Importance of reinsurance
Reinsurance is important for four main reasons:
To protect an insurer against very large claims
Insurers spread the costs of paying out on large risks by reinsuring part of what they have agreed to insure with other reinsurers. This ‘spread’ means that the loss incurred by each individual insurer is not as severe.
To reduce exposure to ‘peaks and troughs’
Insurers want a balanced set of underwriting results each year, without peaks and troughs. Because reinsurance covers them against unusually large losses, this keeps a cap on the claims the insurer has to pay.
To obtain an international spread of risk
This is important when a country is vulnerable to natural disasters and an insurer is heavily committed in that country. Insurance may be reinsured to spread the risk outside the country.
To increase the capacity of the direct insurer
Sometimes, insurers want to insure a very large risk but are unable to do this on their own. By using reinsurance, the insurer can accept the whole risk and then reinsure the parts it cannot keep with other insurers.
Like the direct insurance market, reinsurance usually involves specialist brokers. The specialist reinsurance brokers here at Lloyd’s have expert knowledge of the market and the ability to access experienced reinsurance underwriters on behalf of their clients.