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Reinsurance
3 Months Ended
Mar. 31, 2017
Reinsurance Disclosures [Abstract]  
Reinsurance

Note 8 Reinsurance

 

The Company's insurance subsidiaries enter into agreements with other insurance companies to assume and cede reinsurance.  Reinsurance is ceded primarily to limit losses from large exposures and to permit recovery of a portion of direct or assumed losses.  Reinsurance is also used in acquisition and disposition transactions when the underwriting company is not being acquired. Reinsurance does not relieve the originating insurer of liability.  The Company regularly evaluates the financial condition of its reinsurers and monitors concentrations of its credit risk.

 

Reinsurance Recoverables

 

The majority of the Company's reinsurance recoverables resulted from acquisition and disposition transactions in which the underwriting company was not acquired. Components of the Company's reinsurance recoverables are presented below:

 

(In millions)          
    March 31, December 31, Collateral and Other Terms 
Line of Business Reinsurer(s)2017 2016 at March 31, 2017 
Ongoing operations:        
 Global Health Care, Global Supplemental Benefits, Group Disability and Life Various$ 478 $ 478 Recoverables from approximately 80 reinsurers including the U.S. Government, used in the ordinary course of business. Current balances range from less than $1 million up to $93 million. Excluding the recoverable from the U.S. Government of $39 million, over 60% of the balance is from companies rated investment grade by Standard & Poor's, and 13% is secured by assets in trusts or letters of credit.  
 Total recoverables related to ongoing operations  478   478   
Acquisition, disposition or runoff activities:        
 Individual Life and Annuity (sold in 1998) Lincoln National Life and Lincoln Life & Annuity of New York  3,551   3,586 Both companies' ratings are sufficient to avoid triggering a contractual obligation to fully secure the outstanding balance. 
 GMDB Berkshire  1,052   1,085 100% secured by assets in a trust. 
   Other  42   44 100% secured by assets in a trust or letters of credit. 
 Retirement Benefits Business (sold in 2004) Prudential Retirement Insurance and Annuity  904   921 100% secured by assets in a trust. 
 Supplemental Benefits Business (2012 acquisition) Great American Life  293   297 100% secured by assets in a trust. 
 Other run-off reinsurance Various  66   67 100% secured by assets in trusts. 
 Total recoverables related to acquisition, disposition or runoff activities  5,908   6,000   
Total reinsurance recoverables  $ 6,386 $ 6,478   
            
            

The Company bears the risk of loss if its reinsurers and retrocessionaires do not meet or are unable to meet their reinsurance obligations to the Company. The Company reviews its reinsurance arrangements and establishes reserves against the recoverables if recovery is not considered probable. As of March 31, 2017, the Company's recoverables were net of a reserve of approximately $3 million.

 

Effects of Reinsurance

 

In the Company's Consolidated Statements of Income, premiums were reported net of amounts ceded to reinsurers and Global Health Care medical costs and other benefit expenses were reported net of reinsurance recoveries in the following amounts:

 

      Three Months Ended
      March 31,
(In millions)     20172016
Ceded premiums:         
Individual life insurance and annuity business sold     $ 39$ 41
Other       81  95
Total ceded premiums     $ 120$ 136
Reinsurance recoveries:         
Individual life insurance and annuity business sold     $ 70$ 68
Other       29  96
Total reinsurance recoveries     $ 99$ 164

The decrease in reinsurance recoveries in 2017 is primarily due to the ceded GMDB business. The ceded reserves declined during the three months ended March 31, 2017 due primarily to favorable equity market conditions, while the ceded reserves increased during the three months ended March 31, 2016 due to changes in the capital market assumptions that are used to calculate the reserves.

 

Effective Exit of GMDB and GMIB Business

 

In 2013, the Company entered into an agreement with Berkshire to effectively exit the GMDB and GMIB business via a reinsurance transaction. Berkshire reinsured 100% of the Company's future claim payments in this business, net of other reinsurance arrangements existing at that time. The Berkshire reinsurance agreement is subject to an overall limit with approximately $3.5 billion remaining as of March 31, 2017.

 

A discussion of each of these businesses follows. While GMDB is accounted for as reinsurance, GMIB assets and liabilities are reported as derivatives at fair value as discussed below. Accordingly, GMIB assets are reported in other assets, including intangibles, and GMIB liabilities are reported in accounts payable, accrued expenses and other liabilities.

 

GMDB

 

The Company estimates the gross liability and reinsurance recoverable with an internal model based on the Company's experience and future expectations over an extended period, consistent with the long-term nature of this product. As a result of the reinsurance transaction, reserve increases have a corresponding increase in the recorded reinsurance recoverable, provided the increased recoverable remains within the overall Berkshire limit (including the GMIB asset presented below). The ending net retained reserve covers ongoing administrative expenses, as well as minor claim exposure retained by the Company.

 

Because the product is premium deficient, the Company records an increase to the net retained reserve if it is inadequate based on the model.

 

Activity in future policy benefit reserves for the GMDB business was as follows:

 

 For the period ended
 March 31,December 31,
(In millions)20172016
Balance at January 1$ 1,224$ 1,252
Add: Unpaid claims  16  18
Less: Reinsurance and other amounts recoverable  1,129  1,164
Balance at January 1, net  111  106
Add: Incurred benefits  -  4
Less: Paid benefits (recoveries)  (1)  (1)
Ending balance, net  112  111
Less: Unpaid claims  18  16
Add: Reinsurance and other amounts recoverable  1,094  1,129
Ending balance$ 1,188$ 1,224
     
     

Benefits paid and incurred are net of ceded amounts.

 

The table below presents the account value, net amount at risk and number of underlying contractholders for guarantees assumed by the Company in the event of death. The net amount at risk is the amount that the Company would have to pay if all contractholders died as of the specified date. Unless the Berkshire reinsurance limit is exceeded, the Company should be reimbursed in full for these payments.

 

(Dollars in millions, excludes impact of reinsurance ceded)March 31, 2017December 31, 2016
Account value$ 10,755$ 10,650
Net amount at risk$ 2,335$ 2,458
Number of contractholders  280,000  285,000

GMIB

 

In this business, the Company reinsured contracts with issuers of GMIB products. The Company's exposure represents the excess of a contractually guaranteed amount over the level of variable annuity account values. Payment by the Company depends on the actual account value in the underlying mutual funds and the level of interest rates when the contractholders elect to receive minimum income payments that must occur within 30 days of a policy anniversary after the appropriate waiting period. The Company has purchased retrocessional coverage (“GMIB assets”) for these contracts.

 

The Company reports GMIB liabilities and assets as derivatives at fair value because cash flows of these liabilities and assets are affected by equity markets and interest rates, but are without significant life insurance risk and are settled in lump sum payments.

 

As of March 31, 2017, there were three reinsurers for GMIB as follows:

 

(In millions)          
   March 31, December 31, Collateral and Other Terms 
Line of Business Reinsurer(s)2017 2016 at March 31, 2017 
GMIB Berkshire$ 360 $ 370 100% secured by assets in a trust. 
  Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada  220   227   
  Liberty Re (Bermuda) Ltd.  197   202 100% secured by assets in a trust. 
Total GMIB recoverables reported in other assets$ 777 $ 799   
           

Assumptions used in fair value measurement. The Company estimates the fair value of the assets and liabilities for GMIB contracts by calculating the results for many scenarios run through a model utilizing various assumptions. The only assumption expected to impact future shareholders' net income is non-performance risk. The non-performance risk adjustment reflects a market participant's view of nonpayment risk by adding an additional spread to the discount rate in the calculation of both (a) the GMIB liabilities to be paid by the Company, and (b) the GMIB assets to be paid by the reinsurers, after considering collateral.

 

Other assumptions that affect GMIB assets and liabilities include capital market assumptions (including market returns, interest rates and market volatilities of the underlying equity and bond mutual fund investments) and future annuitant behavior (including mortality, lapse, and annuity election rates). As certain assumptions used to estimate fair values for these contracts are largely unobservable (primarily related to future annuitant behavior), the Company classifies GMIB assets and liabilities in Level 3 in the fair value hierarchy presented in Note 9.

 

The Company regularly evaluates each of the assumptions used in establishing these assets and liabilities. Significant decreases in assumed lapse rates or spreads used to calculate non-performance risk of the Company, or significant increases in assumed annuity election rates or spreads used to calculate the non-performance risk of the reinsurers, would result in higher fair value measurements. A change in one of these assumptions is not necessarily accompanied by a change in another assumption.

 

GMIB guarantees. Future payments are not fixed and determinable under the terms of these contracts. Accordingly, the Company calculated exposure, without considering any reinsurance coverage, using the following hypothetical assumptions:

 

  • no annuitants surrendered their accounts;
  • all annuitants lived to elect their benefit;
  • all annuitants elected to receive their benefit on the next available date (2017 through 2021); and
  • all underlying mutual fund investment values remained at the March 31, 2017 value of $818 million with no future returns.

 

The Company has reinsurance coverage in place that covers the exposures on these contracts. Using these hypothetical assumptions, GMIB exposure is $665 million, which is lower than the recorded liability for GMIB calculated using fair value assumptions.