Chapter 16- Surplus Distribution Policy Flashcards
outline the high level structure of this chapter? (6)
• Different ways of adding to policyholders benefits (“bonus structures”)
• Factors to take into account in bonus declarations
• More on asset share
• Modelling considerations
• Management of bonus stabilisation reserve and free assets
• Related concepts
outline the features of a reversionary bonus structure? (5)
• This method of surplus distribution is associated with conventional with-profit business
• Once declared the reversionary bonus becomes guaranteed addition to benefits and cannot be removed i.e. the bonus vests in the sense that guarantee benefit increases
• Life office tend not to let the reversionary bonus levels fluctuate from year to another and therefore set a conservative or sustainable level
• The policyholders expectation that bonus rates will not cut significantly places financial strain on the life office which need to reserve for bonuses declared and bonuses expected to be added in the future
• Sometime life offices also distribute surplus by way of a “special” reversionary bonus which is a once off payment that cannot be taken away
outline the features of a smooth bonus structure? (7)
• The method bears more of a resemblance with a “savings” account in the sense that bonuses are added to the current value of the policy rather than final maturity amount
• Smoothed bonus polices also tend to follow more closely the actual investment returns rather than as opposed to reversionary bonuses which tend to be more stable
• Given that smoothed bonuses fluctuate more than reversionary bonuses they create less of an expectation that needs to be maintained
• The bonus declaration is usually split into vesting and non-vesting components
• The vesting portion is guaranteed
and non-vesting portion can be removed at the discretion of the company
• However the removal of non-vesting bonuses is considered a very extreme event
• Normally the investment mandate of a smooth bonus portfolio is conservative such that a extreme event is unlikely to occur
outline the features of a terminal bonus? (7)
• Given that reversionary bonuses are set at conservative levels they do not normally distribute the entire surplus generated by the polices
• Therefore another type of bonus called the terminal bonus is used to distribute the residual surplus
• The terminal bonus is normally paid when the policy becomes a claim
• Paying part of the benefit in the form of a terminal bonus means greater volatility in the size of the claims
• Terminal bonuses do not vest which means that they can be reduced or removed
• It is common practice for terminal bonuses to be reduced on surrender
• If the terminal bonus is expected to be maintained (given the investment return assumption), a corresponding reserve must be set up
• The company retains more investment freedom so both shareholders and policyholders have the prospect of higher potential benefits
• Terminal bonuses that are based on asset share can take care of equity between different generations and types of contracts
outline interim bonuses? (3)
• Bonus rates on with-profit contracts are typically declared annually
• Interim bonus rate applies to contracts that becomes claims before the next declaration
• They represent distribution earned since the last bonus declaration
Outline what is included in the principles and practices of financial management? (5)
o This includes the nature and extent of discretion
o Factors considered in bonus declarations
o The investmentt strategy for the underlying assets
o When will decisions be taken to remove non-vested bonuses
o The board must approve the document
list the factors that will be considered in bonus declarations? (15)
• BSR
• Free assets
• Return on underlying assets
• Investment strategy / IGR
• Competition
• Expectation of bonuses
• SH vs PH allocations
o Delay distribution of profits delay SH allocations
• Sources of surplus (AoS)
• Asset share
• Smoothing
• Equity between classes and generations of policyholders
• Vesting vs non-vesting vs TB
o Vested increase guaranteed Ls surrenders & increased SCR
• PPFM (i.e. includes company’s bonus philosophy)
• TCF
• Solvency
outline BSR and how it may influence the distribution of surplus?(6)
• Measure of financial soundness of a with-profit portfolio
• If assets underlying the with-profits fund exceed liabilities then the fund has effectively declared a lower bonus rate supported by distributable surplus that arose over the period
• This insurer can hold back the surplus for latter distribution by setting up a BSR
• The BSR collectively belongs to policyholders sharing in the fund and any positive BSR will be distributed through future bonus declarations
• Similarly if assets underlying the with-profit fund are less than the liabilities the fund would have declared a higher bonus than that supportable by the surplus
• A negative BSR can only be included in valuation of liabilities if the insurer is expecting to recover the deficit through under distribution in the next 3 years (according to SAP 104)
outline free surplus and how it may influence the distribution of surplus? (5)
• Higher free asset level greater ability to:
o Smooth by deviating from market returns
o Invest aggressively (while maintaining a stable bonus rate)
• Low free asset level
o Constrained investment freedom
o Constrained ability to write new business
o Endangered solvency position
outline the influence of return on underlying assets in declaring a surplus? (4)
• The offices bonus declaration philosophy (e.g. volatility of regular bonus distributions)
• The amount of BSR available
• The level of underlying guarantees influences prudence in bonuses
• The investment mandate will influence the volatility of returns which may influence the degree of smoothing
outline the influence of investment strategy in declaring a surplus? (3)
• Investment mandate in marketing literature clearly communicate any deviation from this
• Typical mix: 60% equity, 20% bonds, 20% money market
• Not too conservative - higher returns than money market
• Not too aggressive – require long-term stable returns
• More conservative smoother pattern of bonuses
outline the influence of competition in declaring a surplus? (2)
• Competitive bonus rates are important in attracting new business and retaining inforce business
• Although the insurer should not endanger its solvency by declaring higher bonus rates
outline the influence of PRE in declaring a surplus? (5)
• If policyholder expectations are not met this could result in bad publicity and have a reputational impact on the insurer
• Policyholder usually expect reversionary bonuses to be stable over time
• There is usually less expectations regarding the terminal bonus rate
• However for smooth bonus polices there is not usually a terminal bonus to ensure equity over time therefore regular bonuses vary more the RB
• Some actuaries argue that gradual change is acceptable as long as it is communicated to the policyholder
outline the influence of allocations between shareholders and policyholders in declaring a surplus? (3)
• 90/10 method (Policyholders get 90% of all distributed surplus and shareholders get 10%
• Shareholders charge explicit fees to cover expenses and profit while policyholders receive all the remaining surplus
• Investment surplus only (policyholders receive all investment and bonus loading surplus while shareholders get the surplus from all other sources)
outline the influence of sources of surplus in declaring a bonus? (6)
In South Africa bonuses on with-profit contracts are designed primarily for the distribution of investment surplus. However there are other sources of surplus which could influence the levels and patterns of bonuses distributed:
• Investment surplus
• Expense surplus
• Mortality and other risk benefit surplus
• Withdrawal surplus
• Surplus from other contracts (non-profit contracts)
• Mismatching surplus
Surplus will arise if the actual experience is more favourable than the pricing basis and the emergence of the surplus will depend on the valuation basis