CP1 Ch 37: Surplus arising

Discussion in 'CP1' started by Bhoomi Sindhi, Jan 4, 2024.

  1. Bhoomi Sindhi

    Bhoomi Sindhi Made first post

    Hi, It is mentioned that surplus arising in any given year is equivalent to profit. On page 5 of this chapter, they've mentioned how equivalence can be drawn between the two and a few subtleties to watch out for. Could you please explain with the help of a numerical example? I'm not particularly clear on how this equivalence is drawn.
     
  2. Lindsay Smitherman

    Lindsay Smitherman ActEd Tutor Staff Member

    Hi - what this is saying is that surplus arising is effectively the same as profit for an insurance company, provided we are careful with our definitions.

    Surplus arising = {assets at end - liabs at end} - {assets at start - liabs at start} = {assets at end - assets at start} - {liabs at end - liabs at start}

    Profit for an insurance company = Premiums + investment earnings - claims paid - expenses incurred - increase in liabilities

    The assets held will increase over the period by + cashflows in (= premiums) - cashflows out (= expenses and claims paid) + investment earnings

    So we can see by working through and using each of the above statements that:
    Surplus arising = increase in assets minus increase in liabilities = premiums + investment earnings - claims - expenses - increase in liabilities = Profit (as required)

    The 'subtleties' referred to basically mean
    (1) the increase in assets part of the surplus arising (and also the 'investment earnings' part of profit) would likely include unrealised gains (not just realised gains) - and that wouldn't necessarily be the case under every accounting standard, and
    (2) be careful to remember that profit for an insurance company includes 'minus increase in liabilities' (or plus reduction in liabilities), which isn't typically something that we would expect to see in a profit/loss statement for a 'normal' type of company.

    Hope that helps
     
    James Nunn likes this.
  3. Claudio

    Claudio Member

    Hi there I would just like to ask some questions based on this.

    In respect to the surplus the surplus that arises may not be an actual profit due to it being unrealized. For example, if there was an increase in equities this would lead to a surplus but we haven't sold these equities and haven't realized an actual profit?

    And then concerning the increase/decrease in liabilities would this be a change in reserves or provisions and what would the distinction between the two be? How would proviso versus reserves change over the lifetime of a product?
     
  4. James Nunn

    James Nunn ActEd Tutor Staff Member

    Hi Claudio

    I agree with your example - this is a situation where the increase in surplus over the year in question wouldn't be equal to the profit for the same year, if accounting standards do not allow unrecognised asset gains to be treated as profit.

    Regarding what you say about the increase/decrease in liabilities, yes - what you say is correct (reserves/provisions being the value of liabilities). Also, yes - 'reserves' and 'provisions' can be treated as meaning the same thing for CP1; please see the fourth, fifth and sixth paragraphs in the introduction section to Chapter 31 ('Provisions') for more commentary on provisions vs reserves.

    A few examples of the change in provisions / reserves for different products

    For many life / general insurance policies with fixed terms where a benefit may not be paid, we would expect a provision or reserve to decrease to zero at the end of the policy's terms, all other things being equal (as the probability of a claim decreases). However, all other things may not be equal, and the provision or reserve may increase in some years if, for example, assumptions are strengthened or the level of cover is increased.

    For a whole-of life assurance or endowment assurance contract, for example, a benefit will be paid and so the provision or reserve is likely to increase over time as discounting (to the expected time of the payment of the benefit) decreases.

    CP1 is about pensions too. All other things being equal, provisions or reserves for member's pension are likely to increase between the date of joining the scheme and the date of retirement (due to additional years of accrual and less discounting of retirement benefits over time); they will then decrease after retirement as benefits are paid and the member's expected future lifetime (over which benefits are paid) decreases.
     

Share This Page