We consider the task of assessing the righthand tail of an insurer's loss distribution for some specified period, such as a year. We present and analyse six different approaches: four upper bounds, and two approximations. We examine these approaches under a variety of conditions, using a large event loss table for US hurricanes. For its combination of tightness and computational speed, we favour the Moment bound. We also consider the appropriate size of Monte Carlo simulations, and the imposition of a cap on single event losses. We strongly favour the Gamma distribution as a flexible model for single event losses, for its tractable form in all of the methods we analyse, its generalisability, and because of the ease with which a cap on l...
Statistical extreme value theory provides a flexible and theoretically well motivated approach to th...
When analyzing catastrophic risk, traditional measures for evaluating risk, such as the probable max...
One of the most important problems in collective risk theory has been the computation of the distrib...
We consider the task of assessing the righthand tail of an insurer's loss distribution for some spec...
In this paper, we study the estimation of parameters for g-and-h distributions. These distributions ...
Previous work has shown a compound Poisson process provides a reasonable model for the total economi...
Good estimates for the tails of loss severity distributions are essential for pricing or positioning...
The analyses of insurance risks are an important part of the project of Solvency II preparing of E...
Traditionally, the size of natural disaster events such as hurricanes, earthquakes, tornadoes, and f...
This paper is intended as a guide to building insurance risk (loss) models. A typical model for insu...
The objective of this paper is to improve option risk monitoring by examining the information conten...
This thesis reviewed various heavy tailed distributions and Extreme Value Theory (EVT) to estimate t...
The magnitude of natural hazard events such as hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes, and floods are tr...
Statistical analyses on actual data depict operational risk as an extremely heavy-tailed phenomenon,...
A general methodology for modeling loss data depending on covariates is developed. The parameters of...
Statistical extreme value theory provides a flexible and theoretically well motivated approach to th...
When analyzing catastrophic risk, traditional measures for evaluating risk, such as the probable max...
One of the most important problems in collective risk theory has been the computation of the distrib...
We consider the task of assessing the righthand tail of an insurer's loss distribution for some spec...
In this paper, we study the estimation of parameters for g-and-h distributions. These distributions ...
Previous work has shown a compound Poisson process provides a reasonable model for the total economi...
Good estimates for the tails of loss severity distributions are essential for pricing or positioning...
The analyses of insurance risks are an important part of the project of Solvency II preparing of E...
Traditionally, the size of natural disaster events such as hurricanes, earthquakes, tornadoes, and f...
This paper is intended as a guide to building insurance risk (loss) models. A typical model for insu...
The objective of this paper is to improve option risk monitoring by examining the information conten...
This thesis reviewed various heavy tailed distributions and Extreme Value Theory (EVT) to estimate t...
The magnitude of natural hazard events such as hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes, and floods are tr...
Statistical analyses on actual data depict operational risk as an extremely heavy-tailed phenomenon,...
A general methodology for modeling loss data depending on covariates is developed. The parameters of...
Statistical extreme value theory provides a flexible and theoretically well motivated approach to th...
When analyzing catastrophic risk, traditional measures for evaluating risk, such as the probable max...
One of the most important problems in collective risk theory has been the computation of the distrib...