16. Unit pricing Flashcards
Basic principle
Unit price = value of pool of assets / number of units
What are the components of the Net Asset Value
- Market “offer/bid” price value of the assets held by fund
- expenses that would be incurred incurred in purchase
+ current assets e.g. cash on deposits or investments sold but not yet
settled
+ accrued income e.g. interest income from fixed-interest securities
and deposits, net of outgo e.g. fund charges
- current liabilities e.g. investments purchased but not settled / loans
- allowance for tax if applicable
- expenses that would be incurred incurred in purchase
Management box
- Consists of additional units that have been created but not owned by policyholders at any point in time.
- These units are owned by life company itself.
- More units than necessary to cover unit liabilities
Why own a management box
Meet day-to-day needs of ph without having to constantly create and cancel units
Advantages of holding a management box
- Enables company to maintain steady offer/bid basis, rather than having to change too frequently basis on which it prices units.
- Achieves “broad-equity” approach between diff unit-holders (as basis is only changed if there’s significant cashflow movement against existing basis) and …
- …avoids unnecessary and artificial volatility in published unit prices.
- By using box, unnecessary creation and cancellation of units is avoided.
Disadvantages of holding a management box
- Exposed to investment risk of holding large number of units for its own account
- However, with careful management might be source of profit
- May be problems with control- setting down guidelines as to how large a box is maintained, what to do in event of severe market movements or large unit purchases/encashments.
- Risk of management expenses being higher than expected
- Operational risks e.g. keeping track of which units belong to ph and which to company
Basic equity principle
- Interests of unit holders not involved in a transaction must be unaffected by transaction
- For the holder of a unit the only prices relevant are those at which they buy units in the fund and those at which they redeem units.
- In theory, the movement in price between those two events should only reflect the performance of the assets backing the unit and charges deductible under the policy terms.
- Therefore the price of units should not be affected by creation or cancellation of other units, otherwise cross subsidies between unit holders will arise.
Appropriation price definition
- Amount of money per unit that company must put into the unit-linked fund for each unit appropriated (created) such that …
- … the net asset value per unit is the same before and after the appropriation to preserve interests of existing unit holders.
- Price at which company will create a unit.
- Net asset value on an offer basis divided by number of units before new units created
Expropriation price definition
- Amount of money per unit that company must be taken out the unit-linked fund for each unit expropriated (cancelled) such that …
- … the net asset value per unit is the same before and after the expropriation to preserve interests of existing unit holders.
- Price at which company will cancel a unit.
- Net asset value on a bid basis divided by number of units before units cancelled
How does appropriation (expropriation) price achieve broad equity principle?
To achieve the basic principle of equity this price per unit is such that the net asset value per unit is the same before and after the creation (cancellation) of the units.
Pricing basis when fund is expanding
- Offer basis
Pricing basis when fund is contracting
- Bid basis
Broad equity approach
- The interests of unit holders not involved in a unit transaction should be unaffected by it.
Bid price
- Price life comany uses to redeem units it has alloacted to a contract.
Offer price
- Price life comany uses to alloacte units to a contract.