A diminishing number of Reinsurers still seem to work with percentage loadings which are applied with more or less sophistication to the pure risk premium rate.
A more sensible approach is to study the distribution of the total claims amount of the layer reinsured (standard deviation, variance, skewness).
In practice this distribution is not known and we have to work with estimates E* and σ*2 of the first moment which is the pure risk premium (E) and of the second central moment (σ2). Because of the positive skewness of the distribution, E* will fall below E in more than half of the cases and sometimes considerably below.
One security loading principle could be to add a proportion k of σ* to E* in such a way that
If ε is put equal to 0.25 this reflects our wish to ensure that our security loaded rates are too low only in 25% of the cases. A σ- loading here emerges as a result of the statistical uncertainty.
If we analyse the result fluctuations we are led to apply a variance loading (1), which can be interpreted as a price for capacity (2). (See also discussion contributions by B. Ajne, G. Benktander, G. Berger, H. Bühlmann; Transactions of the Congress, 5, Oslo 1972, p. 169 ff.)
An underwriter who is confronted with two portfolios having the same first and second moments should, if conditions are the same, prefer the one with the lower third moment. A special loading for skewness is thus indicated.