Income & Surplus Flashcards

1
Q

Income Statement & 3 types of income

A

*contains the revenue, expenses & net income

*3 types of income

Underwriting income

Investment income

Other income

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2
Q

Net Income

A

Net Income = UW Income + Investment Income + other Income – PH dividends - Tax

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3
Q

Underwriting Income

A

Underwriting Income = EP – Loss & LAE Incd – Other UW Expenses Incd

Loss & LAE Incd = paid + change in case

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4
Q

if the allocation of other UW expenses (component of prem) is not accurate

A

subsidies may arise that may cause problems, including:

  • distortion of the profitability measures
  • inefficient allocation of resources
  • anti-selection
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5
Q

Investment Income & 2 components

A

*Insurers have an opportunity to earn investment income because there is a delay between time that the prem is collected and when the losses are paid

*2 components of investment income in the income statement:

Net investment income earned

Net realized capital gain (position is closed for a profit)

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6
Q

Investment Guidelines

A

Insurers should ensure that the investments conform to their investment guidelines. Guidelines are governed by state investment laws

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7
Q

NAIC Model Investment Law

A

allows the insurer to adopt either of the following 2 types of investment guidelines:

Defined Limits: quantitative limits

Prudent Person: a principles based approach, which enables the insurer to develop its own guidelines. The insurer should strive for the protection of the PH and consider the investment expertise and resources available

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8
Q

Common elements of Other Income

A

Net Gain from Agents’ or Premium Balances Charged Off

Finance & Service Charges not included in Premiums

Aggregate Write-ins for Miscellaneous Income

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9
Q

Net Gain from Agents’ or Premium Balances Charged Off

A

If the insurer believes that the balances won’t be collected, it needs to recognize them as a loss. This particular component includes any balances that had previously been written off and later collected.

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10
Q

Finance & Service Charges not included in Premiums

A

includes the service charges that the insurer adds to the prem that is paid in installments

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11
Q

Not part of Other Income, but do impact the overall income

A

Dividends to policyholders

Federal & Foreign Income Taxes

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12
Q

Capital & Surplus Account

A

*provides sources of the surplus change in addition to those reflected in the income statement

*can be used to reconcile the beginning to the ending surplus

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13
Q

Current Year’s surplus

A

Current Year’s surplus = Prior Year’s Surplus + Current Year’s Net Income + Other Surplus Changes + Additional Capital Contributions – Stockholder Dividends

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14
Q

Other Surplus Changes

A
  • Change in Unrealized Capital Gains (profitable position that has yet to be sold in return for cash)
  • Change in Net Unrealized Foreign Exchange Capital Gains
  • Change in Net Deferred Income Tax
  • Change in Nonadmitted Assets
  • Change in Provision for Reinsurance
  • Cumulative Effect of Changes in Accounting Principles
  • Capital Changes & Surplus Adjustments
  • Capital paid in
  • Surplus paid in

*need to include reduction of Deferred Tax Liability for the reduction in unrealized gains (ie + 35%*DTL)

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15
Q

2 definitions of surplus

A

*Balance Sheet definition: surplus = assets – liabilities

*Income Statement definition: surplus = prior years surplus + current year’s income

*These 2 definitions would equivalent if all balance sheet transactions also flow through the income statement

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16
Q

In order to reconcile the income statement definition surplus with the balance sheet definition surplus

A

it is necessary to adjust the income statement definition surplus for transactions that do not flow through the income statement. These are either:

Direct credits (increases) to surplus

Direct charges (reductions) to surplus

*Exhibits from the Annual Statement will account for the difference: Exhibit of Non-Admitted Asset; or Capital and Surplus account

17
Q

Double Taxation

A

By investing in insurance companies, investors incur double taxation

*Cost of Double Taxation = indirect taxes - direct taxes = investment yield *corporate tax rate *(1-personal tax rate)

*cost of double taxation is an additional amount that investors need to pay by investing in securities via the insurer. To encourage investors to invest in the insurer, this lost yield needs to be paid by the PHs

*paid through premiums (as the profit margin component), since there are no direct transactions between the PHs and the investors. Since it is paid through the profit margin in the premiums (which is taxed as underwriting income), there is another layer of tax involved

18
Q

Atkinson & Dallas Formulae

A

reflect the additional cost that arises because of the investment constraints of insurers.

Cost of the insurer investing in the safer investments. This is equal to the difference between what the insurer could earn had they invested in the higher yielding equity, and what they are currently earning

19
Q

total amount of capital which is subject to this cost of holding capital

A

to the sum of:

  • surplus
  • equity in the unearned premium reserves (UEPR * acquisition cost %)
  • equity in the undiscounted reserves (undiscounted reserve * discount rate)
  • Deferred Tax Asset should be subtracted from this amount
20
Q

Amount of tax to invest in bonds vs in insurer

A

Amount of tax to invest in bonds = Investment * yield * personal tax

Amount of tax to invest in insurer = Investment * yield * (corporate + (1-corporate)*personal)

21
Q

Money needed to paid by policyholders to compensate investors for cost

A

Cost of double taxation/[(1-personal tax)*(1-corporate tax)]

if taxes paid mid year -> /(1+yield)^0.5

22
Q

Revised Cost of Holding Capital ie Atkinson & Dallas

A

Revised Cost of Holding Capital ie Atkinson & Dallas = Cost of double taxation + Investment *(riskier yield - yield) = Cost of double taxation + cost of constraints

23
Q

Calculate the Invested Capital and deciding to liquidate

A

Equity in UEPR = UEPR*acquisition %

Equity in undiscounted reserve = discounted reserve/closing IRS discount factor – discounted reserves

DTA from UEPR = UEPR*tax*(1-closing IRS discount factor)

DTA from discount = Equity in undiscounted reserve*tax*%paid during yr

Invested capital = surplus+equity in UEPR+equity in undiscounted reserve – DTA

Insurer is profitable if PV after tax income > invested capital

If insurer is not profitable, should liquidate if cost of liquidation is less than invested capital – PV of after tax income

PV after tax income = earnings*(1-tax)/cost of equity capital