- Industry Loss Warranties
Industry Loss Warranties, often referred to as ILWs, are a type of reinsurance or derivative contract through which one party will purchase protection based on the total loss arising from an event to the entire insurance industry rather than their own losses. For example, the buyer of a "$100mm limit US Wind ILW attaching at $20bn" will pay a premium to a protection writer (generally a reinsurer but sometimes a
hedge fund ) and in return will receive $100mm if total losses to the insurance industry from a single US hurricane exceed $20bn. The industry loss ($20bn in this case) is often referred to as the "trigger." The amount of protection offered by the contract ($100mm in this case) is referred to as the "limit."These agreements are usually documented as
reinsurance contracts between the parties. If so, in addition to the industry loss trigger the contract will include an "ultimate net loss clause" which specifies that the protection buyer must demonstrate that they have lost a specified amount as well.ILWs are sometimes referred to as Original Loss Warranties (OLWs) or Original Market Loss Warranties, but this usage is becoming increasingly rare.
Development of the ILW Market
The first contracts of this type were traded in the 1980s. This market remained fairly small (though influential in price setting for reinsurance as these contracts are more consistent than most reinsurance treaties) through
Hurricane Katrina . The entry of many hedge funds into the market (for which ILWs are a preferred trading vehicle) along with the breakdown of the retrocessional reinsurance market (reinsurance for reinsurers) led to the growth of the ILW market.The ILW market has no recognized exchange or clearing source to track volumes. Size estimates range from $2bn to $10bn outstanding (Aon, Nephila). The pre-Katrina market in terms of outstanding contracts was likely near the low end of that range and the post Katrina market is likely to have moved upward within that range.
Loss Measurement in ILWs
Property Claims Services , a division of theInsurance Services Office (ISO), is generally the source for industry loss estimates for US perils. SIGMA, a division ofSwiss Re is often the source for such losses outside the US, with Munich Re's NatCAT Service appearing more and more often on ex-US business.Common ILW Contracts and Market Dynamics
The benchmark contract for the market for a number of years around
Hurricane Katrina was $20bn US Wind and Quake. A number of other US Wind and Quake zones as well as Japanese Quake and European Windstorm and various second event coverages also trade in the market.Many
catastrophe bond s are triggered by industry-based triggers and trade with reference to pricing in the ILW markets.These contracts are often negotiated directly between parties. In addition, brokers including Willis, [http://www.carvill.com RK Carvill] and Access Re publish estimated bid and offer levels and attempt to arrange trades. Catastrophe bond traders including
Swiss Re andGoldman Sachs have indicated their intention to trade these instruments.pecific Types of ILWs
Live Cat contracts are ILW contracts traded while an event is in progress -- usually a
hurricane approaching land.Dead Cat contracts are traded on an event that had already occurred, but for which the total amount of industry loss is not yet known. Some market participants refer to contracts against perils which are out of season (for example, hurricane contracts outside of hurricane season) as dead cats.
Back-up Covers provide protection for events that occur following the occurrence of a catastrophe.
ee also
*
Alternative Risk Transfer
*Reinsurance
*Catastrophe bond
*Reinsurance sidecar
*International Society of Catastrophe Managers External links
* [http://www.bondmarkets.com/story.asp?id=2350 Conference on Insurance- and Risk-Linked Securities (the Bond Markets Association)]
* [http://www.atmos.washington.edu/~lixin/zeng2000b.pdf On the Basis Risk of Industry Loss Warranties (2000 article by Lixin Zeng)]
* [http://www.insureegypt.com/Capital%20Market%20Innovation.pdf Financial Innovation (article by EnsureEgypt)]
* [http://www.atmos.washington.edu/~lixin/KZ1998.pdf Finite Programs Impact (by Lixin Zeng)]
* [http://catmanagers.org International Society of Catastrophe Managers]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.