Swiss Re. Susan Holliday Head of Investor Relations

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Swiss Re Susan Holliday Head of Investor Relations

Agenda Key points 2006 Strong P&C renewals as expected Closed acquisition of GEIS IS integration on track and positive news on retention of business so far Strong H1 results Strategy P&C reserving and US GAAP Renewals 2007 Sal Oppenheim European Fin. Conference Zurich, 28 November 2006 Slide 2

Strategy (I) Aspiration To be the leading force in the risk transfer industry, combining professional resources and skills with customer focus to deliver economic profit growth Strategic direction Building blocks Generate economic profit growth Reduce earnings volatility Deliverles Best in class customer service Sal Oppenheim European Fin. Conference Zurich, 28 November 2006 Slide 3 Enlarge market scope Foundation of success Advance organisational excellence Attractive shareholder returns

Strategy (II) Generate economic profit growth through Intelligent cycle management and efficient capital allocation Reduce earnings volatility through Our capital markets expertise, scale and diversification Enlarge market scope through Organic and transaction-related activities to address the needs of our clients Advance organisational excellence through Efficient processes, innovative skills and professional expertise Slide 4

Efficient processes, innovative skills and professional expertise Chief Executive Officer Jacques Aigrain Disciplined underwriting and highquality standards match clients needs for a partner committed to long-term value Client Markets Michel Liès Americas L&H & Global Admin Re SM Americas Property & Casualty Europe Asia Globals & Large Risks Products Stefan Lippe Property & Specialty Casualty Life & Health Claims & Liility Management Financial Services Roger Ferguson Asset Management Credit Solutions Capital Management and Advisory Risk Management Christian Mumenthaler Risk Management Corporate Actuarial Sustainility & Emerging Risk Mgt Finance Ann Godbehere Capital Mgmt Corporate Finance & Treasury Tax Investor Relations Group Accounting Group Planning & Analysis Regional Finance Operations Andreas Beerli Global IT Communications & HR Group Legal Global Technical Accounting & Services Group Logistics Attract, develop and retain best people to ensure clients are provided with highest levels of expertise and service Effective risk control, separating responsibilities for client service, underwriting, reserving and reporting. Chief Risk Officer is a member of Executive Board Slide 5 Divisions Departments Results-oriented approach with focus on efficient business processes: Swiss Re targets at least USD 300m cost reduction by end 2007 from IS acquisition

Risk, Return & Growth Getting the Balance Right Focus on economic profit, not volume Due to size, diversification and strong balance sheet, Swiss Re is well positioned to write complex and long tail business, if transparency of risks, pricing and terms and conditions are adequate Key challenges are to further improve efficiency of operations and optimise the capital structure Slide 6 2005 portfolio (NPE) Swiss Re and Insurance Solutions 21% Property Liility 36% Motor Accident 15% Specialty Credit Commercial Ins. 2% 7% 12% 3% Life & Health 8% Europe 46% Americas 46% Asia Pro forma net premiums earned: USD 28.0bn Book value per share* 80 60 40 20 0 in CHF in CHF 5.48 53.8 CAGR: 10.2% 59.6 61.8 73.9 75.4 2002 2003 2004 2005 1H 2006 8.00 4.68 4.92 2003 2004 2005 1H 2006 Over the cycle targets: EPS growth 10% ROE 13% * based on shares entitled to dividend

Key points P&C reserves Swiss Re believes its corporate governance, processes and methodology for P&C reserving are best in class Swiss Re has high confidence in its reserve adequacy, including Insurance Solutions reserves With Swiss Re s excellent diversification and overall P&C reserves of CHF 80bn at mid 2006, there is scope for positive reserve development, in particular from recent years Sal Oppenheim European Fin. Conference Zurich, 28 November 2006 Slide 7

Reserving actuaries are independent of business Client Markets Products Financial Services Chief Executive Officer Jacques Aigrain Risk Management Corporate Actuarial Michael Eves Finance Operations Michel Liès Stefan Lippe Roger Ferguson Ch. Mumenthaler Ann Godbehere Andreas Beerli Effective risk control, separating responsibilities for client service, underwriting, reserving and reporting Chief Risk Officer is a member of the Executive Committee, reporting directly to the CEO Independent actuarial team at Group level provides additional oversight to entire reserving process at Swiss Re Group P&C Europe / Africa P&C Asia P&C / L&H Americas P&C Group L&H Cont. Europe L&H UK / Africa L&H Americas L&H Actuarial Process & Project Mgmt Slide 8 approx. 250 actuaries in total

Swiss Re s IBNRs and ACRs more than 53% of total reserves Cedant reserve Reserve reported by cedant based on actual, notified claims and excluding any allowance for unreported claims Total gross reserves: CHF 57.1bn as of 31.12.2005 in CHF bn 24.0 Additional Case Reserve (ACR) Reserve created in respect of known claims where the claim reserve as assessed by Swiss Re Claims Management is different from reserve reported by cedant IBNR Reserve for claims relating to insured events that have occurred but that have not yet been reported (or not enough reported) as of the date of the financial statements 10.2 3.4 6.1 0.7 13.0 10.0 1.0 8.0 3.0 4.8 0.2 4.5 2.7 1.3 0.5 27.7 26.8 2.6 10.4 5.6 4.6 0.2 Property Liility Motor Accident & Health Other lines Slide 9 Cedant reserve ACR IBNR

Loss development tle *) Net claim reserves and re-estimates CHF millions Original reporting year 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Net claim reserves as of 31.12. 21 282 28 474 31 767 33 387 37 907 42 096 51 455 45 061 46 852 47 456 55 513 1year later 23 797 28 385 29 904 34 765 37 388 41 760 46 380 46 098 46 865 52 453 2years later 23 828 26 602 30 860 33 604 36 200 39 811 47 005 46 274 51 158 3years later 22 701 37 423 29 193 32 112 34 472 40 588 47 500 50 167 Current reserves plus payments since original reporting year 4years later 5years later 6years later 7years later 23 244 22 286 21 149 20 039 26 043 24 660 22 924 22 493 27 536 25 596 25 302 25 175 30 079 29 402 29 335 30 071 34 215 34 389 35 409 40 850 42 197 50 731 8years later 19 739 22 457 25 568 9years later 19 708 22 959 10 years later 20 171 Surplus / (deficiency) 1 111 5 515 6 199 3 316 2 498-101 724-5 106-4 306-4 997 Excluding foreign exchange: Surplus / (deficiency) 5.2% 19.4% 19.5% 9.9% 6.6% -0.2% 1.4% -11.3% -9.2% -10.5% 3 214 5 876 5 907 4 125-84 -3 655-5 906-5 757-2 923-994 15.1% 20.6% 18.6% 12.4% -0.2% -8.7% -11.5% -12.8% -6.2% -2.1% Slide 10 *) As previously published

Estimated net accident year view Positive developments from earlier and recent years more than offset 1998-2001 CHF millions Ultimate claims, at 31.12.2005 exchanges rates Ultim. claims at end of first development year 1 year later 2 years later 3 years later 4 years later 5 years later 6 years later 7 years later 8 years later 9 years later 10 years later Surplus/ (Deficiency) Latest reserves *) Pre-1996 1996 22 797 10 288 22 537 10 089 22 199 9 614 21 685 9 418 21 164 9 094 20 530 8 842 19 395 8 446 19 042 8 396 18 905 8 426 19 063 8 381 19 193 3 603 1 907 3 961 1 322 1997 9 515 9 590 9 413 9 244 8 998 8 984 9 123 9 069 8 877 639 1 350 1998 10 023 9 693 10 178 10 201 10 654 10 453 10 686 10 745 (722) 2 559 1999 9 545 10 268 10 494 11 170 11 759 12 088 12 152 (2 607) 2 312 2000 13 175 13 863 14 479 15 862 16 207 16 006 (2 832) 4 541 2001 16 643 15 590 15 889 16 537 17 701 (1 058) 7 381 2002 12 661 12 145 12 038 12 204 457 5 369 2003 13 734 12 779 12 725 1 009 6 083 2004 13 108 12 420 687 7 447 2005 14 887 0 13 188 Total 1 084 55 513 Slide 11 All years include the effect of discounting as at 31.12.2005 and figures include claim adjustment expenses *) Equals latest estimate of ultimate claims less claims paid

Swiss Re s reserving has been more than adequate The previous slide shows that over last 10 years there have been overall releases of reserves compared to the reserve set up at the end of the first development year Reserving accident years 1998-2001 impacted by significant adverse development for liility business these years have seen severe claims development in certain areas, such as pharma, financial institutions and directors & officers risks most of these claims took several years to emerge but are now reaching maturity Otherwise, Swiss Re has a history of positive reserve developments arising from its realistic reserving policy Sal Oppenheim European Fin. Conference Zurich, 28 November 2006 Slide 12 With such a large overall portfolio, reserving risk is spread across many sub-portfolios and across time; hence even the poor record of 1998-2001 has been sorbed

Swiss Re Group overall Reserving shows effect of underwriting cycle, recent years performing very well Treaty year Earned premium in CHFm Ult claims ratio Reported claims (paid plus case) for last 10 treaty years (in % of premiums earned, net of commission) 1994 7 694 82.1% 1995 7 704 85.2% 1996 7 282 90.3% 1997 6 944 104.8% 1998 7 083 124.7% 1999 7 545 164.3% 2000 9 779 145.3% 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 11 868 11 422 12 171 11 978 8 259 121.2% 79.0% 71.7% 85.1% 115.7% IBNR Actual results in accounts differ as these tles ignore all forms of recoveries (eg retro) and equalisation reserve movements Slide 13

Swiss Re Group property Development complete after 3 years, large claims known quickly, no major reserve risk Treaty year Earned premium in CHFm Ult claims ratio Reported claims (paid plus case) for last 10 treaty years (in % of premiums earned, net of commission) 1994 2 617 71.5% 1995 2 533 74.3% 1996 2 378 76.0% 1997 2 253 90.6% 1998 2 095 120.5% 1999 2 428 174.8% 2000 2 870 113.2% 2001 3 843 132.6% 2002 3 902 55.3% 2003 4 033 52.1% 2004 4 044 76.9% 2005 3 200 141.5% Slide 14

Swiss Re Group liility Development of post-2001 even lower than pre-1998, coupled with much larger premiums Treaty year Earned premium in CHFm Ult claims ratio Reported claims (paid plus case) for last 10 treaty years (in % of premiums earned, net of commission) 1994 1 116 92.0% 1995 1 207 99.9% 1996 1 183 108.4% 1997 1 214 139.7% 1998 1 714 145.6% 1999 1 632 219.3% 2000 2 387 215.5% 2001 2 669 154.4% 2002 2 942 94.7% 2003 3 564 81.8% 2004 3 247 90.4% 2005 1 796 89.3% Slide 15

Swiss Re s key strengths to minimise reserving risk Reserving actuaries are independent of the business all P&C and L&H reserving actuaries report directly to CRO who reports to CEO Within P&C actuarial, there is an independent team who reviews over 90% of all reserves (2nd level of review) Direct feedback loop from reserving actuaries to underwriters facilitates immediate price adjustments Swiss Re management selects best estimate in the upper half of the range determined by the actuaries Sal Oppenheim European Fin. Conference Zurich, 28 November 2006 This setup has been strengthened in the last 5 years Slide 16

Insurance Solutions reserves thorough due diligence process Swiss Re conducted a detailed and thorough review of Insurance Solutions reserves, utilising the assistance of an external actuarial firm P&C (incl. A&E): Swiss Re identified significant deficiencies, generally attributle to years 2001 and prior Non actuarial reserves (eg pharmaceutical, financial institutions, litigation): analysis suggested deficiency and a portion of overall reserve strengthening was attributle to these segments Sal Oppenheim European Fin. Conference Zurich, 28 November 2006 L&H: reserves were reviewed and US business was subsequently excluded from the transaction Slide 17

Insurance Solutions reserves since closing Pre-closing increase: composition by line in USD bn 3.2 0.5 0.9 0.5 Acquisition agreement priced in USD 3.4 billion reserve increase; actual increase pre-closing was USD 3.15 billion USD 250 million adjustment in 1H 2006 PGAAP balance sheet Reserve review substantially complete; confirms reserves within best estimate range, minor adjustment (less than 1% of reserves) to move reserves up in range Total gross reserves as of 30.6.2006: USD 24.5bn in USD bn 0.5 10.8 13.3 0.8 6.0 0.4 Other lines Other liility A&E Reserves Product liility Investors' Workers' day comp 20 November 2006 Slide 18 0.4 1.3 1.7 1.0 4.5 0.8 2.0 2.8 2.7 1.3 Property Liility Motor Accident & Health Other lines Cedant reserve Additional case reserve IBNR

Key points US GAAP 2005 US GAAP RoE 9.8% (Swiss GAAP 6.7%), with earnings up 59% primarily due to forex adjustments and shareholders equity up 6%, primarily due to marking to market fixed income securities Presentation changes to Group accounts, but business segment results will remain largely unchanged other than equalisation reserves in P&C Accounting presentation has no impact on the economics of the Swiss Re Group and management targets remain unchanged Sal Oppenheim European Fin. Conference Zurich, 28 November 2006 Slide 19

Reinsurance pricing levels remain firm There is no room for declining RoEs in the industry either underwrite priceadequate business or use alternatives for capital required Rating agencies capital charge for peak risks structurally impacts demand and asset allocation Sal Oppenheim European Fin. Conference Zurich, 28 November 2006 Property incl. nat cat US Property incl. nat cat (excl. US) Casualty overall (excl. motor) Motor Casualty critical risks/products (e.g. D&O) Special lines Marine offshore Slide 20

Cautionary note on forward-looking statements Certain statements contained herein are forward-looking. These statements provide current expectations of future events based on certain assumptions and include any statement that does not directly relate to a historical fact or current fact. Forward-looking statements typically are identified by words or phrases such as "anticipate", "assume", "believe", "continue", "estimate", "expect", "foresee", "intend", "may increase" and "may fluctuate" and similar expressions or by future or conditional verbs such as "will", "should", "would" and "could". These forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors, which may cause Swiss Re's actual results, performance, achievements or prospects to be materially different from any future results, performance, achievements or prospects expressed or implied by such statements. Such factors include, among others: the impact of completed and future investments, acquisitions or dispositions, and any delays, unexpected costs or other issues experienced in connection with any such transaction, including the ility to efficiently and effectively integrate the former GE Insurance Solutions operations into our own; cyclicality of the reinsurance industry; changes in general economic conditions, particularly in our core markets; uncertainties in estimating reserves; the performance of financial markets; expected changes in our investment results as a result of the changed composition of our investment assets or changes in our investment policy; the frequency, severity and development of insured claim events; acts of terrorism and acts of war; mortality and morbidity experience; policy renewal and lapse rates; changes in rating agency policies or practices; the lowering or withdrawal of one or more of the financial strength or credit ratings of one or more of our subsidiaries; changes in levels of interest rates; political risks in the countries in which we operate or in which we insure risks; extraordinary events affecting our clients, such as bankruptcies and liquidations; risks associated with implementing our business strategies; changes in currency exchange rates; changes in laws and regulations, including changes in accounting standards and taxation requirements; and changes in competitive pressures. These factors are not exhaustive. We operate in a continually changing environment and new risks emerge continually. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward-looking statements. We undertake no obligation to publicly revise or update any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. Slide 21

Swiss Re Q&A Sal Oppenheim European Fin. Conference Zurich, 28 November 2006