Unallocated Loss Adjustment Expenses (ULAE)
Unallocated Loss Adjustment Expenses (ULAE) are expenses incurred in settling claims that cannot be associated with a specific individual claim.
Common Examples of ULAE
- Claims department salaries, employee benefits, and overhead.
- Rent, utilities, and maintenance for claims office space.
- Licensing fees for claims processing software and databases.
Because ULAE cannot be allocated directly to a claim, it is aggregated on a Calendar Year (CY) basis (the year the cash overhead expense is paid).
Dollar-Based Techniques
Dollar-based techniques assume that ULAE costs are proportional to loss and ALAE dollars.
1. Classical Method
- Key Assumption: ULAE tracks loss dollars in timing and amount. (Note: This assumes a single $10,000 claim has the same ULAE as ten $1,000 claims, which is a major limitation).
- Ratio Calculation:
- Unpaid ULAE Projection (50/50 Rule):
Assumes 50% of ULAE is spent when opening a claim, and the remaining 50% is spent when closing it.
- Pure IBNR: Unreported claims require 100% of ULAE (50% to open + 50% to close).
- Case Reserves + IBNeR: Already-opened reported claims require 50% of ULAE (only to close).
- Limitations: Distorted if the insurer’s volume is growing/shrinking or for long-tailed lines where paid losses lag written premium.
2. Kittel Method
- Objective: Adjusts the Classical method’s denominator to reduce distortion in a growing/shrinking book.
- Ratio Calculation:
- Application: Same unpaid formula as the Classical method.
3. Mango-Allen Method
- Objective: Stabilizes the denominator by using expected losses instead of actual paid or reported losses.
- Ratio Calculation:
4. Generalized Method
- Concept: Formally splits ULAE into costs to Open (Report), Maintain, and Close claims.
- : Ultimate loss cost of claims Reported (opened) during the CY.
- : Losses Paid (maintained) during the CY.
- : Ultimate loss cost of claims Closed during the CY.
- : Selected percentages of ULAE spent on opening, maintaining, and closing ().
- Base Calculation:
- Ratio & Application:
[!TIP] Method Connection: Kittel is a special case of the Generalized Method where , , , and closed losses equal paid losses ().
Count-Based Techniques
Count-based techniques address the limitations of dollar-based methods by tracking ULAE per claim count (treating ten $1,000 claims as ten times more expensive to manage than a single $10,000 claim).
- Methodology:
- Determine the average ULAE cost per claim transaction (e.g., cost to open a claim, cost to maintain a claim per year, cost to close a claim).
- Project the number of claims to be opened, maintained, and closed in each future calendar year using claim count triangles.
- Multiply the projected future claim counts by the selected transaction costs to estimate future ULAE payments: