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Back to the Future
2008 RMS Client Conference · May 13-16, 2008 · Scottsdale, Arizona
Thursday, May 15 Agenda |
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**Denotes sessions that are offered twice
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7:30-8:30 am |
Breakfast
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8:30-9:15 am |
Twenty Years of Catastrophe Risk Modeling
̶ Looking Back and Moving Forward
Hemant Shah, President & CEO, RMS
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9:15-10:00 am |
The Evolution of the Catastrophe Insurance
Market
Guest Speaker ̶ VJ Dowling,
Managing Director, Dowling & Partners Securities
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10:00-10:15 am
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Break
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10:15-11:00 am |
The Next Generation USGS Hazard Maps
Dr. Mary Lou Zoback, Vice President, Earthquake Risk
Applications, RMS
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11:00-11:20 am |
Break
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11:20 am-12:20 pm |
BREAKOUT SESSIONS
U.K. Inland Flood Model
̶ Hazard and Vulnerability Review
In 2008, RMS is releasing a major upgrade of the U.K. River
Flood Model, which builds on modeling advancements in the 2006
Germany River Flood Model, and offers high-resolution VRG-based
flood modeling through 10-meter grid Digital Terrain Models (DTM).
This is the first comprehensive upgrade since 2001 in which all
components of the model are being rebuilt to incorporate the
latest methodologies and innovations at RMS, as well as
significant new data. This session will provide a detailed look
at both the latest hazard and vulnerability modeling techniques
being implemented, including the new rainfall model and
dynamical rainfall-runoff components, the expanded floodplain
model, improved defense and off-floodplain modeling, as well as
how these combine with the vulnerability updates to improve risk
differentiation and probabilistic loss estimates.
Advancements in Developing a Detailed Data
Validation Database**
Following the data quality issues highlighted by the 2004/2005
hurricanes, the development of a high quality database of
commercial properties with building attributes was identified as
a key priority for RMS by our clients. In response, RMS has
developed a database of building attributes for the United
States. This session describes the process of developing the
database and its applications, and focuses on the challenges in
compiling a large database from multiple external third party
data sources as well as internal development efforts. The
process of populating the database, development of confidence
scores for each of the building attributes, and validation using
remote sensing, photo interpretation, and field surveys will be
discussed. (Repeated Wednesday at 1:30 pm)
Making More Effective Underwriting Decisions
Using Cat Modeling Products**
Effective catastrophe underwriting is a key driver of
profitability for P&C insurance companies. It is also, if done
well, a tremendous source of competitive advantage. However, Cat
underwriting is also hard to do well particularly since there is
an inherent tension created by the need to quote quickly against
the need to properly assess the risks that are being presented,
as well as quickly optimize the new risk against the company’s
portfolio strategy. In this session, we will present a model
case study that demonstrates how data quality, real-time
accumulation management, and account model analyses can be
efficiently interwoven and fed into portfolio management to
increase the effectiveness of catastrophe underwriting and drive
its use as a source of competitive advantage. The related
session "Using the RMS Suite for Optimizing End-to-End Portfolio
Management" focuses on the portfolio management strategy and how
that feeds into building efficient underwriting guidelines to
inform underwriting decisions. (Repeated Friday at 9:30 am)
Scope of the 2009 North America Earthquake
Model Upgrades**
For 2009, RMS has embarked on an ambitious agenda to develop,
update, and expand its earthquake modeling throughout North
America. Stretching seamlessly from Canada through Mexico, and
eventually throughout South America, the project will provide a
consistent, comprehensive solution for analyzing seismic risk.
This session will review the depth and breadth of the project
scope, from USGS hazard map updates and RMS innovations in the
North American vulnerability analysis that enhance underwriting
applications to how these enhancements inform the regional
portfolio modeling in areas of more aggregate exposure data. In
addition to scope and key technical highlights, the session will
also outline the change management plan for countries with
existing RMS models. (Repeated Friday at 9:30 am)
Building the WindX U.S. Hurricane Index
Guest Speaker ̶ Buck
Lyons, CEO, WeatherFlow
In 2007 RMS partnered with WeatherFlow, the leading expert in
installing and maintaining networks of wind stations, to build a
vast network of wind speed measurement stations for a broad set
of applications, including parametric risk transfer. Phase I of
the project is now complete, which includes 50 stations in
Florida and 7 in Houston. The completion of Phase I also brings
the launch of both the WindX and Paradex U.S. Hurricane index
solutions. This session will review why the stations needed to
be built and how they have been constructed to survive strong
winds or sabotage. Uses of the network for building parametric
securities and settling transactions will also be discussed.
Intro to Terrorism Modeling
This session provides an overview of the key components of
terrorism risk. The primary focus is on how to assess and model
terrorism as an insurable peril by defining a framework for
characterizing and evaluating the risk. This session is
recommended for new users and individuals preparing for the RMS
CAT Program.
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12:20-2:00 pm |
Lunch
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2:00-3:00 pm |
BREAKOUT SESSIONS
U.K. Inland Flood Model ̶ Changes in Loss**
The 2008 upgrade of the U.K. Inland Flood Model builds on the
major modeling advancements made by RMS since the original model release in 2001, such as those implemented
for the Germany River Flood Model in 2006. This session will
provide a detailed look at the impact of integrating new
modeling technology and data on model results and the landscape
of inland flood risk across the British Isles. The session will
discuss the drivers of change in industry-level results
regionally as well as across lines of business and coverage
types between the current and new model. (Repeated Friday at
10:45 am)
Driving the Best
Value from RMS Geocoding**
As geocoding technology becomes more broadly used across the
enterprise, the importance of consistently accurate geocoding
has never been more important. RMS geocoding products have been
designed with global geographic accuracy as the highest
priority. This session covers how RMS is pursuing this goal now
and into the future, so that users can derive the most value
from geocoding. Best practices for geocoding and driving results
in risk differentiation will be the core of the session.
Examples include account triage, underwriting, accumulations,
and modeling. Additional topics will include comparisons to
commercially available applications and well-known internet
products and flexible access/workflow integration options.
(Repeated Friday at 10:45 am)
Using the RMS Suite to Optimize End-to-End
Portfolio Management**
Using a hurricane exposed book of business as an example, this
session will walk the audience through an end-to-end portfolio
management workflow that provides insight into the integrated
use of multiple RMS data products (e. g. geocoding and building
level data), services (e.g. outsourced data quality and peril
model analyses), and applications (e.g. RiskLink, Reinsurance
Platform, RiskTools, customized data visualization tools). An
often overlooked result of the portfolio management process is
its unique ability to inform the underwriting process. This
presentation will show how the assessment of data quality
metrics, accumulation zone refinements, optimal pricing
guidelines, and meaningful reporting enables an effective
portfolio management strategy with a targeted workflow
optimization and product use. The related session "Making More
Effective Underwriting Decisions using Cat Modeling Products"
focuses on the underwriting strategy and how the underwriting
process feeds into portfolio management operations. (Repeated
Friday at 10:45 am)
Implications for the 2009 U.S. Earthquake Model Upgrade**
Revisions to the RMS U.S. Earthquake Model
represent the most significant component of the broader
2009 Americas Earthquake Model updates. While catalyzed by the 2007 USGS National Seismic Hazard Mapping Project, the update
comprises a much broader range of advances to the science and
art of earthquake risk modeling. The Next Generation Attenuation
(NGA) project, more sophisticated approaches to site response,
cutting-edge applications of structure modeling, and continuing
RMS research into post-event loss amplification each contribute
to a more comprehensive view of risk. This session will provide
insights into this ongoing development work, exploring some of
these key technical components that will contribute to changes
in loss results when the final model is released. (Repeated
Friday at 10:45 am)
Building Intuition with RMS RiskManager
Sophisticated catastrophe risk managers understand that it is
important to have an exposure-based view of risk in addition to
a probabilistic event-based view. RMS RiskManager allows
clients to keep up-to-date with advances in sophisticated
exposure management techniques. Attend this session to learn how
companies are using RiskManager to view accumulations after applying limits and deductibles,
implement scenario-based accumulation rules, build customized hazard-based accumulation zones,
easily run what-if scenarios, and gain insight into the risk of
non-modeled perils.
Intro to the RMS
Financial Model
A solid understanding of the key financial statistics provided
in RMS products is critical to interpreting model results. This
session will review the key components of the financial model,
and will discuss the interpretation and application of the EP
Curve and Statistics. Finally, it will discuss how RiskLink
results (EP Curves and Statistics) should be used and
interpreted. This session is recommended for new users and
individuals preparing for the RMS CAT Program.
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| 3:00-3:15 pm
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Break
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| 3:15-4:15 pm
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BREAKOUT SESSIONS
Modeling Event Clustering**
Event independence is a key premise of catastrophe loss
models. There is however a growing body of evidence both
anecdotal and from rigorous scientific studies that demonstrate
an apparent relationship between loss events both in space and
time. This presentation will discuss RMS research into event interdependence for European and U.S. windstorms,
focusing both on the physical mechanisms for clustering and the
implication for modeling the sources of dependency. We will
demonstrate the impact of clustering via the RMS simulation
methodology and show the impact on example reinsurance
contracts. Future developments for a multi-peril perspective
afforded by a flexible simulation approach to hazard modeling
will also be discussed. (Repeated Friday at 10:45 am)
Data Quality Trends in the Market**
In the past year, RMS has been working closely with clients to
assess and review the quality of their exposure data.
This session will discuss some of the findings from those
engagements, including: common data problems in the market, the
impact of geocoding resolution, the impact of missing or unknown data,
and data biases. It will also review best practice methods for
assessing data accuracy and running sensitivity analyses to help understand
the variation in model results due to data quality issues.
The discussion will cover issues related to both personal lines
and commercial lines, with relevance for both primary
and reinsurance companies. (Repeated Wednesday at 2:45 pm)
Meeting Your Underwriting Goals Using RiskBrowser® 8.0
This session will provide insight into how you can use
new and enhanced capabilities in RiskBrowser 8.0 to both meet
underwriting goals and to improve underwriting
processes. This session will review features that enable
roll-out of RiskBrowser to individuals across your organization
and across business units while limiting access to only that
business unit's exposure and results data, the ability to more
efficiently search and find existing accounts in the system, new
options to customize RiskBrowser installation, the ability to
capture useful data elements to make exposure data more
complete, geocoding workflow enhancements, and other features. A
case study will also be used to show how the accumulation
management enhancements in RiskBrowser 8.0 can help you identify
new concentrations with each new account underwritten and how
you can better manage risk concentrations.
Super Cat Loss Modeling
Hurricane Katrina served as a modern-day reminder of how cascades of contingent and
random sub-events can combine with a major catastrophe to form
extreme disaster scenarios. Since Katrina, RMS has continued to
review the causes and implications for Super Cats. This session
will review RMS research on Super Cats, and a methodology for
estimating losses to individual policies, based on the causative
peril or sub-peril (e.g. ground shaking or fire-following), and
estimates for disruption time. It will also suggest how this framework of analysis can help in
estimating contingent BI, based on an approach that includes a
model of supply chain dependencies for local and regional
suppliers.
Querying Data from RiskLink® Tables**
Viewing data from within RiskLink is a very effective method to
analyze exposure and results data, but with just a basic knowledge
of Microsoft Access or SQL, you can take analyzing RiskLink data
to a new level. The focus of this session will be to provide
basic techniques on how to query data directly from the back-end
tables. We will examine how to extract primary exposure
characteristics as well as common industry loss metrics. In
addition, we will explore some uncommon methods for unlocking
data from RiskLink. (Repeated Wednesday at 2:45 pm)
Intro to Accumulation Management
The intent of this session is to strengthen the participant's
understanding of the fundamental concepts used in RiskLink's
accumulation management capabilities. With a sound grasp of the
fundamentals, participants will be positioned to effectively use
the accumulation functionality to support traditional capacity
management and monitoring tasks. The session will compare and
contrast the accumulation methodology with the fundamentals of
catastrophe modeling. The discussion will also focus on analysis
assumptions, terminology and results interpretation. This
session is recommended for new users and individuals preparing
for the RMS CAT Program.
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| 4:15-4:45 pm
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Break
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4:45-5:30 pm |
Challenges in Modeling Climate Hazards
Dr. Steve Jewson, Vice President, Model Development, RMS
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7:00-9:00 pm |
Conference Dinner
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