We investigate the probability that an insurance portfolio gets ruined within a finite time period under the assumption that the r largest claims are (partly) reinsured. We show that for regularly varying claim sizes the probability of ruin after reinsurance is also regularly varying in terms of the initial capital, and derive an explicit asymptotic expression for the latter. We establish this result by leveraging recent developments on sample-path large deviations for heavy tails. Our results allow, on the asymptotic level, for an explicit comparison between two well-known large-claim reinsurance contracts, namely LCR and ECOMOR. We finally assess the accuracy of the resulting approximations using state-of-the-art rare event simulation tec...
AbstractThis paper investigates the probability of ruin within finite horizon for a discrete time ri...
The large claims reinsurance treaties ECOMOR and LCR are well known not to be very popular. They hav...
The present paper studies the probability of ruin of an insurer, if excess of loss reinsurance with ...
We investigate the probability that an insurance portfolio gets ruined within a finite time period u...
We consider risk processes with reinsurance. A general family of reinsurance contracts is allowed, i...
EnWe study the ruin problem for a non-life insurance company, whose risk process has the following f...
We consider an extension of the classical compound Poisson risk model, where the waiting time betwee...
AbstractThe large claims reinsurance treaties ECOMOR and LCR are well known not to be very popular. ...
Market cycles play a great role in reinsurance. Cycle transitions are not independent from the claim...
International audienceA risk process with constant premium rate $c$ and Poisson arrivals of claims i...
International audienceIn the compound Poisson risk model, several strong hypotheses may be found too...
We consider a dependent portfolio of insurance contracts. Asymptotic tail probabilities of the ECOMO...
finite-time ruin probabilities with reinsurance cycles influenced by large claim
The purpose of this Ph.D. thesis is twofold. Firstly, we concentrate on mathematical properties of r...
We compare two types of reinsurance: excess of loss (EOL) and largest claim reinsurance (LCR), each ...
AbstractThis paper investigates the probability of ruin within finite horizon for a discrete time ri...
The large claims reinsurance treaties ECOMOR and LCR are well known not to be very popular. They hav...
The present paper studies the probability of ruin of an insurer, if excess of loss reinsurance with ...
We investigate the probability that an insurance portfolio gets ruined within a finite time period u...
We consider risk processes with reinsurance. A general family of reinsurance contracts is allowed, i...
EnWe study the ruin problem for a non-life insurance company, whose risk process has the following f...
We consider an extension of the classical compound Poisson risk model, where the waiting time betwee...
AbstractThe large claims reinsurance treaties ECOMOR and LCR are well known not to be very popular. ...
Market cycles play a great role in reinsurance. Cycle transitions are not independent from the claim...
International audienceA risk process with constant premium rate $c$ and Poisson arrivals of claims i...
International audienceIn the compound Poisson risk model, several strong hypotheses may be found too...
We consider a dependent portfolio of insurance contracts. Asymptotic tail probabilities of the ECOMO...
finite-time ruin probabilities with reinsurance cycles influenced by large claim
The purpose of this Ph.D. thesis is twofold. Firstly, we concentrate on mathematical properties of r...
We compare two types of reinsurance: excess of loss (EOL) and largest claim reinsurance (LCR), each ...
AbstractThis paper investigates the probability of ruin within finite horizon for a discrete time ri...
The large claims reinsurance treaties ECOMOR and LCR are well known not to be very popular. They hav...
The present paper studies the probability of ruin of an insurer, if excess of loss reinsurance with ...