Showing posts with label SIFI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SIFI. Show all posts

Wednesday, 20 March 2013

Reactions magazine - CRO Risk Forum - Solvency II and ERM opinion

I covered the last one of these releases from Reactions magazine this time last year on the basis that it had some good all round coverage of ERM and Solvency II from Europe's highest profile risk executives, and again they haven't disappointed.

This recent release again has a veritable Who's Who of European CROs providing their take on a range of matters, so is definitely worth your time. It covers most of today's hot topics, including SIFIs, ERM, Solvency II, ORSA (in US), Internal Modelling and Emerging Risk.

I've taken the following from it;

Hannover Re CRO
  • "...experiencing increasing requirements for internal model approval" - strange one this, as they have already converted to a Societas Europaea, potentially driven by a wish to escape a more onerous challenge in this respect from Bafin and the FSA - doesn't therefore sound like that tactic is of much use!
  • Their internal model is currently S&P ECM III-approved - detail on the significance of that available here for those not familiar with their methodology etc, but of course a positive review of an ECM will impact both S&P's assessment of a company's ERM framework, as well as the amount of capital required to sustain a particular rating.
  • The CRO uses the cost of the Risk Function against the capital savings from an approved model as a demonstration of the function's value - in the absence of a range of alternatives, I guess it's worth a shot.
  • As CRO, has a veto of decision making at executive committee level
  • Comments in a rather peeved manner that current draft Level 3 proposals insist upon separately staffed and operationally independent compliance, risk and actuarial functions (they appear to have everything balled up into a second line of defence 'risk control unit'  - bit confused by this, but I'm guessing he has seen something behind closed doors, and rightly doesn't appreciate EIOPA determining how a company should be departmentally structured.
SCOR CRO
  • The financial crisis "...has shown that the diversification of financial risks disappears in extreme situations"
Kiln CRO
  • "Every generation of activity since [Level 1] has produced ever increasing requirements for documentation"
  • "We are wallowing in paperwork"
  • As with Hannover Re, they cite S&P internal model approval positively against the developing EIOPA/national requirements - only 40 pages required to evidence a standard sufficient for S&P 'model approval'
  • They differentiate between Strategic Risk and Emerging Risk, with the latter seen positively as product development opportunities.


Tuesday, 2 October 2012

Deloitte with more on the US-of-ORSA

Billed as a "regulatory guidepost to the future", Deloitte in the States have published their thoughts on ORSA developments, following on from recent activity in the space, most notably the NAIC's adoption of the RMORSA Act a few weeks back.

Hard to tell whether Deloitte have borrowed much from their European counterparts, who ponied up with the EIOPA-compliant equivalent document last week, but both documents ultimately point at the same end goal, namely getting the ORSA Process and ORSA Report content right.

Confidently declaring the first regulatory filing of an ORSA Report to be precisely, errr, "Sometime in 2015", the stateside plans are anchored more to ERM and, I guess by association, ratings agency implications. The document does help identify a couple elements which, with the Solvency II hat on, are easy to forget;
  • IAIS ICP 16 is bringing ORSA to the table of all signatories at some future juncture (which means I may get a job back home one day!)
  • Existing techniques for monitoring solvency, even in a jurisdiction of this size, are seemingly past their sell-by-date in terms of both content and turnaround time (p2) - holds true for many of the Solvency II-covered countries as well (plenty on that topic in here).
The rest of the document draws out the preparatory work which firms should be undertaking, despite the relative lack of certainty at this point in time, such as increasing real-time data availability and changes in reporting, management and governance structures. It also touches on suggested content, process implementation (more like formalisation from experience), and a checklist of operational considerations, resourcing (or even briefing/coaching) being highest priority in my mind in 2012.

Good document for you statesiders to pass round your friendly non-executive directors anyway, as an early socialising of the concept in this format goes a long way when you have tiny windows to educate them on the topic over the next 3 years - looks like you will be filing ORSA Reports before we are!

Interesting footnote is that AIG have been labelled as a potential SIFI today - ORSA may be 5 years too late to have saved the behemoth it once was, but let's hope it can help its slimmed down current-day version.

Monday, 17 October 2011

Van Hulle, Bernadino, SIFIs and Solvency II "chafing"

It was raining comment on the Thomson ILS news today (may need to subscribe, but it's free and worth it). Both van Hulle and Bernadino are quoted as playing down the significance of any decisions made on SIFIs, or "too big to fail" insurance institutions (as I recall there is some kind of decision pending, or may indeed have been released, on SIFI criteria).

Sr. Bernadino (our EIOPA big-hitter) is more concerned with low investment return and high inflation than the threat of SIFI classification on the insurers under his watch, while the thought of additional capital burdens for any EU insurers that qualify as SIFIs is "complete nonsence" to van Hulle, the Commission's Solvency II scribe.

This all despite KBW claiming that only a couple of insurers will fall inside the net (though I think this may have been US-HQd only).

Finally, AM Best got in on the act after the delays announced to Solvency II implementation last week - as well as highlighting the benefits of preparedness from a mergers and acquisitions angle (which may now also be put back a year), they also add that, while smaller companies are probably happy to receive an additional year of prep-time, the larger companies "may chafe" at the delay.

I have a nice cream for that...

Wednesday, 7 September 2011

CEA releases - SIFIs and ComFrame

The CEA got busy this week with a double release, covering their feedback on the IAIS's ComFrame proposals for group supervision, and feedback on ongoing discussions on SIFIs.

As far as ComFrame goes, they express that they feel it is too prescriptive, and potentially onerous for some groups ahead of others. They do not agree with the introduction of "living wills" for insurance companies (in the same way that banks are being obliged to document 'orderly wind-down' strategy in the UK for example). They also highlight that it does not address minimum standards at national level, so could be viewed as an additional layer of compliance for groups.

The CEA go on to countersign a separate letter with a number of other insurance associations to highlight these viewpoints.

The response to the ongoing SIFI work of the Financial Stability Board reaffirms the position of the CEA (and indeed the Geneva Association who have been vociferous on the matter) that insurers, by nature of their long term and less portable liabilities, should not be subjected to the same categorisation and timeframes as the banking industry. Cognisance of the ladder of intervention afforded by Solvency II is also requested.

Thursday, 30 June 2011

Insurance SIFIs - Metric ideas from the AAA

Spotted this, and it looked intriguing - American Academy of Actuaries proposing metrics "regarding size, interconnectedness and risk assumption" to assess whether insurance companies are systematically important - the AIG angle still seems to be driving this desire (resisted by almost every insurance lobbying group) to include a couple of insurance giants in the SIFI pot. I haven't looked for the paper itself, so google away if you are hot on this topic!

The second notable point here was that a "voting insurance expert" has beeen elected to the Financial Stability Oversight Council - not sure if that increases or lessens the likelihood of some insurers being captured as SIFIs.