Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Insurance Underwriting ====== Insurance Underwriting is the meticulous, data-driven process that [[insurance]] companies use to evaluate the [[risk]] associated with a potential client, decide whether to offer them coverage, and determine the price, or [[premium]], for that coverage. Think of it as the insurer’s brain and central nervous system. While we, the [[policyholder]]s, see insurance as a safety net, the [[insurer]] sees it as a carefully calculated business. Underwriters are the professionals who decide if taking on your specific risk is a good bet for the company. They sift through information, from your driving record for car insurance to a company's safety protocols for liability coverage, to predict the likelihood and cost of a future claim. Their goal is to accept enough good risks at the right price to cover all future claims and expenses, and hopefully, turn a profit on the operation itself. This process is the foundation upon which a sound insurance company is built. ===== The Art of Pricing Risk ===== At its heart, underwriting is a sophisticated guessing game powered by statistics and experience. The entire insurance model relies on the [[Law of Large Numbers]], which states that as the number of policyholders increases, the actual results will get closer to the expected results. Underwriters don't know if //you// will crash your car next year, but they can predict with remarkable accuracy how many out of 100,000 similar drivers will. ==== The Underwriter's Toolkit ==== An underwriter’s decision is not a wild guess. It's a structured assessment based on data, models, and judgment. They are supported by [[actuary|actuaries]], who are the mathematical wizards building the complex statistical models that predict future losses. The process generally boils down to answering three critical questions: * **Should we accept this risk?** Based on the applicant's profile and the company's risk appetite, the first decision is a simple yes or no. A driver with multiple DUIs or a factory with a history of fires might be rejected outright. * **What terms and conditions should apply?** If the risk is acceptable, it might come with strings attached. This could mean requiring a higher deductible, excluding certain types of coverage (e.g., flood damage), or demanding safety improvements (like installing a sprinkler system). * **How much premium should we charge?** This is the final and most crucial step. The premium must be high enough to cover the expected claim costs, the insurer's administrative expenses, and a margin for profit, yet competitive enough to attract customers. ===== The Investor's View: Why Underwriting Matters ===== For a value investor, understanding an insurer's underwriting skill is paramount. It's more important than its stock portfolio or marketing budget. A disciplined underwriter creates wealth; a sloppy one destroys it. This is because underwriting performance directly creates (or fails to create) the most magical ingredient in insurance: the float. ==== The Magic Number: The Combined Ratio ==== The single most important metric for judging an underwriter's performance is the [[Combined Ratio]]. It's a simple, elegant formula: **Combined Ratio = ([[Loss Ratio]] + [[Expense Ratio]])** Let's break that down: * **Loss Ratio:** Claims paid out / Premiums earned. * **Expense Ratio:** All other business costs (salaries, commissions, office rent) / Premiums earned. A Combined Ratio below 100% means the insurer made an [[Underwriting Profit]]. For every dollar in premiums it collected, its costs and claims were less than a dollar. This is the gold standard of underwriting. A ratio above 100% means it paid out more than it collected, resulting in an underwriting loss. ==== The Holy Grail: The Float ==== Here’s where it gets exciting. Insurers collect premiums upfront but pay claims later—sometimes //much// later. This lag creates a massive pool of cash that doesn't belong to the insurer but that it gets to hold and invest for its own benefit. This pool of money is the [[Float]]. As [[Warren Buffett]], the master of insurance investing, has explained for decades, float is a primary reason he loves the insurance business, especially [[Property and Casualty (P&C) Insurance]]. If a company can achieve a Combined Ratio of 100% or less, it is effectively being //paid// to hold billions of dollars of other people's money. It’s like getting a massive, interest-free (or better than free!) loan to invest. This is the engine behind much of [[Berkshire Hathaway]]'s success. Disciplined underwriting generates low-cost float, and that float is then invested to generate spectacular long-term returns. ===== A Word of Caution ===== While powerful, the insurance model is fraught with peril. The pressure to gain market share can lead to undisciplined underwriting—slashing prices and accepting bad risks just to write more policies. This can lead to catastrophic losses when claims inevitably roll in. Underwriters also constantly battle two sneaky problems: * **[[Adverse Selection]]:** The tendency for people who know they are high-risk to be the most likely to seek insurance. * **[[Moral Hazard]]:** The risk that a policyholder, once insured, might behave more recklessly because they know they are covered. Finally, some risks, like those covered by [[Reinsurance]] (insurance for insurers), can have incredibly "long tails," meaning claims may not surface for decades. Misjudging these risks can bring down a company years after the original policy was written. As an investor, you must seek out insurers who prioritize long-term profitability over short-term growth.