Ch 1: Life ins prods - Endowment Flashcards
Summary Card
- Endowment assurance
- Capital requirements
Useful accronyms:
- FISCR (Five Issues Surrounding Capital Requirements)
Describe an endowment contract (6, 5 additional subpoints)
- Pays benefit on survival to known date (savings need)
- retirement lump sum, repay capital on interest only loan
- May also pay death benefit during term (protection need)
- Can be used to transfer wealth e.g nominate child beneficiary
- Normally has surrender value.
- Usually increases over time
- Depends on contract design
- Not necessarily related to sum assured
- Can have a paid up value too
- Group version exists
- e.g. by employers as part of remuneration package
- e.g. retirement benefits, or death-in-service benefit
Describe the forms under which endowment assurances can be written (4)
In all cases, product can be paid for either with single premium or regular premiums.
- Without-profits
- benefit is a guaranteed sum assured
- typically paid on survival, can be death benefit added
- With-profits
- benefit increases over time with bonuses declared by insurer
- Unit-linked
- premiums pooled into collective investment fund
- benefit depends on investment performance, fees
- benefit is versatile, can be
- fixed sum assured
- value of units
- some % of value of units
- surrender value
- based on unit value
- may be reduce by some surrender penalty by insurer
State 3 examples of how the death benefit on a unit-linked endwment assurance may be expressed
- fixed monetary amount
- value of units
- some percentage (e.g. 120%) of value of units.
- If (1) is chosen, with very high sum assured (relative to premium), then policy can be almost entirely protection.
- With (2) or (3), emphasis would be on savings.
- All 3 versions commonly found in practice, as used to meet different needs.
Discuss the risks to an insurance company that arise from endowment assurances
( 6 risks, 15 total subpoints)
- Investment risk
- depends on contract design/form
- greatest for without-profits contracts, lower for with-profits contracts, lowest for unit-linked contracts
- Mortality risk
- depends on level/nature of death benefit
- big death benefit: high at start, reduces with duration IF
- return of premiums/fund: low mortality risk, except near start
- no death benefit: more survivors = more benefits paid
- Withdrawal risk (persistency)
- depending on withdrawal value compared with asset share
- Expense risk
- Marginal costs (e.g. comm), fixed costs (e.g salaries)
- Risks arise because of
- inflation
- inability of management to control expenses
- lower than expected sales
- Anti-selection
- policyholder choice to take out contract based on own knowledge of health
- Concentration of risk
- particularly for group contracts e.g. multiple deaths of people in same residential area due to catastrophe
State reasons why anti-selection risk for group endowment assurance may be lower than for individual contracts (3)
- compulsory membership requirement
- ‘free’ membership to those insured e.g. if employers pay premums, expect all employees to choose to join
- restrictions on level of cover per member (salary related)
Discuss the capital requirements related to insurers who write endowment assurance (5)
Accronym: FISCR
Five Issues Surrounding Capital Requirements
-
Frequency of premium pmts
- more upfront = less capital intensive
-
Initial expenses
- higher initial expenses increase capital requirement if premium doesn’t increase
-
Solvency capital requirements
- need assets to cover supervisory and required solvency capital
-
Contract design
- whether contract design allows reserves/solvency margin to remain low
- lower initial reseves = lower initial capital requirement
- slower increase in reserves over contract term, faster invested capital is release
-
Reserving basis (level of prudence)
- reserving basis stronger, requires more capital than would be required under pricing basis