Is This The Time To Consider Reinsurance For A Diversified Hedge Fund Portfolio?

Updated on

Most institutional investors understand the uncorrelated, diversification benefits of property catastrophe reinsurance. Many have been waiting on the sidelines for a large event to happen that would drive up pricing before allocating to the strategy.  The two big questions these investors ask are, “Is pricing going up?” and “Has the probability of hurricanes increased?”

Get The Timeless Reading eBook in PDF

Get the entire 10-part series on Timeless Reading in PDF. Save it to your desktop, read it on your tablet, or email to your colleagues.

Will pricing on property catastrophe reinsurance increase?

2017 has the potential to be the costliest year for the reinsurance industry on record, even worse than 2005 when the reinsurance industry was impacted by hurricane Katrina, Rita and Wilma.  Applied Insurance Research (AIR) Worldwide estimates that losses from Hurricane Maria could add between $40 billion and $85 billion to the insurance industry losses from recent catastrophes. When added to the devastation of Hurricane Harvey and Irma along with recent earthquakes in Mexico, losses could be as high as $165 billion based on AIR estimates of all events.

Insurance companies typically assume the initial losses from major events and purchase reinsurance to cover losses above a threshold. The most recent events will likely have a disproportionately large impact on reinsurance, compared to others in the insurance industry, as they trigger aggregate losses which exceed those thresholds

Prices for reinsurance are impacted by supply and demand. The potential $165 billion of lost capital will need to be replaced and will subsequently put upward pressure on pricing. In addition to the immediate material loss, a significant amount of capital will be locked up for accruals of potential claims at the end of 2017. This capital will be unavailable during the forthcoming January reinsurance renewal season.

Fitch Ratings noted “Given the magnitude of the Maria-estimated losses, we now believe that 2017 catastrophe losses will constitute a capital event for a number of (re)insurance companies as opposed to just an earnings event.”  Companies faced with a potential downgrade will either have to raise capital or reduce their balance sheets, thereby putting further pressure on pricing. Price increases will be moderated by new capital coming into the industry but also enhanced by investors withdrawing capital from underperforming funds.

As a result property catastrophe reinsurance rates may increase to the highest level seen in years, especially in regions affected by the 2017 hurricanes and in the Retro (reinsurance of reinsurance companies) market. For example, before the most recent events, but after Hurricane Harvey and Irma, some reinsurance deals were completed with premiums 25% to 50% higher than deals earlier in the year.

Has the probability of future hurricanes increased?

There has been a lot of debate on the impact of global warming on weather patterns. However, there is no clear evidence supporting the theory that global warming is impacting property damage from hurricanes over the short term. The short term (one year or less) maturities of most reinsurance deals allow models to remain accurately applied in the face of gradually shifting weather patterns. As a matter of fact, over the previous decade and before the third quarter of 2017, the industry experienced below-average losses from hurricane-related catastrophes.

What is reinsurance?

Reinsurance is one of the few hedge fund strategies that has almost no correlation to the stock or bond markets. The strategy has the potential to generate high single-digit to low double-digit returns on average over the next five to ten years, regardless of the direction of the capital markets. One way to understand the asset class of reinsurance is to compare it to structured credit. Lending institutions can either hold various loans they have made on their books, or they can sell the loans to other institutions and keep a small transaction fee. Insurance companies can do the same thing with property insurance policies they underwrite.

When a bank sells their loans to a third party, often the interest and principal payments are broken out into various structured credit tranches offering different expected risk-versus-reward levels.  This concept of slicing up risk is similar to how insurance companies carve up a basket of insurance policies. Typically the insurance company assumes most of the initial risk and then sells off tranches of risk to reinsurance providers. The most conservative way to participate in the reinsurance market is through catastrophe bonds (CAT bonds). These securities trade on exchanges and can easily be purchased by institutions. They generally cover the highest tranches of risk and tend to have the lowest probability of loss. They also offer the lowest yields and expected returns. Most of these securities are only yielding approximately 5% before loss and gross of fees and expenses. Traditional reinsurance tends to focus on the middle layers of risk offering yields significantly higher than CAT bonds and is the area that most institutional investors are focused.

What are some of the things to consider before investing in a property catastrophe reinsurance fund?

It’s not easy to differentiate between reinsurance funds during long periods without a major event. The third quarter of 2017 will cause the relative performance between funds to widen out dramatically and provide a good stress test to determine which reinsurance funds actually have good risk controls. How funds performed during this period relative to expectations will be important to consider when determining the potential funds to which one should allocate. We expect to see some firms with single digit losses while others may be down over 50%.  Firms with draw-downs of this magnitude will either go out of business or require many years to move back to their high-water mark.

Other evaluation factors on which to focus were included in the previous paper we wrote on the industry titled, “Reinsurance: the Perfect Hedge Fund Strategy to Enhance a Portfolio’s Sharpe Ratio?” In addition to those, we believe the best way to maximize future returns is by focusing on mid-sized reinsurance organizations with between $500 million and $2 billion in assets. As a firm’s assets grow above $2 billion, their ability to generate alpha through deal selection is slowly reduced as alpha is diluted across a larger asset base.

Other ways of differentiating reinsurance funds are:

  1. Volume of deal flow: It is very difficult to generate a large amount of deal flow in the reinsurance space.  To access the deal flow, firms must have relationships with regional insurance brokerage offices. Developing relationships across the extensive geographical landscape of the reinsurance industry takes an enormous amount of time and effort. However, the more regional relationships a firm is able to develop and, subsequently, the more deals they are able to see, the more inefficiencies in the market they can potentially identify.
  2. Focus on small, regional companies: By focusing on smaller insurance companies that typically primarily focus on single-family residences within a single state, reinsurers face less competition and can receive more accurate information to precisely identify and price risk. This information advantage allows reinsurers to diversify risk and isolate deals in certain geographic areas.  This geographic isolation is important.  When events occur, all the positions are not impacted - only the ones in the immediate area of the catastrophe event.
  3. Proprietary analytics: Most reinsurance firms use the same weather models and datasets that can be purchased from the scientific community. To develop an edge, reinsurance firms must develop proprietary overlays to refine and enhance the models as they pertain to specific perils and/or geographies. A large portion of alpha can be generated through improved accuracy of the risk assessment compared to the off-the-shelf models.
  4. Risk control: Risk control is extremely important in any reinsurance portfolio. One way to implement this control is to build a portfolio that maximizes the Omega Score. While Sharpe Ratio can be appropriately applied to outcomes with normal or near-normal distributions, Omega Score is a more effective way to evaluate risk for the ‘fat-tail’ return distributions found in reinsurance.

About the Author

Donald A. Steinbrugge, CFA – Managing Partner, Agecroft Partners

Don is the Founder and CEO of Agecroft Partners, a global hedge fund consulting and marketing firm. Agecroft Partners has won 34 industry awards as the Hedge Fund Marketing Firm of the Year. Don frequently writes white papers on trends he sees in the hedge fund industry, has spoken at over 100 hedge fund conferences, has been quoted in hundreds of articles relative to the hedge fund industry and is a regular guest on business television. 

Highlighting Don’s 33 years of experience in the investment management industry is having been the head of sales for both one of the world’s largest hedge fund organizations and institutional investment management firms. Don was a founding principal of Andor Capital Management where he was Head of Sales, Marketing, and Client Service and was a member of the firm’s Operating Committee. When he left Andor, the firm ranked as the 2nd largest hedge fund firm in the world. Previous to Andor, Don was a Managing Director and Head of Institutional Sales for Merrill Lynch Investment Managers (now part of Blackrock). At that time MLIM ranked as one of the largest investment managers in the world. Previously, Don was Head of Institutional Sales and on the executive committee for NationsBank Investment Management (now Bank of America Capital Management).

Don is a member of the Board of Directors of Help for Children (Hedge Fund Care), Virginia Home for Boys and Girls Foundation and the Child Savers Foundation. In addition he is a former 2 term Board of Directors member of the University of Richmond’s Robins School of Business, The Science Museum of Virginia Endowment Fund, The Richmond Ballet (The State Ballet of Virginia), Lewis Ginter Botanical Gardens, The Hedge Fund Association and the Richmond Sports Backers. He also served over a decade on the Investment Committee for The City of Richmond Retirement System

Don Steinbrugge

Managing Partner

Agecroft Partners, LLC

103 Canterbury RD

Richmond, VA 23221

804-355-2082

[email protected]

www.agecroftpartners.com

  • Gaining the Edge- 2017 Hedge Fund Investor Leadership Summit – Nov. 2 - 3 NYC
  • Hedgeweek Global Awards 2017, 2016, 2014, 2013, 2012 and 2011 Third Party Marketer of the Year
  • Hedgeweek US Awards 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012 and 2011 Third Party Marketer of the Year
  • International Hedge Fund Awards 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014 and 2013 Third Party Marketer of the Year - US
  • HFMweek 2015, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010 and 2009 Best Third Party Marketer

Agecroft Partners is a licensed broker-dealer, registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and is a member of The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), member SIPC and a member of The National Futures Association (NFA).

Leave a Comment