Claims Triangle - R: Submitted by Ishan Bandyopadhyay
Claims Triangle - R: Submitted by Ishan Bandyopadhyay
-R Submitted by
Ishan Bandyopadhyay
Insurers don’t know the upfront cost for their
service, but rely on historical data analysis and
judgement to predict a sustainable price for
their offering.
The claims payment process can take years or
even decades. Therefore, often not even the
Introduction delivery date of their product is known to
insurers.
It should come as no surprise that the biggest
item on the liabilities side of an insurer’s
balance sheet is often the provision or
reserves for future claims payments.
The ChainLadder provides various statistical methods
which are typically used for the estimation of outstanding
claims reserves in general insurance, including those to
estimate the claims development results.
“ChainLadder”
Select Select tail factor
5 5
4
4 3 3
5 3
4
3 1 1 1
1
15000
3 1 2 2
5
4 6 2 2
RAA
3 2
1
8 6
6 7
1
4 7
1 2
5
3
1
8
6
5000
4
1 9 2
2
7
3
9
0
6
8
5
7
0
2 4 6 8 10
dev. period
Claims Development by origin period
2 4 6 8 10 2 4 6 8 10
2 4 6 8 10 2 4 6 8 10 2 4 6 8 10
dev. period
Loss triangle - Incremental
Log-linear extrapolation of age-to-age factors
0
-1
Log-linear
log(f - 1)
-2
model
-3
-4
2 4 6 8
dev.period
LDF method
• Thomas Mack published in 1993 a
method which estimates the standard
errors of the chain-ladder forecast
without assuming a distribution.
Mack • The Mack chain-ladder model gives an
unbiased estimator for IBNR (Incurred
ChainLadder But Not Reported) claims.
• The Mack chain-ladder model can be
regarded as a weighted linear
regression through the origin for each
development period.
Mack triangle
Munich ChainLadder
• Munich chain-ladder is a
reserving method that reduces
the gap between IBNR
projections based on paid losses
and IBNR projections based on
incurred losses.
• The Munich chain-ladder method
uses correlations between paid
and incurred losses of the
historical data into the projection
for the future.
• The Boot ChainLadder function uses a two-
stage bootstrapping/simulation approach
following the paper by England and Verrall.
• In the first stage an ordinary chain-ladder
methods is applied to the cumulative claims
triangle.
Bootstrap • In the second stage we simulate the process
error with the bootstrap value as the mean and
ChainLadder using the process distribution assumed.
• The set of reserves obtained in this way forms
the predictive distribution, from which
summary statistics such as mean, prediction
error or quantiles can be derived.
BootChainLadder
Quantiles of
Bootstrap
IBNR
• The LDF method assumes that the ultimate
losses in each origin period are separate
and unrelated. The goal of the method,
therefore, is to estimate parameters for
the ultimate losses and for the growth
curve in order to maximize the likelihood
of having observed the data in the triangle.
Clark’s • The CapeCod method assumes that the
apriori expected ultimate losses in each
methods origin year are the product of earned
premium that year and a theoretical loss
ratio. The CapeCod method, therefore,
need estimate potentially far fewer
parameters: for the growth function and
for the theoretical loss ratio.
Clark’s LDF method
GENERALISED LINEAR A PAID INCURRED CHAIN
MODELS [GLM] MODEL.
Future Scope
A MULTIVARIATE
CHAINLADDER APPROACH