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💰 Catastrophe bond (CAT bond) is a insurance-linked security that transfers a defined layer of catastrophe risk from an insurer, reinsurer, or government entity to capital markets investors. Issued as a fixed-income instrument — typically through a special purpose vehicle — a CAT bond pays investors an attractive coupon above a risk-free benchmark in exchange for their principal being at risk if a qualifying catastrophe event occurs during the bond's term. Since the first issuance in the mid-1990s, the market has grown to more than $45 billion in outstanding capacity, making CAT bonds a mainstream pillar of the global catastrophe risk transfer ecosystem.
⚙️ Structurally, a sponsor — say a major reinsurer seeking to reduce its peak-peril exposure — works with an investment bank to create an SPV in an offshore jurisdiction like Bermuda or the Cayman Islands. The SPV issues notes to investors and places the proceeds in a collateral trust invested in high-quality, liquid assets. If no triggering event occurs before maturity, investors receive their principal back plus periodic coupon payments. If a qualifying event does occur, some or all of the collateral is released to the sponsor to pay claims. Triggers vary: they may be indemnity-based (tied to the sponsor's actual losses), industry-loss indexed (tied to aggregate market losses reported by agencies like PCS), parametric (tied to a physical measurement such as earthquake magnitude or wind speed), or modeled-loss based (tied to output from a designated cat model). Each trigger type carries a different balance between basis risk for the sponsor and transparency for investors.
📈 For the insurance industry, CAT bonds address a fundamental constraint: traditional reinsurance capacity is ultimately limited by the capital held within the insurance sector itself, whereas the broader capital markets represent a vastly deeper pool of money. By tapping pension funds, hedge funds, and dedicated ILS managers, sponsors can secure multi-year, fully collateralized protection that is immune to the credit risk inherent in reinsurer receivables. Investors, in turn, gain exposure to a return stream that has near-zero correlation with equity and bond markets — an appealing diversification benefit. Regulatory bodies such as the NAIC have developed frameworks to allow insurers to recognize CAT bond recoveries for solvency purposes, further embedding these instruments into the industry's risk management architecture.
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