Loss Reserving Chain Ladder Methods Applied to a Small Midwestern Insurance Company
Estimating future losses is integral to setting aside appropriate reserves in the insurance industry. This study analyzes different Chain Ladder reserving methods based on weighted-least square regression that consider different function of weights. These methods are tested on 78 NAIC fully develope...
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ndltd-ndsu.edu-oai-library.ndsu.edu-10365-278662021-10-02T17:09:20Z Loss Reserving Chain Ladder Methods Applied to a Small Midwestern Insurance Company Martin, Peter Estimating future losses is integral to setting aside appropriate reserves in the insurance industry. This study analyzes different Chain Ladder reserving methods based on weighted-least square regression that consider different function of weights. These methods are tested on 78 NAIC fully developed loss triangles. While the CRE Chain Ladder method is selected based on its performance, this method does not work well for a small number of NAIC companies that may have erratic changes in their loss trends. For these outliers, two other methods were explored for the early development years; the nearest neighbor technique and mixture of linear regressions. A recommendation is then made to a small Midwestern insurance company on the best methodology to use for estimating the loss reserves based on the actual data provided. These results can be useful to any other insurance company currently using Chain Ladder methods in loss reserving practices. 2018-03-26T19:35:22Z 2018-03-26T19:35:22Z 2015 text/thesis https://hdl.handle.net/10365/27866 NDSU Policy 190.6.2 https://www.ndsu.edu/fileadmin/policy/190.pdf application/pdf North Dakota State University |
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description |
Estimating future losses is integral to setting aside appropriate reserves in the insurance industry. This study analyzes different Chain Ladder reserving methods based on weighted-least square regression that consider different function of weights. These methods are tested on 78 NAIC fully developed loss triangles. While the CRE Chain Ladder method is selected based on its performance, this method does not work well for a small number of NAIC companies that may have erratic changes in their loss trends. For these outliers, two other methods were explored for the early development years; the nearest neighbor technique and mixture of linear regressions. A recommendation is then made to a small Midwestern insurance company on the best methodology to use for estimating the loss reserves based on the actual data provided. These results can be useful to any other insurance company currently using Chain Ladder methods in loss reserving practices. |
author |
Martin, Peter |
spellingShingle |
Martin, Peter Loss Reserving Chain Ladder Methods Applied to a Small Midwestern Insurance Company |
author_facet |
Martin, Peter |
author_sort |
Martin, Peter |
title |
Loss Reserving Chain Ladder Methods Applied to a Small Midwestern Insurance Company |
title_short |
Loss Reserving Chain Ladder Methods Applied to a Small Midwestern Insurance Company |
title_full |
Loss Reserving Chain Ladder Methods Applied to a Small Midwestern Insurance Company |
title_fullStr |
Loss Reserving Chain Ladder Methods Applied to a Small Midwestern Insurance Company |
title_full_unstemmed |
Loss Reserving Chain Ladder Methods Applied to a Small Midwestern Insurance Company |
title_sort |
loss reserving chain ladder methods applied to a small midwestern insurance company |
publisher |
North Dakota State University |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10365/27866 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT martinpeter lossreservingchainladdermethodsappliedtoasmallmidwesterninsurancecompany |
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