Reinsurers Seek to Boost Returns Through Tailored Business

March 20, 2017 by Brenna Hughes Neghaiwi and Paul Arnold

Reinsurer Swiss Re, usually involved in mega-deals on natural disaster coverage, is branching out on its own to do individually tailored schemes to boost returns, such as one in China to protect farmers against floods or drought.

This tailor-made approach is part of Swiss Re’s response to fierce competition in the reinsurance industry, where companies are being forced to find new ways to make money as their traditional model of clubbing together to backstop risks generates increasingly slim returns.

“We feel very strongly that our ability to figure out solutions to the problems that our clients have means they will give us opportunities,” the head of Swiss Re’s core reinsurance business, Moses Ojeisekhoba, told Reuters in an interview.

Reinsurers usually pool resources in syndicates to underwrite the risk taken on by front-line insurers. But low interest rates and competition from a host of so-called “alternative providers” such as pension funds has eaten into their profits.

Up to 20 percent of the reinsurance market is now occupied by alternative providers, insurance industry experts estimate, a trend that began to take off in the years following the 2008 financial crisis.

Insurance rating agency A.M. Best has estimated that $75 billion in alternative or so-called “convergence” capital entered the business in 2016.

This has put pressure on the market. Industry prices for the traditional property/casualty business, for example, fell again in January, the important policy renewals season, albeit at a slower rate than in the past few years.

To combat the difficult climate, Swiss Re, the industry’s No. 2, has pioneered the concept of tailor-made reinsurance, negotiating on its own with insurers to offer bespoke deals.

Last year, for example, it set up deals with local Chinese insurers and provincial government to reinsure parts of two provinces against natural disaster risks. The schemes—which included China’s first anti-poverty insurance deal to protect farmers against flooding and drought—use a combination of satellite and weather data to trigger payouts of up to roughly $350 million in each province.

Swiss Re devised the pilot schemes and acted as sole reinsurer, rather than working in a syndicate to spread the risks.

Competition

But this specialized business is facing competition from rivals such as Munich Re, Hannover Re and SCOR.

“There are more people coming into this space,” Ojeisekhoba said.

Munich Re has emphasized tailor-made products in niche areas such as aerospace and cyber risk. It has also said it would step up investment into InsurTech startups like app provider Wrisk, which offers insurance via smartphones. Munich Re said this would help it to offer more customized products.

Large, tailored transactions drove Munich Re’s P/C premium growth in 2016, representing 23 percent of just under 18 billion euros ($19.36 billion) in the P/C division’s gross written premiums, the German company said in annual results earlier this month.

But Ojeisekhoba, who took over Swiss Re’s reinsurance business last July, said the tailored business was set to keep growing this year despite the competitive pressures.

Reinsurers are also using bespoke deals to help insurance companies manage tougher capital requirements under Europe’s new Solvency II regime. These deals allow the insurers to free up capital they must hold under the new rules to buffer against unexpected claims and financial losses.

Demand for Hannover Re’s bespoke offerings, particularly capital relief, helped the group to book 7 percent premium growth in January.

Swiss Re does not break out figures for the amount of so-called large and tailored business it writes but has said recent premiums growth was driven by such transactions.

The reinsurer has committed $250 million in annual R&D spending to develop advanced risk models that help it to estimate risks ranging from the potential cost of heavy rainfall in Malaysia through to predicting what might become the industry’s next “asbestos.”

These modeling tools also enable Swiss Re to construct specialized deals to help a customer estimate exposure and locate new risks, protect against earnings volatility, and free up capital to pay dividends or buy back shares.

“It’s not something you simply take off the shelf and apply to a particular situation,” Ojeisekhoba said.

“You require deep skillsets. You require strong balance sheets. You require relationships and knowledge of the counterparty’s portfolio and their financials, and you clearly require an unambiguous understanding of the regulatory regimes.”

But with little disclosure from the reinsurers on how they define bespoke business, Mediobanca analyst Vinit Malhotra said it was hard to assess how it will help to shore up individual players’ profitability.

Some relief may come from an inevitable uptick in standard business as prices drop below profitable levels. “I think we are not that far away from the bottom. Nobody wants to push their luck that much,” Malhotra said.

($1 = 0.9300 euros)