Evaluation of Insurance Products With Guarantee in Incomplete Markets
Posted: 5 Apr 2006 Last revised: 25 Nov 2008
Date Written: August 22, 2006
Abstract
Life insurance products are usually equipped with minimum guarantee and bonus provision options. The pricing of such claims is of vital importance for the insurance industry. Risk management, strategic asset allocation, and product design depend on the correct evaluation of the written options. Also regulators are interested in such issues since they have to be aware of the possible scenarios that the overall industry will face. Pricing techniques based on the Black & Scholes paradigm are often used, however, the hypotheses underneath this model are rarely met.
To overcome Black & Scholes limitations, we develop a stochastic programming model to determine the fair price of the minimum guarantee and bonus provision options. We show that such a model covers the most relevant sources of incompleteness accounted in the financial and insurance literature. We provide extensive empirical analysis to highlight the effect of incompleteness on the fair value of the option, and show how the whole framework can be used as a valuable normative tool for insurance companies and regulators.
Keywords: Life Insurance, Minimum Guarantee, Bonus Provision, Incomplete Markets, Stochastic Programming
JEL Classification: C62, G14, G23
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation