Summary
We present a class
of new reinsurance covers with features similar to Bermudan options
popular in the financial industry. The insurer can buy, say, a cover
which will pay the claims emanating during a fixed time interval
within one year. For example, the insurer has the right to exercise
an option at the end of any month. The reinsurer will then pay the
claims of that month and the contract expires.
If the covered claim interval is very short, for instance only a few
days, then the cover works similar to a catastrophe treaty except
that there is always a payout since at the end of the year it is
rational for the option holder to exercise. On the other hand, if
the period agreed on is long, say one full year in the extreme case,
the contract collapses to a traditional reinsurance cover. Hence,
the cover provides for a very flexible tool to optimize existing
reinsurance programs.
We derive the optimal strategy the insurer will have to pursue to
decide on when to exercise the option. To determine the net--premium
of the cover, we use the techniques of dynamic programming and
derive explicit recursive solution schemes for a variety of problems
and general claim distributions. |