
Best's Capital Adequacy Relativity (BCAR)
Best's Capital Adequacy Relativity (BCAR) is a rating of the strength of an insurance company’s balance sheet. Other factors that can impact the balance sheet strength analysis include liquidity, quality of capital, dependence on reinsurance, quality and appropriateness of reinsurance, asset/liability matching, reserve adequacy, stress tests, internal capital models, and the actions or financial condition of an affiliate and/or holding company, which may include a BCAR calculation at the holding company/consolidated level. By establishing a guideline for the net required capital needed to support balance sheet strength, BCAR can assist analysts in differentiating among the financial strength of insurers and in determining whether a rating unit’s capitalization is appropriate for its risk profile. BCAR takes a look at an insurance company's leverage, underwriting activities, and financial performance, using them to test different financial scenarios and how the insurance company would be impacted. The basic formula for BCAR is as follows: **_BCAR = Adjusted Policyholders’ Surplus (APHS) / Net Required Capital (NRC)_** APHS takes into account unearned premiums, assets, loss reserves, reinsurance (equity adjustments), surplus notes, debt service requirements (debt adjustments), and other adjustments, such as potential catastrophe losses and future operating losses.

What Is Best's Capital Adequacy Relativity (BCAR)?
Best's Capital Adequacy Relativity (BCAR) is a rating of the strength of an insurance company’s balance sheet. Also known as Best’s Capital Adequacy Ratio, BCAR, examines an insurer’s leverage, underwriting activities, and financial performance and uses this information to test various scenarios to see how each would impact the insurer’s balance sheet.





Understanding Best's Capital Adequacy Relativity (BCAR)
Insurance companies run a delicate business. They guarantee to make payments for their policyholders to cover damages that the policyholder may experience in life. To ensure that they are in the financial position to make these payments, insurance companies and regulators require various regulations to be met and tests to be run. Many of these tests include capital adequacy ratios; tests that ensure an insurance company is in the financial position to meet its obligations.
Best's Capital Adequacy Relativity (BCAR) was developed by A.M. Best, a rating agency that focuses on the insurance industry. BCAR depicts the quantitative relationship between an insurance company's balance sheet strength and its operating risks. As the foundation of financial security, balance sheet strength is critical to the determination of a rating unit’s ability to meet its current and ongoing obligations.
BCAR emphasizes the balance sheet because it shows whether an insurer will be able to meet its policy obligations. Underwriting practices, specifically underwriting leverage, determine whether the insurer is underwriting the policies that it should be underwriting, or if it is taking on too much risk.
BCAR takes into account the premiums currently written by the insurer, reinsurance coverage, and loss reserves. By establishing a guideline for the net required capital needed to support balance sheet strength, BCAR can assist analysts in differentiating among the financial strength of insurers and in determining whether a rating unit’s capitalization is appropriate for its risk profile.
The basic formula for BCAR is as follows:
BCAR = Adjusted Policyholders’ Surplus (APHS) / Net Required Capital (NRC)
APHS takes into account unearned premiums, assets, loss reserves, reinsurance (equity adjustments), surplus notes, debt service requirements (debt adjustments), and other adjustments, such as potential catastrophe losses and future operating losses. NRC components include fixed-income securities, equities, interest rates, credit, loss and loss-adjustment expense reserves, net premiums written, and off-balance sheet items.
Limitations of Best's Capital Adequacy Relativity (BCAR)
The analysis of BCAR alone does not decide the balance sheet strength assessment. Other factors that can impact the balance sheet strength analysis include liquidity, quality of capital, dependence on reinsurance, quality and appropriateness of reinsurance, asset/liability matching, reserve adequacy, stress tests, internal capital models, and the actions or financial condition of an affiliate and/or holding company, which may include a BCAR calculation at the holding company/consolidated level.
Similarly, a rating is more than a balance sheet strength assessment and includes evaluations of a rating unit’s operating performance, business profile, and enterprise risk management.
The 2007-2008 financial crisis hit insurance companies hard. Many of them incorrectly priced risk, which led to insurers taking on more risk than they were able to cover with their reserves. A lack of adequate reporting, financial transparency, and regulatory complacency led to insurance regulators not understanding how exposed insurance companies were, and thus not monitoring their insolvency risk properly.
Banks are also held to capital adequacy ratios to make sure that they have enough reserves on hand to meet adverse financial situations as well as customer demand for deposits.
Related terms:
Accounting
Accounting is the process of recording, summarizing, analyzing, and reporting financial transactions of a business to oversight agencies, regulators, and the IRS. read more
Balance Sheet : Formula & Examples
A balance sheet is a financial statement that reports a company's assets, liabilities and shareholder equity at a specific point in time. read more
Bank Deposits
Bank deposits are money placed into a deposit account at a banking institution, such as savings accounts, checking accounts and money market accounts. read more
Capital Adequacy Ratio – CAR
The capital adequacy ratio (CAR) is defined as a measurement of a bank's available capital expressed as a percentage of a bank's risk-weighted credit exposures. read more
Catastrophe Reinsurance
Catastrophe reinsurance protects catastrophe insurers from financial ruin in the event of a large-scale natural or human-made disaster. read more
Development To Policyholder Surplus
Development to policyholder surplus is the ratio of an insurer’s loss reserve development to its policyholders’ surplus. read more
Gross Leverage Ratio
Gross leverage ratio is the sum of an insurance company’s net premiums written ratio, net liability ratio, and ceded reinsurance ratio. read more
Insurance Premium
An insurance premium is the amount of money an individual or business pays for an insurance policy. read more
Liquidity
Liquidity refers to the ease with which an asset, or security, can be converted into ready cash without affecting its market price. read more
Loss Reserve
Typically comprised of liquid assets, loss reserves are an asset that allows an insurer to cover claims made against policies it underwrites. read more