Customers 

Testimonials

"Pinnacle brought a lot of medical malpractice knowledge to the task, interfaced with us well and produced a solid and highly usable report."

— Alan Seeley, New Mexico Insurance Division

 

 

Overview  — Regulators

As a state regulator, you walk a tightrope balancing between protecting consumers and encouraging business growth. You ask questions like:

  • Are proposed rates inadequate, excessive or unfairly discriminatory?
  • Are a company’s loss reserves actuarially sound?
  • Is a proposed captive or risk-retention group appropriately designed?
  • Are market availability and affordability needs being met?
  • What impact will proposed legislation have on a market?
  • Is a government insurance program having the desired market impact?
  • Are insurers adequately managing risk to maintain financial soundness?

Pinnacle has the experience necessary to provide answers to these and similar questions. Whether it’s expert testimony, loss reserving, financial modeling and testing, rate filing reviews, assistance with governmental insurance programs, or legislative costing and market analysis, we provide an experienced, in-depth and up-to-date knowledge base. Furthermore, we strive to communicate complex actuarial topics in plain language. This critical commitment assures maximum value.

Our actuaries have worked in state insurance departments and others state agencies as employees and consultants. We understand the intricacies of governmental requirements, including meeting tight timelines and following unique procedures.

When you need actuarial expertise not available on staff, or if you want an independent review of your internal work product or process -- or even training -- Pinnacle can help. You can rely on us to help you fulfill your responsibilities to your constituents.

Experience the Pinnacle Difference: Timely, dependable and professional responses. Plain language that not only communicates our findings, but that adds value in the process. Understandable reports and presentations that help you navigate the jargon-filled process of the insurance business. And a team of experts who are focused on doing whatever it takes to exceed your expectations, time and time again.

Services  — Regulators

Administrative Hearing Support

Pinnacle has a team of litigation support consultants who have testified and helped prepare testimony for dozens of administrative hearings on issues such as loss and expense reserve adequacy, reinsurance recoverables, pricing adequacy and many other areas for insurance companies and regulators. Using our experience and expertise, we are ready to help you, regardless of the challenges you face.

Deposition Support

Asking the right questions and understanding the answers is key to a successful deposition. Pinnacle consultants are experienced in the often rapid-fire situations presented in depositions.

Diagnostic Tests

Assessing the reasonableness of indicated loss and loss adjustment expense reserves after the analysis is completed is an essential element of the loss reserve analysis. In particular, measures such as loss ratios, changes since the prior evaluation, implied claim frequencies and severities and costs per unit of exposure are a few of the diagnostic tests employed when considering the reasonableness of indicated reserves.

Discounting

Management sometimes wishes to reflect the time value of money in funding projections, accruals for unpaid claims liabilities and other valuations. The two most important parameters for doing so are the assumed interest rate and the underlying claim payment pattern. Assessing reasonable values for these parameters is not trivial as the interest rate may need an adjustment for risk while the claim payment pattern may not be readily available.

Expense Analysis

Expenses for any insurance program are categorized as variable or fixed. Variable expenses include the cost of:

  • Commissions, brokerage and/or royalty fees
  • Taxes, licenses & fees (TL&F), including federal excise tax
  • Provisions for underwriting profit and contingencies

Certain other expenses for alternative market programs are considered variable as well, including:

  • Claims administration
  • Excess and/or aggregate coverage costs
  • Fronting fees
  • Fees for other vendors (such as loss control)

Fixed expenses would include item fees for legal, captive management, auditing and actuarial services.

Expert Witness

Pinnacle consultants have experience in providing expert witness testimony in federal, state and county courts and before state legislatures. We have also defended insurer and bank business practices in complex class action lawsuits.

Financial Examination Support

Pinnacle provides financial examination support to many state insurance departments. This support is usually peer review or independent loss evaluations and loss adjustment expense reserve liabilities.

Frequency / Severity Analysis

Ultimate losses in a loss reserve exercise may be broken down into two components – ultimate claim counts and ultimate average claim severities. Claim frequencies are affected by changes in coverage or product line mix or geographic diversity, safety culture, loss control efforts and employee education. Average claim severities typically trend upwards but may be influenced by risk management techniques such as managed care, vendor analysis, and attitudes towards early settlements. Pinnacle can help you review your claims experience to determine potential improvement areas to control rising costs.

Higher Confidence Levels

Management often desires to be conservative when setting an accrual for unpaid claims liabilities. Routinely we employ a variety of methods to derive indicated accruals for unpaid claims liabilities at a variety of higher confidence levels to help you assess the potential variability in future loss outcomes. Using evaluation methods to reflect process risk, parameter risk and/or model risk, we can help you find out what you need to know about indicated reserves at specified higher levels of statistical confidence.

Identify, Explain and Assess Issues

Since Pinnacle’s consultants have career backgrounds ranging from large to small insurers, regulatory authorities and statistical organizations, Pinnacle delivers a complete perspective to each assignment. Pinnacle’s commitment to the actuarial profession is demonstrated by committee work and leadership positions for actuarial organizations, which keeps us on the cutting edge of professional developments.

Industry Studies / Market Assessments

Pinnacle has produced many industry studies to demonstrate differences in regulatory, social and economic conditions within and between states, as well as the impacts of potential legislative and regulatory changes. Many of these studies look at costing of legislation and both historical and expected impacts on insurance coverage availability and affordability. Our studies include evaluations of:

  • The impact of tort reforms on liability insurance coverages including automobile, general, products, medical and non-medical professional liability
  • The impact of Florida hurricane and wind pools
  • No-fault thresholds, repeals and other coverage features
  • Uninsured and underinsured motorists stacking provisions
  • The role and design features of patient compensation and birth injury funds on medical professional liability insurance
  • The impact of both competitive and monopolistic state compensation funds for workers compensation
  • The likely impact of the implementation, modification or repeal of caps on non-economic damages on medical professional liability insurance
  • The medical professional liability insurance market and its impact on the access to healthcare
  • How contractors liability and home warranty tort reforms impact contractors and construction markets
     

Loss Fund Projections

Future loss fund projections generally rely on commonly accepted actuarial methodologies, all of which contain certain assumptions regarding expected loss ratios, loss development patterns, retention levels, benefit levels, potential recoveries and trends in costs and exposures. The approach to projecting future losses will generally rely on past claims experience.

Typically there will be a subtle trade-off between stability and responsiveness. A stable method for producing loss fund projections will generally use more years of data in the experience period. A responsive method relies more on data for the past few years. The right balance will be dependent on a variety of factors, including the volume of underlying data, the coverage(s) involved, consistency of the data during the experience period and wishes of management.

Loss Portfolio Transfer

Pinnacle represents the interests of both buyers and sellers of blocks of business. At other times, our independent analysis is used as a reference point between competing valuations of the unpaid claims obligations. Regardless of the viewpoint, our analysis will reflect an independent evaluation of a program’s indicated unpaid claims liabilities often reflecting provisions for the time value of money (i.e., discounting) and uncertainty (risk margins).

Loss Reserve Analyses

Setting a reasonable accrual for unpaid loss and loss adjustment expense obligations is one of the most critical functions of management in preparation of a program’s financials. Performing such analyses is our bread and butter, but emphasis is always placed on using the program’s actual data to the maximum extent possible (rather than relying on external benchmarks) in order to reflect your program’s unique loss characteristics.

When necessary, we will rely on our library of industry, state and insurer/TPA specific benchmarks. These benchmarks allow us to derive reasonable estimates of the accrual for unpaid claims liabilities to the extent your program’s data is not of sufficient volume or reliability to be fully credible for analysis.

You expect your consulting actuary to interact daily with captive managers, auditors, fronting carriers, reinsurers and other service providers, presenting the analysis of the program’s liabilities for unpaid claims – generally the largest item on the Liability side of the balance sheet. Pinnacle leverages its good working relationships with dozens and dozens of service providers, regulators and managers in jurisdictions around the globe to your advantage.

Loss reserve projections generally take one of four forms:

  • Point estimate of mean expected loss and loss expense reserves (i.e., “actuarial central estimate" or best estimate)
  • Reasonable range of indicated loss and loss expense reserves
  • Reserves at a specified higher level of statistical confidence
  • Stochastic forecast of the range of all possible outcomes (i.e., a distribution of potential loss and loss expense reserve estimates)

Loss Reserve Analyses - Ceded Losses / Schedule F

Developing net loss reserves often requires an estimate of ceded loss reserves and distinct knowledge and skills. Pinnacle has the special skills and knowledge to understand the unique nature of various reinsurance treaty types and their potential impact on loss reserve estimates.

Loss Reserve Analyses - Reinsurance Reserves

Reinsurance loss reserving requires special skills and knowledge. The reinsurance reserving actuary must understand the unique nature of various reinsurance treaty types and their potential impact on reserve estimates. Pinnacle’s consultants understand reinsurance contract language and have the skill set required to properly evaluate reinsurance loss reserves.

Analysis of a program’s ceded reinsurance reserves can take several forms. A typical loss reserve analysis may first estimate indicated loss and loss adjustment expense reserves on a direct and assumed basis, then separately reviews indicated ceded reserves to determine indicated net reserves by subtraction. Other times, the analysis begins with net data and adds the indicated ceded reserves to develop estimates of amounts on a direct and assumed basis. The reinsurance program may combine elements of quota share, surplus share, excess of loss, aggregate excess, clash and catastrophe coverages.

Loss Reserve Analysis Design

Pinnacle’s approach to each loss reserve analysis is customized to the unique characteristics of each program. Differences in lines of coverage, number of exposure periods, gross versus net, annual or quarterly loss evaluations, and detail by state are different for virtually every assignment. We have found a predetermined loss reserving template doesn’t work efficiently for the unique characteristics of individual programs. Our templates are custom designed to accommodate your needs.

Policy Forms

Pinnacle is experienced at comparing and contrasting coverage forms for many commercial and personal lines of insurance. For many specialty products, unique coverage features are essential to avoiding coverage pitfalls, meeting agency and insured expectations and setting your products apart from companies using industry boilerplate forms.

Pro Formas

We have prepared pro formas for start ups and insurance department-required due diligence for mergers and acquisitions.

Rate Level Analysis

Rate level adequacy is an important feature of every successful insurance program. Reasonable projections of future loss and loss expenses underlie the determination of premium contributions, after reflecting expected expenses for the program. Considerations about future rate levels incorporate a large number of factors including expected trends in costs and exposures, loss development, changes in past and future benefit levels, impact of deductibles, appropriate loadings for assessments, expenses and underwriting profit.

Alternate considerations may include anticipated investment income, provisions for dividend returns, recoveries from deductibles, other insurance coverage (e.g., accidental death & disability) or excess recoveries.

Regulatory Support

The regulators reviewing the financial condition of the program will rely on the actuarial report in support of the program’s financial statements. There are occasions when a formal Statement of Actuarial Opinion (SAO) may be required as well. We provide such analysis and SAOs routinely and interact with regulators on an as needed basis.

Reinsurance Analysis

Analysis of reinsurance contracts may focus on the relative cost versus coverage provided. Competing options quoted by excess carriers will have trade-offs from a cost/benefit viewpoint. A specific review of the proposed reinsurance contract may focus on the risk transfer elements of the coverage itself in order to determine whether or not it is a bona fide contract from an accounting viewpoint. A third analysis commonly requested relates to potential collectability problems with reinsurers.

Reinsurance Evaluation

Information coming soon.

Risk Retention Studies

The level of risk assumed in any insurance program is critical to its long-term success. How much risk to assume is dependent on management attitudes, market conditions, expected costs for excess coverage and several other factors. The risk/reward trade-offs that accompany such considerations often relate to the capitalization level of the program itself and management’s appetite for risk.

Roll Forward Projections

The timely reporting requirements of financial results sometimes leads to a mismatch between the evaluation date of the data and the date shown on the financial statement. Projections of claim activity in the next few months are often requested to accommodate such time constraints. The roll forward projection of future expected loss and loss expense reserves is calculated based on interpolated loss and loss expense payment and reporting patterns. The assumption inherent in this approach is that actual claim activity in the roll forward period will not be materially different than projected.

Trend Analysis

Trend refers to changes in the value of underlying exposure, premiums, claim counts or average claim severities. Future cost projections are heavily dependent on trend assumptions; factors may be developed either from a particular organization’s data, data from similar organizations or from benchmarks derived from broader sources. Trends may vary considerably depending on the line of coverage and/or exposure involved.

Witness Preparation

Pinnacle provides “been-there-done-that” perspective that is helpful in preparing witnesses for the unfamiliar and frequently stressful litigation landscape.

Expertise  — Regulators

When you partner with Pinnacle, you work with a team of experienced consultants who know the unique requirements of your role in the insurance industry. Our expertise not only provides insight to a reasonable range of likely outcomes, but also provides you with valuable intelligence that comes from similar work for other regulators.

Pinnacle’s strength in the regulatory arena comes in part from the wide variety of services we have provided to other regulators. Our industry background includes:

  • Assistance forming and maintaining government insurance programs
  • Comparison of state insurance results versus other states
  • Costing of proposed legislation and evaluating the results of enacted laws
  • Development of industry closed claims databases
  • Expert testimony
  • Industry reviews of coverage availability and affordability
  • Loss reserve analyses in support of financial exams
  • Review of captive applications
  • Self insurance capital requirements
  • Review of rate filings
  • Risk management assessments
  • Support of financial examinations

Products  — Regulators

DynaMo™

Dynamic Financial Analysis (DFA) is the study of risks associated with operating a company — such as insurance, banking and manufacturing. Such risks can include:

  • Interest rate fluctuations
  • Inflation rates
  • Frequency and severity of loss
  • Catastrophic events
  • Expense issues
  • Price elasticity

If you want to build an Enterprise Risk Management (ERM) or a DFA model, but aren’t sure where to begin, Pinnacle offers its educational DFA model called DynaMo™ at no cost. Intended to be a starting point to learn more about dynamic risk modeling, DynaMo will help you decide if and how to build your own internal economic capital model. It also serves as the beginning of a rigorous modeling framework that fosters decision-making for strategic objectives.

DynaMo can help you address the following questions:

  • What are the risks associated with your growth goals?
  • Do different states, markets, products and competitive situations change your risk make-up?
  • What is the optimal reinsurance structure for your company or group considering all lines of business?
  • What are the risk/reward trade-offs associated with different reinsurance programs?
  • What is the most efficient use of capital?
  • How should capital be allocated between companies or lines of business of a group to measure performance?
  • When should dividends be declared?
  • How can you better communicate the risks associated with your business to external agencies?

Fast Track Plus™

Fast Track Plus is a compilation of quarterly insurance industry data by state for private passenger auto and homeowners carriers. It provides consolidated premiums, losses, claims counts and exposures by line of coverage (auto) and policy form (homeowners) suitable for use in trending analysis. Fast Track is widely accepted as the most timely, credible, and authoritative source of trend information for personal lines insurance programs. This is because Fast Track data represents the consolidated experience of participating insurers representing a significant sample of industry experience.

This detailed data is jointly released to the state insurance commissioners under the Fast Track monitoring system each quarter by Property Casualty Insurers Association of America (PCIAA), Insurance Services Office, Inc. (ISO) and the National Independent Statistical Service (NISS).
 

Industry Benchmark Data

Finding quality publicly available industry benchmark data is one of the biggest challenges insurance professionals face. This data can be difficult and expensive to acquire and the analysis necessary to turn the data into meaningful benchmarks requires specific actuarial expertise.

Pinnacle’s client base, especially the scores of captives and thousands of self-insureds we serve, requires that we make a significant investment in all manners of industry benchmark data.

To better serve clients, we have created extensive benchmark datasets with user-friendly interfaces that make our expert data analysis -- and flexible and customizable groupings -- available at the click of a button.

These benchmarks are much more than just data. They include Pinnacle’s expert analysis of the data and user-friendly interfaces to access in flexible and customized groupings.

Our unique benchmarks include:

  • Loss development factors
  • Paid and incurred loss, closed and reported counts and held IBNR in many situations
  • Losses gross and net of reinsurance for insurance companies
  • Custom aggregations of unique industry segments (e.g. trucking companies, lawyers professional liability insurers, non-standard auto insurers)
  • Many custom aggregations with geographic details.
  • Expected and historical loss ratios, often with state and/or insurance company or group detail available
  • Loss distributions by limit for most commercial coverages
  • Benefits on-level factors for workers compensation
  • Trend analyses, including Fast Track Plus
  • Market share and market concentration analyses
  • Underwriting expense analyses, often with state, insurance company or group and custom aggregation available
  • Leading insurer rate levels, class plans and aggregations for many lines and states

 

MarketPointe™

Auto Insurance Generates Questions:

  • What is your company’s actual competitive position?
  • What is the true market share for detailed market segments?
  • Where is the best potential for profitable market expansion?

MarketPointe™ Answers the Questions

MarketPointe is a customized report that reveals your company’s insured auto penetration and profitability by:

  • Geography — state, county, ZIP code and census breakdowns
  • Vehicle Characteristics — make, model, model year, type of vehicle, etc.
  • Census Characteristics — population density, household sizes, vehicles in household, etc.
  • Company Characteristics — age, gender, occupation, insurance score, etc.

Applications Include

  • Detailed competitive analysis
  • Marketing, planning and evaluation
  • Market expansion
  • Competitive position  

Territory Maps

Sometimes numbers on paper is not enough. Territory maps can be used as a visual aid to help you analyze your data more efficiently and accurately. Pinnacle’s custom territory mapping can support and display all data types by illustrating any spatial relationships or patterns that may occur. Many of our studies for regulators and legislative panels rely on maps to clearly communicate the results of our analysis.

Our territory maps augment our competitive analysis services by showing premium comparisons, rankings and territory boundaries between different companies.

By applying our smoothing and clustering techniques using surrounding geographical areas instead of statewide information, we can develop and enhance your geographic rating definitions with our Summit product.

Territory maps can be used to convey general information about spatial patterns. For example, comparisons of industry differences by state for legislative costing studies come to life using our mapping tools.

Applying geographic boundaries to territory maps can help you describe specific information about particular locations.

Through custom territory mapping, we can support or display all data types to help you analyze and communicate data more efficiently and accurately.

Summit ®

Do you think your territorial rating process is accurately reflecting geographic exposure? If you are like most insurers, you are missing competitive opportunities to better price risks at the territorial level.

Summit® can change all that. Instead of using county, city or street boundaries as territories, you can easily and efficiently build finer-detail geographic boundaries based on actual underlying experience. Summit supports new rating territories by smoothing and clustering your experience with various catastrophe models — whether hurricane, severe thunderstorm or earthquake. Specifically designed for ZIP code-defined data, Summit can also handle more refined data levels, such as census blocks or tracts.

Summit's smoothing feature provides you the flexibility to select the smoothing equation, credibility exposure and/or distance standard to specify how far to “reach out” to surrounding ZIP codes. You’ll also see how adding more information contributes to finer, more accurate smoothing of local data.

With Summit, you can develop and evaluate numerous sets of indicated territory boundaries by grouping or clustering areas of similar experience on a Visual Basic platform. You can also perform the clustering process using contiguous or non-contiguous areas based on dollar or percentage differences. The output then provides graphically-displayed diagnostics to determine the statistically-optimal number of territories. Summit also creates a variety of territorial scenarios in one run.

Towers Watson Pretium ®

Flexible multivariate modeling. Sophisticated geographical spatial analyses. State-of-the-art price optimization.

With Pretium®, you can see these leading-edge, profit-boosting strategies faster than ever. Whether identifying profitable segments, fine-tuning marketing initiatives or incorporating customer response modeling, Pretium’s new intuitive, flexible and easy-to-use interface streamlines the analysis process for faster and more efficient modeling. Its tree view feature also allows you to immediately see the progress of multiple analyses running simultaneously.  

Developed and maintained by Towers Watson, Pretium has more than 500 users in 40 countries and is available in North America and Canada through Pinnacle. We also provide service, training and expert actuarial assistance to maximize Pretium's power.

Pretium delivers:

  • An easy, flexible and practical solution to complex actuarial modeling
  • An efficient system for producing pricing models and management information
  • The comfort of knowing that this system will meet all your pricing needs
  • The support of Pinnacle, the firm of choice for predictive modeling and actuarial services

Pretium is designed to:

  • Be used by companies within the insurance industry
  • Help actuaries and analysts better understand their data and current rating structure
  • Make pricing models easy to develop, use, interpret and implement
  • Enable quick and robust analyses of the potential impact of proposed changes
  • Help product managers oversee their books of business 

People  — Regulators

Photo Shawna Ackerman FCAS, MAAA Principal and Consulting Actuary



Biography
Office Phone: 415-692-0937
shawnaa@pinnacleactuaries.com
Photo LeRoy Boison FCAS, MAAA Principal and Consulting Actuary



Biography
Office Phone: 516-746-7149
lboison@pinnacleactuaries.com
Photo Steven G. Lehmann FCAS, FSA, FCIA, MAAA Principal and Consulting Actuary



Biography
Office Phone: 309-807-2302
slehmann@pinnacleactuaries.com
Photo Laura A. Maxwell FCAS, MAAA Consulting Actuary



Biography
Office Phone: 415-692-0938
lmaxwell@pinnacleactuaries.com
Photo John E. Wade ACAS, MAAA Senior Consulting Actuary



Biography
Office Phone: 317-889-5760
jwade@pinnacleactuaries.com

Case Studies  — Regulators

Dedicated Fund Review

Pinnacle was asked by a State Insurance Department to review the financial soundness of a State controlled, dedicated fund. The review consisted of establishing the State’s outstanding liabilities and future funding needs. Detailed historic exposure and loss experience were not readily available from the State because the program was administered by individual insurers. Pinnacle designed and conducted an industry data call on behalf of the State. The collected data was then used by Pinnacle in support of their analysis. As the data was still somewhat limited, additional industry data was gathered from other states to supplement Pinnacle’s analysis. Pinnacle then provided the State with a report detailing the determination of the estimated liabilities, the indicated rate changes, and recommendations on data capturing for enhancement on future studies.

Medical Malpractice Damage Caps

A state insurance regulator asked Pinnacle to determine the potential impact of several proposed tort reforms, including a change to non-economic damage caps for medical professional liability claims. Pinnacle worked with medical society to identify the most appropriate claims databases for assessing the potential legislative change. Our detailed analysis not only considered data from that state, but several others to stress test the results and provide a range of reasonable outcomes. In many cases, the specific reform’s effect, for example “I’m Sorry” legislation, was very difficult to isolate. Through this industry analysis, we identified differences well beyond a simple loss limitation to provide a more complete review of potential environmental changes that could be expected in the state.

This comprehensive analysis helped our client identify the effect of various legislative options, which empowered them to be a strong voice in the legislative debate and to influence policymaking in the state.

Rate Filing Review

Pinnacle typically provides state regulators expert review of company and bureau rate change filings. In a recent review of a Company’s automobile rate filing Pinnacle was able to confirm that the filed rates met the State’s rating laws and Department’s filing requirements. Using a procedure developed by Pinnacle specifically to review rate filings, the Company filing was reviewed against generally accepted actuarial principles. The Company was questioned on certain rating procedures and was able to support their procedures and selections with additional documentation to the filing. Pinnacle was then able to affirm to the Regulator that the filed rates were not excessive, inadequate, nor unfairly discriminatory and that the new rates would not produce any major policyholder dislocations. The Regulator was then able to acknowledge the Company’s filing with confidence that the Regulator had carried out his charge of providing service and protection both to consumers and to the insurance industry.

U S Domestic Statement of Actuarial Opinion

Domestic U.S. property/casualty insurers and risk retention groups are required to file an Annual Statement with state regulators each year by March 1. Part of that filing includes the submission of a formal Statement of Actuarial Opinion (SAO) by a qualified Appointed Actuary as to the reasonableness of held loss and loss adjustment expense reserves. The SAO must be one of five types:

  • Reasonable
  • Inadequate/Deficient
  • Excessive/Redundant
  • Qualified
  • No Opinion

In addition to the SAO, most jurisdictions require an Actuarial Opinion Summary (AOS) providing more detail on the Appointed Actuary’s specific findings by March 15. Lastly, a formal report narrative in support of the SAO and AOS is required to be available by May 1.

As the SAO is a compliance document, the primary audience is state regulators but the individual company must arrange for the service to be provided.

A recent SAO for one of our clients touched on many of the required disclosures:

  1. The adequacy of held reserves on a net basis were below the low end of our range of reasonable reserves until we took into account anticipated salvage and subrogation recoveries.
  2. The unearned premium reserves for long duration contracts were substantial and we conducted a review to determine they were adequate
  3. The Company held material loss and loss adjustment expense reserves for pools and associations. In order avoid having to issue a Qualified Opinion, we separately computed indicated reserves for two of the pools/associations, and obtained an SAO from the Appointed Actuary for the National Workers Compensation Reinsurance Pool.
  4. Reinsurance recoveries were in doubt for certain carriers as balance were sometimes overdue by more than 90 days. After reviewing the reinsurers’ A. M. Best ratings, we made the required disclosures about reinsurance collectability. 

Workers' Compensation

Pinnacle was retained by a major national political organization to investigate the impact of several workers compensation reforms including: implementation of mandatory managed care, privatization of state workers compensation insurance funds and the permitting of private insurers to enter previously monopolistic workers compensation states. Our analysis looked at state-level differences in rate levels, insurer experience, coverage competition, the mix of medical and indemnity claims and numerous other metrics. The study was extremely well received and ultimately presented to more than half of the nation’s governors.

Publications  — Regulators

Free Markets are the Best Way to Lower Workers Compensation Costs
  Research Briefs - January 2010
  Authored by 
Customizing the Public Access Model Using Publicly Available Data
  Authored by 
Materiality and Statement of Actuarial Opinion
  Authored by 
Living Without Credit Scoring
  Articles - Contingencies - July / August 2007
  Authored by 
Having to Say You're Sorry: A More Efficient Medical Malpractice Insurance Model
  Articles - Contingencies - November / December 2006
  Authored by 
Medical Malpractice Insurance: A Call for Efficiency
  Monographs - May 2006
  Authored by 
Statement of Actuarial Opinion Changes Boost Industry Health
  Monographs - January 2006
  Authored by 
Will Post-Katrina Gas Shortages Impact Auto Claim Frequencies?
  Monographs - December 2005
  Authored by 
Pinnacle Predicts Climbing Wisconsin Med Mal Costs
  News Releases - August 2005
  Authored by 
Pinnacle Audit Support Brochure
Pinnacle Captive and Alternative Markets Brochure
Pinnacle Claims Predictive Modeling Brochure
Pinnacle Corporate Brochure
Pinnacle Peril Vision Brochure
Effects of the Winter of 2001-02 on Pure Premiums
  Monographs - November 2002
  Authored by 
Symbols / Vehicle Rating Inconsistent Among Major Insurers
  Monographs - July 2002
  Authored by