17. Actuarial funding Flashcards
1
Q
What is the purpose of actuarial funding?
A
- Reduce NBS on certain kinds of unit-linked contracts
2
Q
Describe the principles of actuarial funding?
A
- Method life insurance company can use to reduce size of “unit reserves” it needs to hold in respect of unit-linked business.
- Company effectively capitalises some or all of unit-related charges it expects to receive from units it has nominally allocated, with funding repaid from future charges as they are received.
- When associated with appropriate surrender penalties, enables company to:
o Reduce financing requirements because initial expenses are
matched in terms of time and nature.
3
Q
For what kind of product design will actuarial funding be useful?
A
- One type of unit has relatively high management charges, primarily used to recoup initial expenses
- There’d usually be no explicit initial charge …
- … just regular fund management charges
- SP would have to exist for initial period of years
- Product may have capital and accumulation unit structure with initial premium(s) allocated to capital units and …
- … subsequent premiums to accumulation units
- Capital units have much higher fund management charge
- Design not necessary …
….any design where fund management charges used to recoup initial E okay
4
Q
Explain the problem with this unit-linked design if actuarial funding isn’t used
A
- Mismatch between income and outgo
- Large outgo at start of policy, but income received regularly over term
- Produces large capital strain when policy sold
- Mismatch also by nature
- Fund management charges investment linked
- i.e, proportional to future fund values
- Amount of income received subject to investment risk
5
Q
How does atuarial funding reduce problems with unit-linked design?
A
- Much increased positive net non-unit fund cashflows on early years’ premium allocations
- Significantly reduces initial strain
- Eliminate investment risk caused by mismatch, income now in cash form
- Income = premium paid - unit reserve set up as a result of premium allocation which …
- … is not subject to investment risk
6
Q
What are the necessary conditions for actuarial funding to apply?
A
- Unit fund benefits must be contingent on death and usually survival for a minimum period of years
- Needs to be sufficient regular fund management charges available. The limiting condition is that, after actuarial funding, prudently projected future net cashflows to insurer remain positive
- Must be unit-related surrender penalty imposed, st.t unit reserve is not lower than surrender value payable
7
Q
How do you calculate actuarially funded unit reserves?
A
- Nature of contingent payment means we can discount unit fund benefits as endowment assurance.
- This can be done for a term equal to residual survival period.
- The maximum theoretical discount rate that can be used is the annual fund management charge.
- The requirement to cover ongoing cash outflows forces discount rate used to be lower than the theoretical maximum.
- If using capital and accumulation units are used, the rate may be the difference between the management charges on the two units.
8
Q
What changes to net cashflows to the insurer occur as a result of actuarial funding?
A
- When premium is allocated, an increased net cashflow occurs because cost of allocation has been reduced
- Cost of allocation- amount of additional unit reserve required on premium allocation
- Net cashflows to insurer during each subsequent year will be reduced because fund management charge is based on smaller unit reserve.
- Net cashflow to insurer each year will be reduced by cost of building the unit reserve back up towards face value.
- Increase in cost will be spread over all remaining years of funding period.
- On death:
o Additional cost equal to face value less funded value of units will be
incurred
o Expected amount of cost in any year will be equal to this diff multiplied by the appropriate q_x - On surrender:
o Reduced net cashflow will be made compared to non-funded
position.
o Profit made on each surrender after actuarial funding, will = excess
of funded value of units over surrender value at time of surrender.
o Expected surrender profit per policy in force x probability of
surrender.