analytics can be used to
manage customer data and understand the behavior patterns of the best and worst
customers. By gaining insight into customers’ attitudes, behavior, profitability and risk,
management will be able to make smarter decisions about marketing.
Secondly, customers want to feel that their insurer understands them. They expect
to be properly communicated with and treated consistently. Marketing efforts,
therefore, must be well-orchestrated and synchronized across multiple channels.
Business analytics gives a company the ability to do just this – to choreograph a
comprehensive, multichannel marketing communication strategy that optimizes every
resource to achieve the desired goals and maximize return on investment. Finally,
business analytics is critical in implementing a closed-loop marketing process that
makes adjustments and improvements over time.
But better customer intelligence is just one part of the customer-centricity story. To
make it a winning story, insurance providers must also have robust strategies and
processes in place to retain existing customers and win new ones; find new ways
to maximize customer profitability through effective sales channels; and have more
precise segmentation and better communications.
In other words, they must fully embrace customer relationship management, and
deploy it within a business analytics framework. Such a framework will allow the
insurer to maximize customer intelligence to get the best return from campaigns;
optimize customer campaigns and channels by automatically tracking each campaign
element; implement complex customer interaction strategies, such as multichannel
and event-triggered campaigns; and create, deliver and track high-volume, opt-in,
personalized e-mail marketing campaigns based on a thorough understanding of
the customer.
Sound data is at the foundation of new product development and how new products
are underwritten and priced. Calculating the probability of traditional risks turning
into losses is difficult enough, and requires sound actuarial methods and disciplines;
calculating probabilities for emerging risks to be insured, and arriving at workable
premiums, is even more complex. Obtaining a comprehensive and accurate view of
data is important for insurers, but hard to achieve, especially considering the cyclical
nature of the market. Advanced analytic techniques are therefore essential.
Up-to-date, accurate data about the risks to be insured, and who is to be insured,
is the basis for sound underwriting. The underwriter uses this data to estimate the
expected losses and expenses over the anticipated period of coverage; to calculate
the premiums necessary to cover these costs; and to avoid adverse selection (i.e.,
where people, organizations or property that are most likely to suffer losses are
covered in greater proportion than others).
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RISKS AND REWARDS FOR THE INSURANCE SECTOR
A business analytics framework will allow insurers to manage all types of insurance
products they offer, using a platform that can be easily integrated into existing IT
and management frameworks. The platform will include an insurance data model
and data management processes that support the company’s risk analysis, actuarial
calculations and economic capital assumptions. A further benefit is that it will
measure return on investment (ROI) to show whether a product has been priced
profitably or not. Measuring ROI over the long periods that many insurance policies
run without a claim is particularly difficult, but it can be done.
Digital channels, though not as widely used as traditional, offer the best chances
of collecting customer data. Every website interaction can be captured to create
customer-centric knowledge which can be integrated with other digital and traditional
channels. This will allow insurers to more effectively understand, model and market to
their customers.
Such an approach can also be used by staff members in branches and call centers
at their computers. During a conversation with customers, or from paper or electronic
documents filed by customers, data is keyed or scanned into the system. Once in the
system it will be cleansed and merged with the data gathered from digital and other
distribution channels to build a single customer view.
Ensuring that operations are carried out quickly and at reasonable cost, and that
they achieve what they are supposed to achieve, is a constant slog but essential
to maintain profitability, return on investment and shareholder value. At the core
of improved operations is data, but many companies find it hard to manage
their data, vast quantities of which are scattered throughout the enterprise, and
convert it into the intelligence that executives need to understand and optimize
their operations. To add to their problems, the common silo mindset of business
units slows the delivery of information to those who need it, and a lack of clear
operational performance measurements can make it impossible to execute corporate
strategy successfully.
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RISKS AND REWARDS FOR THE INSURANCE SECTOR
There are four main areas where insurance companies could dramatically enhance
their operational efficiency and effectiveness, helped by better operational insight:
• Channels and products (e.g., distribution insight, product mix and the network).
By using business analytics, an insurer can understand its operations more fully
and optimize them. It is important in claims management, for example, especially
in difficult economic times; with sales and premium income already depressed, an
increase in claims payouts can easily turn profit into loss. To make matters worse,
claims fraud tends to increase in a recession. It is therefore more important than ever
to manage the claims process effectively, speeding up the time it takes to settle a
claim, as well as more accurately assessing claims and forecasting likely outcomes.
Managing the cost of claims means making the right decision as each new piece of
the claim puzzle comes into place. As a claim becomes more complex with more
settlements – perhaps there is a physical injury element or legal considerations to be
taken on board – the cost to the insurer accelerates. It is therefore crucial to make
the right offer, at the right time, to the right people – while accurately forecasting the
loss reserves – in order to mitigate the severity of the claim.
Governmental and regulatory action can be both hindrance and a help for insurers.
Business-hostile laws, burdensome financial regulation and increased levels of
taxation can all adversely affect profitability, the viability of certain business lines
and the attractiveness of a financial center. On the other hand, in recent times
governments have taken emergency action to support the industry – the US
government’s rescue of AIG being a case in point – or created policies designed to
make their countries more attractive as an insurance base than other countries.
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RISKS AND REWARDS FOR THE INSURANCE SECTOR
Take the Solvency II directive, which will fundamentally change the capital adequacy
regime for Europe’s insurers when it comes into force in 2013. One of the challenges
the directive poses is the need for robust data management. Due to volume and
complexity, data organization and planning will account for between 60 and 80
percent of a Solvency II project’s cost. But with the power of business analytics, an
insurance company will be able to collect and integrate data across the enterprise,
analyze it using powerful software, and put it into a suitable format for reporting up
the line to chief risk officers and the board, and to supervisors.
Treating customers fairly (TCF) is another area where business analytics can make
a difference. A number of regulators around the world now require financial firms,
including insurers, to demonstrate to themselves and to regulators that they are fair
to consumers.
The debate on capital and risk management is dominated in Europe by the Solvency
II directive, but it is a critical issue for insurers worldwide and is inextricably linked
to sound investment strategies. Some insurers have their own asset management
divisions or subsidiaries, while others outsource the responsibility to specialist asset
management companies.
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When the Solvency II directive comes into force in 2013, insurance companies
throughout Europe will have to set aside more capital to cover all the risks they
take. They will have to abide by the following measures – the Solvency Capital
Requirement (SCR) and the Minimum Capital Requirement (MCR), as well as
qualitative requirements – and business analytics will help them in those calculations
and assessments, which will entail a large data gathering, cleansing, analyzing and
management exercise.
Insurers managing their own investments will also need to do so within a business
analytics framework. The first step will be to gather and analyze data to acquire a
deep and up-to-date understanding of the business, its organizational structure,
the financial ratios, its tax liabilities and more. The second and third steps will be to
construct an investment portfolio to match the company’s return objectives and risk
appetite, and to select the securities and other assets to fit that portfolio; both of
these stages will require the profiling and segmentation of asset types, forecasting,
predictive modeling and optimization. Finally, investment performance, risk measures
and other finance-specific evaluations will be measured and reported to management
for action to be taken where necessary.
The core business of insurance is managing and carrying risk – transferring risk from
policyholders to insurers through the underwriting process. But the insurer’s other
risks – market, credit, operational, liquidity risk and so on – must also be managed
effectively. All of these risks should be managed through an enterprisewide framework
that allows the insurer to identify, measure, manage, report and monitor risks, and
then adjust the company’s risk profile in line with its business objectives and risk
appetite. There must be clear governance so that everyone – from the supervisory
board and executive management through to heads of business and compliance –
knows what their responsibilities and reporting lines are.
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A business analytics framework will therefore be helpful. It will, for example, assist
European insurers in complying with the Solvency II directive. Solvency II is designed
to protect policyholders and prevent a financial crisis in the European insurance
industry by requiring insurers to implement sound economic risk management
practices. Other regulatory bodies worldwide are following the European example
and implement similar solvency standards in an effort to strengthen the insurance
sector.
Business analytics software and services will help an insurer meet solvency
regulations by:
At the narrower level, business analytics can be deployed to deal with specific risks
such as fraud, a serious operational risk. Insurance claims fraud is widespread
and expensive, with estimated losses exceeding $30 billion a year in the US alone.
Most fraud detection solutions uncover fraud based on a single claim or customer
in isolation and are unable to identify wider bogus claims patterns associated with
organized crime. A fraud framework underpinned by different analytics techniques
will detect and prevent both opportunistic and organized claims fraud.
The Insurance Working Group (IWG) of the United Nations Environment Programme
Finance Initiative (UNEP FI) has been looking long and hard at sustainability issues, in
particular how to integrate environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors into
insurance companies’ business strategies and operations. The IWG believes that
the systematic analysis, integration and management of ESG risks and opportunities
in core insurance processes – underwriting, product development, investment,
claims management, and sales and marketing – is material to enhancing long-term
company value.
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The IWG’s report, The Global State of Sustainable Insurance: Understanding and
Integrating Environmental, Social and Governance Factors in Insurance, published
in October 2009, stresses the importance of data collection and analysis in ensuring
that ESG risks are properly taken into account when underwriting and pricing
insurance products. It says that a “detailed analysis of a large body of historical
experience and loss data” is necessary to understand these ESG risks, even though
much of the data required may be in short supply.
This is where a business analytics framework can help. Such a framework will gather
data on global emerging risks – such as climate change, biodiversity loss, ecosystem
degradation, demographic change, financial exclusion, human rights and new laws
and regulations – analyze and understand the data, which can then be used by
the insurer as the basis for making sound, forward-looking risk assessments and
underwriting decisions.
The framework can also be used by an insurer to collect and analyze data on the
ESG performance of its corporate policyholders. It is the duty of all policyholders
to disclose all material risk factors, but conventional disclosure practices may lag
behind current requirements and may not therefore capture all ESG factors; with the
power of business analytics, an insurer will be able to detect such nondisclosures
and help its customers meet their obligations. The same capability can be applied to
an insurer’s investment portfolios as well, to assess how well companies in which it
invests comply with ESG principles.
Finally, an insurer can use business analytics to measure its own compliance with
ESG principles. To what extent have we been able to limit carbon emissions, waste
and water consumption? How much of an equal opportunity employer are we?
Are we operating ethically? Are we ready for new regulations? All these searching
questions require significant data input and analysis to provide accurate answers.
Once it has the answers, the company’s management will be able to make properly
informed decisions on what steps to take next.
Taking Action
This document has outlined the vital role that insurers play in the world economy as
risk managers, as risk carriers and as institutional investors. It has shed light on the
critical issues that face insurers – the need to put customers at the center of their
strategy and activities, develop new products, enhance operational efficiency and
effectiveness, maintain good relations with governments and regulators, manage
capital and investments, strengthen risk management, and act in a sustainable way.
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Most importantly, this paper has shown how insurers can deal with those issues
by harnessing the power of business analytics. A business analytics framework
will collect, integrate and analyze data, and then report it up the line for business
leaders to make fact-based decisions that resolve problems and make the most of
opportunities (see Figure 3). The result will be more effective management, a better
performing business, greater profitability and – the Holy Grail for all enterprises –
enhanced shareholder value.
So what is the recommended course of action for insurers who want to go down
this route? The simple answer is that they should ensure that business analytics
becomes a central feature of their strategy and operations. It should become
part of their culture, just as so many other business basics – such as customer
management, operational excellence, workforce development and diversity, and
investor relations – have become embedded in every successful enterprise.
Insurers using a business analytics framework, embedded and aligned with every
aspect of the enterprise, will find it easier to deal with the big issues of the day.
They will be able to turn adversity into opportunity. Deploying such a framework –
incorporating the latest software and technology, and embracing sound processes
and skilled people – will allow them to collect and analyze data about their core
business activities and make fact-based decisions that propel the enterprise forward.
It will help them comply with new legislative and regulatory requirements. And it will
act as a guide and facilitator on the route to good corporate citizenship.
Success in all dimensions is what insurers aspire to; success in meeting not only
the narrow financial expectations of shareholders, but also in meeting the different
expectations of customers, employees, suppliers, local communities, regulators
and other stakeholders. This success can be achieved through the power of
business analytics.
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About SAS
SAS is the recognized leader in business analytics software, solutions and services,
which will deliver the right information – at the right time – to empower fact-based
decisions at every level of your enterprise. Our leadership is built on the combined
strengths of our software, our domain expertise and our more than three decades of
experience helping our customers not only adapt to change, but anticipate it.
SAS has more than 30 years of experience in financial services, working closely with
around 3,000 of the top financial institutions worldwide in the areas of risk, customer
and performance management.
• Data management. Only SAS has built, from the ground up, a comprehensive
enterprise data management environment, bringing together any format and type
of data to enable analyses within or from outside the organization. This vision is
made even stronger by our leadership in data mining and text mining – helping
you find patterns within, and interpret, both structured data and unstructured
data, such as e-mails, text documents, images and video.
• Analytics. For three decades, SAS has been the leader in helping organizations
apply statistical and mathematical functions to support actuarial calculations and
risk management processes, as well as predictive analytics, to drive proactive
decision making. Understand not only what happened in the past, but also
“Why is this happening?”, “What will happen next?” and “What’s the best that
can happen?”
• Query and reporting. With SAS, query and reporting are part of a seamless
approach for creating and sharing intelligence.
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