Catastrophe Swap

Catastrophe Swap

A catastrophe swap is a customizable financial instrument traded in the over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives market that enables insurers to guard against massive potential losses resulting from a major natural disaster, such as a hurricane or earthquake. A catastrophe swap is a way for insurance companies to transfer some of the risks they've assumed, rather than purchasing reinsurance or issuing a CAT — a high-yield debt instrument, usually insurance-linked, designed to raise funds in case of a catastrophe, such as a hurricane or an earthquake. A catastrophe swap is a way for insurance companies to transfer some of the risks they've assumed, rather than purchasing reinsurance or issuing a catastrophe bond (CAT). The catastrophe bond, linked to the risk of damage by earthquakes and tropical cyclones in 16 countries within the Caribbean, was part of a catastrophe swap with the Caribbean Catastrophic Risk Insurance Facility (CCRIF). A catastrophe swap is a customizable financial instrument traded in the over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives market that enables insurers to guard against massive potential losses resulting from a major natural disaster, such as a hurricane or earthquake.

A catastrophe swap is a customizable instrument that protects insurers from massive potential losses resulting from a major natural disaster, such as a hurricane or earthquake.

What Is a Catastrophe Swap?

A catastrophe swap is a customizable financial instrument traded in the over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives market that enables insurers to guard against massive potential losses resulting from a major natural disaster, such as a hurricane or earthquake. These instruments enable insurers to transfer some of the risks they've assumed through policy issuance and provide an alternative to purchasing reinsurance or issuing a catastrophe bond (CAT), a high-yield debt instrument.

A catastrophe swap is a customizable instrument that protects insurers from massive potential losses resulting from a major natural disaster, such as a hurricane or earthquake.
A catastrophe swap is a way for insurance companies to transfer some of the risks they've assumed, rather than purchasing reinsurance or issuing a catastrophe bond (CAT).
For some catastrophe insurance swaps, insurers trade policies from different regions of a country, allowing them to diversify their portfolios.

Understanding a Catastrophe Swap

In finance, a swap is a contractual agreement between two parties to exchange cash flows for a given period. For a catastrophe swap, two parties — an insurer and an investor — exchange streams of periodic payments. The insurer's payments are based on a portfolio of the investor's securities, and the investor's payments are based on potential catastrophe losses as predicted by a catastrophe loss index (CLI).

A catastrophe swap helps protect insurance companies in the wake of a significant natural disaster when numerous policyholders file claims within a short time frame. This type of event places substantial financial pressure on insurance companies.

A catastrophe swap is a way for insurance companies to transfer some of the risks they've assumed, rather than purchasing reinsurance or issuing a CAT — a high-yield debt instrument, usually insurance-linked, designed to raise funds in case of a catastrophe, such as a hurricane or an earthquake.

Some catastrophe swaps include the use of a catastrophe bond.

In some catastrophe insurance swaps, insurers trade policies from different regions of a country. The goal here is to diversify their portfolios. For instance, a swap between an insurer in Florida or South Carolina and one in Washington or Oregon could mitigate significant damage from a single hurricane.

Example of a Catastrophe Swap

In 2014, the World Bank issued a three-year, $30 million catastrophe bond as part of its Capital-At-Risk notes program, which allows its clients to hedge against natural disaster risk. The catastrophe bond, linked to the risk of damage by earthquakes and tropical cyclones in 16 countries within the Caribbean, was part of a catastrophe swap with the Caribbean Catastrophic Risk Insurance Facility (CCRIF).

Simultaneous to the issuance of the $30 million bond, the World Bank entered an agreement with the CCRIF, which echoed the terms of the bond. The World Bank's balance sheets held the proceeds from the bond. If a natural disaster occurred, the principal of the bond would have been reduced by an agreed-upon amount laid out under the terms, and the proceeds would then have been paid to the CCRIF.

Related terms:

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

Bond : Understanding What a Bond Is

A bond is a fixed income investment in which an investor loans money to an entity (corporate or governmental) that borrows the funds for a defined period of time at a fixed interest rate. read more

Catastrophe Excess Reinsurance Defintiion

Catastrophe excess reinsurance is a policy that protects a catastrophe insurance company from insolvency following a disaster. read more

Catastrophe Futures

Catastrophe futures are futures contracts used by insurance companies to protect themselves against future catastrophe losses.  read more

Catastrophe Loss Index (CLI)

Catastrophe Loss Index (CLI) is used in the insurance industry to quantify the magnitude of insurance claims expected from major disasters. 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

Catastrophe Bond (CAT)

A catastrophe bond is a high-yield debt instrument designed to raise money for companies in the insurance industry in the event of a natural disaster. read more

Debt Instrument

A debt instrument is a tool an entity can utilize to raise capital. Any type of instrument primarily classified as debt can be considered a debt instrument. read more

Diversification

Diversification is an investment strategy based on the premise that a portfolio with different asset types will perform better than one with few. read more

Extreme Mortality Bond (EMB)

Insurers securitize their issued policies in the form of bonds called extreme mortality bonds to mitigate the risk during extreme mortality events. read more