CIA.IFRS17-DR Flashcards
Define the IFRS 17 term: Discount Rate
Rate used to discount the estimates of future cash flows which is consistent with the timing, liquidity and currency of the insurance contract cash flows.
- May be a single rate, or a curve of rates varying by duration.
- Discount rate and yield curve are terms used interchangeably
Define the IFRS 17 term: Estimates of future cash flows
Future undiscounted cash flows arising from the insurance/reinsurance contracts issued or reinsurance contracts held
Define the IFRS 17 term: Fulfilment Cash Flow (FCF)
Present value of the estimates of future cash flows plus the risk adjustment for non-financial risk
Define the IFRS 17 term: Liquidity/Illiquidity Premium
Adjustment made to a liquid risk-free yield curve to reflect differences between the liquidity characteristics of the financial instruments that underlie the (risk-free) rates observed in the market and the liquidity characteristics of the insurance contracts
Define the IFRS 17 term: Reference Portfolio
A portfolio of assets used to derive discount rates based on current market rates of return, adjusted to remove returns related to risk characteristics embedded in the portfolio that are not inherent in insurance contracts
Is the liquidity of a government bond high or low? What about a high-tech start up firm?
Government bond: High
High-Tech Startup: Low
This is based on the liquidity profile of the investment
Insurer may calculate ceded cash flows by calculating gross minus net cash flows.
In doing so, the actuary may consider the following (3)
Data availability: If data is sparse or limited, may not be possible/appropriate to directly estimate the PV of ceded cash flows
Cash flow volatility: different approaches may be warranted for different segments of business depending on volatility of cash flows
Reinsurance held: consideration would be given to the type and consistency of an entity’s reinsurance held
Identify considerations in segmenting data for selecting payment patterns (3)
- The business segments used for the analysis of the liabilities on an undiscounted basis, and which may not correspond to the entity’s insurance contract portfolios
- The payout period
- The existence of a predetermined schedule of payments for a segment of claims
Identify characteristics an IFRS17 discount rate should possess (3)
(a) reflect the time value of money, the characteristics of the cash flows and the liquidity characteristics of the insurance contracts
(b) be consistent with observable current market prices (if any) for financial instruments whose characteristics are consistent with those of the insurance contracts
(c) exclude the effect of factors that influence such observable market prices but do not affect the future cash flows of the insurance contracts
Identify the two methods for selecting a discount rate for valuation of insurance contract liabilities under IFRS17
- Bottom-up approach
- Top-down approach
Explain the bottom-up approach
A liquid risk-free yield curve is adjusted to reflect the differences between the liquidity characteristics of the financial instruments that underlie the rates observed in the market and the liquidity characteristics of the insurance contracts
Explain the top-down approach
The YTM of a reference portfolio of assets is adjusted to eliminate factors that are not relevant to insurance contracts
Is it possible for the bottom-up and top-down approaches to lead to the same discount rate?
Yes, but they may also result in different discount rates due to limitations in the way in which adjustments are calculated
How would an actuary select either the bottom-up or top-down approach?
The selection of one approach over the other depends on a number of considerations, such as
- The characteristics of the liability cash flows
- The availability of suitable data
- The investment environment
- How frequently the discount rate is expected to be updated
Identify another possible approach for determining IFRS17 Discount Rates & its advantage
Hybrid approach: derive illiquidity premium using a top-down approach, and use this illiquidity premium in a bottom-up approach to determine IFRS17 discount rates
Advantage: blends the use of a robust model for estimating illiquidity premiums, which can be updated periodically as appropriate, with the use of readily available Canadian risk-free yield curves, which are updated weekly
Identify an advantage & a disadvantage of the bottom-up approach
Advantage: availability of risk-free yield curves
Disadvantage: need to derive an illiquidity premium if or when a non-zero illiquidity premium is required
Identify potential sources of risk-free yield curves
Government of canada:
- Zero-coupon bond yield curves (is advantageous over the other two due to: timeliness of data, which is updated weekly & availability of the data at a reasonable level of granularity)
- Spot yield curves
- Forward 1-yr rates