Our glossary explains technical terms from the areas finance and reinsurance. We hope it facilitates the understanding of our texts, publications and annual reports. If you have comments or suggestions, please use our feedback form!
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Securitisation instruments
instruments for transferring reinsurance business to the capital markets with the goal of refinancing or placing insurance risks.
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Segment reporting
presentation of items in the balance sheet and income statement split according to functional criteria such as business sectors and regions.
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Solvency II
European directive for the insurance industry. The new European regulatory regime for (re)insurers that entered into force on 1 January 2016 on the basis of the Solvency II Directive (Directive 2009 / 138 / EC) is comprised of risk-based capital requirements and imposes quantitative, qualitative and reporting-related requirements in three main areas known as pillars.
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Solvency capital ratio
Percentage coverage of the supervisory capital requirement (target solvency capital) under Solvency II by eligible own funds.
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Spread loss treaty
treaty between an insurer and a reinsurer that covers risks of a defined portfolio over a multi-year period.
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Structured entity
entity with specific characteristics not bound to a particular legal form that is used to conduct closely defined activities or to hold assets and for which the traditional concept of consolidation – based on voting rights – is often inadequate for determining who exercises control over the entity.
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Structured reinsurance
reinsurance with limited potential for profits and losses. In most cases customers strive for risk equalisation over time or solvency relief, both of which have a stabilising effect on the ceding company's balance sheet.
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Surplus reinsurance
form of proportional reinsurance under which the risk is not spread between the insurer and reinsurer on the basis of a previously agreed, set quota share. Instead, the insurer determines a maximum sum insured per risk up to which it is prepared to be liable. Risks that exceed the ceding company’s retention (surpluses) are borne by the reinsurer. The reinsurer’s lines thus vary according to the level of the retention and the sum insured of the reinsured contract. The reinsurer’s liability is generally limited to a multiple of the ceding company’s retention.
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Surplus relief treaty
reinsurance contract under which an admitted reinsurer assumes (part of) a ceding company’s portfolio to relieve stress on the cedant’s policyholders’ surplus.
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Survival ratio
ratio of loss reserves to paid losses under a specific contract or several contracts in a balance sheet year.