Loss Development and Bornhuetter-Ferguson Methods - A Visual Approach - Actuarial 101
This video demonstrates the mechanics of the loss development methods and the Bornhuetter-Ferguson methods with the help of several graphical illustrations. The loss development and BF methods are the most commonly used actuarial techniques for estimating ultimate losses and loss reserves. Chapters 0:00 - Introduction 1:47 - Paid Loss Development Method 3:33 - Incurred Loss Development Method 4:54 - Paid Bornhuetter-Ferguson Method 8:12 - Incurred Bornhuetter-Ferguson Method 11:06 - Graphical Comparison of All 4 Methods 12:15 - Impact of Increase in Paid Loss 13:19 - Impact of Increase in Case Reserves 14:14 - Summary of Formulas and Methods For more information, visit us at https://archeractuarial.com/ Disclaimer: Information presented in this video should not be relied upon as actuarial or accounting advice, which should be provided by a credentialed actuary or accountant familiar with the details of your organization's risk management program.

Policy Year, Calendar Year, & Accident Year - Insurance Terminology - Actuarial 101

Bornhuetter-Ferguson Method for Loss Reserves and IBNR - P&C Insurance - Actuarial 101

Loss Triangle Introduction - P&C Insurance - Loss Reserving - Actuarial 101

Actuarial Reserving: Chain Ladder Reserving Method

Bornheutter Fegusson Method

Bornhuetter-Ferguson Method

Hindsight IBNR to Case Ratio Approach for P&C Insurance - Webinar May 2025

What is IBNR? - P&C Insurance - Loss Reserves - Actuary 101

How Actuaries Use Parallelograms // Real Actuarial Concepts

Reserve Calculation Basic Chain Ladder and Bornhuetter Ferguson Method

Train Your Brain to Never Forget (5 Feynman Habits)

Actuarial Reserving 1 | Development Method

Inflation adjusted chain ladder approach

Loss Development Patterns - P&C Insurance - Actuarial 101

Catastrophe modelling: applying science, data science and open source software to managing risk

Reinsurance 101

RISK66® Bornhuetter-Ferguson Method

RELIABILITY Explained! Failure Rate, MTTF, MTBF, Bathtub Curve, Exponential and Weibull Distribution

Loss Development - Part 2: Use LDFs to Estimate Ultimate Loss - Actuarial 101

