Title: Monitoring Changes in Capital and Hedge Effectiveness
1Monitoring Changes in Capital and Hedge
Effectiveness Under Fair Value Accounting
Principles
March 31, 2009
2Life insurance companies are risk enterprises.
Risk is the essence of their business. Beyond the
general economic and business risks faced by all
business, life insurance companies assume the
risks underlying their insurance
products--specifically, mortality, investment,
expense, and withdrawal.
3- In 1971, Richard G. Horn published a paper in the
Transactions entitled Life Insurance Earnings
and the Release from Risk Policy Reserve System.
- This landmark paper established a methodology for
analyzing the earnings of a life insurance
company. - This methodology became to be known as a sources
of earnings analysis.
4- The natural reserve is the present value of
future benefits and expenses less the present
value of future net premiums. - Future benefits would include death benefits,
withdrawal benefits and endowment benefits. - Expenses would include commissions, acquisition
expenses and maintenance expenses.
5The company's hazard, however, lies in
deviations from the expected values of these
risks rather than the expected values themselves.
The company must provide for the costs of both
the expected values of the risks inherent in
their products and the deviations from the
expected values. The risks of adverse variability
in realistically assumed rates of mortality,
interest, withdrawal, and expense constitute the
hazard of the life insurance endeavor.
6- Explicit recognition would be made for all the
major assumptions (expenses, interest, mortality
and lapses). - These assumptions would be expected values (i.e.,
best estimates) plus provisions for adverse
deviation.
7- The provisions for adverse deviation would be
released over the life of the block of policies
as experience emerged. - Accordingly, this reserving methodology became
known as the release from risk policy reserve
method. - To measure both the amount and timing of these
releases, a sources of earnings analysis would be
preformed.
8Â Net income Premium income Investment
income - Expenses - Benefit
payments - Increase in reserves
9Â Net income Premium load Expense
margin Investment margin Mortality
margin Withdrawal or persistency margin
10- With the exception of term life insurance, most
life insurance and annuity products underwritten
today have significant equity risk. - Furthermore, fair value accounting principles are
replacing historical-based accounting principles.
- Finally, many insurance companies have hedging
programs in place to manage the embedded equity
risk in the type of products that they have
underwritten.
11- Under fair value accounting principles, the
capital account becomes the primary focus of
attention. - Accordingly, an analysis of the change in
capital is needed to replace a traditional
sources of earnings analysis. - In addition, most life insurance companies have
hedging programs to manage the embedded equity
risks in the types of products they have
underwritten. Thus, an important focus of this
analysis is to monitor the effectiveness of these
hedging programs.
12- Consider a company with 10,000 of cash and no
liabilities sold a put option on the SP 500 with
a strike price of 1,500 and an expiration date
in thirty days. - Assume that on the date that this option was
written - The current spot price of the SP 500 was 1,500.
- The implied volatility of the SP 500 was an
annualized rate of 20. - The risk-free interest rate was an annual rate of
5 compounded continuously. - The dividend yield of the SP 500 was an annual
rate of 2 compounded continuously. - Using these assumptions and the Black-Scholes
Option Pricing Formula, the premium for this put
option is 3,239.63.
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14- Now assume one day after the option was written
- The current spot price of the SP 500 decreased
to 1,485. - The implied volatility of the SP 500 increased
to an annualized rate of 21. - The risk-free interest rate increased to an
annual rate of 5.1 compounded continuously. - The dividend yield of the SP 500 increased to an
annual rate of 2.1 compounded continuously. - Using these assumptions and noting that the
option is one day closer to the expiration date,
the value of the put option increased to
4,113.81.
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17 Change in Capital Interest on Cash Time
Decay Change in Stock Price Change in
Volatility Change in Risk-Free
Rate Change in Dividend Rate
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21 Change in Capital Insurance Gain or
Loss Change in value of embedded
option Gain or loss on hedge
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26The End