Risk management involves identifying potential losses, analyzing their likelihood and impact, and selecting techniques to address them. This includes risk control methods like avoidance, prevention and reduction, as well as risk financing options like retention, insurance and non-insurance transfers. The key steps are identifying exposures, measuring and analyzing risks, selecting appropriate treatment techniques, implementing a risk management program, and monitoring it. Risk management helps organizations reduce losses and costs from risks.
Risk management involves identifying potential losses, analyzing their likelihood and impact, and selecting techniques to address them. This includes risk control methods like avoidance, prevention and reduction, as well as risk financing options like retention, insurance and non-insurance transfers. The key steps are identifying exposures, measuring and analyzing risks, selecting appropriate treatment techniques, implementing a risk management program, and monitoring it. Risk management helps organizations reduce losses and costs from risks.
Risk management involves identifying potential losses, analyzing their likelihood and impact, and selecting techniques to address them. This includes risk control methods like avoidance, prevention and reduction, as well as risk financing options like retention, insurance and non-insurance transfers. The key steps are identifying exposures, measuring and analyzing risks, selecting appropriate treatment techniques, implementing a risk management program, and monitoring it. Risk management helps organizations reduce losses and costs from risks.
Risk management involves identifying potential losses, analyzing their likelihood and impact, and selecting techniques to address them. This includes risk control methods like avoidance, prevention and reduction, as well as risk financing options like retention, insurance and non-insurance transfers. The key steps are identifying exposures, measuring and analyzing risks, selecting appropriate treatment techniques, implementing a risk management program, and monitoring it. Risk management helps organizations reduce losses and costs from risks.
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The key takeaways are that risk management involves identifying, assessing and controlling threats to an organization's capital and earnings. It also involves forecasting and evaluating financial risks.
The steps involved in risk management process are: identify potential losses, measure and analyze the loss exposures, select appropriate techniques for treating losses, implement and monitor the risk management program.
The different types of loss exposures are: property, liability, business income, human resource, crime, employee benefit, foreign and intangible property.
PRESENTED BY:-
APOORVA 111 SUMAN 107 AMIT 125 WHAT RISK MANAGEMENT MEANS?
The forecasting and evaluation of financial risks
together with the identification of procedures to avoid or minimize their impact.
Risk management is the process of identifying ,
assessing and controlling threats to an organisation’s capital and earnings. WHAT IS MEANT BY RISK MANAGEMENT IN INSURANCE? Insurance risk management is the assessment and quantification of the likelihood and financial impact of event’s that may occur in the customer’s world that require settlement by the insurer; and the ability to spread the risk of these events occurring across other insurance underwriter’s in the market RISK MANAGEMENT PROCESS
Identify potential losses.
Measure and analyze the loss exposures. Select the appropriate combination of techniques for treating the loss exposure. Implement and measure the risk management program. IDENTIFY LOSS EXPOSURES
MEASURE AND ANALYZE THE LOSS EXPOSURES
SELECT THE APPROPRIATE COMBINATION OF
TECHNIQUES :- 1 RISK CONTROL AVOIDANCE LOSS PREVENTION LOSS REDUCTION 2 RISK FINANCING RETENTION NON – INSURANCE TRANSFER COMMERCIAL INSURANCE
IMPLEMENT AND MONITOR THE RISK
MANAGEMENT PROGRAM Identifying Loss Exposures • Property Loss Exposures • Liability loss exposures • Business Income Loss Exposures • Human resource loss exposures • Crime loss exposures • Employee benefit loss exposures • Foreign loss exposures • Intangible property loss exposures PROPERTY LOSS EXPOSURE:- A condition that presents the possibility that a person or an organisation will sustain a loss resulting from damage to property in which that person or organisation has a financial interest. LIABILITY LOSS EXPOSURE:- any condition or situation that presents the possibility of a claim alleging legal responsibilities of a person or business for injury or damage suffered by another party. Some liability claims results in lawsuit. BUSINESS INCOME LOSS:-income loss exposure affect the financial cash flow of a small business. For instance, claims may be for loss of sales, rents or tuition or may be due to an injury, sickness disability or loss of employment HUMAN RESOURCE LOSS EXPOSURE:- also known as personnel or people loss exposures, arise from injuries(or death) to employees, third parties or volunteers. People loss include the possibility of loss from a small business to disability, injury resignation, death or retirement of employees.
EMPLOYEE BENEFIT LOSS EXPOSURE:- liability
of an employer for an error or omission in the administration of an employee benefit program , such as failure to advise employees of benefit programs . coverage of this exposure is usually provided by endorsement to the general liability. FOREIGN LOSS EXPOSURE:-foreign exchange risk sometimes also refers to risk an investor faces when they need to close out a long or short position in a foreign currency and do so at a loss due to fluctuations in exchange rates.
INTANGIBLE PROPERTY LOSS EXPOSURE:-a
condition that presents the possibility that a person or an organisation will sustain a loss resulting from damage( including destruction, or loss of use) to property in which that person or organisation has a financial interest. • Failure to comply with government rules and regulations • Risk managers have several sources of information to identify loss exposures:- • Questionaires • Physical inspection • Flow charts • Financial statements • Historical loss data • Industry trends and market changes can create new loss exposures. Measure And Analyze Loss Exposures • Estimate the frequency and severity of loss for each type of loss exposure - Loss Frequency refers to the probable number of losses that may occur during some given time period. - Loss severity refers to the probable size of losses that may occur. • Once loss exposures are analyzed, they can be ranked according to their relative importance Loss severity is more important than loss frequency? Loss severity is more important than loss frequency:- • The maximum possible loss is the worst loss that could happen to the firm during the life time. • The probable maximum loss is the worst loss that is likely to happen. Select the Appropriate combination of techniques for treating the loss exposure
• Risk control refers to the techniques that
reduce the frequency and severity of losses • Methods of risk control include: • Avoidance- it means a certain loss exposure is never acquired, or an existing loss exposure is abandoned. - The chance of loss is reduced to zero - It is not always possible , or practical, to avoid all losses Loss prevention refers to measures that reduce the frequency of a particular loss. • Example- installing safety features on hazardous products Loss reduction refers to measures that reduce the severity of a loss after it occurs • Example- installing an automatic sprinkler system. Risk Financing refers to the technique that provide for funding of losses Methods of risk financing includes: • Retention • Non- insurance transfers • Commercial Insurance Risk financing methods: Retention Retention means that the firm retains part or all of the losses that can result from a given loss. - Retention is effectively used when: • No other method of treatment is available • The worst possible loss is not serious • Losses are highly predictable • The retention level is the dollar amount of losses that the firm will retain • A financially strong firm can have a higher retention level than a financially weak firm • The maximum retention can be calculated as a percentage of the firm’s net working capital - A risk manager has several methods for paying retained losses: • Current net income: Losses are treated as current expenses. • Unfunded reserve: losses are deducted from a book keeping account • Funded reserve: losses are deducted from a liquid fund • Credit line: funds are borrowed to pay losses ass they occur. A captive insurer is an insurer owned by a parent firm for the purpose of insuring the parent firm loss’s exposures - A single captive parent is owned by only one parent - An association or group captive is an insurer owned by several parents - Captives are formed for several reasons including: • The parent firm may have difficulty obtaining insurance • To take advantage of a favourable regulatory environment • Cost may be lower than purchasing commercial insurance • A captive insurer has easier access to a reinsurer A captive insurer can become a source of profit -Premiums paid to a captive may be tax- deductable under certain conditions. • Self- insurance is a special form of planned retention -Part or all of a given loss exposure is retained by the firm -Another name for self insurance is self funding -Widely used for workers compensation and group health benefits. • A Risk retention group is a group captive that can write any type of liability coverage except employer liability, workers compensation, and personal lines. -Federal regulation allows employers, trade groups, governmental units, and other parties to form risk retention groups’ -they are exempt from many state insurance laws. • A non-insurance transfer is a method other than insurance by which a pure risk and its potential financial consequences are transferred to another party. -Example include: contracts, leases. RISK FINANCING METHOD: INSURANCE • Insurance is appropriate for loss exposures that have a low probability of loss but for which the severity of loss is high - The risk manager selects the coverages needed, and policy provisions: • A deductible is a provision by which a specified amount is subtracted from the loss payment otherwise payable to the insured • An excess insurance policy is one in which the insurer does not participate in the loss until the actual loss exceeds the amount a firm has decided to retain. - The risk manager selects the insurer , or insurers to provide the coverages. - A risk manger must periodically review the insurance program MARKET CONDITIONS AND THE SELECTION OF RISK MANAGEMENT TECHNIQUES • Risk managers may have to modify their choices of techniques depending on market conditions in the insurance markets. • The insurance market experiences an underwriting cycle In a “hard” market, when profitability is declining, underwriting standards are tightened, premiums increase, and insurance becomes more difficult to obtain. In a “soft” market, when profitability is increasing standards are loosened, premiums decline and insurance becomes easier to obtain Implement and monitor the Risk Management Program Implementation of a risk management program begins with a risk management policy statement that: - Outlines the firm’s risk management objectives. - Outlines the firm’s policy on loss control - Educates top level executives in regard to the risk management process - Gives the risk manager greater authority - Provides standards for judging the risk manager’s performance A risk management manual may be used to : describe the risk management program Train new employees IMPLEMENT AND MONITOR THE RISK MANAGEMENT PROGRAM • A successful risk management program requires active cooperation from other departments in the firm • The risk management program should periodically reviewed and evaluated to determine whether the objectives are being attained The risk manager should compare the costs and benefits of all risk managers activities. BENEFITS OF RISK MANAGEMENT • Pre loss and post loss objectives are attainable • A risk management program can reduce the firm’s cost of risk - The cost of risk involves premiums paid, retained losses, outside risk management services, financial guarantees, internal administrative costs, taxes , fees and other expenses • Reduction in pure loss exposure allows a firm to enact an enterprise risk management program to treat both pure and speculative losses are reduced Personal risk management • Personal risk management refers to the identification of pure risks faced by an individual or family, and to the selection of the most appropriate technique for treating such rrisks • The same principles applied to corporrate risk management apply to personal risk management CONCLUSION As we have seen that there are many risk associated with investing. Some risk can be eliminated and some cannot. If you follow the process outlined , you should be able to reduce your risk and improve your outcome.