Underwriting profit margin of P/L insurance in the fuzzy-ICAPM
In: The Geneva risk and insurance review, Band 31, Heft 1, S. 23-34
ISSN: 1554-9658
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In: The Geneva risk and insurance review, Band 31, Heft 1, S. 23-34
ISSN: 1554-9658
In: Review of Pacific Basin Financial Markets and Policies, Band 21, Heft 3, S. 1850020
ISSN: 1793-6705
Environmental insurance (EI) protections help resolve the firm-industry economic loss problem. However, the loss ratio of EI is positively affected by itself from one period ahead. The positive and negative effects of macroeconomic factor on the loss ratio of EIs are not necessarily consistent, but they are dependent on the effect of the year's environmental condition. The economic variables affecting the loss ratio of EI are quite inconsistent, so insurance prices and liability reserves should be modified every year. While the investigations are the special properties of our input data of Taiwan, the prescription of this paper could provide cross-references with other countries.
In: Review of Pacific Basin Financial Markets and Policies, Band 19, Heft 4, S. 1650024
ISSN: 1793-6705
This paper employs panel data regression analysis to explore the measurable differences in risk-capitalization relationship between FHC and non-FHC organized Banks. The main contribution of this paper is in explaining some rethinking which shows the business of FHCBs take more risk than that of NFHCBs, and high degree of capitalization is negatively associated with asset risk and has higher interest rate spread increased bank's asset risk in FHCBs only. It obviously has its strong anti-incentives domination for high capital banks group in NFHCHs, which a high degree of loans ratio, loans ratio is positively associated with asset risk in NFHCBs only. A large degree of bank size, bank size is negatively associated with asset risk in FHCBs only. The prior studies and previous hypothesis indicate that risk level increases when the bank capital size is high but the finding in this paper is inconsistent with the previous research.