Essays on Alternative Investments and Insurance

Essays on Alternative Investments and Insurance

Author: Semir Ben Ammar

Publisher:

Published: 2016

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This dissertation consists of four parts, focusing on alternative investments, catastrophe risk, and asset pricing in an insurance context. Several financial instruments (i.e., funds, options, and stocks) are analyzed with different perspectives on an insurer's balance sheet. The first part pertains infrastructure as an alternative investment and considers the asset side of life insurers, which are in need of stable, long-term cashflows in the current low-interest rate environment to match their liabilities. The second part analyzes equity returns of non-life insurers and the risk factors driving them. In a similar vein, the third part takes a look at the equity value of non-life insurers implied by option prices to analyze their catastrophe risk exposure. The fourth part considers the liability side of non-life insurers and how policyholder liabilities can be securitized to act as alternative investments through insurance-linked securities (ILS) funds.


Two Essays in Finance

Two Essays in Finance

Author: Ward R. Kangas

Publisher: Universal-Publishers

Published: 1997-10

Total Pages: 144

ISBN-13: 1581120044

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Based on data on publicly traded insurance firms, the first essay examines questions about the effect of large catastrophic events on insurance firms. Rather than looking at a single event, thirty catastrophic events were aggregated into quintiles and the cumulative abnormal returns around these events were found to be significantly positive over a 25 day trading window. There is no significant evidence that post-catastrophic stock returns are correlated to the magnitude of the catastrophe. The second essay analyzes the effect of a large land grant university, the University of Illinois, on the State Treasury of Illinois. If the State Treasury were acting as its own agent trying to maximize revenues, would it choose higher education as an investment versus other alternative investments. While it is true the State makes large expenditures for the operations of the University, it is also true that individuals receiving degrees on average receive higher incomes. Taxes or higher incomes offset the cost of operating the University. The study is broken out by the level of student: undergraduate, masters, doctorate, medical professional, and by function of the University. It was found that all levels of education have a positive return not only for the individual, but also for the State Treasury. This is in excess of any non-pecuniary benefits to the State of having a better educated population, or the local taxation effects on the county or city where the campus is located. These returns are found to be higher than other types of investments.


Two Essays in Finance: Market Response to Catastrophic Losses on the Insurance Industry and Return on Investment of a Land Grant University

Two Essays in Finance: Market Response to Catastrophic Losses on the Insurance Industry and Return on Investment of a Land Grant University

Author: Ward Randall Kangas

Publisher:

Published: 1996

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Based on data on publicly traded insurance firms, the first essay examines questions about the effect of large catastrophic events on insurance firms. Rather than looking at a single event, thirty catastrophic events were aggregated into quintiles and the cumulative abnormal returns around these events were found to be significantly positive over a 25 day trading window. There is no significant evidence that post-catastrophic stock returns are correlated to the magnitude of the catastrophe. The second essay analyzes the effect of a large land grant university, the University of Illinois, on the State Treasury of Illinois. If the State Treasury were acting as its own agent trying to maximize revenues, would it choose higher education as an investment versus other alternative investments. While it is true the State makes large expenditures for the operations of the University, it is also true that individuals receiving degrees on average receive higher incomes. Taxes or higher incomes offset the cost of operating the University. The study is broken out by the level of student: undergraduate, masters, doctorate, medical professional, and by function of the University. It was found that all levels of education have a positive return not only for the individual, but also for the State Treasury. This is in excess of any non-pecuniary benefits to the State of having a better educated population, or the local taxation effects on the county or city where the campus is located. These returns are found to be higher than other types of investments.


Essays on the Investment Management of Life Insurers

Essays on the Investment Management of Life Insurers

Author: Kyeonghee Kim

Publisher:

Published: 2018

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Life insurers play a major role as institutional investors in the financial markets, and their investment behavior receives considerable attention from regulators, policyholders, and participants of financial markets. In this thesis, I examine the investment management of U.S. life insurers. The thesis is comprised of two essays. In the first essay, I study the effects of investment advisor use on life insurers' investment performance. Using a measure of investment performance that accounts for investment risk and regulatory constraints, I find that life insurers experience an economically and statistically significant increase in investment returns when they start using an investment advisor. The performance increase, however, disappears over time. The investment performance effect of an investment advisor is not observed for life insurers that continuously use an investment advisor nor life insurers that switch away from using an investment advisor during the sample period. The results are robust to potential selection issues and alternative explanations. In the second essay, I study a unique type of reinsurance, modified coinsurance, which enables life insurance companies to transfer their investment risk to the reinsurer. When this reinsurance is arranged with an unaffiliated reinsurer or with affiliated foreign reinsurers, it provides risk-based capital (RBC) relief for life insurers with risky assets. I find that life insurers using this RBC-relief reinsurance hold more risky bonds but less capital than life insurers that do not use this type of reinsurance. Our findings, however, are not free of endogeneity problems because life insurers are not randomly assigned to use RBC-relief reinsurance and a life insurer's investment and capital decisions are jointly determined based on their regulatory capital requirements. In future work, I will use exogenous shocks to the bonds that life insurers hold to identify the causality between a life insurer's use of RBC-relief reinsurance and its investment and capital decisions.


Alternative Investments: A Primer for Investment Professionals

Alternative Investments: A Primer for Investment Professionals

Author: Donald R. Chambers

Publisher: CFA Institute Research Foundation

Published: 2018

Total Pages: 122

ISBN-13: 1944960384

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Alternative Investments: A Primer for Investment Professionals provides an overview of alternative investments for institutional asset allocators and other overseers of portfolios containing both traditional and alternative assets. It is designed for those with substantial experience regarding traditional investments in stocks and bonds but limited familiarity regarding alternative assets, alternative strategies, and alternative portfolio management. The primer categorizes alternative assets into four groups: hedge funds, real assets, private equity, and structured products/derivatives. Real assets include vacant land, farmland, timber, infrastructure, intellectual property, commodities, and private real estate. For each group, the primer provides essential information about the characteristics, challenges, and purposes of these institutional-quality alternative assets in the context of a well-diversified institutional portfolio. Other topics addressed by this primer include tail risk, due diligence of the investment process and operations, measurement and management of risks and returns, setting return expectations, and portfolio construction. The primer concludes with a chapter on the case for investing in alternatives.


The Principles of Alternative Investments Management

The Principles of Alternative Investments Management

Author: Ewelina Sokołowska

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2015-06-24

Total Pages: 194

ISBN-13: 3319132156

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The purpose of this book is to present the principles of alternative investments in management. The individual chapters provide a detailed analysis of various classes of alternative investments on the financial market. Despite many different definitions of alternative investments, it can be assumed that a classical approach to alternative investments includes hedge funds, fund of funds (FOF), managed accounts, structured products and private equity/venture capital. Alternative investment in keeping with this broad definition is the subject of consideration here. The theoretical part of each chapter is meant to collect, systematize and deepen readers’ understanding of a given investment category, while the practical part of each focuses on an analysis of the current state of development of alternative investments on the global market and outlines the prospects of future market development. This book will be a valuable tool for scholars, practitioners and policy-makers alike.