When a ceding insurer transfers a portion of its risk?

What Is Reinsurance?

Reinsurance is also known as insurance for insurers or stop-loss insurance. Reinsurance is the practice whereby insurers transfer portions of their risk portfolios to other parties by some form of agreement to reduce the likelihood of paying a large obligation resulting from an insurance claim.

The party that diversifies its insurance portfolio is known as the ceding party. The party that accepts a portion of the potential obligation in exchange for a share of the insurance premium is known as the reinsurer.

How Reinsurance Works

Reinsurance allows insurers to remain solvent by recovering some or all amounts paid to claimants. Reinsurance reduces the net liability on individual risks and catastrophe protection from large or multiple losses. The practice also provides ceding companies, those that seek reinsurance, the capacity to increase their underwriting capabilities in terms of the number and size of risks.

According to the Insurance Information Institute, Hurricane Andrew caused $15.5 billion in damage in Florida in 1992, causing seven U.S. insurance companies to become insolvent.

Benefits of Reinsurance

By covering the insurer against accumulated individual commitments, reinsurance gives the insurer more security for its equity and solvency by increasing its ability to withstand the financial burden when unusual and major events occur.

Through reinsurance, insurers may underwrite policies covering a larger quantity or volume of risk without excessively raising administrative costs to cover their solvency margins. In addition, reinsurance makes substantial liquid assets available to insurers in case of exceptional losses.

Insurers are legally required to maintain sufficient reserves to pay all potential claims from issued policies.

Types of Reinsurance


Facultative coverage protects an insurer for an individual or a specified risk or contract. If several risks or contracts need reinsurance, they a renegotiated separately. The reinsurer holds all rights for accepting or denying a facultative reinsurance proposal.

A reinsurance treaty is for a set period rather than on a per-risk or contract basis. The reinsurer covers all or a portion of the risks that the insurer may incur.

Key Takeaways

  • Reinsurance, or insurance for insurers, transfers risk to another company to reduce the likelihood of large payouts for a claim.
  • Reinsurance allows insurers to remain solvent by recovering all or part of a payout.
  • Companies that seek reinsurance are called ceding companies.
  • Types of reinsurance include facultative, proportional, and non-proportional.

Under proportional reinsurance, the reinsurer receives a prorated share of all policy premiums sold by the insurer. For a claim, the reinsurer bears a portion of the losses based on a pre-negotiated percentage. The reinsurer also reimburses the insurer for processing, business acquisition, and writing costs.

With non-proportional reinsurance, the reinsurer is liable if the insurer's losses exceed a specified amount, known as the priority or retention limit. As a result, the reinsurer does not have a proportional share in the insurer's premiums and losses. The priority or retention limit is based on one type of risk or an entire risk category.

Excess-of-loss reinsurance is a type of non-proportional coverage in which the reinsurer covers the losses exceeding the insurer's retained limit. This contract is typically applied to catastrophic events and covers the insurer either on a per-occurrence basis or for the cumulative losses within a set period.

Reinsurance Deconstructed

Under risk-attaching reinsurance, all claims established during the effective period are covered regardless of whether the losses occurred outside the coverage period. No coverage is provided for claims originating outside the coverage period, even if the losses occurred while the contract was in effect.

Facultative vs. Treaty Reinsurance: An Overview

Facultative reinsurance and reinsurance treaties are two types of reinsurance contracts. When it comes to facultative reinsurance, the main insurer covers one risk or a series of risks held in its own books. Treaty reinsurance, on the other hand, is insurance purchased by an insurer from another company. With facultative reinsurance, the reinsurer can review the risks involved in an insurance policy and either accept or reject them. But the reinsurer in a treaty reinsurance policy, on the other hand, generally accepts all the risks involved with certain policies.

Key Takeaways

  • Facultative and treaty reinsurance are both forms of reinsurance.
  • Facultative reinsurance is reinsurance for a single risk or a defined package of risks.
  • Facultative reinsurance occurs whenever the reinsurance company insists on performing its own underwriting for some or all the policies to be reinsured.
  • The ceding company in treaty reinsurance agrees to cede all risks to the reinsurer.
  • The reinsurer in treaty reinsurance agrees to cover all risks, even though the reinsurer hasn't performed individual underwriting for each policy.

Investopedia / Alison Czinkota

Facultative Reinsurance

Facultative reinsurance is usually the simplest way for an insurer to obtain reinsurance protection. These policies are also the easiest to tailor to specific circumstances.

Facultative reinsurance is reinsurance purchased by an insurer for a single risk or a defined package of risks. Usually a one-off transaction, it occurs whenever the reinsurance company insists on performing its own underwriting for some or all the policies to be reinsured. Under these agreements, each facultatively underwritten policy is considered a single transaction, not lumped together by class. Such reinsurance contracts are usually less attractive to the ceding company, which may be forced to retain only the riskiest policies.

Suppose a standard insurance provider issues a policy on major commercial real estate, such as a large corporate office building. The policy is written for $35 million, meaning the original insurer faces a potential $35 million in liability if the building is badly damaged. But the insurer believes it cannot afford to pay out more than $25 million. So before even agreeing to issue the policy, the insurer must look for facultative reinsurance and try the market until it gets takers for the remaining $10 million. The insurer might get pieces of the $10 million from 10 different reinsurers. But without that, it cannot agree to issue the policy. Once it has the agreement from the companies to cover the $10 million and is confident it can potentially cover the full amount should a claim come in, it can issue the policy.

Treaty Reinsurance

Treaty reinsurance occurs whenever the ceding company agrees to cede all risks within a specific class of insurance policies to the reinsurance company. In turn, the reinsurance company agrees to indemnify the ceding company of all risks therein, even though the reinsurance company has not performed individual underwriting for each policy. The reinsurance often applies even to those policies that have not yet been written, so long as they pertain to the pre-agreed class.

The most important characteristic of a treaty agreement is the lack of individual underwriting on behalf of the assuming insurer. This structure transfers underwriting risks from the ceding company to the assuming company, leaving the assuming company exposed to the possibility that the initial underwriting process did not adequately evaluate the risks to be insured.

There are different kinds of treaty agreements. The most common is called proportional treaties, in which a percentage of the ceding insurer's original policies is reinsured, up to a limit. Any policies written in excess of the limit are not to be covered by the reinsurance treaty.

For example, one reinsurance company may agree to indemnify 75% of the original insurer's automobile policies—up to a $100 million limit. This means the ceding company is not indemnified for $25 million of the first $100 million in auto policies written under the agreement. That $25 million is known as the ceding company's retention limit. If the ceding company writes $200 million worth of automobile insurance, it retains $25 million from the first $100 million and all of the subsequent $100 million, unless it arranges a surplus treaty. Generally speaking, reinsurance policy premiums are lower when retention limits are higher.

Special Considerations

Reinsurance companies offer insurance to other insurers, safeguarding against circumstances when the traditional insurer does not have enough money to pay out all of the claims against its written policies. Reinsurance contracts take place between a reinsurer or assuming company, and the reinsured or ceding company. In effect, a standard insurance provider can spread its own risk of loss even further by entering into a reinsurance contract.

Reinsurance companies provide coverage to other insurers that can't pay out all of the claims against their written policies.

In a traditional insurance arrangement, the risk of loss is spread among many different policyholders, each of whom pays a premium to the insurer in exchange for the insurer's protection against some uncertain potential event. It is a business model that works whenever the sum of received premiums from all members exceeds the amount paid out on insurance claims against the policies. There are times, however, when the amount paid out in claims by the insurer exceeds the sum of money received from policyholder premiums. In such instances, it is the insurer who faces the greatest risk of loss.

When a ceding insurer transfers a portion of its risk to an assuming insurer on a case by case basis this process is reffered to as?

The process of transferring the risk from the ceding entity to the reinsurer is known as a cession. If an assuming entity, in turn, transfers a portion of this risk, the process is called a retrocession. A retrocession is customarily made when the amount assumed is beyond the reinsurer's limits of retention. 3.

When the original insurer ceding company surrenders part of a risk to another insurer it is referred to as?

Reinsurance ceded and reinsurance assumed are the actions taken by the two parties involved in this type of contract between two insurance companies. Reinsurance ceded is the action taken by an insurer to pass off a portion of its obligation for coverage to another insurance company.

What does it mean when an insurance policy is ceded?

Cede — when a company reinsures its liability with another. The original or primary insurer, the insurance company that purchases reinsurance, is the "ceding company" that "cedes" business to the reinsurer.

What is the general term for transferring a portion or all of the insurance written by one insurer to another insurer?

Reinsurance is the practice whereby insurers transfer portions of their risk portfolios to other parties by some form of agreement to reduce the likelihood of paying a large obligation resulting from an insurance claim. The party that diversifies its insurance portfolio is known as the ceding party.