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BoE issues alert to insurers.

 The BoE’s Pruden­tial Reg­u­la­tion Author­ity, which super­vises the sec­tor, put 16 life insurers through a stress test of

Bank of England

credit down­grades and increased longev­ity. In res­ults pub­lished yes­ter­day, it found them resi­li­ent, but said their assump­tions ran the risk of over­con­fid­ence.

Sev­eral com­pan­ies relied on their abil­ity to sell bonds that had been down­graded to junk, with £8bn to £9bn of such assets expec­ted to be off­loaded, the report found. Most assumed this could be done within six to 12 months of the event.
«It is import­ant that, when firms plan for the man­age­ment actions that they could take in stress, they allow for mar­ket liquid­ity and poten­tial stress amp­li­fic­a­tion arising from actions taken by other investors».
An example of insti­tu­tional investors rush­ing for the exit was provided in the UK’s gilts mar­ket crisis last year, triggered by former prime min­is­ter Liz Truss’s ill-fated «mini» Budget, when pen­sion funds struggled to off­load gov­ern­ment debt quickly enough to meet col­lat­eral calls and the BoE was forced to inter­vene.
For gen­eral insurers, includ­ing those within the Lloyd’s of Lon­don mar­ket, the reg­u­lator iden­ti­fied areas for improve­ment in how they quantify losses from so-called sec­ond­ary per­ils — events such as floods that have his­tor­ic­ally been less costly, but are grow­ing in fre­quency.
«Indeed, some entit­ies repor­ted that they have a spe­cific gov­ernance approach to invok­ing this lan­guage and have con­sidered poten­tial costs that may be incurred,» said Gerken.
Par­ti­cipants high­lighted efforts to cre­ate new policy lan­guage to address the chal­lenges.
The Fin­an­cial Times revealed last week that insurers were in dis­cus­sions with the Treas­ury about whether Pool Re, the UK’s ter­ror­ism rein­sur­ance scheme, could be expan­ded to back state-sponsored cyber attacks.
The insurers in the stress test were not named in yes­ter­day’s let­ter, but the lifein­sur­ance units of groups includ­ing Aviva and L&G had been invited to par­ti­cip­ate last year.

Comments

  1. These kinds of tests are very beneficial as they show the true capabilities of life insurers and can find problems that need addressing.

    ReplyDelete
  2. This right here is worrying “their assump­tions ran the risk of over­con­fid­ence” So many companies think this way, think that they can withstand anything and that’s not true. And this stops you from growing, from preparing for the worst case scenario.

    ReplyDelete

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