37 - Capital Requirements Flashcards
What are the 2 Components of Regulatory Solvency Capital?
- The prudential margins in the regulatory liability valuations basis
- An amount of additional solvency capital in excess of the regulatory provisions
What is the use of the additional solvency capital in the regulatory solvency capital?
Used as an estimate of non-financial risk
What does a provider of financial benefits have to hold provisions for?
- Liabilities that have accrued but which have not yet been paid
- Future periods of insurance against which premiums have already been received
- Claims already incurred but which have yet to be settled
Give the Advantage and Disadvantage of using Formula-Based additional capital requirements.
Pro: simple and easy to implement
Con: makes it more difficult to compare providers who use different levels of prudence
(Not a risk-based approach)
Give the three pillars of Solvency II
- Quantification of risk exposures and capital requirements
- A supervisory regime - internal capital requirements and measures
- Disclosure
Give the two levels of capital requirements under Solvency II
- Minimum Capital Requirement (MCR) in order to conduct business
- Solvency Capital Requirements (SCR) under which companies require attention from the regulator
Give the advantage and disadvantage of using standard formula in the SCR calculation.
Pros:
1. Less complex
2. Less time-consuming
Cons:
1. Aims to capture the risk profile of an average company
2. This may not be appropriate for the actual companies that need to use it.
Give the three pillars of the Basel Accords
- Minimum capital requirements
- Risk management and supervision
- Market discipline and disclosure
Define: Economic capital
It is the amount of capital that a provider determines is appropriate to hold given its assets, liabilities and business objectives
It is typically determined based upon:
- The risk profile of the individual assets and liabilities in its portfolio
- Correlation of the risks
- The desired level of overall credit deterioration that the provider wished to be able to withstand
Give the factors that determine economic capital
- The risk profile of the individual assets and liabilities in its portfolio
- The correlation of the risks
- The desired level of overall credit deterioration that the provider wishes to be able to withstand.
Under which pillar of Solvency II does the Own Risk and Solvency Assessment (ORSA) fall under?
Pillar 2: A supervisory regime
the companyβs own solvency regime
Give the main purpose of the ORSA
Provides management with assessment of:
- Adequacy of its risk management
- Its current, and likely future, solvency position
Give the requirements of the ORSA on financial providers
- Identify the risks to which it is exposed
- To identify the risk management processes and controls in place
- To quantify its ongoing ability to continue to meet its solvency capital requirements - projections of financial position
- To analyse quantitative and qualitative elements of its business strategy
- To identify the relationship between risk management and the level and quality of financial resources needed and available.
What is βICAAPβ and which pillar in the Basel Accords it falls under.
Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment Process and it is under pillar 2: risk management and supervision
Give the purpose of the ICAAP
ICAAP enables banks to:
1. To identify, measure and aggregate material risks that a bank faces.
- Calculate the economic or internal capital necessary to cover the risks
Give the main aim of internal models in Solvency II
Aim to create a stochastic model that reflects the companyβs own business structure.
Used mainly to calculate Economic capital
Give the main uses of Internal models with regards to required capital.
- To calculate economic capital using different risk measures - VaR and TVaR
- To calculate levels of confidence in the level of economic capital calculated
- To apply different time horizons to the assessment of solvency and risk
- To include other risk classes not covered in the standard formula
How does pricing allow for Capital requirements?
- Pricing of financial products should allow for the cost of holding the required capital
- Return on the capital is lower due to restrictions on investments, opportunity cost
- Lower investment profit is offset by the additional trading profit earned from allowance for COC built into premiums
What is the main purpose of allowing for required capital in the pricing models of financial products
The lower investment income from the solvency capital can be offset by the additional trading profits earned for the allowance.
Why is Capital allocation important in a business model?
- Business planning and to
- Measure the performance (R.O.C)
- Pricing purposes.
- Risk control limits
Give two performance measurements that take risk into account.(ie risk-return measures)
- RAROC - Risk Adjusted Return On Capital
2. EIC - Economic Income Created
Give the disadvantages of using a factor based approach for calculating required capital
- The large number of factors required to capture all the risk that insurance companies ma face
- The factors may be chosen to be appropriate for a typical insurance company with typical risks - they are unlikely to be suitable for all companies
- The simple calculation may not be appropriate to deal with some types of risk - catastrophes
- To retain an appropriately stringent capital requirement in different condition , the factors would need to be updated in the light of changing conditions - changing asset values.
Explain why the factor-based approach for calculating required capital may lead to higher amounts of capital held on average.
It is seen as an approximation and this would probably be leaning towards a prudent view since it is regulatory capital - too much rather than too little
Describe the two main components of determining a companyβs economic capital position.
- Economic capital requirement
2. Economic capital available