TITLE
"Using Catastrophe-Linked Securities to Diversify Insurance
Risk: A Financial Analysis of Cat Bonds," Journal
of Insurance Issues, Henri Louberge, Evis Kellezi,
and Manfred Gilli. Fall 1999, Vol. XXII, No. 2, pp. 125-146. Entire article in Acrobat format.
ABSTRACT
Severe natural catastrophes in the early 1990s generated a lack of financial capacity in
the catastrophe line of the global reinsurance market. The finance industry reacted to
this situation by issuing innovative products designed to spread the excess risk more
widely among international investors (risk securitization). The paper reviews these
developments and emphasizes their significance with respect to the economic theory of risk
exchanges. Special attention is devoted to the case of catastrophe-linked bonds, issued by
ceding insurers to secure ex post conditional capital for the payment of claims. We
analyze these new securities as financial portfolios combining a straight bond and
catastrophe options. Using option pricing theory and simulation analysis in a stochastic
interest rate environment, we show that investors attracted by the potential for
diversification benefits should not overlook the optional features when including these
securities in an asset portfolio.
[Keywords: insurance, cat bonds, cat options, investment.]
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