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Group LTD Pricing Issues SOA Spring Meeting, Dallas, Texas May 30, 2001 Session 48 Rick Leavitt - Smith Group Delaine Hare - Fortis Benefits Dave Fitzpatrick - The Standard The economy, circa 1998-2000 • Decline in unemployment • Interest rates started to rise • Rising Index of Leading Economic Indicators LTD industry, circa 1998-2000 • Improving LTD profits – Positive results, but is ROE strong enough? – But it beats the early 90’s • Deteriorating STD profits – Suddenly losses! Where’s the cheese? • Who got the cost savings resulting from managed and integrated disability? – The carrier???? – The employer???? The economy, circa 2001 • • • • Stock market has stumbled Unemployment starting to rise Interest rates falling Index of Leading Economic Indicators is on the rise • Consumer Confidence falling Agenda • Manual rating pitfalls • Competitive pricing pitfalls • Measurement & accountability Manual rating pitfalls Rick Leavitt Smith Group How Useful Are Your Manual Rates? 1. Do they accurately predict claim costs? 2. Are they adjusted for current risk dynamics…Unemployment? Discount Rate? 3. Do your underwriters use them? 4. Do you track sold to manual rates? Common Pitfalls: Inforce vs. New Sales For Example: In Reality: Current Block Rate Change Segment A: 33% Segment B: 33% Segment C: 33% -10% 0.0% 10% Estimated Rate Impact: 0% New Rate Sales Change Segment A: Segment B: Segment C: 60% 30% 10% -10% 0.0% 10% Actual Rate Impact: -5% Common Pitfalls: Rate Variables are Dependent Consider an example Own Occupation: Industry: Variables are Dependent Current Factor Actual Cost 24 Month 1.00 1.00 Unlimited 1.10 1.10 Doctors Lawyers All Other 1.50 1.20 1.00 2.00 1.10 1.00 Doctors Lawyers All Other 24 Mo 30% 50% 80% Unlimited 70% 50% 20% Common Pitfalls: Rate Variables are Dependent Hypothetical Example: Results of Own Occupation Study Pricing Factor Observation Unlimited 1.10 1.26 24 Month Own Occ 1.00 1.02 Do you need to adjust the Own Occ factor? Common Pitfalls: Changing Dynamics Over Time 115 110 1998 2000 ? 1999 2001 105 100 95 90 85 1998 1999 2000 2001 Three Year Study shows rate is right on… What is appropriate for 2001? Smith Group Comparison of Filed Manual Rates • 12 Top Companies • Sample Calculations on over 1000 Representative Cases • Manual Rates Calculated as Publicly Filed Smith Group Comparison of Filed Manual Rates: Distribution of the Ratio of Manual Rates Max/Min 50% Max/Avg Avg/Min 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 Smith Group Comparison of Filed Manual Rates: Variation of Individual Companies Company A Manual Rate . Company A versus the Average 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 0 0.5 1 1.5 Average Manual Rate 2 2.5 Smith Group Comparison of Filed Manual Rates: Variation of Individual Companies Company B versus the Average Company B Manual Rate . 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 0 0.5 1 1.5 Average Manual Rate 2 2.5 Smith Group Comparison of Filed Manual Rates: Industry Factors 1.9 1.7 1.5 1.3 1.1 0.9 0.7 0.5 Government Engineering Social Services Educational Legal Services Health Services Doctors Offices Miscellaneous Data Processing Advertising Hotels/Personal Investment Real Estate Insurance Insurance Security Brokers Mortgage Banking Retail Trade Wholesale Trade Transportation Manufactoring Construction Mining, Oil and Agricultural, Smith Group Comparison of Filed Manual Rates: Area Factors 1.25 1.15 1.05 0.95 0.85 0.75 WA CA TX MO IL MN WI MI IN OH TN FL GA NC VA MD PA NY NJ MA Pricing pitfalls Delaine Hare Fortis Benefits Recipe for top line growth • • • • • Discount 10% for “value” contract Discount 10% for early intervention Discount 10% on “good cases” Discount 5% for packaged LTD/STD Guarantee the rates for 3 years …and the bottom line • Have you been too aggressive? • If so, can you recover? • Renewal is a double-edged sword – One big increase - can you afford the poor persistency? – Layered increases - can you afford the good persistency? Watch your tail • Better claim management improves claim closures at early durations • What happens to closures at later durations? • Is your reserve tail as strong as it used to be? Simple reserve illustration • For relative comparison only • Not an opinion on what is an appropriate pricing discount • Sensitive to termination rate assumptions – Valuation table, age, sex, etc. Manage the early claims... • 45 year old • 20% better term rate for 24 mo. • Same term rate after 24 mo. • 19% cost savings 1.0 l(x) 0.8 0.6 Base 0.4 0.2 Improved 0.0 0 24 48 72 96 120 144 Months of duration 168 192 216 240 l(x) …without managing the old • 45 year old • 20% better term rate for 24 mo. • 20% worse term rate after 24 mo. • 9% cost savings 1.0 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.0 Base Improved 0 24 48 72 96 120 144 Months of duration 168 192 216 240 Watch your assumptions • Improved claim management & stronger contract • Did they add to your margins? – Did you give it all away? – Was it as big as you thought? – Some cases may not benefit at all Table 95a / Basic 2000 Table • Concerns expressed over appropriateness of this table • Termination rates in later durations appear to be overstated • Reserves may be deficient Value of early intervention... LTD without benefit of early intervention LTD with benefit of early intervention …is relative LTD without benefit of early intervention LTD with benefit of early intervention LTD with no STD coverage in front Claim Manager of the Year • The award goes to… Nobody!!! • Starvation effect – Elimination period is akin to a deductible – Nothing controls incidence like loss of income – When you add STD coverage, what are you replacing? What is a “good case”? • Manual rates already reflect the “good” plan design & “good” industry • Is “good” experience really credible? Persistency & profitability 115% 110% 105% 100% 95% 90% Rate Charged Profitable Rate 85% Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5 Year 6 Year 7 …during a recession • Drop in interest rate raises the bar • Higher unemployment may raise the bar 125% 115% 105% 95% Rate Charged 85% Profitable Rate Measurement & accountability Dave Fitzpatrick The Standard Calculated (Manual) Rates • Group Aging and impact on rates? (recession and baby boomers) • Aging census one year can increase claim costs 5-10% • Multiple year rate guarantees? “You can’t manage what you can’t measure.” “What gets measured gets done.” Bill Hewitt, 1991 Successful Measures of Sold-toCalculated Rates • Actual-to-Expected Analysis • Can easily be aggregated at underwriter/rep /plan level • Can help in pricing vs. loss ratio analysis only • Provides a measurable target that is easily understood Reasons Why Rates May Vary • • • • • • Underwriting Considerations Mistakes Experience Rating Credibility Underwriters may discount loads Change in census from proposal to effective date Return on Equity (ROE) • Formula for Underwriters to ensure attainment of ROE targets • ROE = Net Income/(Average Equity) • Equity = Required surplus + (STAT reserves - GAAP reserves) Return on Equity (ROE) • An elegant formula: Equity = [ A *{C0 C4 a (C1 C3a ) 2 (C2 ) 2 (C3b ) 2 (C4b ) 2 ] (1987 CGDT tVxSPIA100bp - Company Adjusted tVxnew money yields) } k where C0 = Asset Risk - Affiliated Amounts C1 = Asset Risk - All other C2 = Insurance Risk C3a = Interest Rate Risk C3b = Health Credit Risk C4a = Business Risk C4b = Health Adm Exp - Business Risk Return on Equity (ROE) Pros and Cons of an elegant formula: • Impressive to look at and discuss • Difficult to challenge • Hard to explain • Not understood by underwriters and many normal actuaries Return on Equity (ROE) • An example of a much simpler formula: Equity = 30% of annualized premiums + 30% of case reserves Possible to approximate to fit individual company’s equity requirements! Return on Equity (ROE) Pros and Cons of a simple formula: • Easy to understand and explain • More likely to be used by underwriters • Convenient to periodically review • Approximates equity to the satisfaction of most normal actuaries • Percentages may vary by company • Can be further refined as % of premium Industry/Occupation Variations • One role of the underwriter is to assign the “best” occupation class • Individual DI has some lattitude in assigning which might result in 5-20% difference • Group occ factors are combination of industry/occupation assignment STD - What’s Up! • JHA Profitability Survey reports STD profits are negative • Lack of concrete evidence that managing STD reduces LTD claim costs • Brings into question the assumed savings of integrating disability • Probably caused by aggressive acquisition pricing or assumed expense saving Group Insurance Handbook • Maximize participation - preclude individual selection • Voluntary/contributory LTD violates these two principles • Most selection can be priced and/or controlled • 100% participation on a rich plan design may not be a good thing (gross-ups). High Maximum Benefits • Less pressure in recent years • Impact of bonus and incentive compensation • Selection may be controlled through EOI • Evidence is your friend • Doesn’t need to be an inconvenience • Free cholesterol check “If you aren’t getting the results you want, ask the magic question, ‘What is being rewarded’.” Getting Results, Michael LeBoeuf Manual Rating - Quality Assurance • Field Office Managers/Reps Accountability • Combination of office loss ratio and sold rates in relation to manual • Actual loss ratio tied to predetermined target • Positive or Negative! Bottom-line Accountability • Sales reps/Office Managers tied to target loss ratios and sold-to-calc ratios • In year 2000, positive and negative compensation impacts were offsetting, but significant at the individual level. • Percentage of reps received higher compensation due to favorable sold-to-calc ratios was somewhere near moiety Pricing - Reserve Analysis • Measuring results requires appropriate reserve analysis • Incurred But Not Reported Reserves • Reported Reserves • Actual-to-expected Termination Rate Study - theoretical elegant • Actual reserve runouts better Reserve Analysis • “The whistles and bells don’t cost much during good economic times.” Rick Leavitt, Las Vegas - 2000 • “Reserve runouts on IBNR and reported reserves are better during good economic times.” Dave Fitzpatrick, Dallas - 2001 Reserve Analysis • IBNR reserves and reported reserve runouts fluctuate over time for many reasons (incidence rates, claim management, RTW offsets, SS awards/denials, re-opens, economy, replacement ratios, mortality) • IBNR range 1993-1998 without adjusting 40% of reserve • Reported range 1993-2000 without adjusting - 12% of reserve Rate Filings • Required in several states prior to use (FL, WA, CO, ND, NY) • Inability to gain timely approvals may impede progress in improving profitability