Abstract

We study the time variation of the market price of catastrophe (CAT) bonds for the period 1999–2016. While we find an overall decreasing trend in the price of expected loss risk, large catastrophes increase this price by 34% on average. Our empirical tests show that the latter effect is temporary and unlikely to be the byproduct of behavioural changes in investors’ perceptions about catastrophic risk, as previously argued. Instead, we find evidence that changes in the price of expected loss risk may be explained by changes in investor effective risk aversion, initiated by catastrophic events triggering CAT bond losses that could bring investors closer to their habit consumption levels and lead to a hard reinsurance market environment. Contagion effects from reinsurance markets are more relevant after main catastrophes given the levels of liquidity in the markets. Furthermore, contagion effects from financial markets are minor and only relevant during the subprime financial crisis, as documented in previous studies.

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