Home

insurancelinked

InsuranceLinked denotes a family of financial instruments whose payoffs depend on insurance risk, transferring part of an insurer’s exposure to losses to investors in the capital markets. The best-known forms are insurance-linked securities (ILS) such as catastrophe bonds, collateralized reinsurance arrangements, sidecars, and industry loss warranties. These instruments are typically issued by a special purpose vehicle that raises funds from investors; in return, investors receive periodic coupons and the return of principal if no triggering event occurs. If a defined loss event happens, payments are made to the sponsor from the SPV and investors may lose part or all of their investment.

Triggers vary by structure. Occurrence-based triggers use actual insured losses from a defined catastrophe; parametric or

Benefits and risks are balanced. For insurers, InsuranceLinked instruments can diversify risk, stabilize capital, and access

industry-loss
triggers
rely
on
aggregated
data
such
as
industry-wide
losses.
These
mechanisms
determine
how
and
when
payments
are
triggered,
affecting
both
risk
transfer
and
investor
returns.
The
instruments
are
designed
to
provide
capital
relief
to
insurers
while
offering
investors
exposure
to
catastrophe
risk
with
potentially
low
correlation
to
traditional
asset
classes.
new
sources
of
funding.
Investors
gain
diversification
and
potential
returns
that
are
not
highly
correlated
with
equity
or
credit
markets.
Risks
include
model
error,
basis
risk
(especially
with
ILWs
and
non-catastrophe
events),
concentration
risk,
and
liquidity
constraints
in
secondary
markets.
The
market
is
globally
active,
with
a
concentration
of
activity
in
jurisdictions
such
as
Bermuda
and
the
Cayman
Islands,
and
deals
typically
involve
specialized
sponsors,
reinsurers,
and
asset
managers.