3.5 insurable interest & 3.6 underwriting
the agent is responsible for __________ by using pre-established criteria
field underwriting
insurance companies employ ________ who ultimately decide whether to accept or reject the applications sent in by producers or agents on the basis of company underwriting standards
underwriters
incurred loss
include amounts paid and reserved on claims for covered losses and various expenses related to handling claims
combined ratio =
loss ratio + expense ratio
combined ratio characteristics
- 100% is breakeven point - < 100% = underwriting profit - > 100% = underwriting loss
loss ration characteristic
-compares company's operations year over year
underwriting: process of evaluating a risk
-field underwriting is performed by the agent or producer -company underwriters decide if a policy is to be issued
an insurance company evaluates its income and expenses for given periods of time to measure its financial performance. they also look for trends that may have occurred over an extended period of time. an insurer uses three ratios to evaluate performance:
-loss ratio -expense ratio -combined ratio
characteristics of insurable risk
-risk of financial loss -may be present at the time of application and MUST be present at the time of loss
characteristics of a binder
-temporary insurance -usually given by the agent: verbal or in writing -can be canceled by the company -does not guarantee a policy will be issued -automatically ends if a policy is issued by the underwriter
there are multiple sources of information used in the underwriting process to evaluate risks
-the client application for insurance -inspection services -credit scores from Equifax or Transunion -government bureaus, such as the Bureau of Motor Vehicles -insurance industry bureaus, such as the Automated Property Loss Underwriting System -financial information services, such as Standard & Poor's -previous insurers -the insurance company claim files
coverage under the binder will end at the later of:
-the effective date of the policy, if issued -the effective date of a formal cancellation notice from the insurance company -when no cancellation notice is sent, the expiration date of the binder (e.g. 30, 60, or 90 days)
example of insurable interest
a new car - a bank or an auto financing department has an insurable interest and could lose money if the car is stolen
underwriting expenses include
advertising, commissions, salaries, other administrative costs, and regulatory costs such as taxes and licensing fees
underwriting expenses
are the costs to acquire and to keep policies
A _______ is a ________ oral or written statement made by the agent that gives the insured immediate coverage for a specified time
binder, temporary
expense ratio
is calculated by dividing underwriting expenses by the amount of written premium, it is an indicator of the cost of doing business
loss ratio
is calculated by the dividing the amount of incurred losses by the amount of earned premium
insurable interest
is often defined as "legitimate risk of financial loss in the person or thing being insured."
written premium
is the gross amount of premium income received from insureds
earned premium
is the premium the company actually earned by providing insurance protection for the designated period
application
is the primary source of underwriting information
underwriting
is the process of evaluating the risk and exposures of potential clients
combined ratio
is the sum of the loss and the expense ratio
example of a binder
suppose John gets an oral statement from his agent on July 6th that he is "bound" effective on that date for 90 days. On July 14th, John has a loss that would have been covered under the policy. On July 21st, the insurance company reviews the application and decides not to issue the policy. Because the agent issued a _____, John will have coverage for this loss