Insurers see more demand
from banks for cover against cyber attacks, rogue staff
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[August 30, 2017]
By Carolyn Cohn
LONDON (Reuters) - Banks are increasingly
turning to insurance to protect their capital from "operational risks"
like cyber attacks and rogue traders, and insurers say they can help
safeguard lenders by providing an extra layer of expertise.
After a spate of expensive court cases and IT outages, banks including
Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank and Lloyds are looking for ways to mitigate
the costs of such episodes by taking out insurance.
Most such insurance contracts are arranged privately and the details
never publicized. But the practice gained new attention last year, when
Credit Suisse sold a 220 million Swiss franc bond tied to its
operational risk.
Buyers were given generous coupons of more than 4 percent, but could
lose their investment if the bank is hit with charges from employee
malfeasance, cyber attack or other issues.
The bond was linked to coverage provided by Zurich Insurance, which said
it was seeing growing interest in operational risk policies, due to the
rising frequency and severity of such risks.
Banks were "interested in de-risking their balance sheets by
transferring a portion of their operational losses and so mitigating the
impact on equity capital," a Zurich spokesman said by email.
As with all insurance, there can be a risk of "moral hazard", with banks
that offload some of their risk becoming laxer about their own controls,
said Domenico del Re, director at consultants PwC. Smaller financial
firms in particular might prefer to buy insurance than spend much
greater sums on risk management, he added.
But he said insurers can also help cut those risks by scrutinizing
firm's controls closely.
"Insurers are getting more and more sophisticated as risk management
partners," he said. "If you think of the parallel with fire risk, by
helping companies getting advice on where sprinklers should located, the
same is happening with cyber: where insurers are linking up with IT and
cyber specialists."
Insurers are employing risk specialists with experience at major banks
to help assess the practices of the financial institutions they cover,
said Angelos Deftereos, senior underwriter for operational risk at XL
Catlin.
He cited his own background as an example: "Before joining XL Catlin, I
was responsible for implementing the operational risk framework at the
asset management division of Morgan Stanley. So I have an insight into
these risks as well as how they are managed/controlled.”
"BACK TO FUNDAMENTALS"
The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision defines operational risk as
"the risk of loss resulting from inadequate or failed internal
processes, people and systems or from external events".
It can include cyber attacks, general IT outages, rogue traders and
financial fraud, and is one of the risk areas against which banks need
to set aside regulatory capital, along with market and credit risk.
Regulators permit the largest banks to use insurance to reduce the their
capital buffers for operational risk by up to 20 percent, although this
might change: the Basel Committee that sets global rules has yet to
release the results of a consultation on the issue last year.
Banks first started to look at operational risk insurance before the
financial crisis struck a decade ago. Their interest has renewed in the
past year, insurers say.
"The crisis is over, banks are getting back to fundamentals and now it's
back in focus," said Mark Fellows, financial institutions manager at
U.S. insurer AIG.
Major cyber attacks "WannaCry" and "NotPetya" earlier this year have
driven more interest. There has been rising demand for operational risk
insurance from banks in Britain, continental Europe, Australia and other
parts of the developed world, brokers and insurers say.
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A broker reacts while trading at his computer terminal at a stock
brokerage firm in Mumbai, India, November 9, 2016. REUTERS/Danish
Siddiqui/File Photo
Banks can buy insurance against different aspects of operational risk, such as
property, cyber or professional indemnity, but an umbrella policy fits more
closely with their needs, they add.
Paul Search, financial institutions practice leader at Willis Towers Watson,
said the insurance "can cover the whole spectrum of operational losses incurred
by a bank," in contrast to traditional insurance, "which remains siloed, risk
type by risk type".
Siobhan O'Brien, managing director, financial and professional practice at
broker Marsh UK, said banks could typically buy operational risk insurance to
cover three different aspects of operational risk for a total cover of up to $1
billion, from a range of insurers.
Deutsche and Lloyds are among major banks that have said in company statements
that they use operational risk insurance. Both declined to comment.
Policies still usually require that the bank itself bears a big chunk of any
losses, to ensure they do not loosen their controls.
"That's the tool the insurance industry uses to protect itself from the moral
hazard," said Daniel Butler, managing director, operational risk solutions at
broker Aon Benfield.
There are additional risks for the insurers themselves. For example, offering
insurance to banks classed by regulators as having global systemic importance -
such as Barclays, Credit Suisse or JP Morgan - could potentially leave insurers
themselves facing a similar burden.
"If you provide operational risk insurance to an institution of systemic
importance, you become systemically important yourself," said one senior insurer
in the Lloyd's of London market, whose firm did not provide operational risk
insurance. Because of this, only the largest insurers tended to offer such
insurance, he added.
A second Lloyd's market source said many insurers were reluctant to offer cover
against operational risk because of the huge bills firms can run up as a result
of rogue trading.
Societe Generale rogue trader Jerome Kerviel triggered 4.9 billion euros ($5.78
billion) in losses in 2008.
Kweku Adoboli caused 1.4 billion pounds ($1.80 billion) in losses at his
employer UBS in 2011.
Those who have offered operational risk insurance have found the insurance
profitable, however, as there have been few claims, insurance specialists say.
Providers of operational risk insurance include U.S. firms AIG and XL Catlin and
Switzerland's Zurich Insurance.
Operational risk insurance can also be of use to other financial firms, such as
asset managers, to cover risks such as dealer error or being accused by
investors of violating their mandates, said XL Catlin's Deftereos.
Policies can take months or even years to develop because they are custom
tailored to meet the institution's needs and may also need to be signed off by
regulators, brokers say.
“There is no single price for operational risk insurance as there are too many
variables to consider and each financial institution is different," Deftereos
said.
(Additional reporting by Brenna Hughes Neghaiwi in Zurich and Huw Jones and
Andrew MacAskill in London; editing by Peter Graff)
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