The Evolving Market for Catastrophic Event Risk

31 Pages Posted: 8 Aug 2012 Last revised: 1 Dec 2022

See all articles by Kenneth Froot

Kenneth Froot

Harvard University Graduate School of Business; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

Date Written: August 1999

Abstract

This paper discusses the recent changes in the market for catastrophe risk. These risks have traditionally been distributed through the insurance and reinsurance systems. However, because insurance companies tend to share relatively small amounts of their cat exposures and because insurance companies' capital is threatened by large event, these risks are now being shared partly through the capital markets. In looking to likely future developments, the paper enumerates five key ingredients that successfully structured cat instruments are likely to share: retentions should be substantial; layers of protection should not be too high; dollar amounts of risk transfer should not be too small; loss triggers should be beyond cendent control; and loss triggers should be symmetrically transparent.

Suggested Citation

Froot, Kenneth, The Evolving Market for Catastrophic Event Risk (August 1999). NBER Working Paper No. w7287, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=198971

Kenneth Froot (Contact Author)

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