Title: Use of Reinsurance in Pension Risk Management
1Use of Reinsurance in Pension Risk Management
Presented By Jean-François Lemay
April 16th, 2007
2Use of Reinsurance
- Overview
- Pension Buy-outs in the UK
- Longevity Bonds
- Use of reinsurance in Canada
- Pricing and asset management from a reinsurers
perspective
3Pension Buy-outs in the UK
- Changes in regulation and accounting standards
mean that the deficit of approx. 50 billion on
500 billion UK pensions liabilities have become
a serious issue for many companies - Combining this phenomenon with some high profile
corporate bankruptcies and restructuring, e.g.
Marconi, so the UK became a major market
opportunity both in buying pension liabilities
and in buying distressed companies with even more
distressed pension schemes - Initially, in the UK there are two significant
players in the bulk annuities/pensions buy-out
market The Prudential and Legal General. - We now have many players, some are specialized in
the area (Paternoster), some are just private
equity players looking for an asset-intensive
play (Cerberus). - UK has a much greater prevalence of payout
annuities, hence the longevity risk has taken a
much more prevalent place.
4Pension Buy-outs in the UK
Two main strategies to accomplish buy-out in the
UK using offshore entities ? Life Insurance
Buy-Out ? Shell Company Spin-Off
5Life Insurance Buy-Out
Offshore Reinsurer
Collateral for Counterparty risk
Reinsurance
ABC Life (Rated onshore life insurance Co.)
Insurance Contract
Company/Sponsor
Pension Plan
6Shell Company Spin-Off
Offshore Insurer
Collateral for Counterparty risk
Insurance
Shell company
Pension Plan
Buy-out
Company/Sponsor
Pension Plan
7Pension Buy-outs in the UK
- Under both UK strategies an offshore entity ends
up with the risk. Offshore entities can offer a
more competitive price because of lower capital
costs and taxes. - Both strategies call for the simple and full
transfer of liabilities to an insurer/reinsurer - Reinsurance is an effective way of transferring
the longevity risk and the investment risk. - Reinsurance would be tailored exactly to the
pension plans mortality experience, so no
volatility would be left on the reinsured lives. - Reinsurance would reduce volatility of both the
accounting liabilities and valuation liabilities. - Reinsurance would eliminate the volatility of the
portion of the risk reinsured. - Accounting liabilities are going to be much more
important with the new rules requiring that
pension liabilities be shown on the balance sheet
and not only as a footnote
8Longevity Bonds
- A relatively new twist
- The structure is likely to evolve
- probably all will have different twists
- The European Investment Bank / BNP Longevity bond
issued in 2004 is a good example - Payments are linked to a survivor index
- The interest paid is X times the proportion of
survivors from a group aged 65 at issue - Survivorship using UK government statistics
- Issuer is the European Investment Bank (AAA
rated) - Structurer and manager is BNP Paribas
- Partner Re is the reinsurer
9Longevity Bond
Reinsurer
Reinsurance
Issuer
Issue Price
Floating rate tied to longevity
Bond Holder (Pension Plan)
10Longevity Bonds
- Same net effect a reinsurer gets the mortality
risk - The difference is that it is transferred to the
pension plan through a rated asset - This fact may make it easier to enter into
- More liquid than pure reinsurance
- However the longevity bond is based on an index,
not on the actual mortality experience of the
plans, hence a basis risk left for the pension
plan - The plan may not be able to increase surplus /
reduce deficit even if the price of the longevity
bond is more attractive than the reserve
calculation - This may or may not be a more efficient structure
from a tax or capital perspective
11Use of Reinsurance in Canada
- Reinsurance in Canada could take a similar form
to the UK reinsurance structure. - Assets need to stay in Canada in an
OSFI-regulated trust in order for the ceding
insurance company to get reserve relief - So this is not just for counter-party risk, but
is mandated for reserve and capital relief - The reinsurance would likely be done on a funds
withheld basis, meaning that the initial premium
is never transferred from the insurer to the
reinsurer, it is withheld and will appear as a
payable on the insurers book. - This would be a more efficient way from a capital
perspective than putting all the assets in the
trust. Assets in trust need to be 110 of Stat
reserves, but you only need 100 of stat reserve
on funds withheld.
12Use of Reinsurance in Canada
Offshore Reinsurer
Collateral for Reserve Relief
Reinsurance (funds withheld basis)
ABC Life (Rated onshore life insurance Co.)
Insurance Contract
Company/Sponsor
Pension Plan
13Use of Reinsurance in Canada
- The devil is in the details. While the general
structure for each transaction may be similar,
there will always be customizations - What are the provisions if the assets in trusts
are not sufficient? - Who manages the business (pay pensions, keep
records)? - What are the rules relative to the assets in the
trust? - Any Letters of credit?
- What happens if the reinsurer gets downgraded?
- Any rights to recapture the business?
- In short, this is a mini MA exercise
14Use of Reinsurance in Canada
- Not aware of any similar transactions being done
in Canada - Currently, the large insurers in Canada are the
only source of annuities - But if you have a large plan, you may not be able
to get a quote for your whole block - About 1B in annuities done in Canada in a year.
Some blocks are much larger than that. - So basically we are at the stage where the UK was
prior to the entry of the new players and
offshore reinsurers.
15Use of Reinsurance in Canada
- The costs of doing one of those transactions for
one of these offshore player is large - They many not have the life insurance company
setup yet, so they need to buy/borrow/build one. - They may not have any mortality expertise in
Canada so a lot of consulting costs to price
the deal - It may be easier for a very large plan to get a
quote than for a medium-sized plan, since the
large plan will attract more bidders willing to
absorb the cost of setting up a structure in
Canada.
16Pricing Reinsurance
- The cost of reinsurance will be driven mainly by
the yield available in the markets, mortality,
taxes and the cost of the capital needed to
support the business. - The cost of reinsurance may be different than the
solvency liability, depending on - The interest rate used for the calculation of the
liabilities relative to the current rates - The assumptions used (mortality being the main
one) in the calculation of the liabilities vs.
the best estimate mortality used in the
reinsurance - The relationship between the liabilities booked
and the cost of reinsurance may also change
depending on which piece of the liabilities is
reinsured - Reinsurance may target only the pieces where the
price is than the liabilities - There could be other accounting issues, such as
realization of deferred gains/losses, etc.
17Pricing Reinsurance
- Following is an example of the three main factors
in the reinsurance price would be estimated be
the reinsurer - Mortality
- Return on assets
- Cost of capital
18Pricing Reinsurance
- Mortality
- Experience data would be the first thing a
reinsurer would look at. - Only large plans would have credible data, but
anything would help - Refinements could be made by looking at the
occupation, amounts, geographic distribution - History of the plan will also be important, the
reinsurer may look at if there was anti-selection
at any given point in time was there an offer
of lump sums or any other conversions? - The reinsurer will have to use mortality
improvement factors, for example, 1 improvement
per year from the starting experience.
19Pricing Reinsurance
- Return on assets
- Reinsurer will look at what is the yield on a
portfolio that he could purchase today that
matches the liability cash flows - Will use a set of investment guidelines to have a
realistic mix of provincial, Canada and corporate
bonds, as well as a credit quality mix. - To that yield, the reinsurer will subtract an
expected default rate, to take credit risk into
account. - Some would use an optimizer to generate the
portfolio used for pricing, and for managing the
assets. - Often this net return on asset is converted to a
spread over treasuries or a spread over the swap
curve, for example, treasuries 90bps.
20Pricing Reinsurance
- A linear optimizer can be used to make the most
optimal fixed income portfolio selection - The optimizer would select from a list of
available bonds the portfolio that best matches
the liability portfolio with the highest yield,
ensuring that - Mismatch risk, determined through interest rate
scenario testing is within risk tolerance and - The portfolio fits all constraints, such as
- Overall credit quality
- Exposure per issuer, per sector, per type, per
rating (duration-weighted) - Any other risk metric, such as maximum negative
cash flows in any given year - The universe of bonds used as input to the
optimizer would be price as of the time of the
optimization, and would include the full
bid-offer spread. - The universe would also have been screened by the
asset manager to eliminate any undesirable names
and ratings used by the optimizer may be adjusted
by the asset manager to reflect any view the
manager has on that particular issue.
21Pricing Reinsurance
- Cost of capital
- Reinsurer will come up with the capital it needs
to support the business. - Offshore reinsurers may not have statutory
capital requirements as such (Bermuda minimum
capital is 250k!), so reinsurer will calculate
an economic capital, i.e. an amount set aside
that is a measure of the risk of the business - Economic capital will depend on the certainty
around the assumptions as well as the risk of the
asset portfolio - Then a cost of capital is calculated so that the
reinsurer obtains its target return on capital.
Often expressed as a reduction in the discount
rate used, for example 30bps. - So in our example, if we earn treasuries 90
bps, and need 30 bps for the cost of capital,
then the price offered will be discounting the
liability cash flows (calculated using the
reinsurers mortality assumption) at the treasury
curve 60bps.
22Summary
- UK market may be an indicator of what lies ahead
- Reinsurance is a flexible tool and may ultimately
be the only outlet for large amounts of longevity
risks - New accounting rules in the US may speed up
evolution there