Observations on Industry Practice in the Construction of Large Correlation Structures for Risk and Capital Margins

26 Pages Posted: 8 Feb 2018 Last revised: 23 Mar 2023

See all articles by Greg Taylor

Greg Taylor

UNSW Australia Business School, School of Risk & Actuarial Studies

Date Written: February 1, 2018

Abstract

This is a practical paper, concerned with certain existing industry practices used to factor large correlation matrices into estimates of variance of total portfolio liabilities, and hence into risk, and possibly capital margins, and the extent to which those practices are theoretically sound. Two such practices are examined, and the results of this enquiry are largely negative.

One practice appears to be fatally flawed. It is found to produce an estimated variance of total liabilities from the variance of subsets of the total that is not consistent with any particular correlation matrix between those subsets other than in trivial circumstances.

The other approach lacks the support of any formulated stochastic model of the liabilities. While such a model may exist (as yet unformulated), the author has not succeeded in identifying it. The “most obvious” contender has been tested, and found wanting.

Keywords: capital margin, correlation matrix, industry practice, loss reserving, risk margin, tensor product

JEL Classification: G22

Suggested Citation

Taylor, Greg, Observations on Industry Practice in the Construction of Large Correlation Structures for Risk and Capital Margins (February 1, 2018). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3113756 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3113756

Greg Taylor (Contact Author)

UNSW Australia Business School, School of Risk & Actuarial Studies ( email )

Level 6, East Lobby
UNSW Business School Building, UNSW
Sydney, NSW 2052
Australia
+61 421 338 448 (Phone)

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