Reserves & Liabilities Flashcards
Reserve standards for the different types of financial statements (4)
- ) Statutory - focus is on ensuring solvency, so reserves tend to be conservative
- ) GAAP - focus is on matching profit streams with revenue streams, with a lesser degree of conservatism (through provisions for adverse deviation)
- ) Tax statement - IRS standards make sure profits beyond a set level are recognized, and therefore taxed immediately
- ) Embedded value based statement - may be needed for international companies. Standards are set by the International Accounting Standards Board.
Types of premium reserves (4)
- ) Unearned premium - reserve for the premium that has been received to cover the portion of the coverage period which hasn’t yet occurred (usually a pro-rata portion of the last premium received)
- ) Premium paid in advance - reserve for premiums paid in advanced for future coverage periods
- ) Premium due and unpaid - an asset is created on the statement for the amount of premium that is expected to be received
- ) Policy reserves - money set aside to account for current funding of costs over the future lifetime of a policy
Types of policies for which policy reserves are required (2)
- ) Contracts that use level premiums
2. ) Contracts where the value of the future benefits at any time exceeds the value of future net premiums
Reasons why a deficiency reserve may be needed (3)
- ) A policy is non-cancelable, so premium rates can’t be raised
- ) Regulators are unlikely to allow the premium rates to rise to self-sufficient levels
- ) The size of increases needed might trigger an anti-selection spiral that makes it impossible to ever break even
Policy Reserve - Prospective Formula
PV of Future Claims - PV of Future Net Premiums
Policy Reserve - Retrospective Formula
AV of Past Premiums - AV of Past Claims
2 Year Full Preliminary Term Reserves (5)
- ) For coverages other than LTC and return of premium contracts
- ) Reserve for first 2 policy yrs is 0
- ) Policy is treated as if it was issued 2 years later and policyholder is 2 years older
- ) Method allows for reduced reserves in first 2 years to limit the surplus strain resulting from acquisition cost
- ) Approach enables expenses to be implicitly deferred as explicit recognition of expense is not allowed under statutory accounting
1 Year Full Preliminary Term Reserves (2)
- ) For LTC coverage and return of premium contracts
2. ) 2 year FPT may be used based on situation
Deferred Acquisition Cost (DAC) Asset
Explicitly delays recognition of certain expenses (acquire the business, commissions):
Retrospective:
(AV of Deferrable Expenses) - (AV of Net Expense Premiums)
ASOP #42: Considerations for determining provider-related liabilities (3)
- ) Risk-sharing and capitation arrangements - the nature of the arrangement should be considered when determining whether to establish a liability
- ) Provider financial condition - consider whether the provider will be able to meet its obligations
- ) Provider incentive payments - if an agreement with a provider calls for incentive payments, consider whether a liability should be held for those payments
ASOP #42: Considerations for determining contract reserves (7)
- ) Interest rates - rates should be reasonable and consistent with the purpose of the reserve
- ) Morbidity - this assumption should reflect the underlying risk, including factors such as age, gender, durational effects, and adverse selection
- ) Persistency - this assumption should include bot involuntary and voluntary terminations
- ) Expenses - consider whether maintenance, acquisition, or claim expenses should be included
- ) Trend - inflation, utilization, morbidity, and expense rates should reflect the appropriate trend
- ) Premium rate changes - assumptions for future rate changes should reflect market conditions, regulatory restrictions, and rate guarantees
- ) Valuation method - when the valuation method is not prescribed, the actuary should choose an appropriate method
Active life reserves formula
Active life reserve
=midterminal+UPR
=mean-deferred premium reserve
midterminal=(V1+V2)/2
mean=(V1+V2+net premium)/2
Impact of the ACA on Actuarial Liabilities (4)
- ) Claim liabilities - claim payment patterns and PMPM claim cost levels will change at beginning of 2014 adding challenge to setting reserves
- ) Contract reserves - some insurers have held this in ind to account for effect of UW wear-off. This is no longer appropriate because UW not allowed.
- ) Due and unpaid premium asset - affected by 90-day premium grace period for people receiving subsidies
- ) PDR - could result in need of PDR