Tag Archives: Actuaries

SOA’s international outreach

I’m a little slow noting this, but SOA President Bradley Smith blogged about the proposal to add a property-casualty track this week. He asserts fairly clearly that the move is pointed at international concerns: For us to meet the needs of our growing member and candidate base outside the U.S. and Canada, we must offer [...]

More on the SOA’s P/C track

With the Society of Actuaries planning to launch a casualty track, the CAS responds: The CAS Board affirms that it is the intention of the CAS to remain independent while at the same time cooperating with other actuarial organizations to meet challenges to the profession. There’s more at the link, noting that the CAS: is [...]

Does bootstrapping understate reserve variability?

Over at Guy Carpenter land, actuary Jessica Leong posits that the bootstrapping method of estimating reserve variability understates that variability. Bootstrapping, of course, is a method of using the company’s own data to drive a random sampling process; said process re-estimates the reserve. Sample enough times, keep track of the results, and you’ve got a [...]

Fortune favors an actuary

Via Claire Wilkinson at the III blog, a young actuary makes good. Really good: As I was sitting in the doctor’s waiting room the other day leafing through the latest issue of Fortune magazine, I couldn’t help but notice Fortune’s 40 under 40. This annual ranking highlights the hottest young stars in business across the [...]

Why health insurance subsidizes the elderly

Over at the Speaking of Actuaries blog, SOA President Brad Miller puzzles over why Obamacare has younger buyers subsidizing older ones: I discussed this with someone who works on Capitol Hill. I told him I understood the criteria for the first three but was struggling to understand the reason for the young to old age [...]

Be like Tebow

Never followed him in college, but am intrigued by Denver Broncos quarterback Tim Tebow. And his experience has lessons for the actuarial exams. If you follow football, you know Tebow led his team back from 15 points behind late to win Sunday’s game. Apparently Tebow has crude quarterbacking skills. His only skill, it seems, is [...]

Supply and demand in p/c insurance

Always good when someone shores up the ranks of blogging actuaries, so welcome to Todd Bault! I guess he’s been posting awhile, but I seemed to have missed his earlier work. Todd is well-known in the actuarial community for being one of the leading insurance industry analysts, and he’s posting as part of the lineup [...]

Whoops! Almost forgot to include a headline – 1st pass

This week the Wall Street Journal’s data geek looks at data goofs throughout the ages: (Added “data” before “goofs” to clarify – 2nd pass.) (Put quotes around the term “goofs” that appears in italics – 5th pass.) This month, the U.K. Office of National Statistics calculated construction output for the three-month period ending in May [...]

On ERM credential, CAS hits the pause button

If you were a casualty actuary studying to become a certified ERM expert, you might want to put your books down. Last night the Casualty Actuarial Society blogged that it was changing requirements to become a Chartered Enterprise Risk Analyst – before the original requirements were even in place. The analyst designation, usually abbreviated CERA, [...]

Insolvency: What was the actuary’s role?

Time Flies Department: The Reliance Insurance insolvency turned 10 this year, and Best’s Review (sub. req., I think) was all over it. Reliance was one of three big insurers that went under in a 10-month span ending in March 2002, the others being Legion Insurance and Phico. The accompanying chart, which ranks the largest insolvencies [...]

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