Salvage & Subrogation (S&S)
Salvage and subrogation are the primary sources of post-claim recovery for insurers:
- Salvage: The sale of damaged property (e.g., a totaled vehicle) acquired by the insurer during claim settlement.
- Subrogation: The legal right to recover payments from a negligent third party responsible for the loss.
- Recoverable S&S (Unpaid S&S):
S&S Estimation Approaches
Insurers can estimate ultimate salvage and subrogation recoveries using two main methods:
1. Direct Development Approach
- Uses traditional loss development techniques directly on historical S&S triangles (either paid/received S&S or reported S&S).
- Evaluation:
- Works well for Salvage (property coverages) because it develops rapidly and is settled soon after the claim is reported.
- Less effective for Subrogation (liability coverages) because legal proceedings can cause significant reporting and settlement lags.
2. S&S-to-Loss Ratio Approach
- Methodology:
- Construct a triangle of historical S&S-to-loss ratios: (paid or reported).
- Develop these ratios to ultimate using ratio development factors.
- Apply the ultimate S&S-to-loss ratio to the estimated ultimate gross losses to find ultimate S&S.
- Advantages of the Ratio Approach:
- Less Leveraged: Ratio triangles are less volatile and less leveraged than S&S dollar triangles, which can have small numbers and high percentage fluctuations.
- Diagnostic Value: The resulting ultimate ratio () acts as a diagnostic test. If a year’s ratio is anomalous, the actuary can manually adjust or select a normalized ratio.
Example: S&S Ratio Approach Calculation
| AY | Dev S&S % | Sel S&S % | Est Ult Gross Loss | Ult S&S | Rec S&S | Recoverable S&S |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | 36.10% | 36.10% | $17,000 | $6,137.00 | $5,600.19 | $536.81 |
| 2007 | 38.17% | 38.17% | $17,248 | $6,583.51 | $5,900.27 | $683.24 |
| 2008 | 32.18% | 37.18% | $16,500 | $6,134.70 | $2,700.13 | $3,434.57 |
| Total | $18,855.21 | $14,200.59 | $4,654.62 |
[!TIP] Selection Rationale: For mature accident years (e.g., 2006 and 2007), the developed ratio is highly reliable and should be selected directly. For immature years, select ratios based on a historical average or trend. If a downward trend exists, select lower developed ratios to reflect deteriorating recoveries.
Reinsurance Net-of-Reinsurance Estimation
Insurers must often project unpaid losses net of reinsurance. The two standard approaches are:
- Direct Net Development: Develop the net loss triangle directly. Preferred if ceded loss data is thin or volatile.
- Indirect Net Development: Develop gross and ceded loss triangles separately, then subtract ultimate ceded from ultimate gross:
Reinsurance Structures & Tail Development
The impact of reinsurance on loss development and tail factors depends heavily on the contract structure:
1. Quota Share (Proportional)
- The reinsurer shares a fixed percentage of all premiums and losses (e.g., 70% Quota Share).
- Tail Factor Impact: The tail factors for gross, net, and ceded triangles are identical because net and ceded losses are constant proportions of gross losses.
2. Excess of Loss (XOL) / Stop Loss (Non-Proportional)
- Per-Risk/Per-Occurrence XOL: Cedes individual claim amounts above a specific retention level up to a limit.
- Stop Loss (Aggregate XOL): Cedes aggregate annual losses above a retention up to a limit.
- Tail Factor Impact:
- Ceded Tail Factor > Gross Tail Factor: As claims mature, larger claims pierce the retention limit. Future development on these large claims occurs entirely in the ceded layer.
- Net Tail Factor < Gross Tail Factor: Because net losses are capped at retention , net development slows down or halts once the retention is breached.
Common Calculation Pitfalls
- Incorrect Development Application: Do not apply gross loss development factors (LDFs) directly to net or ceded loss triangles, as non-proportional reinsurance alters development speeds.
- XOL Transaction Mechanics:
To find net payments for a calendar year under an XOL treaty:
- Determine cumulative gross paid losses at the beginning () and end () of the period.
- Compute cumulative net paid losses at both points:
- Calculate the incremental net paid loss for the period:
- The incremental ceded paid loss is the remainder: