Chapter1 Life Products EA Flashcards

1
Q

The products typically offered in a life insurance market have evolved over time so as to represent

A

profitable risks to the insurer whilst providing useful benefits to the consumer.

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2
Q

the basic theme of life insurance.

A

in return for one or more premiums paid by a consumer, the insurer contracts to pay benefits which are in some way contingent upon human life – payment occurs on death or survival.

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3
Q

The simplest contracts provide

A

specified guaranteed benefits in return for the payment of specified premiums. Variations on this simple basis are discussed later in this chapter (and also later in the course), of which the most notable are with-profits and unit-linked contracts.

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4
Q

simplest contracts referred to above are known as

A

non-profit non-linked (or without-profits non-linked) contracts – which are shortened (usually) to non-profit (or without-profits) respectively. On first reading this terminology seems to suggest that these contracts are not profitable – but this is not what it means! The name is simply telling us that the policy is neither with-profits nor unit-linked!

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5
Q

terms and conditions of the contract will specify

A

both the amount of each premium and for how long the premiums have to be paid. When a contract is paid for by regular premiums (typically of level monthly or annual amounts), the premiums would usually be payable for a fixed number of years or until earlier death.

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6
Q

In practice, contracts may also provide

A

benefits on surrender, but this is usually a non-contractual payment of non-guaranteed amount.

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7
Q

A surrender is said to occur when

A

a policyholder fails to pay all of the premiums required under the contract, and receives a lump sum (surrender value) in compensation for the premiums paid to date.

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8
Q

The amount paid (at the date of surrender) would normally

A

not be specified in the contract. But the method used to calculate the amount paid (at the date of surrender) would normally be disclosed in the policy documentation sent to the policyholders at the inception of the policy. However, contracts that give guaranteed (minimum) surrender values can exist.

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9
Q

The payment of a surrender value is just one example of

A

what can happen when a policyholder stops paying his or her contractual premiums in this way. Another example is that it is usually possible for the policy to continue, without paying any more premiums, but for a reduced benefit amount. This is called making the policy paid up.

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10
Q

Some policies do not pay any benefits if premiums cease before the contractual time: in these cases the contracts are said to

A

lapse.

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11
Q

Needs of customers

A

The type of contractual benefit offered provides a useful way of listing the main products. For each contract type, we first give a description of how the benefits provided may be useful to a consumer.

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12
Q

The basic customer needs met by life insurance contracts are

A

protection and savings. Many contracts protect people (or their dependants) from the financial consequences of unwelcome events, such as death. Other contracts are essentially investments, allowing the policyholder to build up funds for specific things such as an income in retirement, the repayment of a loan, or just a lump sum to spend as the policyholder wishes. Some contracts provide a mixture of savings and protection.

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13
Q

Risks to the insurer

A

Secondly an outline is given of the risks associated specifically with each contract. These “micro” risks are one part of the overall risk picture. The “macro” aspects are covered in later chapters.

The risks that are being referred to here are mainly risks to the insurance company, rather than the policyholder, although the risks that policyholders take on when taking out life insurance are also important. An example of a “micro” risk (to the insurance company) would be if more deaths than expected occurred on an assurance contract, leading to the insurance company making less profit than expected on the contract. An example of a “macro” risk would be the company becoming insolvent.
The risks borne by the insurance company in writing insurance business vary considerably depending on the type of contract involved. In Chapters 1 to 4 we shall study how and why this variation occurs for the different products that life insurers sell. As suggested above, a “big picture” view of the risks involved in being a life insurance company will be discussed later in the course.

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14
Q

Capital requirements

A

Depending on the contract design and the particular supervisory regulations, capital may be recouped quickly or only very slowly. All other things being equal, a company is likely to prefer contract types and designs that recoup the invested capital quickly, so that this capital can be used to fund further profitable business.

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15
Q

Taken to its logical conclusion, this would imply that companies would be selling contracts with very high premiums or charges in the first year of any contract. In practice, though, premiums (or charges) are often level or even gradually rising during the policy term. Suggest why you think this might be the case.

A

.

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16
Q

Because of its importance, therefore, we shall be considering the capital requirements of the different types of contract throughout these first four chapters.

A

.

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17
Q

New business strain: a reminder

A

A large proportion of the costs associated with the contract may occur at the start of the contract, because of items such as marketing, underwriting (the process of assessing risks) and initially setting the policy up on the company’s computer systems. In many markets it is also common practice to pay a commission to the provider of the business, eg the company’s own salesperson or an independent broker.

This means that the cashflow (ie income less outgo) in the first year will be low or, often, negative. This is the amount of money the company has on day 1 of the policy. (This is also known as the policy’s asset share as at day 1 – more about asset shares later.)
A further issue is that the insurance supervisory authorities may require that money (reserves) be specifically set aside to ensure that the company is able to meet its obligations to policyholders. In some countries the supervisory authorities require that the reserves are calculated on a prudent basis. Capital is then tied up because of this need to set aside reserves larger than those the company really believes are needed to meet payouts to policyholders.
The company may also have to maintain a minimum amount of assets in addition to those backing its assessment of liabilities. Such a “required solvency margin” ties up further capital.
The combination of the initial cash outflow, any prudence in the reserves and the need to establish a required solvency margin means that money has to be found initially in order to write the business.

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18
Q

initial capital strain can be written

A

C=V+E-P
where C0+ = Capital strain at time 0 +
V0+ = Supervisory reserves and minimum solvency margin at time 0+ E0+ = Expenses and commission incurred by time 0+
P = Premium paid by time 0+. 0+
and time 0+ is the point immediately after the policy has been issued, after the first premium has been paid, and all the initial expenses have been incurred. P0+ would be
the single premium, or the first regular (annual or monthly) premium

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19
Q

because the asset share at time 0+ can be written:

A=P-E 0+ 0+ 0+

A

then the initial capital strain is also the excess of the supervisory reserve and required solvency capital over the asset share on day 0+.)

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20
Q

The personal financial lifecycle can give an indication of

A

the needs of customers for various life and health and care products at different times in an individual’s life, eg young adult, mid-life adult etc.

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21
Q

therefore important to understand the life insurance needs of the consumer, and how these may change both over personal lifetimes and over calendar time.

A

This is, of course, an important part of the general commercial and economic environment for the insurance company. A key point is that consumer needs do not remain static, but change as lifestyles, standard of living, education and technology each change over time. For example, if more people become financially better off over time, then the demand for savings products should rise and that for protection may fall. It may also allow more people to accept more risk in the policies they buy (with the greater potential rewards they provide). This will tend to increase demand for the more risky products and reduce demand for the (more expensive) fully guaranteed products. Changes in technology and a more educated public also allow more flexible and complicated products to be sold. These are all changes that affect demand for products over calendar time.
There are also important changes in personal financial needs that affect demand for different types of products over individual lifetimes. This helps to explain the variety of products that are sold simultaneously in any life insurance marketplace. A typical personal financial life cycle (in a country with a developed economy) may proceed as follows (note that the actual age-bands may differ quite widely between individuals):

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22
Q

Ages 16 – 25

A

May still be in higher education, first job, may or may not have partner, probably
does not own home or have dependants.
Financial needs: may still have some support from parents; may be saving towards future family needs, such as buying a home; paying off student debts; likes to spend money if possible!
(This period can be very short for those who do not continue into higher education.)

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23
Q

 Ages 25 – 35

A

May have partners and sometimes children, large debts (eg if they have borrowed money to buy a home), moderate income and often high expenditure (cost of raising children) but often not much wealth. 
Financial needs: loans to meet cost of buying home and/or other high expenditure, worried about what will happen to dependants should earner(s) become sick or die. May start saving, possibly for the benefit of children as they grow older. Far-sighted individuals may perceive the need to start saving for retirement.

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24
Q

 Ages 35 – 65

A

Children become older and ultimately independent. Debts reduce, loans are paid off. Income may increase and could well outstrip expenditure. Periods of redundancy may also occur. 
Biggest financial need is to save for retirement. May also wish to provide for the cost of future long-term care (to protect against the consequences of long- term sickness or disability), and how best to manage the transfer of wealth to the next generation (on or before death). And what do you do with all that other additional disposable income?

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25
Q

 Ages over 65

A

Move from employment into retirement. Few debts, but much lower income. Should have more accumulated wealth. Main risks are running out of money if become very old, and an increasingly imminent need for long-term care. Still wish to save disposable income for leisure activities and for wealth transfer. 
As you study the remainder of this and the next six chapters, think about where each of the products you meet fits into the personal financial life cycle. Also think about whether you would expect the products described to be popular in your own country. (We will return to this again at the end of Chapter 4.)

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26
Q

The product cycle and the nature of the product

A

The risks posed to the insurer and mitigating measures should be considered at the product design stage. The product cycle can be used to identify possible risks for the particular product and feasible techniques to manage these risks.

All areas (pricing, underwriting, claims management, marketing and sales, experience monitoring and valuation) within an organisation make an important contribution to the experience that emerges. 
We will see later in the course how, for example, the product design, underwriting, claims’ management and pricing of IP, CI and LTCI products are all more complex than they are for, say, life insurance products.
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27
Q

Product design

A

The product features (eg events covered) are determined as part of product design in the product cycle. The needs of customers that the product aims to meet, risks to the insurer, distribution methods and marketing and designing administration systems and pricing are considered at the product design stage. The design of the product will be adjusted based on results from the pricing and risk identification exercises and input from marketing and sales and administration departments. Factors that should be considered in designing new products are discussed in more detail in Chapter 20.

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28
Q

Pricing 


A

Experience will vary by office, but it is imperative that the practices employed by each area of the product cycle are reflected in the premiums charged (eg weaker claims management should be reflected in higher premium rates).

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29
Q

Administration

A

Policy and claims files must be maintained by the insurer. Administration systems must be able to cope with the complexity of the product designs. For example for IP and LTCI policies the system must be able to make regular claims payments, and record a lot of information about each claim. An obvious example is that the system should not only be able to record the date a claim starts, but also the reason for the claim, the date it ceased, and why.

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30
Q

Marketing and sales

A

Marketing and sales strategies may influence the characteristics (and thus the risk) of the lives insured. 
The insurer will also need to consider the appropriate distribution method and the costs of marketing and selling the product. 


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31
Q

Underwriting and claims management

A

The rigorousness of underwriting and claims management will have a direct bearing on the claims experience of the product. However, onerous underwriting processes may have a negative impact on business volumes and a balance is therefore required. 
Underwriting and claims management are more complex for IP and LTCI products (and possibly for CI if tiered benefits are available) than for most other life assurance products. Both have fundamental implications for the resulting claims experience.

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32
Q

Experience monitoring and valuation

A

The impact of reserves including the regulatory requirements for the policyholder liabilities and capital requirements should be considered when designing the product.
Experience monitoring provides the insurer with information that can be used to update the product design, sales and claims processes, as well as assumptions used in the pricing or valuation of the liabilities. Appropriate data needs to be gathered and stored in a way that facilitates analysis of this information for experience monitoring purposes.

The impact of reserves including the regulatory requirements for the policyholder liabilities and capital requirements should be considered when designing the product.

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33
Q

Group products

A

The first seven chapters focus mainly on individual cover for life and health and care insurance products. Group life and health and care products are also available in most insurance markets.
Group business is defined as any collection of individuals who combine to make a single proposal for uniform insurance cover.
Group covers are different to individual covers in that they cover a number of individuals under a single policy document.
Usually the collected individuals will be employees in the same company and the employer will pay for the premiums either wholly or in part. In most cases, the employer is the policyholder and the employees are the insured.

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34
Q

Group products can arise where:

A

● the employer pays the whole premium on behalf of the employees 

● where the cost is shared between the two parties (the employer may pay part or all of the employee cost but the member must pay for any coverage desired for spouse or children) 

● where the employer facilitates with payroll deduction but the employee pays all costs 

● where the “group” is not employment based but linked to club membership (affinity groups) or credit cards.

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35
Q

Another key difference is that

A

while individual business may be long term, group business is written over a short period – typically one or two years. Cover would be provided for claims that occur during the period of cover, eg individuals who become disabled during the period of cover would be eligible to claim under that insurance arrangement. 
Therefore group policies may be considered to be short-term, regularly renewable products, even if they are written by a life assurance company. The premium paid for each period of cover will depend on the number of (and characteristics of the) individuals covered by the policy.

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36
Q

Contracts that insurers sell

A

Endowment assurances
Whole life assurances
Term assurances
Convertible or renewable term assurances Immediate annuity contracts
Deferred annuity contracts Unit-linked contracts Index-linked contracts
Although unit-linked and index-linked contracts have separate sections to themselves (in Chapter 4), linking is essentially an approach to product design that can be used with most of the contracts covered in Chapters 1 to 3. Hence they are not strictly products in their own right.

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37
Q

Most of the contracts in Chapters 1 to 3 could

A

come in linked or non-linked form. We shall therefore use our first contract, the endowment assurance, to illustrate both linked and non-linked designs. For the other contracts we study in Chapters 1 to 3 we shall concentrate largely on the non-linked versions. When we come to study unit-linked contracts specifically, in Chapter 4, we shall use one or two of the contract types to illustrate the key features of unit-linked designs and how they differ from non-linked designs.

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38
Q

Endowment assurances: needs of consumers

A

An endowment assurance is a contract to pay a benefit on survival to a known date and hence operates as a savings vehicle, for example to provide a lump sum on retirement, or a means of repaying the capital on an interest-only loan. The contract may also provide a significant benefit on the death of the life insured before that date and, in this case, operates also as a vehicle for providing protection for dependants.

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39
Q

leave open a range of possibilities for the amount of death benefit,

A

including no death benefit at all. Traditionally, the term “endowment assurance” has implied some sort of death benefit, while “pure endowment” has been used for contracts offering a benefit only at maturity. Here, though, the term “endowment assurance” is being used to cover both possibilities.

40
Q

Typically, a surrender value

A

would also be available. The surrender value is a product design decision and therefore does not necessarily have to be related to the benefit payable on death or maturity. For example, the actuary could decide that the surrender value is a return of a portion of the premiums paid.

41
Q

Surrender values for endowment assurances

A

usually increase over the term of the contract. urn of a portion of the premiums paid.

42
Q

Example

A

For Life Insurance Corporation of India’s New Endowment Plan (with-profits endowment plan) with an assumed term of 35 years, the guaranteed minimum surrender values expressed as a percentage of the of the guaranteed sum assured increase from 7% if surrendered after 5 years, to 37% after 20 years to 81% if surrendered in the last year of the policy.1

43
Q

Endowment assurances are often used as

A

a means of transferring wealth from, say, parents to children. The basic idea is that a parent would pay the premiums but the benefit would be payable to the child.

44
Q

Explain how you think an endowment assurance could be a more attractive means of transferring wealth than a non-insured savings method.

A

.

45
Q

An endowment assurance is sometimes used as

A

means of repaying the capital on an interest-only loan. Where this is done, the borrower pays interest (only) to the lender while the loan is outstanding. The borrower also takes out an endowment policy, the proceeds of which are designed to repay the debt.

46
Q

Another use of endowments is to provide a

A

for saving money for retirement. (We describe this use under the heading of deferred annuities in Chapter 3.)

47
Q

An endowment assurance could come in

A

without-profits, with-profits or unit-linked form. Each has significantly different characteristics and will meet different consumer needs. Here is a brief description of each.

48
Q

Without-profits endowment assurance

A

offers a guaranteed amount of money (the “sum assured”) at the end of the contract in exchange for a single premium at the start of the contract or a series of regular premiums throughout the contract. If the policyholder dies before the contract term ends then usually the same sum assured is paid on death. However, the contract could be structured with a sum assured paid on death different from that paid at maturity, or with no benefit on death

49
Q

With-profits endowment assurance

A

also known as participating insurance contracts.)
The structure of what we know as conventional with-profits contracts is similar to that of the without-profits contract, except that the initial sum assured is expected to be enhanced by the declaration of bonuses to the policyholder. In the UK, bonuses usually take the form of additions to the amount of benefit, and this is also true in many other countries. In some other countries bonuses are given as regular cash payments, or as a reduction in future premiums.
As well as the conventional type of with-profits policy, there is also an accumulating type of with-profits structure. We will cover this when we look at with-profits business in detail later in the course.

50
Q

A conventional with-profits endowment and a without-profits endowment both have an initial sum assured of £10,000. All other things being equal, which would have the higher initial premium, and why?

A

./

51
Q

When using an endowment to pay off a loan, a with-profits policy is much more often used than a without-profits policy. Why do you think this is?

A

.

52
Q

Unit-linked

A

operate by paying policyholder premiums into pooled investment funds. The benefit payable at maturity depends on the performance of the underlying assets and the level of charges levied by the insurance company.

The benefit on death might be, for example:
● a fixed sum (eg £10,000), or 

● the value of units, or 

● some percentage (eg 120%) of the value of units. 


53
Q

This makes unit-linked policies very

A

very versatile: if the first option is chosen, with a very high sum assured (relative to the premium), then the policy can be almost entirely protection. Choose a lower level of sum assured (or, equally, a higher premium), then you could end up with unit funds accumulating up to the sum assured level after a period of, say, 20 years. This would be similar to the non-linked endowment described above, with death benefit equal to, or at least the same order of magnitude as, the survival benefit. (This version would be chosen if the unit-linked endowment were to be used for paying off a loan.) 
With either of the second two versions the emphasis would be on savings, so these might be appropriate if the policy was being used as a retirement savings policy, for example. 
All three versions are commonly found in practice, because they are used to meet different needs. 


54
Q

The benefit payable on surrender,

A

typically also depends on the performance of the underlying assets (net of charges), but will be reduced by a surrender penalty. The size of the penalty is a product design decision.
The company levies its charges in order to cover expenses and the cost of life cover, and (probably) to make a profit. The charges may be taken from premiums before they are invested in units and / or as deductions from the unit fund.
A range of investment funds may be offered, for example International Equities, European Bonds, Venezuelan Tin Futures etc.
We cover unit-linked contracts in more detail a little later in the course.

55
Q

Group endowment assurances

A

usually arise as a way for an employer to provide some form of insurance cover or savings benefit to employees as part of their overall remuneration package.
A group endowment assurance would enable, for example, an employer to provide benefits for employees at retirement, and maybe also on death in service.
In this case, the contract would effectively consist of a collection of individual endowment assurances, one for each employee.
As with individual contracts, group endowment assurances could be without-profits, with-profits or unit-linked.

56
Q

Suggest a practical problem with such an arrangement that would not arise on an individual contract.

A

.

57
Q

Example

A

A large unit-linked group endowment assurance might have the following features:
● All contributions, ie premiums, are paid by the sponsoring employer. 

● The only charge is a monthly percentage of each member’s fund. 

● The scheme provides a cash fund for each member, equal to the value of units, which is used to purchase an annuity at retirement. 


58
Q

Investment risk

A

The savings nature of the contract introduces an investment risk, the extent of which depends on whether the contract is unit-linked, index-linked, without-profits or with-profits.
Note that we are concentrating here on the amount of investment risk borne by the life insurance company, rather than the policyholder. In other words, if the assets held to meet the liabilities perform badly, to what extent is the company adversely affected?

59
Q

Mortality risk

A

The nature of the death benefit provided will determine whether there is a mortality risk and the nature of that risk. Possible approaches include:
● A significant benefit, for example a without-profits contract where the benefit on death equals that payable on survival. There will be a significant mortality risk at the start of the contract, but this will reduce as duration in force increases.

60
Q

Comment briefly on how much risk a life insurance company faces from adverse investment performance in the cases of without-profits, with-profits and unit-linked endowment assurances.

A

.

61
Q

Explain why there is this pattern of risk over time.

A

.

62
Q

Associated with this mortality risk will be

A

an anti-selection risk. The extent of this risk will depend on the extent of the actual, or perceived, choice the policyholder had in effecting the contract.
Anti-selection can involve, for example, an applicant for insurance using knowledge he or she has about their own state of health to gain favourable terms from an insurer. For example, a person who knows he is seriously ill may apply for insurance. Life insurance companies protect themselves against this risk in various ways, the chief of which is underwriting. We shall consider anti- selection and underwriting in more detail later in the course.

63
Q

Return of premiums or “fund”.mortality risk is likely to be

A

insignificant except near the start of the contract. 
The exact interpretation of “fund” will vary from contract to contract, but broadly it is an accumulation of premiums and similar in concept to the “asset share”. In the case of a unit-linked contract the most likely interpretation of “fund” would be the value of the policyholder’s unit account at the time of death.

64
Q

No death benefit.

A

Here there will be a longevity risk, the significance of which will increase with duration in force. 
Clearly, if the contract pays a benefit only on survival to maturity then the company risks losing money if fewer policyholders than expected die. In effect the death strain at risk is negative, and becomes increasingly so as the policy approaches maturity. This is why the significance of the risk increases with duration in force.

65
Q

Expense risk

A

that the actual marginal costs of administering the contract need to be met. 


66
Q

Explain why this mortality risk might be more significant near the start of a contract.

A

.

67
Q

The marginal costs of a contract are

A

those costs which are incurred because the policy exists. The most obvious example of a marginal cost is commission, which is incurred only when the policy is in force (both at the start of the policy, and also often when further premiums are paid). But there are others: eg costs of postage and telephone calls to policyholders, printing of policy documents or statements – these are all marginal costs provided they would not have been incurred if the policy was not in existence.
The non-marginal costs are referred to as fixed costs or overheads. The vast majority of staff-related costs are fixed, at least in the short term, as staff are not hired or fired continuously in proportion to the volume of business administered by the company. For example, the number of actuaries the company employs will remain relatively stable over a period of time, whether the company is in a sales boom or a sales depression.
Meeting the marginal costs is the very least that the company should require from a contract. In most cases, a contribution to the company’s fixed costs and profit will also be required. Strictly, the risk is that the total actual expenses (over a period) are higher than the total contributions received towards those expenses from the charges and/or premiums received by the company. As these charges or premiums reflect the assumptions made for future expenses when the products were priced, then this can be regarded as the risk that the company’s expenses are greater than the levels assumed when pricing the business.
Expenses might prove higher than expected for many reasons, for example because of higher than expected price inflation, or because of lower than expected sales of business.

68
Q

Explain why lower than expected sales of business can lead to expenses being higher than expected.

A

.

69
Q

Withdrawal risk

A

Persistency risk is the risk that the number of withdrawals is different to that expected.

Withdrawals could include not only surrenders and lapses, but also partial withdrawals and paid-up policies.

70
Q

At times when the asset share is negative,

A

there is a financial risk from withdrawal. At other times, whether there is such a risk depends on how any withdrawal benefit paid compares with the asset share.
When the asset share is negative on withdrawal, the company will lose money even if it pays the policyholder nothing. When the asset share is positive, the company will lose money if the withdrawal benefit is larger than the asset share.

Asset shares are covered fully a little later in the course. But in order to get you started…
…Broadly speaking, the asset share of a policy is the accumulation of the premiums paid under the contract (ie including any investment return earned), minus the expenses incurred and the cost of the benefits provided. It is sometimes referred to as the “earned asset share”. An important point about an asset share is that it is built up from actual cashflows attributed to individual policies, accumulated at actual earned rates of investment return.

71
Q

When is the asset share of an endowment assurance policy most likely to be negative?

A

.

72
Q

hen we were talking about mortality risk, we looked at the death strain – the difference between the death benefit and the reserve of the policy at the time of death. But when we talk about withdrawal risk, we are looking at the difference between the withdrawal benefit and the asset share at the time of claim. This suggests that the loss made by a death and a withdrawal would be different even if they paid out the same amounts and related to identical policies, because the reserve and the asset share would not be the same.

A

.

73
Q

Risks under group contracts

A

group version of the contract adds no additional risks and any anti-selection risk is likely to be much reduced, particularly if it is compulsory for all eligible members to join the group contract.
However, the grouped nature of the contract does mean that a concentration of risk may arise. For example, the contract might cover employees in the same workplace, where an industrial accident could result in a number of claims.

The reduced anti-selection risk follows from the restricted choice that individuals may have where group schemes are concerned. For example, depending on the product and the market in which it is sold:
● Membership of the group may be compulsory (eg for all employees of a company). 

● There may be restrictions on the level of cover each member can have (perhaps related to salary).

74
Q

Capital requirements

A

How much initial capital is needed to write a contract

75
Q

How much initial capital is needed to write a contract depends on a number of factors. The key factors given below apply not only to endowment assurances but also much more generally.

A

The capital requirement will depend on:
● the design of the contract 

● the frequency of payment of the premium 

● the relationship between the pricing and supervisory reserving bases 

● the additional solvency capital requirements 

● the level of the initial expenses. 


76
Q

Contract design

A

The key issue in contract design, as far as capital requirements are concerned, is whether the design enables reserves and solvency margin requirements to be kept low. Broadly speaking, the lower the initial reserves, the lower the initial capital requirement. The slower the increase in reserves over the contract’s term, the faster any invested capital is released. This issue therefore interacts with the issue of how supervisory reserves are calculated.

77
Q

Example

A

In many countries, unit-linked contracts can be made very capital efficient. Under one possible design a very low (even zero) percentage of the early premiums paid is allocated to unit funds. Because the unit-related liability is low (or zero), the supervisory reserve needed to cover it is very low (or zero). Most or all of the early premiums can be used to recoup the insurance company’s initial expenses and provide a.profit.
In addition, because unit-linked business usually gives low guarantees, the solvency margin requirement is usually low.

78
Q

One of the advantages of a unit-linked contract over a non-linked contract is said to be better value for money to the policyholder. Explain whether you would expect this to be the case for the ultra capital efficient policy described above.

A

.

79
Q

Frequency of premium payment

A

Rank the following in decreasing order of capital required, for an endowment assurance: regular annual payment in advance, regular monthly payment in advance, single premium.

80
Q

Relationship between pricing and supervisory reserving bases

A

We shall illustrate the key idea under this heading with a simple example. Imagine that a company is writing single premium without-profits endowment assurances and is aiming to break even. Let us also imagine that the company’s experience (in particular, the amount of its initial expenses) is exactly as expected according to its pricing basis for the contract. If the company calculates its supervisory reserves using its premium basis assumptions, and there is no solvency margin requirement, then there will be no initial capital strain. This follows from the fact that the premium has been calculated to pay the initial expenses and then be exactly sufficient, on the premium basis (= reserving basis), to meet ongoing expenses and the final benefit.
However, if the reserving basis is stronger than the pricing basis then the premium charged will seem insufficient, on the reserving basis, to meet the expenses and the benefit. Capital will therefore be needed to set up the required reserves at outset. The stronger the reserving basis compared with the pricing basis, the more capital is needed.

81
Q

Additional solvency capital requirements

A

The supervisory authority will require that each insurance company holds enough assets to cover the sum of the supervisory reserves and the required solvency capital.
In some countries the supervisory reserves may be large (based on very prudent assumptions) and only a relatively low level of solvency capital may be required. In other countries reserves may be lower but solvency capital requirements may be much higher. Although these two approaches may appear to be different, the impact on the amount of capital the insurance company needs to may be very similar.
We realise that some of the ideas in this and the previous subsection are quite difficult if you are studying the course for the first time, so we recommend that you come back to this chapter after you have read Part 4 of the Course, which covers supervisory reserving and solvency capital in detail.

82
Q

What will happen if the reserving basis is weaker than the pricing basis?

A

.The premium would exceed the amount needed to be set aside as reserves and so some profit would immediately be released to the insurance company’s free assets, rather than capital having to be found from the insurance company’s free assets.
However the requirement to hold some solvency capital, so that in total the sum of the supervisory reserves plus solvency capital is prudent, would be expected to prevent this happening.

83
Q

The level of initial expenses

A

The higher the level of initial expenses the less the initial asset share will be. If nothing else changes, then clearly this will increase the capital requirement. If the increase in initial expenses has been anticipated in the pricing basis – ie the premiums charged include the relevant loading for these initial expenses – then in theory we can allow for this in the reserves by taking credit for the expected present value of these loadings that we expect to receive in the future. Hence, if this credit were to be taken in full, then the reduction in the asset share would be balanced by the reduction in the (net) reserves required, resulting in no change to the capital requirement. (Actuarial funding, and the use of negative non-unit reserves are examples of this process: but more about these later.)
However, this rarely, if ever, works out entirely in practice. Firstly, it may not be possible to reduce the supervisory reserve. This would ultimately depend on the supervisory regulations of the country in question, but could easily arise if, for example, the asset share is negative and the supervisory reserve is at its minimum allowable level. Secondly, initial expenses might be higher than expected in the pricing basis, in which case the future expense loadings are not increased (in other words, a real loss has been made).

84
Q

Products with very high first-year premiums or initial charges

A

may not be marketable. Another way of thinking about this is that such a product design does not meet the needs of the public, for example policyholders may be less able to afford high costs early on in the policy term than later on in the term. Another factor is the expectations of the public in the light of companies’ past practice: if life insurance has traditionally been paid for by issuing policies with level premiums, then it is hard to do things in a very different way subsequently.
Examples like this often happen in real life: the interests of policyholder and insurance company often differ and cannot both be satisfied fully by the decision reached. In this case the “compromise” reflects the policyholders’ requirements, as the alternative could well result in no policies being sold at all!

85
Q

If the sum assured on death is chosen to be the same as at maturity,

A

then the endowment assurance provides the guarantee that a substantial wealth transfer will be made whether or not the policyholder survives the intended savings period. A non-insured savings method would simply have accumulated the contributions paid in by the date of death, and this could be very small (eg if the person died after only a short time).

86
Q

The premium for the with-profits contract

A

should be larger, probably significantly so.
This is because the with-profits premium is set to provide an expected benefit that is much larger than the initial guaranteed amount, whether as additions to the eventual benefit, as cash bonuses, or as reductions in future premiums.

87
Q

Although the premium for the same sum assured is higher under with-profits,

A

the expectation is that the final payout on maturity (including the bonuses to be added in future) will represent a substantially better return on the policyholder’s premiums than under the without-profits contract. When the loan is paid off, the extra money would be payable to the policyholder. Alternatively, a smaller policy could be taken out to start with (with smaller premiums and smaller initial sum assured), on the basis that this sum assured plus expected future bonuses will together be enough to pay off the loan at maturity, and give the possibility of additional benefit to the policyholder. This leads to a policyholder risk, however, because the future bonuses would not be guaranteed to be enough to pay off the loan at maturity.
This risk has, unfortunately, become reality for many endowment mortgage policyholders over recent years in the UK. The repercussions for the UK life insurance industry have been severe. Much bad press has arisen from allegations of mis-selling, with insurers and their intermediaries accused of not properly communicating the risks of these arrangements to policyholders. The end result has been a virtual cessation of all such business (for this purpose) in the UK market.
In summary, it is the possibility of additional reward that (in theory) makes the with- profits version attractive. The non-profit version offers nothing to the policyholder that a standard repayment mortgage plus decreasing term assurance does not. In fact, the endowment route is probably worse, as it introduces (to the policyholder) the third party risk that the insurer will default before the mortgage is repaid, and probably incurs higher costs via the expense and guarantee loadings in the premium rate. (We describe decreasing term assurances in the next chapter.)
Don’t worry if all this wasn’t obvious to you straight away. It should become clear when you study with-profits policies in detail later in the course.

88
Q

The main problem would be mobility of the workforce (by “mobility” we mean “the ability to change jobs frequently”).

A

With a highly mobile workforce, the administration of such an arrangement would become costly. It might also result in poor surrender values for employees who leave after a short time, if the individual contracts have to be surrendered on leaving.
(Alternatively, it might mean losses for the insurance company if for any reason, such as government legislation, it has to pay over-generous surrender values to employees who leave.)

89
Q

On a without-profits contract

A

the benefit is guaranteed, and so if the achieved investment returns are lower than allowed for in the premiums then the insurance company will make a loss, all other things being equal.

90
Q

The investment risk is rather lower on with-profits contracts.

A

If investment returns are lower than expected then the insurance company may be able to reduce bonuses.
However:
● There is still a guaranteed element that the insurance company must meet. 

● Policyholder expectations may limit the scope and speed of bonus reductions. 

● It is possible that shareholders (where there are any) share in the investment profits of the company. If so, they would lose from reduced investment return. 

● Poor investment returns may discourage future sales of with-profits policies. The extent to which this is true depends on the market and on the way in which the policies are sold. (Because this affects sales, we can actually think of this as a marketing risk.) 


91
Q

On unit-linked business the investment risk is essentially borne by the policyholder

A

not the insurance company. However: 

● If there are charges linked to fund size then these charges are reduced by poor investment performance. 

● As for with-profits contracts, poor performance relative to the competition may damage future sales. 
Even so, the direct exposure of the insurance company to investment risk on unit-linked contracts is low.

92
Q

as the reserve underlying the contract builds up

A

The sum at risk (ie the sum assured minus the reserve) reduces as the reserve underlying the contract builds up. So, for every death that occurs near the start of the contract, the company loses more money than for every death nearer the end of the contract. 


93
Q

When a contract is priced

A

an assumption will be made about the expected average amount of expenses incurred per policy in force. Because some of the expenses are fixed (ie independent of the number of policies in force) then the actual average expenses per policy will rise if fewer policies are in force – which will generally be the case if fewer policies are sold. However, each policy’s contribution to the expected expenses will remain the same, so that, on a per-policy basis, the actual expenses will have increased relative to the expected expenses.

94
Q

Asset shares are most likely to be negative in

A

first few months or years of a regular premium contract, because of high initial expenses.

95
Q

The reserve (by which we mean the supervisory reserve) is

A

how much physical money the company is actually holding towards the liability under the policy. The asset share represents how much money the company has accumulated to date from the historical cashflows from the policy.
Suppose a policy has current asset share £900 and a reserve of £1,200. A claim arises which is settled by a lump sum payment of £1,300.
First look at the asset share. The company has accumulated £900 from the policy, but has to pay out £1,300: so it has made a total accumulated loss of £400.
However, because the company was holding reserves of £1,200 but will need no reserve for the policy going forwards, the company only needs to find a further £100 to meet the claim cost. That is, the company has a capital shortfall of £100, and must fund this sum from its available capital resources (or failing that, become insolvent!).

So we can see that:
● [claim cost] – [reserve] is the capital loss incurred by the policy at the time of claim 

● [claim cost] – [asset share] is the overall accumulated loss from the policy at the point immediately after the claim has been paid. 
If the above amounts are negative, then: 

● [reserve] – [claim cost] is the amount of capital (or supervisory profit) released by the policy at the date of claim 

● [asset share] – [claim cost] is the total amount of profit that the policy has accumulated for the company at the point immediately after the claim has been paid. 
Note that it is quite possible for one of the above to give a loss and the other to give a profit. 
Note that [claim cost] – [asset share] might ignore the cost of capital. The actual loss to the shareholders should include the opportunity cost of holding reserves.

96
Q

A product that is very capital efficient will

A

not need to generate as much profit (per £ of premium) to service the capital. So it should be cheaper for the policyholder and, in this respect, the more capital efficient the better.

97
Q

Essentially the ratio of the premiums received by time 0+, to the amount of initial expenses incurred at time 0+

A

, increases as you go down the list. Typically the asset share at time 0+ would be severely negative for the monthly premium case (remember only one monthly premium will have been received), a bit less negative for the annual premium case, and heavily positive for the single premium contract.
You should note that there is some compensation for this, as credit for the expected present value of future premiums would be taken in the statutory reserves. However the insurance company may not be able to take full credit for the future premiums under the first two contracts, as there is a risk that the policyholder withdraws or dies before the premiums are paid, and so additional solvency capital or higher reserves may need to be held to cover this risk. But with the single premium case, full credit for all possible premiums occurs – because they have all been received!
This assumes that there are no unlikely distortions such as particularly heavy single premium commission.