To
put it mildly, securitisations did not a get a good reputation as a result of
the financial crisis. Things are now
changing. This is illustrated well in a discussion paper from the Bank of England and the European Central Bank extolling the virtues of securitisations (here). It is difficult to disagree with the key message; securitisations can be
a win-win transactions that enhances the ability to redistribute risks more efficiently in the economy
while enabling institutional investors to access a wider pool of
investment.
The
Solvency II Delegated Acts (‘implementing measures’) built up a more favourable
capital treatment for securitisations.
It is now recognised as a category of its own for the purposes of spread
risk. This evolution can be evidenced in
the Commission’s Impact Analysis published at the time of the publication draft
Delegated Acts (here). As recognised in the Delegated Acts, this even
includes recognising the name ‘securitisation’ instead of the name used in the Solvency
II Directive in 2009: ‘investment in tradable securities or other financial
instruments based on repackaged loans’.
As one
would expect, the calibration of the standard formula spread risk for
securitisation reflects the maturity of the exposure and its credit
rating. However, there is an interesting
innovation. The Delegated Acts identify
two types of securitisation exposures: ‘good’ and ‘bad’, or in policy terms,
type 1 and type 2. The criteria are set
out in the Delegated Acts and are quite detailed.
Exposures
of type 1 must meet 20 conditions including a rating of ‘BBB’ or above, the
seniority of the exposure in the securitisation, SPV arrangements, listing in
an OECD or EU exchange, and backing by residential loans, commercial loans or
auto loans and leases. The list of
conditions is somewhat shorter for securitisations that were issued before the Delegated
Acts came into force. Type 2 securitisations are simply those not meeting these
criteria.
Figure
1 shows the significant difference that meeting the conditions for type 1 makes
to the capital charges. It is a noticeably
a more important consideration than the rating or maturity of the
exposure.
Figure
2 shows an alternative view of the spread risk capital requirements for type 1
securitisations compared against the equivalent ones for corporate bonds of
equivalent ratings. The differences
aren’t that large in particular for short maturities.
All
this raises a number of interesting considerations for an insurer’s capital
management strategy.
Firstly,
there may be tactical adjustments where insurers find that they are holding
type 2 securitisation paper as part of the Solvency II implementation
work. In this case, the insurers may
seek to dispose of these investments before 1 Jan 2016 to avoid the capital
increases that Figure 1 suggests.
However, given insurers’ relatively small holdings of securitisations,
this may not be a material issue.
The
bigger issue is the extent to which there is an appetite to consider the
capital treatment of type 1 securitisation as a more strategic opportunity and
readjust investment strategies. Indeed,
would it be possible to do so before 1 Jan 2016 to enhance the matching of cash
flows of annuity liabilities and subject to Matching Adjustment?
In
any event, Figure 2 above suggests that there may be an interesting question
about the risk and return trade-off of corporate bonds versus type 1
securitisations. Would the returns from
securitisations be sufficiently higher to justify the additional capital
requirements? Figure 2 suggests that for
low maturities, e.g. up to 7 to 10 years, this could be finely balanced in
particular for ‘BBB’ bonds. If so, would
insurers be willing to tilt their investment strategies to include more type 1
securitisation? The answer to this
question requires appropriate consideration, cash-flow matching including risk
appetite, stress testing and governance.
However,
even if the risk and return trade-off mentioned above appears appropriate, it
seems that there may be a limited supply of type 1 securitisations. If so, there would be a limited opportunity
for insurers in the short to medium term. This would be more of an
opportunity for investment banks to structure securitisation transactions.
This post is part of a series of posts on Solvency II. To see the list, click here.
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This post is part of a series of posts on Solvency II. To see the list, click here.
If you found this post useful, you may want to subscribe and receive further posts by email – see box on the right hand side of the screen or click here. My target is to post on a weekly basis so I will not be flooding your inbox.