• Liquidity
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A tale of two cities

Factoring liquidity into risk-based capital

Hong Kong’s new risk-based capital framework is reshaping the insurance landscape, pushing insurers to rethink their balance sheet strategies and liquidity management. In this article, Alastair Sewell discusses the evolving asset allocation trends and the opportunities insurers face to enhance capital efficiency and long-term growth.

Read this article to understand:

  • How changes in the Hong Kong insurance regulation may affect liquidity deployment strategies
  • Opportunities for insurers in Hong Kong and Singapore to optimise liquidity
  • The benefits of a well-structured, capital efficient liquidity pool

Hong Kong’s recent introduction of a risk-based capital (RBC) framework marks a step-change in the regulatory requirements for insurers based there. Not only do they face the challenge of optimising their overall balance sheets in response to the regulatory changes, but they must also consider carefully how best to deploy liquidity in the face of a changing asset allocation and the emergence of new products.

A key question for many insurers will be their allocation to private asset funds – while these funds can bring significant benefits, they also bring liquidity challenges.

While Hong Kong is clearly charting its own course, we believe the experience of Singaporean insurers in implementing RBC2 from 2020 can provide some clues as to how Hong Kong insurers may adapt their assets and practices over the coming years.

Assessing the current state of play in Hong Kong

The early adopters in Hong Kong – primarily the largest insurers – tell us they are already at an advanced stage in applying the new regulations. Others have begun to adapt, after the new rules were implemented in July 2024. While we can see progress, we do not believe all insurers have fully embraced the opportunities the new RBC framework brings.

The next phase for many Hong Kong insurers will be balance sheet optimisation

The fact that capital issuance is up year-to-date tells us that while some may be in an advanced position it terms of adapting their asset allocations, for many the blunt approach of issuing more capital to ensure compliance has been the primary tool.

In our view, the next phase for many Hong Kong insurers will be balance sheet optimisation. On the one hand this may well mean adjustments to liabilities, including potential reductions in more capital-intensive activities. On the other, insurers may begin to optimise their assets. Those insurers who thrive will be adept at triangulating between risk, return and capital to achieve an optimal asset allocation.

How asset allocation may change

The changes brought by new regulation can have profound implications for asset allocation. In Europe for example, insurer demand for securitisations following the advent of Solvency II decreased sharply, although there are some signs that may be starting to reverse.1 On the other hand, demand for low capital weighted assets, such as covered bonds, increased.

Changes brought by new regulation can have profound implications for asset allocation

Closer to home, the experience of Singapore, which introduced its RBC2 framework in March 2020, may be of more relevance from the perspective of Hong Kong insurers.

A preliminary observation: RBC2 was a success. Singapore life insurer total assets increased 15 per cent between the end of 2019 and the end of 2022 (the most recent for which full market statistics are available). General insurers, albeit a substantially smaller part of the market, grew over 30 per cent in the same period. Looking at a sample of large life insurers, solvency ratios have steadily risen year-on-year following a post-implementation dip.

Singaporean allocations shift

Singaporean insurers actively adapted their asset exposures in response to the RBC2 framework. Based on a sample of the five largest life insurers (representing over 80 per cent of total industry assets) in the four years to the end of 2023 there was:

  • A modest increase in core government bond holdings. This reflected the relative capital efficiency of sovereign, quasi-sovereign, supranational and agency bonds, along with the availability of long-duration bonds for liability-matching purposes. Exposure to other debt types decreased. Indeed, when considering (undiversified) credit spread risk levels, risk declined over the sample period.
  • A more major increase in exposure to unlisted collective investment schemes, indicating increasing appetite for real and private assets. These assets will typically feature in non-liability matching – or surplus – allocations. We believe much of the increase in equity risk requirements (again, undiversified) have been driven by this allocation.
  • A modest increase in cash and deposit exposure. On the one hand this indicates life insurers are maintaining prudent liquidity buffers as part of their surplus allocation and to service ongoing cashflow needs. On the other, it highlights the risk of operating with a “liquidity barbell” with a mix of the most liquid assets and exposure to illiquid private assets. This liquid-illiquid relationship is arguably a key risk factor for insurers to manage. Regulators appear to agree.

A supervisory view

“…so in the past liquidity risk has been let’s say immaterial for insurance and now it has slipped into the focus of consideration for insurers as well as supervisors …”

“…the expense of liquidity due to the increasingly illiquid asset allocation that we have in the balance sheet of insurers and the hidden losses liquidity really has a price… so this is why liquidity management and liquidity risk have been monitored closely since last year.”

Julia Viens
Chief Executive Director for Insurance and Pension Funds Risk Supervision, BaFin

Source: YouTube, July 10, 2024.2

Figure 1: Risk requirements: Top 5 Singapore insurers (per cent)

Source: Aviva Investors, Monetary Authority of Singapore. Data as of September 2024.

Figure 2: Singapore insurer asset allocation (per cent)

Source: Aviva Investors, Monetary Authority of Singapore. Data as of September 2024.

Could Hong Kong follow a similar path to Singapore?

We expect Hong Kong insurers, like their Singaporean counterparts, to increase core government bond holdings for liability-matching purposes, and to become more selective in their surplus asset allocation, which typically includes exposure to return-seeking assets like equities. However, differences in the two regimes’ capital charging structures mean there will be differences in asset allocation.

Figure 3: Baseline capital charges

  Singapore Hong Kong
Developed equity risk (per cent) 35 40
Emerging equity risk (per cent) 50 50
Credit risk (basis points) 105 95
Property risk (per cent) 30 25

Note: Credit step 1, < 5 years’ maturity.

Source: Aviva Investors, MAS, IA. Data as of September 2024.

While the largest Singaporean insurers modified their asset allocation in broadly similar ways, a closer look at the allocations of individual insurers reveals they were far from identical. Other insurers have charted materially different courses to the largest. This reflects the fact that adaptation is always anchored in the business mix and focus of each individual insurer. General insurers, for example, tend to hold significant amounts of liquidity as a function of their business profile. 

Reallocation considerations

Three recurring considerations crop up in our discussions with insurance clients in the region as they have navigated regulatory change.

The first of these is where to buy-in capability, and where to manage in-house. There are material benefits to be gained from outsourcing certain asset allocation capabilities. Equally, retaining some capabilities in-house can deliver good results and keep costs down.

The combination of allocation shifts and changes in risk requirement levels show us that the Singaporean insurers in our sample were precise in the changes they made. We infer from this combination that much of this change has been at the selection level. i.e. the selection of a given asset – or collective investment scheme – within an allocation bucket.

Singaporean insurers in our sample were precise in the changes they made

We believe some Singaporean insurers chose to in-source specific componentry following the implementation of RBC2. This approach can work well when the in-sourced capability combines demonstrable asset class (or risk management) expertise with insurance awareness, i.e. capital efficiency. Additional benefit can also be gained where an in-sourced solution or asset exposure is bundled with specialist skill sets, such as net-zero transition capabilities.

The second issue concerns the path insurers choose to follow to achieve an optimal asset allocation. This will not necessarily happen overnight. It took the Singaporean insurers in our sample up to three years to adjust their allocations, although that process was probably influenced by the market volatility experienced during the onset of Covid-19.

This experience shows the value of “enabling” allocations. Capital efficient liquid asset strategies can help when moving to a longer-term capital optimised strategic asset allocation. Suitable liquid assets should be easy to access, with short settlement times and of a sufficiently high-quality to minimise the risk of price instability. Assets meeting these criteria can mitigate periods of market volatility while providing “dry powder” to deploy as and when market opportunities arise. Of course, they also need to generate sufficient yield to pay their way both in absolute and risk capital-adjusted terms.

The third consideration is that liquidity matters on multiple levels

While attention will inevitably focus on the two “poles” of insurance asset management - liability matching and surplus assets, respectively, liquidity cannot be overlooked. Some insurers – generals, property and casualty – will naturally hold high liquid asset allocations.

In all three cases, we see great opportunities in reconsidering liquidity allocations

On the other hand, life insurers may hold liquidity buffers to reduce the likelihood they will need to try to liquidate illiquid surplus asset holdings, such as private asset fund holdings. In this sense, increased liquidity allocations play a dual role: first as “normal” liquidity – to meet expected and unexpected cashflow needs; and, second, to mitigate the risk of needing to liquidate private asset exposures in a stress scenario.

In all three cases, we see great opportunities in reconsidering liquidity allocations. Bank deposit counterparty capital charges can be material, while short-term government bond yields can be low. Other options, such as money market funds and our ReturnPlus strategy can provide high levels of liquidity along with attractive yields and in capital efficient formats.

The fact that the RBC framework in Hong Kong does not differentiate between fixed income asset types, means that strategies like ReturnPlus, which can access high-quality covered bonds and securitised assets, can potentially benefit from higher yields than comparably rated bank or corporate bond exposures.

Private asset funds from a liquidity perspective

Private asset funds may bring insurers many benefits. However, they are also associated with multiple risk factors, beyond the risks inherent to the asset classes involved themselves:

Inability to sell

There is no certainty of being able to sell an illiquid asset in timely fashion. While the rise of the secondaries market and financial engineering techniques can help, achieving an exit may still take significant time.

Capital calls

The timing of capital calls is uncertain, leading to the need to fund a large commitment value. Typically, this will involve the sale of liquid public market securities, thus exposing the investor to public market pricing dynamics.

Variable distributions

Private asset funds can deliver lumpy or infrequent cashflows, with the implication that they cannot be relied on in terms of cashflow management for wider business purposes, especially when compared with more predictable dividend or coupon streams on public market assets.

Source: Aviva Investors, September 2024.

A closer look at liquidity risk

Liquidity risk is rising up the agenda for insurance supervisors and is appearing with increasing frequency in insurance regulations. The UK’s Prudential Regulatory Authority dedicates an entire supplement (SS519) to liquidity risk. The Bermudan Monetary Authority’s new rules in 2024 introduced prescriptive liquidity risk management requirements, with further guidance in its August 2024 report: “Liquidity Risk in the Bermuda Long-term Insurance Market”. The Monetary Authority of Singapore’s recent Notice FHC-N126 of April 2024, introduced more specific and binding liquidity risk requirements on insurers.

The liquidity risks

Liquidity risk for insurers can come from multiple sources:

Private assets

Interrupted or reduced distributions from private asset funds; capital calls requiring funding at (relatively) short notice.

Derivative collateral calls

Witness the cascade of stress affecting French insurers in March 2020 as they were forced to collateralise basis swaps.

Mass lapse risk events (life insurers)

As realised at Eurovita in 2023, and with striking similarities to the bank runs of 2023. Across our sample of large Singaporean life insurers, lapse risk requirements have been increasing year-on-year both in absolute terms and as a share of insurance risk.

Correlated peril materialisation (hybrid and general insurers)

Leading to increased claim activity, for example from the effects of multiple natural catastrophes within a narrow time window.

Source: Aviva Investors, September 2024.

Hong Kong currently embeds liquidity risk management in the operational risk self-assessment. Given the amount of focus on liquidity risk from insurance regulators, we suspect there may be more to come from the Hong Kong Insurance Authority on this topic. Of course, regulatory requirements often codify existing good practice. Prudent liquidity risk management is an obligation of any insurer, irrespective of the regulatory requirements involved.

All that being said, many of our clients across regulatory regimes, have a narrow view of liquidity. They may limit themselves to a combination of bank deposits and government bonds only for core liquidity, potentially with a limited allocation to short-term corporate credit for yield enhancement.

We believe there are better options available. Liquidity optimisation is the process of sizing and best matching liquid asset exposures to business needs, while factoring in regulatory capital requirements, by combining the characteristics of high credit quality, high liquidity, attractive yields and, most importantly, capital efficiency. 

Introducing ReturnPlus

Our ReturnPlus strategy is designed to help investors enhance returns on excess cash by investing in short-maturity, highly rated fixed-income securities. We invest in liquid sovereign, corporate and securitised debt, taking modest credit spread risk, mitigating other risks and maintaining liquidity. We hedge interest rate and currency exposures back to the base currency, resulting in a highly capital efficient overall portfolio.

Our clients use ReturnPlus primarily as a surplus asset allocation, and/or as a core liquid asset allocation. The strategy targets the Sterling Overnight Index Average benchmark (SONIA) + 75bps. The strategy composite has been active since 2014.

Figure 4: Performance of ReturnPlus GBP Composite versus its benchmark (per cent)

Return Plus GBP composite

Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future returns

Note: Inception date is October 31, 2014. Performance is expressed gross of fees and fund expenses, in GBP.
Performance net of indicative investment management fees of 15 bps. Benchmark is SONIA: Sterling Overnight Index Average. Fees will reduce the performance shown.

Source: Source: Aviva Investors. Data as of August 31, 2024.

A call to action

We see an opportunity for both Hong Kong and Singaporean insurers to optimise their liquidity. While the recent change to regulation in Hong Kong makes this topic front-of-mind for these insurers, the key concepts resonate across markets.

A well-structured, capital efficient liquidity pool provides multiple benefits

A well-structured, capital efficient liquidity pool provides multiple benefits. From acting as a mitigant to liquidity risk, to generating yield as a core allocation, to serving as a tactical “war chest” for deployment into markets or a wider balance sheet optimised portfolio when conditions are opportune.

We have solutions which can help, either as end destinations for liquidity or as capital efficient and yield generative interim measures pending a wider allocation shift.

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Key risks

Investment risk and currency risk

The value and income from the fund's assets will go down as well as up. This will cause the value of your investment to fall as well as rise. There is no guarantee that the fund will achieve its objective and you may get back less than you originally invested.

Credit and interest rate risk

Bond values are affected by changes in interest rates and the bond issuer's creditworthiness. Bonds that offer the potential for a higher income typically have a greater risk of default.

Illiquid securities risk

Certain assets held in the fund could, by nature, be hard to value or to sell at a desired time or at a price considered to be fair (especially in large quantities), and as a result their prices could be very volatile.

Related views

Composite disclosure

This composite is benchmarked against the MSCI All Country World Index (ACWI) (Net) which is designed to represent performance of the full opportunity set of large- and mid-cap stocks across 23 developed and 26 emerging markets. The MSCI ACWI Index is a free float-adjusted market capitalization in each market. Aviva Investors Global Services claims compliance with the Global investment Performance Standards (GIPS®) and has prepared and presented this report in compliance with the GIPS standards. Aviva Investors Global Services has been independently verified for the periods January 1998 through December 31, 2020. The verification reports are available upon request. A firm that claims compliance with the GIPS standards must establish policies and procedures for complying with all the applicable requirements of the GIPS standards. Verification provides assurance on whether the firm's policies and procedures related to composite and pooled fund maintenance, as well as the calculation, presentation, and distribution of performance, have been designed in compliance with the GIPS standards and have been implemented on a firm-wide basis. Verification does not provide assurance on the accuracy of any specific performance report.

The firm is defined as Aviva Investors Global Services, which includes all managed assets, excluding direct real estate investments. The firm was redefined as of December 31, 2013, when open ended direct real estate assets were removed from the firm. Closed end direct real estate assets had been excluded from the firm as at December 31, 2010. Therefore, direct real estate assets managed by Aviva are not included within the assets under management value. Following the acquisition of Friends Life group by the Aviva Group, the assets managed by Friends Life group, and its investment operations, were integrated into Aviva Investors in 2015. Aviva Investors Global Services AUM increased from £131bn at the end of 2014 to £172bn at the end of 2015. Further to an agreement dated 26 May 2018 between Aviva Investors Global Services Limited and LaSalle Investment Management, Aviva Investor's global indirect real estate investment division was transferred to LaSalle Investment Management with effect from 6 November 2018. Additional details are available upon request. This composite includes funds that are actively managed with an income focused investment approach. The portfolios will invest in a blend of dividend paying companies listed anywhere in the world and will aim for capital growth and income over the longer term.

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