Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-p9bg8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T08:41:51.152Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Foreword by the Guest Editors of the RARE special issue

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 August 2018

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Editorial
Copyright
© Institute and Faculty of Actuaries 2018 

The EU-funded http://www.liverpool.ac.uk/institute-for-financial-and-actuarial-mathematics/research/rare/ (RARE) (Risk Analysis, Ruin theory and Extremes) project addressed rare events and extremes by analysing environmental and financial risks through the use of probabilistic tools and approaches. To achieve this, it established a global network. In total, 20 doctoral and 20 postdoctoral fellows were hired who specialised in (applied) probability, mathematical statistics, stochastic analysis, extremes and financial and insurance mathematics. Partner institutions were 12 leading research centers from Europe, Australia, China, India, Japan, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States. The network now exceeds 100 researchers from around the world.

RARE focussed on developing a theoretical perspective on the analysis of risk probabilities in case of disasters or extreme shocks for financial or environmental risk pools. It also centred on creating new risk measures and assessing aggregate risk effects. Over 200 scientific articles were submitted for publication, raising overall awareness of rare and extreme events and significantly boosting the visibility of researchers. These papers highlight results such as new concepts on rare events analysis, new risk measures, extreme behaviour analysis, and improvements on existing risk analysis tools and statistical applications.

Knowledge and expertise were continually fostered through university seminars, conferences, workshops and dedicated sessions at international events. A final workshop at La Baule (France) gathered over 60 international experts representing academia and industry from five continents. They discussed a broad variety of future topics, ranging from transformation of uncertainty into measurable risks to the role of regulators, communication and new democratic systems.

To conclude nicely our FP7-RARE project, we have a special RARE issue in the Annals of Actuarial Science (AAS), for which researchers working on one of the three topics of RARE (and not necessarily members of the RARE project) were invited to submit a paper. A total of 13 papers have been selected for this issue. The spectrum of papers presented is quite broad, addressing both practical and organisational issues, as well as theoretical advances in risk theory. The main focus is on insurance, which is in line with the goals of an actuarial journal.

An introductory paper, by M. Dacorogna, pictures the new paradigm of insurance management due to the advent of risk-based regulation. He reviews the main changes linked to the necessity of quantifying risk and understanding the return based on it. After this introduction, we grouped the papers that deal with various aspects of regulatory capital. J. Lévy Véhel concentrates on the choice of risk measures imposed by regulators and its consequences in terms of systemic risk. Dynamic risk measures are studied by Y. Shimizu and S.Tanaka in the context of asset performance and regulatory capital. Then we move to the context of ruin theory, with a paper by E. Cheung et al. on ruin probabilities with a generalised dependency structure, followed by a paper by R. Xu et al. on dynamic management of capital based on claims frequency. H. Jiang treats the problem of optimality of dividend payments bringing in Lévy processes. We complete this section with a paper by C. Cai et al. proposing an estimator of the survival probability for a Lévy risk model observed at low frequency. The next group of papers treats the important question of dependence in risk models. The first one, by F. Dufresne et al., introduces, in the context of life insurance, a copula approach to model the dependence between lifetimes within a married couple. Vine copulas are used in the next paper by R. Timmer et al. to model the all balance sheet of a life insurance company to guide asset allocation decisions. M. Tamraz introduces mixture copulas to model the dependence between frequency and severity of insurance claims. In a more theoretical paper, W. Xie et al. question the type of asymptotic tail behaviour, light versus heavy, for phase-type scale mixture distributions. Dacorogna et al. derive analytical formulas for risk measures to investigate the convergence of Monte Carlo (MC) simulations for aggregated risk models under standard dependence structure. In the last paper, S. Asmussen looks at conditional MC techniques to improve density estimation and calculations of standard risk measures under various copula structures.