1 / 33

Financial Risk Management of Insurance Enterprises

Financial Risk Management of Insurance Enterprises. Duration and Convexity – Part 2. Applications of Duration. Remember, ALM evaluates the interaction of asset and liability movements Insurers attempt to equate interest sensitivity of assets and liabilities so that surplus is unaffected

reynard
Télécharger la présentation

Financial Risk Management of Insurance Enterprises

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Financial Risk Management of Insurance Enterprises Duration and Convexity – Part 2

  2. Applications of Duration • Remember, ALM evaluates the interaction of asset and liability movements • Insurers attempt to equate interest sensitivity of assets and liabilities so that surplus is unaffected • Surplus is “immunized” against interest rate risk • Immunization is the technique of matching asset duration and liability duration

  3. Why Worry About Interest Rate Risk? • The 1970s Savings & Loan industry didn’t • Asset-liability “mismatch” • Interest rates can and do fluctuate substantially • Examples of 7 Year U.S. T-bond interest rates: r at r at t t-12 monthsti March 1980 9.15% 13.00% 3.85% July 1981 9.84 14.49 4.65 Oct 1982 15.33 10.88 - 4.45 May 1984 10.30 13.34 3.04 April 1986 11.34 7.16 - 4.18 Dec 1995 7.80 5.63 - 2.17

  4. Assumptions Underlying Macaulay and Modified Duration • Cash flows do not change with interest rates This does not hold for: • Collateralized Mortgage Obligations (CMOs) • Callable bonds • P-L loss reserves – due to inflation-interest rate correlation • Flat yield curve Generally, yield curves are upward-sloping • Interest rates shift in parallel fashion Short term interest rates tend to be more volatile than longer term rates

  5. Assuming Parallel Shifts • The assumption of parallel shifts in the yield curve is not plausible • In reality, short-term rates move more than long-term rates • Also, it is possible that the yield curve “twists” • Short-term and long-term rates move in opposite directions

  6. An Illustration • There are two cash flows, 100 at the end of year 1 and 100 at the end of the second year • The interest rate is a flat 5% • Calculating modified duration

  7. Partial Duration • Each term in the calculation tells us something about interest rate sensitivity • It is the sensitivity of the cash flow to that interest rate • In this example, define two “partial” durations • One for each cash flow period

  8. Interpreting Partial Duration • Note that the sum of the partial durations is equal to the original duration calculation • Using partial duration, we can determine the interest rate sensitivity to any non-parallel shift in the yield curve • We can use partial duration to predict price changes

  9. Example • From our two period cash flow, what is the change in value if the one year rate goes to 4% and the two year rate goes to 6%

  10. Key Rates • Interest rates of “similar” maturities move in the same fashion • The 10 year rate and the 10½ year rate move similarly • Therefore, partial durations can be based on a few points on the yield curve • These are called key rates • Partial durations are sometimes referred to as key rate durations

  11. Typical Key Rates • Popular key rates are: • 3 month and 6 month rate • 1 year • 2 years • 3 years • 5 years • 7 years • 10 years • 30 years

  12. Applications of Key Rate Durations • Key rate durations are very useful for hedging purposes • Because multiple partial durations provide more information than a single duration number, insurers can determine their sensitivity to interest rates based on various parts of the yield curve • If the insurer is not immunized, it can use interest rate derivatives to hedge the risk

  13. Cash Flows Change with Interest Rates • Effective Duration • Effective Convexity

  14. Effective Duration

  15. Effective Convexity(Note – Fabozzi includes a 2 in denominator)

  16. Calculation of the Change in Economic Value of a Cash Flow V = (-1)(Effective Duration)(r) + (1/2)(Convexity)(r)2 (Note: if using Fabozzi convexity calculation, omit the (1/2) in the second term.)

  17. Example – Fixed Cash Flow Cash flow of $1000 in 10 years No interest rate sensitivity Current interest rate = 10% Macaulay Duration = 10 Modified Duration = 9.0909 Convexity = 90.909

  18. Example – Variable Cash Flow Cash flow of $1000 occurs at x years if r = x% Current r = 10%, cash flow at year 10 PV = 1000/(1.10)^10 = 385.5433 ∆r = 50 basis points PV_= 422.2463 PV+= 350.5065 Effective Duration = 18.6075 Effective Convexity = 172.8719

  19. Example – Variable Cash Flow 2 Cash flow of $1000 occurs at 10 years if r = 10% Cash flow changes at ½ the percentage change that interest rates change (from 10%) If interest rates rise to 10.5%, cash flow is $1025 If interest rates fall to 9.5%, cash flow is $975. PV = 1000/(1.10)^10 = 385.5433 ∆r = 50 basis points PV_= 393.4263 PV+= 377.6601 Effective Duration = 4.0894 Effective Convexity = -0.0169

  20. Estimated Impact of Change in Economic Value for 100 Basis Point Rise in Interest Rate V = (-1)(Effective Duration)(r) + (1/2)(Convexity)(r)2 Fixed cash flow -8.6% Variable cash flow 1 -17.7% Variable cash flow 2 -4.1%

  21. Surplus Duration • Sensitivity of an insurer’s surplus to changes in interest rates DS S = DA A - DL L DS = (DA - DL)(A/S) + DL where D = duration S = surplus A = assets L = liabilities

  22. Surplus Duration and Asset-Liability Management • To “immunize” surplus from interest rate risk, set DS = 0 • Then, asset duration should be: DA = DL L / A • Thus, an accurate estimate of the duration of liabilities is critical for ALM

  23. Are Property-Liability Insurers Exposed to Interest Rate Risk? • Absolutely!! • Long-term liabilities • Medical malpractice • Workers’ compensation • General liability • Assets • Significant portion of assets invested in long term bonds

  24. The Liabilities of Property-Liability Insurers • Major categories of liabilities: • Loss reserves • Loss adjustment expense reserves • Unearned premium reserves

  25. Loss Reserves • Major categories: • In the process of being paid • Value of loss is determined, negotiating over share of loss to be paid • Damage is yet to be discovered • Continuing to develop: some of loss has been fixed, remainder is yet to be determined • Inflation, which is correlated with interest rates, will affect each category of loss reserves differently.

  26. What Portion of the Loss Reserve is Affected by Future Inflation (and Interest Rates)? • If the damage has not yet occurred, then the future loss payments will fully reflect future inflation • If the loss is continuing to develop, then a portion of the future loss payments will be affected by future inflation (and another portion will be “fixed” relative to inflation)

  27. How to Reflect “Fixed” Costs? • “Fixed” here means that portion of damages which, although not yet paid, willnot be impacted by future inflation • Tangible versus intangible damages • Determining when a cost is “fixed” could require • Understanding the mindset of jurors • Lots and lots of data

  28. A Possible “Fixed” Cost Formula Proportion of loss reserves fixed in value as of time t: f(t) = k + [(1 - k - m) (t / T) n] k = portion of losses fixed at time of loss m = portion of losses fixed at time of settlement T = time from date of loss to date of payment 1 m Proportion of Ultimate Payments Fixed n<1 n=1 n>1 k 0 1 0 Proportion of Payment Period

  29. “Fixed” Cost Formula Parameters • Examples of loss costs that might go into k • Medical treatment immediately after the loss occurs • Wage loss component of an injury claim • Property damage • Examples of loss costs that might go into m • Medical evaluations performed immediately prior to determining the settlement offer • General damages to the extent they are based on the cost of living at the time of settlement • Loss adjustment expenses connected with settling the claim

  30. Loss Reserve Duration Example For the values: k = .15 m = .10 n = 1.0 r = 5% rr,i = 0.40 Exposure growth rate = 10% Automobile Workers’ InsuranceCompensation Macaulay duration: 1.52 4.49 Modified duration: 1.44 4.27 Effective duration: 1.09 3.16 Convexity 5.75 50.77 Effective convexity 1.99 16.04

  31. Example of ALM for a Hypothetical WC Insurer Dollar Modified Effective ValueDurationDuration Loss & LAE Reserve 590 4.271 3.158 UPR 30 3.621 1.325 Other liabilities 900.9520.952 Total liabilities 710 3.823 2.801 Total assets 1,000 Asset duration to immunize surplus: 2.714 1.989

  32. Conclusion • Asset-liability management depends upon appropriate measures of effective duration (and convexity) • Potentially significant differences between effective and modified duration values • Critical factors and parameters • Line of business • Payment pattern • Correlation between interest rates and inflation • Interest rate model (?)

  33. Next • Review for first exam • First exam – February 27, 2008 • An introduction to stochastic processes • The use of stochastic movements in modeling interest rates • Using interest rate models to calculate duration and convexity

More Related