49 research outputs found

    Proceedings ...

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    Vols. for 1914- include adjourned meetings."No proceedings were published covering the sessions of 1875-1887."Vol. for 1911 issued in two parts.Vols. for 1914- include adjourned meetings.Mode of access: Internet

    Proceedings of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners.

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    Title from cover.Proceedings for 1953- consist of two vols.: v. 1, midwinter meeting, and v. 2, annual meeting.Mode of access: Internet

    The Role of Internal Capital Markets in Financial Intermediaries: Evidence From Insurer Groups

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    We exploit the transparency of internal capital markets (ICMs) within insurance groups to investigate the activity and efficiency of ICMs within insurance groups. Specifically, we compare the relationship between internal capital transfers and investment to that between capital from other sources and investment. The ability to track the actual ICM transactions allows for more direct analysis of ICM activity than most previous studies. Consistent with theory, we find evidence that ICMs play a significant role in the investment behavior of affiliated insurers. We then use these detailed data to execute a more direct test of ICM efficiency than currently exists in the literature. Consistent with ICM efficiency, results suggest that capital is allocated to subsidiaries with the best expected performance. Copyright (c) The Journal of Risk and Insurance, 2008.

    Price Regulation in Secondary Insurance Markets

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    Secondary life insurance markets are growing rapidly. From nearly no transactions in 1980, a wide variety of similar products in this market has developed, including viatical settlements, accelerated death benefits, and life settlements and as the population ages, these markets will become increasingly popular. Eight state governments, in a bid to guarantee sellers a "fair" price, have passed regulations setting a price floor on secondary life insurance market transactions, and more are considering doing the same. Using data from a unique random sample of HIV+ patients, we estimate welfare losses from transactions prevented by binding price floors in the viatical settlements market (an important segment of the secondary life insurance market). We find that price floors bind on HIV patients with greater than 4 years of life expectancy. Furthermore, HIV patients from states with price floors are significantly less likely to viaticate than similarly healthy HIV patients from other states. If price floors were adopted nationwide, they would rule out transactions worth $119 million per year. We find that the magnitude of welfare loss from these blocked transactions would be highest for consumers who are relatively poor, have weak bequest motives, and have a high rate of time preference. Copyright The Journal of Risk and Insurance, 2004.

    An Empirical Investigation of the Effect of Growth on Short-Term Changes in Loss Ratios

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    Given the use of premium growth as a risk measure in regulatory and private risk assessment models, the impact of growth on underwriting profitability is an important question. Our results show a negative relationship between premium growth and changes in loss ratios, suggesting that premium growth alone does not necessarily result in higher underwriting risk. Further, there is a positive relationship between claim count growth and changes in loss ratios, suggesting that claim count growth may be a preferred measure of underwriting risk. Copyright (c) The Journal of Risk and Insurance, 2009.
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