Swiss Re Executes Longevity Transfer, More Expected

A Swiss Re deal to transfer $50 million in longevity risk may bring back to life a market that has suffered since the onset of the financial crisis.

(January 7, 2011) – What was a dormant industry has once again sprung to life – and pension funds are the likely beneficiaries.

With an estimated $21 trillion in longevity exposure for the world’s pension funds, the ability to hedge against pensioners outlasting an actuary’s predictions is a welcome development. While this market for longevity swaps – which did just that – has been dormant as of late, a Swiss Re deal meant to hedge their own exposure to longevity bodes well for those looking to do the same.

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According to a company release, Swiss Re, the giant European-based reinsurer, has issued a “longevity trend bond” that transfers $50 million in longevity risk to capital markets and would be triggered if “in the event there is a large divergence in the mortality improvements experienced between male lives aged 75-85 in England & Wales and male lives aged 55-65 in the US.” The notes yield 4.72% in interest per year and mature in 2017; in return, investors will lose a portion of or the entire bond principle if differences in mortality between the two defined groups diverge greatly.

The deal has been executed through an off-balance sheet vehicle, Kortis Capital.

According to The Wall Street Journal, such hedging opportunities have waned since the onset of the financial crisis, with $2.2 billion in “extreme-mortality securitizations” executed before 2008 and little to speak of after. The investors in the Swiss Re deal, as would be expected, are largely pension funds and other insurers, the Journal reports.



To contact the <em>aiCIO</em> editor of this story: Kristopher McDaniel at <a href='mailto:kmcdaniel@assetinternational.com'>kmcdaniel@assetinternational.com</a>

UK Equities and Emerging Market Equities Drive DB Pension Returns

New research has shown that trustees of defined benefit schemes saw an average return of 13% on investments last year, buoyed by strong equity performance.

(January 6, 2011) — UK defined benefit pensions returned approximately 13% in 2010, a decrease from 15% in 2009.

A report by State Street Investment Analytics’ WM UK Defined Benefit Pension Fund Universe showed the return estimate was aided by UK equities, which returned an estimated 15% in 2010, and emerging markets equities, where returns were as high as 25% in some countries. According to State Street, public UK pensions benefitted from higher equity allocations, outperforming corporate plans.

SSIA noted that continental European equities only offered growth of 6% for the year, following the UK, as well as North America, Japan and Asia Pacific, which returned between 17% and 25%. State Street’s research showed a small shift from equities to bonds in DB schemes last year, with equity weighting falling from 51% to 49% and bond weight rising from 33% to 35%.

Meanwhile, BNY Mellon said UK and international bonds posted gains of 7.2% and 9.9%, respectively, for the year, while real estate returned an estimated 9.6%.

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To contact the <em>aiCIO</em> editor of this story: Paula Vasan at <a href='mailto:pvasan@assetinternational.com'>pvasan@assetinternational.com</a>; 646-308-2742

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