While advanced economies generate the vast majority of insurance and reinsurance business, emerging markets are posting higher rates of growth. Complementing this underlying trend is a strong and expanding interest in catastrophic risk, which by nature tends to pertain to emerging markets. This is coming alongside fast-paced, sector-transforming innovation, which could provide a major boost to industries in less-developed economies.
“You have nothing but opportunity: big populations and tonnes of risks,” Tom Johansmeyer, assistant vice-president of property claim services at ISO Claims Analytics, a division of Verisk Insurance Solutions, told OBG. “Look at the populations and the potential growth in financial sophistication – it is an easy call to make.”
BY THE NUMBERS: In terms of simple throughput, insurance remains very much centred in North America, Europe and mature Asian markets. With long histories of trading risk, a general acceptance of the relevant products, and massive and increasingly vulnerable asset bases that need protection, developed economies generate steady volumes. According to insurance group Munich Re, in 2016 North America paid 31.1% of global premiums, Western Europe paid 28.8% and the more advanced Asian markets, such as Japan, paid 19.8%.
However, growth rates in emerging markets outpace those regions by far: according to global accountancy EY, life premiums in developing markets rose by 7.8% in 2014, while advanced markets grew by 4%. Those rates were 13.2% and 3.4% in 2015, respectively, 20.1% and 2% in 2016 and an estimated 14.9% against 2.1% in 2017. Particularly strong growth was noted in the life segments in Vietnam, Malaysia and Indonesia. Regarding non-life insurance, the growth in emerging markets has been in the range of 5-8.5% since 2012, while growth in developed markets has remained around 2%.
These trends are leading to a relative decline in the share of business in developed insurance markets. Munich Re has estimated that primary premiums in North America will fall to 27.8% of the world’s total by 2026, Western Europe to 24.5% and mature Asian markets to 17.5%. Meanwhile, emerging Asia’s share will jump from 13.3% in 2016 to 21.4%, the MENA region’s allocation will rise from 1.3% to 1.8%, and the share held by sub-Saharan Africa will remain at 1.1%. Swiss Re, another global reinsurer, forecast the global rate of growth in reinsurance at 1% over the three years to 2019. By comparison, reinsurance in emerging markets is growing at about 10% per year.
REINSURANCE TRENDS: The global reinsurance market on the whole is healthy and on a firm footing, with capital reaching $605bn at the end of the second quarter of 2017. However, in the wake of Hurricanes Irma, Maria, Harvey and Nate, among other natural disasters, the long period of relatively low claims appears to be coming to an end, inevitably altering the fundamentals of the existing market. In its “Global Insurance Trends Analysis” for 2016, EY noted this flip in the market, with average event occurrence not only returning to the mean, but rising above it. According to the report, 2016 was the biggest year for catastrophe (CAT) claims since 2012, with $50bn in insurance losses reported on $175bn worth of damage; even more was expected for 2017, which will cost the sector. Reinsurance returns are already at or below the cost of capital: Fitch Ratings expected return on equity to fall from 8.5% in 2016 to 2.1% in 2017, but forecast it would increase to 7.1% in 2018. The cost of capital for companies, meanwhile, is thought to have ranged between 6% and 7% in 2017.
As reinsurance recovers from a turbulent year, emerging markets should help drive the rebound. Although conditions are likely to remain tight, there is considerable optimism as reinsurers and investors in related securities look for opportunities in fast-growing economies in Asia, Africa and the Gulf. Latin America is not to be ignored however, as Mexican insurance authorities reported strong demand from international markets and healthy pricing in early 2018, despite recent global catastrophes. At present, 236 reinsurers are operating in Mexico, serving 113 insurance companies – more than two reinsurers for every insurer.
CAT RISK: One of the main avenues to emerging markets for reinsurers is through CAT coverage. Developing countries are often compelled to turn abroad to cover major disasters, as they have limited domestic capacity due to the size of their economies and local insurance markets. It is also a product line where the modes of participation for international reinsurers are straightforward, with ample opportunity available for innovation and product development. The triggers are transparent, the events are well defined and the duration of the cover tends to be short.
Although CAT coverage is needed and utilised everywhere, and most claims are paid in developed markets, the insurance is particularly suited to emerging economies. Because of their locations, populations and lack of infrastructure, these countries tend to be most affected by weather-related and seismic events. Thailand, the Philippines, Mexico, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea (PNG) and a number of sub-Saharan African nations, for instance, are all highly vulnerable to natural disasters and are candidates for relevant coverage.
Development of the segment is ongoing, but a number of programmes are already in place. For example, the Caribbean Catastrophe Risk Insurance Facility (CCRIF), which is currently owned and operated by 16 governments from the region, was created in 2007 with international assistance. It is the first and only regional fund to date that pays out claims based on statistical parameters rather than actual losses incurred. Reinsurance is a key component of the coverage, as it allows for the purchase of CAT insurance at lower rates than would usually be available commercially. Payouts from the CCRIF totalled $100m as of late 2017.
Another such entity is the Pacific Catastrophe Risk Insurance Company (PCRIC), which covers the Cook Islands, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, Samoa, Tonga and Vanuatu. The entity was designed to pool risk and tap international reinsurance markets to cover key regional risks, such as tsunamis, earthquakes and cyclones. Established in June 2016 after the completion of a pilot programme from 2013 to 2015, the PCRIC mobilised $45m worth of coverage for the 2017/18 cyclone season, up from $38m a year earlier.
To cover the African market, African Risk Capital (ARC) was launched in 2014 as a sovereign CAT fund. It aims to have $1.5bn of coverage available by 2020, although it will likely require significant international support to meet this goal. In this regard, the ARC has reported that the response from the global reinsurance market has been positive so far.
INNOVATION: In addition to traditional arrangements, CAT bonds and CAT swaps are becoming part of the landscape. Under a swap, the exposure is transferred to investors in return for a payment – similar to a bond or a reinsurance agreement, but with less structure. These allow for the quick identification of risk and deployment of capital, in turn resulting in highly competitive terms.
As reinsurance becomes more capital markets oriented, some developing economies may be better served. For instance, Mexico’s Fund for Natural Disasters (Fondo de Desastres Naturales, FONDEN) uses an index based on the Richter scale to provide reinsurance to cover costs after the country’s earthquake insurance fund is tapped out. In 2017 FONDEN sold a $360m CAT bond, surpassing the $290m that was initially planned.
In 2017 a parametric disaster line to cover the 25 most disaster-prone provinces of the Philippines was initiated. The fund, valued at P1bn ($19.8m), received support from the World Bank, with risk fully ceded to international reinsurers. In a related development, the World Bank arranged a $206m CAT swap line for the country, which will cover typhoon and earthquake risk.
The World Bank has initiated a pandemic CAT programme, issuing a $320m bond and completing $105m worth of swap transactions in 2017. The pandemic emergency financing facility will provide coverage for the flu; coronaviruses, such as SARS; filoviruses, including Ebola and Marburg; Crimean-Congo fever; Rift Valley fever; Lassa fever; and others. Data from the World Health Organisation for the number of people affected by an outbreak is used to trigger payments.
The size of the CAT bond market has more than doubled over the past decade. It reached record volumes in 2017, estimated at $12bn, with more than $30bn outstanding. There are signs that alternative financing is outpacing traditional reinsurance, which could have a major impact on developing economies, given the speed and flexibility of market-based solutions.
PROTECTIONISM: Another challenge for reinsurers in emerging markets is the rise of protectionism. According to AM Best, an insurance ratings agency, the trend towards more open economies has hit a speed bump in recent times, as populist sentiment and isolationism increase around the globe. When it comes to insurance markets, these trends have resulted in new efforts to restrict entry, such as local incorporation rules and higher capitalisation levels. Reinsurance is often targeted directly. This can include mandatory cessions to state reinsurers, minimum retention levels and high capital requirements for overseas cessions.
The Global Reinsurance Forum has identified 28 countries or regions that have restrictions on reinsurance or are in the process of putting them in place. While a number of developed countries are included – such as the US, Germany and France – mandatory cession and other similar requirements are more common in emerging markets. For instance, Kazakhstan and Russia have been particularly restrictive, with the latter forming the Russian National Reinsurance Company in 2016. “The introduction of local requirements is influencing international reinsurers,” Solomon Lartey, CEO of Activa International Insurance in Ghana, told OBG. “The global view of the reinsurer is bittersweet. For the big players facing natural disasters, they are getting squeezed from every angle.”
In 2008 authorities in Saudi Arabia announced that all foreign insurance companies operating in the country had to become locally incorporated. In addition, non-local ownership was restricted to 30% of the total capital of an insurer, while all risk was required to be placed with local insurers. A report by AM Best concluded that these rules were ineffective, as informal fronting arrangements meant much of the risk was placed internationally anyway. To mitigate this, authorities initiated minimum retention levels, requiring that 30% of premiums ceded be kept in the country. The Saudi net retention ratio has been well beyond this in recent years, at 82% in 2016 and 81% in 2015.
Similar requirements have been introduced across sub-Saharan Africa: 15% of life cessions and 10% of non-life cessions in Gabon must go to the Société Commerciale de Réassurance du Gabon; 15% of all reinsurance cessions in Uganda must be made to Uganda National Reinsurance; African Reinsurance Corporation (Africa Re) is entitled to 5% from companies that are based in Africa; and in Nigeria 5% of risk goes to Africa Re and 5% is ceded to the West Africa Insurance Companies Association Reinsurance. Furthermore, Nigeria, Ghana and Uganda require that all local capacity be exhausted before placing risk overseas, but due to the small size of domestic markets, this threshold is generally reached.
Protectionism is increasingly evident in Asian markets as well. So-called voluntary cessions to Malaysia Re will continue at a rate of 2.5% until the end of 2019 at least. In the Philippines, 10% must be ceded to the National Reinsurance Company of the Philippines, while in Sri Lanka 30% must go to National Insurance Trust Fund, up from 10% in 2013. Thailand has required 5% cessions to Thai Re since 2005, though this has not been enforced since the damaging 2011 floods. Vietnam, meanwhile, has required mandatory 10% local cession since 2016.
Notably, Indonesia, via the Indonesian Financial Services Authority (OJK), has established a number of reinsurance rules to encourage more domestic cession. Motor, health, personal accident, credit, life and surety risk must remain in the country, though products for multinational companies underwritten by international insurers are allowed. Each insurer must prepare an insurance support strategy, which sets out a reinsurance and retention plan, while automatic reinsurance agreements must utilise domestic capacity first – though they may go overseas if the domestic market is unwilling or unable to fill the order, as long as proof of this is provided to the OJK. Foreign insurers taking on risk must be rated above “BBB”. Indonesia has also set up a national reinsurer, Indonesia Re. Formally established in 2015, Indonesia Re is an amalgamation of the existing reinsurers: Reasuransi Umum Indonesia, Reasuransi Internasional Indonesia, ASEI Re, Asuransi Kredit Indonesia and Reasuransi Nasional Indonesia. The company was created to keep premiums in the domestic market and may be recapitalised to achieve this goal. Some European insurers are worried that the new firm could result in a higher rate of mandatory cession.
While Indonesia is starting to lay down protectionist measures, its rapid economic growth is leading to overexposure in the domestic insurance sector, and relative underinsurance is one result. JLT Re, a global provider of reinsurance broking, noted that although premiums grew at a 10% rate from 2011 to 2016, the pace is not quick enough to fully cover the rise in exposure.