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Life 2003

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Title: Life 2003


1
Life 2003
  • Risk Management Issues and Solutions in the Life
    Industry
  • Birmingham
  • 9 11 November 2003
  • Paul Stanworth Huw Williams
  • Royal Bank of Scotland

2
Agenda
  • Strategic Issues in the Insurance Industry
  • Applications of Derivatives for Life Insurance
  • Practicalities of Implementing Derivative
    Solutions Collateral Admissibility

3
Section 1
  • Strategic Issues in the Insurance Industry

4
A changing environmentBackground Regulatory,
Agency Accounting
5
Regulatory Accounting BackgroundRisk Management
  • Regulatory and accounting backgrounds will be
    changing significantly over the next 2 years
  • The changing environment will drive insurers
    (both UK and European) into more risk management
    and transfer techniques

6
InsurersRequiring Specialist Solutions
Insurance Issues
Regulatory Change Credit Rating
Pressure Difficult Market Conditions Internatio
nal Accounting Changes Sandler Review Solvency
II Basel II
Bonds, Equity, Property Cash Management Future
s FX Management Derivatives execution Regulat
ory Compliance Rating Agency Compliance
Reinsurance Concentration Risk Management Long
Term Guarantee Management WP asset strategy and
eventual product replacement Inflation
protection strategies Pension Fund Risk
Solutions Capital Management Advisory Retail
Product Development Yield enhancement and Cost
minimisation
7
The Role of Derivatives
  • Derivatives can feature as part of the solution
    for many of these issues
  • New product creation
  • Hedging in a fair value environment
  • Increasing emphasis on banking style risk
    management
  • Yield enhancement
  • The following slides illustrate the extent to
    which derivatives are used by all market
    participants by plotting the growth of the
    interest rate swap market since 1989.
  • Interest rate swaps are used for illustration
    since they are the most common product used for
    interest rate risk management (just over 80 of
    the interest rate derivative market by
    outstanding notional amount).
  • These slides highlight the importance of
    derivatives as an asset class and a risk
    management tool.

8
Interest Rate SwapsMarket Growth
Sources International Swaps Derivatives
Association and BIS
9
Interest Rate SwapsComparison with UK domestic
debt
Sources International Swaps Derivatives
Association, BIS, DMO
10
Interest Rate SwapsTenors
  • Quotes available out to 50 years
  • Reasonable liquidity out to 40 years




Source Reuters
11
Section 2
  • Applications of Derivatives for Life Insurance

12
Uses of DerivativesStrategic Tactical
  • Strategic Applications
  • Interest rate swaps duration convexity
    management, cashflow matching
  • Inflation swaps hedging inflation sensitivity,
    asset creation (LPI), cashflow matching
  • Interest rate options hybrids hedging
    guarantees
  • Equity derivatives product creation
  • Credit derivatives product creation
  • Tactical Applications
  • Cross-currency swaps other swaps asset swaps
    to widen the investment universe
  • Interest rate derivatives tactical curve and
    rate views
  • Equity puts or collar-type strategies managing
    equity downside risk
  • Credit derivatives yield enhancement, portfolio
    credit risk management

13
Interest Rate SwapsDefinition
DEFINITION An exchange between two parties of
interest rate exposures from floating to fixed
rate or vice versa. The interest payments are
calculated on a notional underlying principal
amount.
14
Duration ExtensionInterest Rate Swap Overlay
  • The graphs below illustrate how the modified
    duration of the bond portfolio can be improved to
    match closely the modified duration of the
    liabilities by overlaying a standard (generic)
    receive fixed interest rate swap.
  • The value of the interest rate swap to the scheme
    will start off at zero and will increase when
    interest rates fall and decrease when rates rise,
    which creates the effect of higher duration.
  • The swap gives an efficient way of going long a
    long-dated fixed rate bond and shorting an FRN to
    fund the position

15
Duration ManagementFurther Strategies
  • ISSUE Dont want cashflows in the short-term to
    be affected.
  • SOLUTION Make the swap forward-starting i.e.
    swap starts in one-years time.
  • ISSUE The liabilities have a higher convexity
    than the bonds swap (as can be seen from the
    curvature of the lines in the bottom right hand
    graph on the previous page)
  • SOLUTION Duration and convexity can be matched
    with two interest rate swaps (one longer dated
    and one shorter dated) or an interest rate swap
    plus a constant maturity swap.
  • ISSUE Bonds swap portfolio is sensitive to
    spikes at particular points on the yield curve or
    to yield curve rotations.
  • SOLUTION Increase number of swaps with a spread
    of maturities
  • ISSUE Want to increase bond portfolio
    sensitivity as rates fall but not as rates rise.
  • SOLUTION Buy a receivers swaption i.e.
    option on a receive fixed swap

16
Annuity Fund Cashflow Matching
  • Example RPI-linked annuities
  • Match with inflation-linked assets but only an
    imprecise cashflow match possible with
    index-linked gilts and supply of inflation-linked
    corporate bonds insufficient.
  • Left with reinvestment risk/liquidity risk

17
Annuity Fund Cashflow MatchingPotential range of
mismatch
  • Modelling method
  • Correlated one-factor short rate models for
    nominal and real yields (CIR for nominal
    shifted CIR for real)
  • Process for nominal rates calibrated to swaps and
    caps. Real yield process calibrated so that
    resultant RPI levels are consistent with RPI
    LPI swap pricing

18
Annuity Fund Cashflow MatchingAdditional Cash
  • PV of ILG portfolio required to meet liability
    payments 1.14bn assuming that cash can be
    invested or reinvested at rates implied by
    todays LIBOR curve
  • However
  • Deposits may earn below LIBOR
  • Future LIBOR rates will differ from those implied
    by todays curve
  • The chart below illustrates the additional
    amounts of cash required at the start to ensure
    sufficient assets at different confidence levels
    allowing for the variation in future LIBOR (but
    not sub-LIBOR funding).

19
Inflation Swap OverlayCashflow Matching for
Annuity Funds
  • An inflation swap can be used to exchange
    cashflows generated by a bond portfolio for
    RPI-linked or LPI-linked cashflows to match the
    precise nature and timing of annuity payments.
  • This gives a more precise inflation match than
    with index-linked gilts and allows freedom to
    invest in a wide range of underlying assets.


20
Hedging GuaranteesSwaptions and CMS floors
  • Standard hedge for GAOs in the UK
  • Insurer buys a strip of receivers swaptions
  • Cash Payoff max(0, (5 - r20y) x a(20, r20y) )
  • Common hedge for minimum interest rate guarantees
    in Europe either receivers swaptions or CMS
    floors
  • As with the standard interest rate floor contract
    a CMS floor consists of a strip of options known
    as floorlets. The CMS floor contract will
    specify
  • Nominal amount
  • Strike
  • Maturity of floor
  • Frequency of floorlets (i.e annual, semi-annual
    or quarterly)
  • The reference swap rate to use (e.g. The 10yr
    Euribor swap rate as quoted on Reuters).
  • When this swap rate is referenced (e.g. set in
    advance two days before the date of the previous
    floorlet payment date or set in arrears two days
    before the date of the current floorlet payment)

21
CMS Floors Example
  • For a floor with a nominal of 150m, strike of
    4.75, 10-year maturity, annual floorlets, based
    on the 10 year swap rate, set in arrears there
    will be
  • 10 floorlets with payments made annually.
  • The payoff for each floorlet will be
  • Payoff 150m x max(0, 4.75 - 10 year CMS rate)
  • Where the 10 year CMS rate is the 10 year EUR
    interest rate swap rate taken from Reuters two
    days before payment.
  • So if the observed rate is 3.5, the payoff will
    be 150m x (4.75 - 3.5) 1.875m

22
Receivers Swaptions CMS floors CMS floor
replication by receivers swaptions
Convex swaption payoff
Lines cross at 20y rate 3.13. 20yr annuity
value 14.70 _at_ 3.13, which is the ratio of the
CMS notional to the swaption notional
Linear floorlet payoff
CMS payoff exceeds swaption payoff at rates
closer to strike
23
Section 3
  • Practicalities of Implementing Derivative
    Strategies
  • Collateral Admissibility

24
Counterparty Credit Risk Collateral
  • OTC derivatives create counterparty credit
    exposure
  • Exposure can be managed through a collateral
    process
  • Counterparty who is out-of-the-money provides
    security in the form of collateral to the party
    who is in-the-money similar to variation margin
    for exchange-traded contracts.
  • Market standard International Swaps Derivatives
    Association (ISDA) documentation is used to
    support the collateral process in the form of a
    Credit Support Annex (CSA) to an ISDA Master
    Agreement
  • Collateral agreements becoming standard across
    all market participants.
  • According to the ISDA Margin Survey 2003
  • US 719bn of collateral in circulation
  • 38,500 agreements in place

25
Common Collateral Terminology
26
Collateral Call Example
  • Example CSA terms between Party A and Party B
  • Zero threshold
  • Monthly valuation date (30th of each month)
  • Minimum transfer amount of 1,000,000
  • Rounding 100,000
  • Derivative portfolio valuation as at close of
    business on 29th 23,465,341 in-the-money to
    Party A. Collateral already held by Party A
    15.3m
  • Delivery amount after rounding 8.2m to Party A

27
Derivative Contracts - Admissibility
  • Current guidance admissible value only if the
    derivative instrument satisfies
  • Efficient portfolio management or reduction of
    risk
  • Held in connection with admissible assets
  • Fully covered
  • Listed on a regulated market or transacted with
    an approved counterparty
  • Can be readily closed out
  • Based on underlying assets which are admissible,
    an index of such assets or an official index of
    retail prices
  • Have a prescribed pricing basis
  • New guidance is on its way

28
What does the Future Hold?
  • Simplified regulation
  • Clear accounting treatment
  • Derivatives a mainstream risk management tool
  • Questions

29
Contacts
  • The contents of this document are indicative and
    are subject to change without notice. This
    document is intended for your sole use on the
    basis that before entering into this, and/or any
    related transaction, you will ensure that you
    fully understand the potential risks and return
    of this, and/or any related transaction and
    determine it is appropriate for you given your
    objectives, experience, financial and operational
    resources, and other relevant circumstances. You
    should consult with such advisors as you deem
    necessary to assist you in making these
    determinations. The Royal Bank of Scotland plc
    (RBS) will not act as your advisor or owe any
    fiduciary duties to you in connection with this,
    and/or any related transaction and no reliance
    may be placed on RBS for advice or
    recommendations of any sort. RBS makes no
    representations or warranties with respect to the
    information and disclaims all liability for any
    use you or your advisors make of the contents of
    this document. RBS and its affiliates, connected
    companies, employees or clients may have an
    interest in financial instruments of the type
    described in this document and/or related
    financial instruments. Such interest may include
    dealing, trading, holding, acting as
    market-makers in such instruments and may include
    providing banking, credit and other financial
    services to any company or issuer of securities
    or financial instruments referred to herein. RBS
    is authorised and regulated in the UK by the
    Financial Services Authority, in Hong Kong by the
    Hong Kong Monetary Authority, in Singapore by the
    Monetary Authority of Singapore, in Japan by the
    Financial Services Agency of Japan, in Australia
    by the Australian Securities and Investments
    Commission and in the US, by the New York State
    Banking Department and the Federal Reserve Board.
    The financial instruments described in this
    document are made in compliance with an
    applicable exemption from the registration
    requirements of the US Securities Act of 1933
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