ERM and September 11
November 2001
Would the insurance industry have been in
a better position today if ERM were more widely practiced before September 11?
Jerry Miccolis says "Yes" and tells how ERM is used to test the aggregate effects
of various scenarios and then to develop plans to mitigate those effects.
by Jerry
Miccolis
Tillinghast-Towers Perrin
The world suffered a terrible—some have said "unimaginable"—loss on September
11: thousands of lives lost in a span of minutes; thousands of families devastated
by death and injury; monumental icons of the public and private sectors severely
damaged or destroyed; entire enterprises in multiple sectors crippled or felled.
There are virtually no natural or man-made catastrophes in peacetime or in war
to which we can compare these events. And the waves of uncertainty and anxiety
propagated by these tragedies continue to roll through our personal and public
lives, and through the economy.
Those waves broke immediately over the insurance industry. In the face of
such loss and destruction, individuals and businesses turned to their insurers
in the hope and expectation of some recovery, some compensation for the loss.
Even before insurers calculated the full extent of the losses1,
it was clear that they were so extensive, so sweeping, so all-encompassing that
this industry, too, was among those critically stricken by the terror, its foundations
shaken.
It also became clear, to those not already aware, how dependent worldwide
commerce is on a financially stable insurance industry. While this industry
will survive the current calamity, some individual insurers will not, and the
industry as whole has come face-to-face with the reality that it, like the airlines—though
in a much different way—will need support from the public sector in order to
ensure its ongoing viability.
Over the past several weeks since that terrible day, more than one of our
insurance industry clients has wondered aloud if the industry couldn't have
been better prepared against this "unimaginable" act. More pointedly and poignantly,
some have wanted to know if it would have helped at all before the event to
have fully implemented the kind of enterprise-wide approach to risk management
that many companies have espoused and begun to develop. Or would enterprise
risk management (ERM), too, have been unequal to the task of dealing with something
so unthinkable as this?
What we've said to them is that no system on its own will assure that human
beings think of everything. And certainly no system can predict a particular
kind of event—whether a "perfect storm" or terrorists hijacking and flying jet
airliners into three buildings on a suicide mission with such destructive force
and consequences. Nonetheless, the systematic, disciplined, and integrated way
of thinking about risk that is at the heart of ERM would, quite likely, have
enabled insurers to be better prepared to manage the unthinkable when it did
occur.
In particular, we've said to our insurer clients that for extraordinary catastrophic
events such as September 11, ERM could be especially effective in five areas:
- Exposure management
- Extreme event risk planning
- Disaster response
- Capital management
- Stakeholder relations
Exposure Management
ERM's effectiveness in exposure management is grounded in its ability to
enable insurers to identify "cross-silo" effects in advance and mitigate them.
For historical reasons, the industry tends to think and manage in "silos." What
a disaster such as the terrorist attack of September 11 reveals is that these
silos can be simultaneously shaken by a common event, creating the "cross-silo"
effect.
The attacks affected not only so many human lives but also so many different
parts of our society and economy. For insurers, the breadth of the devastation
meant that at the same instant, nearly every insurance line the industry offers
suffered catastrophic loss—from workers compensation, to property, to liability,
to life and health. Moreover, the exposure affected both primary and reinsurance
sectors, and not only underwriting but also investment operations as equity
values likewise suffered substantial losses.
The effect, particularly for multi-line carriers, was profound because of
the interdependencies among the risks—interdependencies that insurers don't
normally think about or account for. On September 11, the cross-silo effect
nearly undermined the entire insurance system. Less severe events can also have
outsized impact to insurers to the extent that these events penetrate across
silos.
As we've tried to demonstrate throughout this series of articles, one of
the strengths of ERM is precisely the ability to think systematically about
these cross-silo effects. The structural simulation-based ERM modeling techniques
that we've reported on enable insurers to develop "what-if" scenarios that uncover
the interdependencies among their various business and financial strategies.
While this scenario-building would not predict a particular event, it makes
it possible for insurers to test the aggregate effects of various scenarios—across
lines, across subsidiaries, across underwriting and investment sides of the
house—and then to develop plans to mitigate those effects.
In a sense, then, asking what would be different today for the industry if
companies had routinely practiced ERM is akin to asking, "What would have been
different had insurance companies routinely practiced catastrophe modeling in
advance of Hurricane Andrew?" We now know the answer to that question: companies
would have known potential magnitudes and, importantly, concentrations of effects,
and would have been in a position to do something about them. Indeed, some companies
that had unwittingly "doubled down," through their multiple subsidiaries' simultaneous
exposures to the same events, would perhaps have done something earlier and
less drastic than selling certain subsidiaries under unfavorable post-event
conditions.
Extreme Event Risk Planning
While ERM deals with events across a wide range of potential magnitudes,
it offers additional benefits in the proper preparation for truly "extreme events"—those
that have extraordinary, broad, catastrophic effects and that are exceptionally
unlikely but that can bring multiple companies, even the entire industry, down.
They are to "ordinary" catastrophes what, say, Noah's Biblical flood would be
to the Johnstown flood. They are more severe even than September 11.
Because the impact of such extreme events is so immense, their effects cannot
be mitigated in the usual ways, such as through exposure management. And, because
they are so rare, it is grossly inefficient to pre-fund them—an insurer's capital
would have to sleep for centuries in that case. But the scenario-building discipline
of enterprise risk management does provide a means for insurers to think about
these extreme events and consider alternatives for managing them. ERM forces
the question: "What do we do if they do occur?"
In the present terrible case, if insurers—either individually or on behalf
of their industry—had worked through such absolutely worst-case scenarios, they
would have thought about potential solutions to backstop the industry should
its capital ever become exhausted. That kind of advance thinking would very
likely have strengthened the industry's stance in the current public policy
debate. Negotiations over government guarantees, including the level at which
the government should reasonably be involved, would be based on a well-informed,
persuasive point of view because the case would have been formulated in advance
of actual crisis conditions.
Disaster Response
The scenario-building and modeling capabilities of ERM also make it possible
for companies to respond to crises much more efficiently and effectively. That
is the case for both operational and financial responses.
On the operational side, ERM goes beyond standard emergency preparations
such as backup computer and communication systems, by enabling companies to
anticipate, and plan for, the impact on such "human systems" as customer service
if a large contingent of claims administrators is suddenly diverted to address
a single catastrophe. Some companies have already taken advantage of ERM's capability
to link catastrophe event modeling with operational planning in this way.
For example, a Category 3 storm is due to hit the East Coast of the United
States. These companies model the storm and, knowing its intensity and likely
landfall, determine how many company people will be required, what skills and
infrastructure support they will need, and the area to best stage people before
the storm actually hits.
On the financial side, ERM-based structural simulation modeling allows insurers
to quickly evaluate alternative financial responses to a disaster, whether the
event creates a short-term emergency that requires an immediate infusion of
capital or whether it creates a short-term opportunity, such as capital restructuring.
In the first case, the ERM models will allow insurers to promptly determine
how much capital they actually need (see the discussion below). In the second
case, the models can guide rapid decisions on issues such as share repurchase
opportunities.
In both cases, what is important is the preexisting ability to model the
effects of simultaneous and complex interrelationships among such elements as
underwriting results, cash flows, asset values, and the company's own stock
value so that the company is ready when quick decisions need to be made. Also,
at the present moment, companies need to make hard decisions about their reinsurance
coverage. ERM-empowered companies would have done this "homework" in advance
as, clearly, shrinkage in reinsurance capacity would have been a plausible scenario
in any thoughtful ERM exercise, even before September 11.
Capital Management
As briefly touched upon above, ERM models help determine the proper amount
of capital needed to run an insurance enterprise. That is, ERM analysis helps
companies achieve the right balance between having sufficient capital to meet
policyholder security requirements on the one hand and achieving the capital
efficiency that owners demand on the other hand.
Beyond determining overall capital adequacy, these ERM models also are effective
in allocating total capital to business units in a manner that reflects the
relative contribution of each unit to enterprise-wide risk. This is a critical
component in establishing proper financial performance criteria, such as return
on risk-adjusted capital, that help management decide which businesses are creating,
or destroying, enterprise value.
With capital now a much more precious commodity in the insurance industry
than it was just a short time ago, these capital adequacy and capital allocation
activities have taken on added urgency. Those companies that have been practicing
ERM-informed capital management find themselves at a distinct competitive advantage.
Stakeholder Relations
ERM also serves to improve communications and relationships with key stakeholders.
While that is true of all stakeholders—from employees to customers to vendors—it
is most especially true for insurers' three key financial and "adjudicating"
stakeholders: regulators, rating agencies, and investment analysts.
First, if you both have a disciplined ERM process in place and communicate
that fact to these stakeholders, they will be reassured that you are well prepared
for a disaster. Second, in the event of a disaster, the ERM process as discussed
above will have shown you already what your total exposure is likely to be and
what controls you can put in place to manage the exposure, so that you can rapidly,
and accurately, answer the inevitable questions on those areas from these interested
parties. You will have removed a source of a great deal of uncertainty for them,
uncertainty that influences which companies they place on their "watch lists."
Conclusion
The answer to the question our insurance company clients have asked—whether
the industry would have been in a better position today if ERM were more widely
practiced before September 11—appears clearly to be, "Yes." And it is certainly
the case that, going forward, stakeholders will insist on the more rigorous
exposure management, scenario testing, response preparation, and capital management
that ERM encompasses.
Clearly, September 11 has made much more real and immediate the need for
serious risk management. Whatever stage of ERM implementation an insurance company
may be in, even if only in the early investigation stage, management would be
well advised to accelerate those activities without delay.
ERM does help us all think about and plan for the unthinkable, even while
we hope and pray that those plans never need to be implemented.
Opinions expressed in Expert Commentary articles are those of the author and are
not necessarily held by the author’s employer or IRMI. This article does not purport
to provide legal, accounting, or other professional advice or opinion. If such advice
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