Chapter 16: Asset liability management Flashcards
What features of liabilities should be considered when deciding in which assets to invest
- Nature of liabilities
- Term of liabilities
- Currency of liabilities
- Uncertainty of liabilities
What are net liabilities?
Net liabilities = Benefit payments + Expense outgo - Premium income
What is the difference between pure and approximate matching?
Pure matching matches in terms of timing and amount of liabilities
Approximate matching
How can liabilities be categorised?
- Guaranteed in money terms
- Guaranteed in terms of an index
- Discretionary
- Investment-linked
How can expenses be categorised?
Increase overtime somewhere between price and earnings inflation
How can premiums be categorised?
- FIxed in monetary terms
- Increase in line with an index
What would the matching asset portfolio look like for each of the four categories of liabilities
- Guaranteed in money terms
- Guaranteed in terms of an index
- Discretionary
- Investment-linked
Guaranteed in money terms
- Choose assets that make payments at an appropriate level and time as liabilities fall due
- Government and conventional bonds
- Swaps
Guaranteed in terms of an index
- Index-linked government and corporate bonds of the appropriate term
- Equity and property over the longer term
Discretionary
- Equities
- Property
- As they give the highest long-term return
Investment-linked
- Replicating portfolio of assets that track the guaranteed index
- Collective investment scheme
- Derivatives
What influences the level of mismatching allowed
- Risk appetite
- Free assets
- Regulatory constraints
- Type of policy - guaranteed or discretionary benefits. The more guaranteed the less scope for taking a risk
What is the use of free assets
- Depart from matched investment strategy to increase returns
- Fund new business
How does the regulator influence risk appetite
Assets
- Prescribed amounts to invest in certain assets, e.g., government bonds
- Restrict the type of assets that can be held
- Restrict amounts in specific assets that can be held
Mismatching
- Limit on level of mismatching allowed
- Allow mismatching but insist on extra reserves to be held for the deviation from the matched position
- Compulsory matching by currency
Risk
- Restrictions on custody of assets, e.g., all assets held domestically so if they invest in gold it has to be shipped to the country and stored domestically
- Restrictions on maximum exposure to a single counterparty
What is risk budgeting
Process of establishing how much risk should be taken and where it is most efficient to take the risk in order to maximise returns
Describe the three main components of a risk budget
Strategic risk - Risk of poor performance of strategic benchmark relative to liabilities
Active risk - Risk of poor performance from fund manager relative to a benchmark
Structural risk - Mismatch of aggregate portfolio benchmark and total fund benchmark