Introduction: Starting the Solvency II Journey
Introduction: Starting the Solvency II Journey
Solvency II: The journey so far
Internal Models and Solvency II
Review of the Capital Adequacy Framework in Singapore
Insurance Liabilities Under IFRS 4 Phase II and Solvency II: Almost the Same Thing?
Solvency II and Mutual Insurance Companies
The Journey Towards an Approved Internal Model
The Road to Solvency II for a Life Insurance Company
Managing Model Risk
Solvency II and Reinsurance
ORSA: A Forward-looking Approach to Risk and Capital Management
Risk Governance: A Framework to Support Better Decision-making and a Journey Towards Continuous Improvement
Operational Risk and Solvency II: A Practitioner Perspective
Reporting Processes
Reporting Challenges under Solvency II: The Allianz Experience
The Audit of Solvency II Information
The Holistic Balance Sheet: A Different European Approach for Pension Funds?
Capital for Operational Risk: Some Fundamental Flaws
Reputational Risk: Success is Trust-dependent
Solvency II is the reform of the insurance regulations, a process that started in 2002 and has its ultimate implementation date in 2016. Most readers will be familiar with the outline of Solvency II. While all stakeholders agreed that a review of the insurance regulations was necessary in the early stages of this process, the devil has proven to be in the detail. First, the final and finishing touch of the regulations by all European decision-makers has proven much more difficult than was previously foreseen. However, second, implementing the principles of this new regulatory regime in insurance companies has turned out to be a major challenge not seen before by many insurers. In addition, the timing of implementation, coinciding as it did with the global financial crisis, did not quite speed up both processes …
The two Solvency II Handbooks are strongly related. The 2009 book explains in detail the structure of Solvency II and a range of technical or methodological matters. At the time, little was known about how to implement the new Solvency II rules, despite a series of quantitative impact studies (QIS). In total, five QIS were held, as well as an additional long-term guarantee
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