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Capital Adequacy

Capital Adequacy. Test 1 – Quantum of assets test Aims to ensure that the fund holds sufficient assets so that, after 12 months of adverse experience, it would have more assets that its (then) prudent liabilities. Stress Test.

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Capital Adequacy

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  1. Capital Adequacy Test 1 – Quantum of assets test Aims to ensure that the fund holds sufficient assets so that, after 12 months of adverse experience, it would have more assets that its (then) prudent liabilities.

  2. Stress Test Represents the amount by which a fund’s capital could deplete over 12 months under a 2nd percentile stressed scenario. Four elements: Stressed net margin estimate; Stressed investment income estimate; Stressed other income estimate; and Tax. The insurer needs to use its own method, assumptions and data in order to: Determine the appropriate percentile to stress the three elements to give a 2nd percentile overall; Determine the size of each of the stresses at that percentile.

  3. Stress Test Stress test amount calculated based on distribution of: Net margin, which in turn is based on: Expected premium $, with rate increase capped at a level slightly above recent insurer-specific benefit increase (yet to be defined); and Stressed net margin %; Stressed investment income $; and Stressed other income $. Correlation between these three classes needs to be considered.

  4. Stress Test - Issues Method Probabilistic or stochastic? Actuarial black box? Data What is a 1 in 50 bad year? At individual component level, what is a 1 in (say) 20 bad year? Stressed net margin - is past data suitable? If so, for how long? Stressed investment income Allows for market risk, credit risk and balance sheet risk (i.e. incorrect value) Where is the data for these risks? How is the stress determined?

  5. Stress Test - Issues Communication Board of insurer needs to ensure that each element of the Standards is properly calculated. How do they ensure the stress test is “properly calculated”? How does the AA engage with Board and management?

  6. Stress Test - Issues

  7. Stress Test - Issues

  8. Insights – 2 July 2013 – PHI Capital Standards Part 2: Other Capital Adequacy Items, &Capital Management Policy

  9. Other Cap Ad components (“Quantum”) Operational Risk: - $1m + ½%: - Growth component removed - Includes ½% of non-insurance-business HRB revenue Prudent Liabilities: - Pragmatic uplift from insurers 75% PoA accounting estimates - Other liabilities (eg loyalty bonus) need 98% PoA estimates - Pragmatic use of commencing liabilities Supervisory Adjustment: - As always, PHIAC have room to intervene, but subject to AAT Subordinated Debt: - Tougher rules: “genuinely loss absorbing” - but can keep previously approved S.D.

  10. Other Cap Ad components (“Concentration”) “Capital Adequacy Maximum Default Loss Amount” (‘CAMDLA’?): - single maximum counterparty exposure - excluding Fed/State/Territory government, ADI - net of recoveries CAMDLA must exceed: (Prudent liabilities) + (Supervisory adjustment if any) Practical issues?: - Look through = a continuous responsibility - Property: related parties, subdivisions, strata titles

  11. Capital Management Policy Has been foreshadowed and informally “required” for years Significantly more formal requirements: Contents and Process Contents: - Stated risk appetite - Capital targets - Triggers for action; and options for action - Link to pricing policy and implications for prices (i.e. customers) - Investment policy - Liquidity management Process: - Authority (Board approved) - Timing (at least every 2 years - Method (probabilistic)

  12. Issues? Cap Ad Quantum: Pragmatic Prudent liabilities for Cap Ad – are the value factors too simplistic? Does the pragmatism act unfairly in some circumstances? Operational risk on non-health-insurance HRB – does this matter? Are the subordinated debt rules too tough? Cap Ad Concentration: Look through = a continuous responsibility; will this limit reasonable actions? Strata title and similar – insurer’s obligation to self-assess whether parties are related Cap Ad Overall: does Cap Ad produce too low or too high a requirement? Capital Management Policy: Significantly more responsibility on the Board – Cap Ad seems lower, so CMP will drive capital from first principles? What are the headline risks that capital must protect against? Failure to meet policyholder promises? – previously this has been negligible Failure to meet regulatory obligations? Failure to meet shareholder goals? Are “probabilistic” methods sufficient alone? Are additional analyses necessary? Greater sophistication required from most insurer’s plans

  13. Insights – 2 July 2013 – PHI Capital Standards Part 3: Solvency requirements

  14. Solvency requirementOverview Equities @ 50% value Cash and Aus gov. bonds % of future contributions Maximum loss on the largest asset counterparty group (Band 1 assets) % of future contributions

  15. Solvency requirementComparison to previous capital standards

  16. Solvency requirementQualifying assets • Introduction • Not all assets are counted for solvency purposes • Qualifying assets are divided into 2 bands

  17. Solvency requirementQualifying assets Band 2 • 50% of the value counted • Securities listed on the ASX or a principal foreign exchange • Board must be satisfied that these assets can be readily converted to cash under highly stressed market scenarios No allowance for other assets not in the prescribed list, even if it satisfies the definition. Eg highly liquid foreign government bonds No guidance on a reasonable methodology in which the Board should adopt its opinion Band 1 • 100% of the value counted • Definition: “highest liquidity and are expected to remain so over any reasonably foreseeable future stressed circumstances” • Prescribed asset types • Cash and cash equivalents (AASB definitions) • Assets with Australian government counterparty (excluding risk equalisation receivable)

  18. Solvency requirementQualifying assets AASB107 Para 7 Cash equivalents are held for the purpose of meeting short-term cash commitments rather than for investment or other purposes. For an investment to qualify as a cash equivalent it must be readily convertible to a known amount of cash and be subject to an insignificant risk of changes in value. Therefore, an investment normally qualifies as a cash equivalent only when it has a short maturity of, say, three months or less from the date of acquisition. Equity investments are excluded from cash equivalents unless they are, in substance, cash equivalents, for example in the case of preferred shares acquired within a short period of their maturity and with a specified redemption date.

  19. Solvency requirementCash management amount • 8% of the fund’s Health Business Revenue Estimate (HBR) for the next 12 months as per the Cap. Ad. Stress Test • PHIAC’s view is that liquidity requirements are related to contribution income. • Does not give credit to high profit margins

  20. Solvency requirementStressed losses amount • HBR x min [62% x SEUs-0.22, 13%] • Health Business Revenue Estimate (HBR)

  21. Solvency requirementSolvency Maximum Default Loss Amount and Solvency Supervisory Adjustment amount • Solvency Maximum Default Loss Amount • Same as the Cap. Ad. Equivalent but only applied to Band 1 assets • Solvency Supervisory Adjustment amount • As per Cap. Ad – if PHIAC believes any of the other Solvency components are inadequate • Not shown in the graph

  22. Solvency requirementSolvency Maximum Default Loss Amount and Solvency Supervisory Adjustment amount • Stressed losses amount – revenue basis • Term deposit treatment • Liquidity, breakability, duration to maturity, AASB definitions clarity • Cash management amount – revenue basis versus claims + expenses

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