Showing posts with label Generali. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Generali. Show all posts

Thursday, 15 August 2013

FTSE and European Insurers - Economic Capital and Solvency II trends - money pit filled?

Interim Results season - without question, the most exciting time of the summer for me (although to qualify that, I do live on the Isle of Man and blog in my spare time). As good an opportunity as any to peer review where the big boys are at in the UK and Europe, both on Solvency II preparations/costs and economic captial positions.

Solvency II project costs - on the wane?
As I had mentioned in an earlier post, the FTSE-listed insurers have gone noticeably quiet on both Solvency II and, in the UK's case, the havoc it was inevitably going to wreak in its 2012 form - while the 2013 silence "speaks volumes" as to the priority of the dossier, it is a smart idea to see what impact the threat of a 2014 start has had to EC positions of major insurers over the last 12 months (i.e. after last year's whingeing, did any of them actually do substantive capital-related activity!)

A few notes for each below;

Aviva

  • Solvency II project costs of £44m - well down on £77m in 2012 year-to-June
  • "...there is still significant uncertainty over the detailed requirements [of Solvency II]"
  • Pro-forma economic capital surplus of 175%, up from 172% in December
  • IGD coverage 1.8 times, up from 1.7 times in December

Axa

  • Nothing on Solvency II at all or project costs
  • Solvency ratio down to 218% (from 233%) since December - interest rated attributed
  • Economic solvency ratio (calibrated to 1-in-200 VaR) down to 204% (from 206%) since December - dividend and market risk elements attributed

Allianz

  • Nothing on project costs
  • Solvency ratio (based on FCD) of 177%, down from 197% this time last year - change in accounting standards attributed
  • "...Allianz continues to be exposed to two external forces that adversely affect our risk profile and would not normally be associated with our core operating activities: the European sovereign debt crisis and regulatory developments – especially the European solvency directive, Solvency II"
  • No reference to economic capital or modelling

Legal and General

  • "Investment projects and expenses" (which covered Solvency II last year) were £20m - £23m in 2012 year-to-June
  • "...remains uncertainty both to the implementation timescales of Solvency II and the final calibrations that will be used for long term business"
  • IGD surplus unchanged at £4.1bn, coverage ratio down to 226%

Old Mutual

  • No mention of Solvency II project costs, same as last year
  • EC coverage of "over 160%", calibrated to VaR 99.93%
  • FGD surplus of 160%
  • Dividend outweighed operational cash flows in the 6 month period, though this was due to the special dividend paid last year after a massive disposal

Resolution

  • Solvency II project costs of £10m for the half year - well down on the £48m for 2012 comparable!
  • "Proposals for Solvency II continue to be the subject of debate"
  • EC Coverage of 192% - (194% in Dec - quantum increased by £200m though)
  • IGCA coverage of 221% (222% in Dec) - sold a business unit, which helped cover dividend

Prudential

  • £13m Solvency II project costs for the half year - £27m in 2012 year-to-June
  • "...deferral until 1 January 2016 or beyond appears likely"
  • "...we now know that it will not be implemented before 1 January 2016" - my emphasis
  • "[potential for] optimising the Group’s domicile as a possible response to an adverse outcome on Solvency II" remains on the table, a copy/paste threat left in from last year.
  • IGD coverage of 230% - quantum lower by over a billion since Dec, due to a change in requirements in their US business

Standard Life

  • £36m Solvency II "and other programmes" costs for the half year - £42m in 2012 year-to-June
  • Solvency II project "...continues to respond to changes in requirements"
  • IGD down £500m since half year after accounting for a special dividend, and surplus generation down year-on-year (attributed to new business strain)
  • IGD surplus of 185%, down from over 200% at YE2012, but up 11% from this time last year
  • Not a single reference to "economic capital" in the document

Generali

  • No mention of Solvency II
  • Solvency I coverage at 139% - up from 130% this time last year
  • Economic capital coverage of 167% - up from 159% this time last year
  • Solvency II project costs down to £10m (was £16m  in 2012 year-to-June)
  • "There remains continued uncertainty as delays in agreeing the rules have caused the planned implementation date of 2014 to be delayed."
  • IGD covered 1.7 times - down from 1.9 times since December - dividends again cited in explaining the dip.
  • Economic capital (calibrated to 1-in-200 VaR) £1.3bn, up from £1.2bn in December.

So a trend of steady Solvency I ratios, and no sign of any war chests being created by holding excess cash back - quite the opposite in some cases, with dividends (special or otherwise) on the high side. With project costs diminishing and barely a passing comment on the Omnibus II impasse, it looks very much like Solvency II is yesterday's news in the boardrooms of major insurers. 

That said, in just those insurers covered above there has been over £100m confirmed spend in the last 6 months on Solvency II preparations, during which time the implementation date has (informally) moved at least two years, IMAP has been elongated, and the LTGA panacea has turned out to be anything but. That's hardly chickenfeed, and the rest of this year can only get busier for the UK with ICAS+ and EIOPA Interim Guidelines to contend with.

I hope Finance Directors don't get too excited by the dwindling project spend though - we haven't started Pillar 3 yet, apparently!

Thursday, 22 March 2012

Listed Insurers and capital adequacy - Generali

Onto the home straight with these now, as most of the UK Tier 1's and the larger mainland European have already presented their preliminaries for 2011, but Generali kindly pushed their disclosures out yesterday, which made for interesting reading on the capital adequacy/transition to Solvency II front. I had blogged last summer that these guys may be stretching it on the capital front on the basis of some numbers touted by the FT, so I have been looking forward to these!

In the main report, they draw out the following;
  • Solvency I coverage down to 117% at 2011 year end (from 132% at end 2010) - similar to Aviva, they throw together a pro-forma estimate for end-February to show that the year-end number was something of an "exceptional volatility" fluke, and suggest it is back around 130% again (p76).
In their analyst presentation, they are a lot more forthcoming on both regulatory and economic capital, and cover the following;
  • "Restoring capital adequacy" slide on p5 shows the need for the pro-forma capital recovery mentioned above.
  • Same slide shows economic capital was as low as 124% before the post-year end recovery (not disastrous bearing in mind they are calibrated to 1 year VaR at 99.95%, the same as Aviva and Zurich, and the same ballpark as Old Mutual).
  • Analysis of change in the Solvency 1 Margin (p33) shows how both the ratio and the amount have been decimated y-o-y - relatily small dividend element, so that should be safe I guess.
  • Economic Capital ratio change (p35) sees them also reference a more generous area of the PDF in order to give context to the level of coverage (only 124% covered at year end using AA rating as the calibration, but 159% covered using BBB rating). I'm guessing things look rosier at 99.5% for everyone else as well though fellas!
  • A slide covering the Solvency I change between 2010 year end and the improved pro-forma number at the end of February 2012. They gain €1.1bn from "Italian anti-crisis legislation", which I'm guessing is bond-related, and amplifies why the economic issues in that area of the Eurozone have to be catered for.
  • Some stress tests on the Solvency I ratio on p74 - useful for consideration
You might also get some use out of their EEV report if you are knee deep in sensitivity/scenario testing, and they go to the trouble of defining some of the terminologies we know and love in their methodology section (particularly nice effort on internal capital on p30)

Thursday, 16 February 2012

Axa results and economic capital measures - indication of things to come?

So results season kicked off today with Axa putting the basic full year out (got to love European efficiency on these matters!). This was followed by the EEV Report and Analyst Presentation.

Of particular interest is of course the Solvency I vs Economic Capital measures which most insurers are now kind enough to table up, and the figures were pretty stark. On the Solvency I measure they were a touch up year-on-year, while their Economic Capital measure was massively down (numbers on first page, rationale on third).

Detail on their Economic Capital (and indeed their entire Capital Management Strategy) was fired out in 2010 as part of an investor day. They appear to be using the 1-in-200 stress as their EC measure, which would suggest that (model approval notwithstanding) they have received a 'beasting' on their SCR coverage over 2011.

I blogged in August last year about an FT article which opined on how companies may approach economic capital targets under Solvency II (125-150% of SCR in UK, and perhaps 170% in mainland Europe was their conclusion, for what its worth). While that would have put Generali fractionally out at the time, most of the other big boys were comfortably covered using that yardstick...until now!

The rationale for the drop presented goes to adverse experience on interest rates and spreads "net of changes to the liquidity premium". A smarter man that me will probably be able to read between the lines on that one to find where they are exposed in a way that leads to such a swing in EC, but if one of the major lobbyists is experiencing this volatility, what chance the rest of us?

NB - Generali punted this round today in order to contextualise the recent downgrading activity of insurers by the ratings agencies - surprising to see a company lump all of their competitors onto a press release from their own offices, but I guess there is safety in numbers! Few comments on Solvency on it, but mostly seems to be about negative outlooks on Eurozone default possibilities, new business and economic conditions etc

Wednesday, 24 August 2011

FT report on listed insurer's capital trends

Just in case anyone missed out on Monday, the FT provided a quality summary on perceived advance capital planning by UK and EU insurers ahead of Solvency II. I say quality despite the couched terminology (SCR referred to as the "softer capital requirement"!)

The suggested SCR coverage targets referenced are interesting (125-150% in the UK, and as much as 170% in continental Europe) – I have heard generalisations on target SCR surplus before (in the context of economic capital targets), but the guy from JP Morgan obviously thinks he’s onto something.

I had a quick look, and thought Generali may struggle on the European side (they had 168% as their Economic Solvency Coverage on p23), but everyone else was well covered.

The schematic also highlights the increase in surplus capital pre and post-credit crunch.