Institute of Actuaries
EXAMINATION
6 April 2005 (pm)
Subject CT5
Contingencies
Core Technical
Time allowed: Three hours
INSTRUCTIONS TO THE CANDIDATE
1.
Enter all the candidate and examination details as requested on the front of your answer
booklet.
2.
You must not start writing your answers in the booklet until instructed to do so by the
supervisor.
3.
4.
Attempt all 14 questions, beginning your answer to each question on a separate sheet.
5.
CT5 A2005
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
[2]
(a)
(b)
Hence calculate the value using the mortality table AM92 Ultimate with 4%
interest.
[3]
A life insurance company sells an annual premium whole life assurance policy where
the sum assured is payable at the end of the year of death. Expenses are incurred at
the start of each policy year, and claim expenses are nil.
(a)
(b)
A life insurance company issues an annuity to a life aged 60 exact. The purchase
price is 200,000. The annuity is payable monthly in advance and is guaranteed to be
paid for a period of 10 years and for the whole of life thereafter.
Calculate the annual annuity payment.
Basis:
Mortality
AM92 Ultimate
Interest
6% per annum
[4]
CT5 A2005
Alive
Sick
Dead
Assume that the transition probabilities are constant at all ages with
= 1% and = 5%.
= 2%, = 4%,
Calculate the present value of a sickness benefit of 2,000 p.a. paid continuously to a
life now aged 40 exact and sick, during this period of sickness, discounted at 4% p.a.
and payable to a maximum age of 60 exact.
[4]
Calculate the probability of survival to age 60 exact using ELT15 (Males) for a life
aged 45 exact using two approximate methods. State any assumptions you make.
[5]
A joint life annuity of 1 per annum is payable continuously to lives currently aged x
and y while both lives are alive. The present value of the annuity payments is
expressed as a random variable, in terms of the joint future lifetime of x and y.
Derive and simplify as far as possible expressions for the expected present value and
the variance of the present value of the annuity.
[5]
Explain how an insurance company uses risk classification to control the profitability
of its life insurance business.
[5]
CT5 A2005
10
You are given the following statistics in respect of the population of Urbania:
Males
Age band
20
30
40
50
Females
Exposed to
risk
Observed
Mortality rate
Exposed to
risk
Observed
Mortality rate
125,000
200,000
100,000
90,000
0.00356
0.00689
0.00989
0.01233
100,000
250,000
200,000
150,000
0.00125
0.00265
0.00465
0.00685
29
39
49
59
Calculate the directly and indirectly standardised mortality rates for the female lives,
using the combined population as the standard population.
[6]
11
A life insurance company issues a 25-year with profits endowment assurance policy
to a male life aged 40 exact. The sum assured of 100,000 plus declared reversionary
bonuses are payable on survival to the end of the term or immediately on death, if
earlier.
Calculate the monthly premium payable in advance throughout the term of the policy
if the company assumes that future reversionary bonuses will be declared at a rate of
1.92308% of the sum assured, compounded and vesting at the end of each policy year.
Basis:
Interest
6% per annum
Mortality
AM92 Select
Initial commission
Initial expenses
Renewal commission
Renewal expenses
Claim expense
CT5 A2005
12
(i)
A1x:n =
(ii)
A1x:n
[5]
Calculate the expected present value and variance of the present value of a
term assurance of 1 payable immediately on death for a life aged 40 exact, if
death occurs within 30 years.
Basis:
Interest
4% per annum
Mortality
AM92 Select
Expenses: None
[6]
[Total 11]
CT5 A2005
13
6% per annum
4% per annum
AM92 Select
Initial expenses
Renewal expenses
Initial commission
Renewal commission
8% per annum
(i)
Calculate the profit margin on the assumption that the office does not zeroise
future negative cashflows and that decrements are uniformly distributed over
the year.
[13]
(ii)
CT5 A2005
(a)
Calculate the expected provisions that must be set up at the end of each
year, per policy in force at the start of each year.
(b)
Calculate the profit margin allowing for the cost of setting up these
provisions.
[4]
[Total 17]
14
(i)
Write down in the form of symbols, and also explain in words, the expressions
death strain at risk , expected death strain and actual death strain .
[6]
(ii)
Calculate the death strain at risk for each type of policy during 2004.
(b)
During 2004, there were eight actual deaths from the term assurance
policies written and one actual death from each of the other two types
of policy written. Calculate the total mortality profit or loss to the
office in the year 2004.
Basis:
Interest
4% per annum
Mortality
END OF PAPER
CT5 A2005
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
EXAMINATION
April 2005
Subject CT5
Contingencies
Core Technical
EXAMINERS REPORT
Introduction
The attached subject report has been written by the Principal Examiner with
the aim of helping candidates. The questions and comments are based around
Core Reading as the interpretation of the syllabus to which the examiners are
working. They have however given credit for any alternative approach or
interpretation which they consider to be reasonable.
M Flaherty
Chairman of the Board of Examiners
15 June 2005
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
April 2005
Examiners Report
The profit vector is the vector of expected end-year profits for policies which are still
in force at the start of each year.
The profit signature is the vector of expected end-year profits allowing for
survivorship from the start of the contract.
(a)
50:20
(b)
A50:20
1 A50:20
d
A50 v 20 20 p50 (1 A70 )
0.32907 0.45639
8054.0544
(1 0.60097)
9712.0728
0.480093
1 0.480093
13.5176
d
50:20
(a)
( tV ' OP et )(1 i )
qx t ( S )
p x t ( t 1V ' )
where
tV
'
OP = office premium
et
Page 2
April 2005
Examiners Report
(12)
(12)
10 | 60
1 v10
10
(12)
10 | 60
10 p60
(12)
70
(12)
@ 6%
(12)
60
(12)
60:10
8054.0544
9287.2164
7.59720
(12)
v10 10 p60 70
0.867219
0.867219
8.682 = 11.801
Page 3
April 2005
Examiners Report
20
2000.e
ii
p40
dt where
ln(1.04)
0
t
ii
t p40
exp
)ds
exp( .05t )
So value is
20
t
2000 e
5%t
dt where
ln(1.04)
e t (.05 ln(1.04))
(.05 ln(1.04))
2000
20
18, 653
Require to calculate
14 p46
(a)
l60
l46
So
q45
14 p45
0.91023
(1 )q45
(1 q45 )
0.00266
(1 .00266)
x t
constant
.001332
So
Page 4
(b)
86714
95266
14 p45
45
ln(1 q45 )
e
0.002664
14 p45
April 2005
Examiners Report
Define a random variable Txy, the lifetime of the joint life status
The expected value at a rate of interest i is
axy
E (aTxy )
1 v
1 E (v
Txy
Txy
1 Axy
The variance is
Txy
1 v
var
1
2
1
2
Txy
var(v
( 2 Axy ( Axy ) 2 )
where 2 Axy is at (1 i ) 2 1
Past Service
29
i35 t v35 t z35 t
10
20000
a35
80
s34
v35
t 0 l35
or
z ia
M
10
20000 s 35
80
D35
Page 5
April 2005
Examiners Report
Future Service
z ia
M
10
20000 s 35
80
D35
z ia
R
1
20000 s 45
80
D35
9
Insurance works on the basis of pooling independent homogeneous risks
The central limit theorem then implies that profit can be defined as a random
variable having a normal distribution.
Life insurance risks are usually independent
Risk classification ensures that the risks are homogeneous
Lives are divided by risk factors
More factors implies better homogeneity
But the collection of more factors is restricted by
The cost of obtaining data
Problems with accuracy of information
The significance of the factors
The desires of the marketing department
10
Age band
20
30
40
50
29
39
49
59
Males
Exposed
to risk
125000
200000
100000
90000
Observed
Mortality
rate
0.00356
0.00689
0.00989
0.01233
Females
Exposed
to risk
100000
250000
200000
150000
Observed
Mortality
rate
0.00125
0.00265
0.00465
0.00685
Male
Actual
deaths
Female
Actual
deaths
Total
Actual
deaths
Total
Exposed
to risk
445
1378
989
1109.7
3921.7
125
662.5
930
1027.5
2745
570
2040.5
1919
2137.2
6666.7
225000
450000
300000
240000
1215000
Female
Expected
deaths using
total
mortality
rates
253.333333
1133.61111
1279.33333
1335.75
4002.02778
Direct
Indirect
Page 6
Total
Expected
deaths using
female
rates
281.25
1192.5
1395
1644
4512.75
0.003714
0.003764
11
April 2005
Examiners Report
[40]:25
a (12)
155.124 P
11
(1
24
a[40]:25
[40]:25
13.290
11
1 (1.06)
24
25 p[40]v
25
25
8821.2612
9854.3036
12.927
EPV of benefits:
100, 000
(1.06)1/ 2 {q[40] (1 b)v
(1 b)
....
24
q[40] (1 b) 2 v 2
where b = 0.0192308
D65
100, 000
1
(1.06)1/ 2 A[40]:25
@ i ' 100, 000
@ i'
(1 b)
D[40]
100, 000
(1.06)1/ 2 (.38896 .33579) 100, 000 .33579 38949.90
1.0192308
where i '
1.06
1 0.04
1 b
EPV of expenses:
.875 12 P 175 0.025 12 P(a (12)
[40]:25
a (12)
[40]:1
a[40]:1
11
(1
24
p[40]v ) 1
11
1 (1.06)
24
9846.5384
9854.3036
0.974
38949.9 =973.748
Page 7
April 2005
Examiners Report
and P = 289.98
12
(i)
n 1
A1x:n
1
t |Ax:1
t 0
n 1
vt t p x A1x
t:1
t 0
1
A1x
vs s p x
t:1
x t s ds
A1x
v s q x t ds
t:1
qx
qx
iv
t
n 1
A1x:n
vt . t p x .qx
t 0
n 1
vt 1. t px .q x
t 0
Page 8
A1x:n
v s ds
iv
t
x t s
qx
(ii)
var( A1x:n
i
var(
A1x:n
April 2005
Examiners Report
var( A1x:n )
( 2 A1x:n
A140 :30
( A1x:n ) 2 )
v30 . 30 p 40 . A70
A 40
0.23041 v30
2 1
A 40 :30
8054.0544
0.60097 0.078970
9854.3036
v30 . 30 p 40 . 2 A70
A 40
0.06775 v30
8054.0544
0.38975 0.037469
9854.3036
where v = 1/1.0816
var( A1x:n )
0.04
ln(1.04)
Expected value =
1
A[40]:30
0.04
0.078970 0.080539
ln(1.04)
13
Annual premium
1000.00
8.0%
Allocation % (2nd yr +)
Interest on
investments
6.0%
Man charge
Interest on sterling
provisions
4.0%
B/O spread
Minimum death
benefit
Initial expense
Renewal expense
50.0%
102.50%
0.50%
5.0%
4000.00
% prm
Total
150
20.0%
350
50
2.5%
75
Page 9
April 2005
Examiners Report
q xd
q xs
40
0.000788
0.10
41
0.000962
0.05
42
0.001104
0.05
43
0.001208
0.05
(aq ) dx
(aq ) sx
(ap)
t 1 ( ap )
40
0.000749
0.09996
0.899291
1.000000
41
0.000938
0.04998
0.949086
0.899291
42
0.001076
0.04997
0.948951
0.853504
43
0.001178
0.04997
0.948852
0.809934
yr 1
yr 2
yr 3
yr 4
0.000
500.983
1555.400
2667.495
alloc
500.000
1025.000
1025.000
1025.000
B/O
25
51.25
51.25
51.25
28.500
88.484
151.749
218.475
2.518
7.816
13.404
19.299
500.983
1555.400
2667.495
3840.421
value of units at
start of year
interest
management
charge
value of units at
year end
Page 10
April 2005
Examiners Report
yr 2
yr 3
yr 4
unallocated
premium
500.000
25.000
25.000
25.000
B/O spread
25.000
51.250
51.250
51.250
350.000
75.000
75.000
75.000
interest
7.000
1.950
1.950
1.950
man charge
2.518
7.816
13.404
19.299
extra death
benefit
2.619
2.293
1.434
0.188
end of year
cashflow
181.898
45.177
38.730
31.589
0.899291
0.853504
0.809934
discount factor
0.925925926
0.85733882
expected p.v. of
profit
88.54607934
expenses
probability in
force
premium
signature
expected p.v. of
premiums
1000
0.793832241 0.735029853
832.67667
731.74245
642.95174
3207.370861
profit
margin
2.76%
(ii)
(a)
To calculate the expected provisions at the end of each year we have (utilising the end of year
cashflow figures and decrement tables in (i) above):
31.589
30.374
1.04
2V (1.04) ( ap ) 42 3V
38.73
1V
45.177
3V
(1.04) (ap ) 41
2V
2V
1V
64.9552
102.7164
Page 11
April 2005
Examiners Report
These need to be adjusted as the question asks for the values in respect of the beginning of
the year. Thus we have:
Year 3
Year 2
Year 1
30.374(ap)42 = 28.823
64.9552(ap)41 = 61.648
102.7164(ap)40 = 92.372
(b)
Based on the expected provisions calculated in (a) above, the cash flow for years 2, 3 and 4
will be zeroised whilst year 1 will become:
181.898
92.372 = 89.526
Hence the table blow can now be completed for the revised profit margin.
revised end of
year cash flow
89.526
0.899291
0.853504
0.809934
discount factor
0.925925926
0.85733882
0.793832241
0.735029853
expected p.v. of
profit
82.89461768
probability in
force
profit margin
14
(i)
2.58%
The death strain at risk for a policy for year t + 1 (t = 0, 1, 2 ) is the excess of
the sum assured (i.e. the present value at time t + 1 of all benefits payable on
death during the year t + 1) over the end of year provision.
i.e. DSAR for year t + 1 S
t 1V
The expected death strain for year t + 1 (t = 0, 1, 2 ) is the amount that the
life insurance company expects to pay extra to the end of year provision for
the policy.
i.e. EDS for year t + 1 q ( S
t 1V )
Page 12
April 2005
Examiners Report
Annual premium for pure endowment with 75,000 sum assured given by:
P PE
3465.71
Annual premium for term assurance with 150,000 sum assured given by:
PTA
P EA 2 P PE
a45:15
2 P PE
PE
D60
D48
75, 000
75, 000
P PE a48:12
882.85
3465.71 9.613 11289.63
1484.43
TA
3V
EA
3V
PE
(2 3465.71 473.20)a48:12
2 11289.63
IA
25, 000a58:2
25, 000(a58:3
1)
9802.048
15.254 1
9864.803
47, 037.91
Page 13
April 2005
Examiners Report
Sums at risk:
Pure endowment:
DSAR = 0
Term assurance:
DSAR = 150,000
Immediate annuity:
11,289.63 = 11,289.63
777.63 = 149,222.37
ADS
ADS
11, 289.63
11, 289.63
40,586.11
11, 289.63
995 q57
ADS 1
72, 037.91
72, 037.91
72, 037.91
Page 14
111, 673.89
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
EXAMINATION
7 September 2005 (pm)
Subject CT5
Contingencies
Core Technical
Time allowed: Three hours
INSTRUCTIONS TO THE CANDIDATE
1.
Enter all the candidate and examination details as requested on the front of your answer
booklet.
2.
You must not start writing your answers in the booklet until instructed to do so by the
supervisor.
3.
4.
Attempt all 13 questions, beginning your answer to each question on a separate sheet.
5.
CT5 S2005
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
[2]
[3]
A graph of f0(t), the probability density function for the random future lifetime, T0, is
plotted on the vertical axis, with t plotted on the horizontal axis, for data taken from
the English Life Table No. 15 (Males).
You are given that f0(t) = t p0
t 80 and then falls.
t.
80 .
Calculate the value of 1.75 p45.5 on the basis of mortality of AM92 Ultimate and
assuming that deaths are uniformly distributed between integral ages.
[3]
[3]
The probability that a life aged 20 exact will die before age 21.25 exact.
The curtate expectation of a life aged 20 exact.
[4]
Define (12)
60:50:20
CT5 S2005
[5]
A life insurance company prices its long-term sickness policies using the following
three-state continuous-time Markov model, in which the forces of transition , ,
and are assumed to be constant:
Healthy
Sick
Dead
The company issues a particular long-term sickness policy with a benefit of 10,000
per annum payable continuously while sick, provided that the life has been sick
continuously for at least one year. Benefit payments under this policy cease at age 65
exact.
Write down an expression for the expected present value of the sickness benefit for a
healthy life aged 20 exact. Define the symbols that you use.
[5]
A life insurance company issues an annuity contract to a man aged 65 exact and his
wife aged 62 exact. Under the contract, an annuity of 20,000 per annum is
guaranteed payable for a period of 5 years and thereafter during the lifetime of the
man. On the man s death, an annuity of 10,000 per annum is payable to his wife, if
she is then alive. This annuity commences on the monthly payment date next
following, or coincident with, the date of his death or from the 5th policy anniversary,
if later and is payable for the lifetime of his wife. Annuities are payable monthly in
advance.
Calculate the single premium required for the contract.
Basis:
Mortality
Interest
Expenses
CT5 S2005
[9]
A life insurance company issues an annuity policy to two lives each aged 60 exact in
return for a single premium. Under the policy, an annuity of 10,000 per annum is
payable annually in advance while at least one of the lives is alive.
(i)
Write down an expression for the net future loss random variable at the outset
for this policy.
[2]
(ii)
(iii)
PMA92C20 for the first life, PFA92C20 for the second life
4% per annum
ignored
[3]
Calculate the standard deviation of the net future loss random variable at the
outset for this policy, using the basis in part (ii).
You are given that a60:60 = 11.957 at a rate of interest 8.16% per annum.
[4]
[Total 9]
CT5 S2005
10
A life insurance company issued a with profits whole life policy to a life aged 20
exact, on 1 July 2002. Under the policy, the basic sum assured of 100,000 and
attaching bonuses are payable immediately on death. The company declares simple
reversionary bonuses at the start of each year. Level premiums are payable annually
in advance under the policy.
(i)
Give an expression for the gross future loss random variable under the policy
at the outset. Define symbols where necessary.
[3]
(ii)
AM92 Select
Interest
6% per annum
Bonus loading
Expenses
Initial
200
Renewal
On 30 June 2005 the policy is still in force. A total of 10,000 has been
declared as a simple bonus to date on the policy.
The company calculates provisions for the policy using a gross premium
prospective basis, with the following assumptions:
Mortality
Interest
Bonus loading
Renewal expenses
AM92 Ultimate
4%
4% per annum simple
5% of each premium
CT5 S2005
[4]
[Total 11]
11
AM92 Ultimate
Initial
Renewal
600
100 at the start of each of the second and third policy years
8% per annum
Non-unit fund
interest rate
4% per annum
Non-unit fund
provision basis
CT5 S2005
[14]
12
On 1 January 2000, a life insurance company issued joint life whole life assurance
policies to couples. Each couple comprised one male and one female life and both
were aged 50 exact on 1 January 2000. Under each policy, a sum assured of 200,000
is payable immediately on the death of the second of the lives to die.
Premiums under each policy are payable annually in advance while at least one of the
lives is alive.
(i)
Interest
4% per annum
Expenses
Initial
Renewal
1,000
5% of each premium payment
[5]
(ii)
On I January 2004, 5,000 of these policies were still in force. Under 100 of
these policies only the female life was alive. Both lives were alive under the
other 4,900 policies.
The company calculates provisions for the policies on a net premium basis,
using PMA92C20 and PFA92C20 mortality for the male and female lives
respectively and 4% per annum interest.
During the calendar year 2004, there was one claim for death benefit, in
respect of a policy where the female life only was alive at the start of the year.
In addition, one male life died during the year under a policy where both lives
were alive at the start of the year. 4,999 of the policies were in force at the
end of the year.
Calculate the mortality profit or loss for the group of 5,000 policies for the
calendar year 2004.
[9]
[Total 14]
CT5 S2005
13
Under the rules of a pension scheme, a member may retire due to age at any age from
exact age 60 to exact age 65.
On age retirement, the scheme provides a pension of 1/60th of Final Pensionable
Salary for each year of scheme service, subject to a maximum of 40/60ths of Final
Pensionable Salary. Only complete years of service are taken into account.
Final Pensionable Salary is defined as the average salary over the three-year period
before the date of retirement.
The pension scheme also provides a lump sum benefit of four times Pensionable
Salary on death before retirement. The benefit is payable immediately on death and
Pensionable Salary is defined as the annual rate of salary at the date of death.
You are given the following data in respect of a member:
Date of birth
Date of joining the scheme
Annual rate of salary at 1 January 2005
Date of last salary increase
1 January 1979
1 January 2000
50,000
1 April 2004
(i)
Derive commutation functions to value the past service and future service
pension liability on age retirement for this member as at 1 January 2005. State
any assumptions that you make and define all the symbols that you use.
[12]
(ii)
Derive commutation functions to value the liability in respect of the lump sum
payable on death before retirement for this member as at 1 January 2005.
State any assumptions that you make and define all the symbols that you use.
[6]
[Total 18]
END OF PAPER
CT5 S2005
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
EXAMINATION
September 2005
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
September 2005
Examiners Report
In general, this examination was done well by students who were well prepared.
Several questions gave difficulties particularly Question 7 and 12(ii) the latter one
being very challenging. To help students comments are attached to those questions
where particular points are of relevance. Absence of comments can be indicate that
the particular question was generally done well.
Adverse selection is the manner in which lives form part of a group, which acts
against a controlled process of selecting the lives with respect to some characteristic
that affects mortality or morbidity.
An example is where a life insurance company does not distinguish between smokers
and non-smokers in proposals for term assurance cover. A greater proportion of
smokers are likely to select this company in preference to a company that charges
different rates to smokers and non-smokers. This would be adverse to the company s
selection process, if the company had assumed that its proportion of smokers was
similar to that in the general population.
Other examples were credited.
Occupation can have several direct effects on mortality and morbidity. Occupation
determines a person s environment for 40 or more hours each week. The environment
may be rural or urban, the occupation may involve exposure to harmful substances
e.g. chemicals, or to potentially dangerous situations e.g. working at heights. Much of
this is moderated by health and safety at work regulations.
Some occupations are more healthy by their very nature e.g. bus drivers have a
sedentary and stressful occupation while bus conductors are more active and less
stressed. Some work environments e.g. pubs, give exposure to a less healthy lifestyle.
Some occupations by their very nature attract more healthy workers. This may be
accentuated by health checks made on appointment or by the need to pass regular
health checks e.g. airline pilots. Some occupations can attract less healthy workers,
for example, former miners who have left the mining industry as a result of ill health
and then chosen to sell newspapers. This will inflate the mortality rates of newspaper
sellers.
A person s occupation largely determines their income, which permits them to adopt a
particular lifestyle e.g. content and pattern of diet, quality of housing. This effect can
be positive or negative e.g. over-indulgence.
Other appropriate examples were credited.
As t increases,
, hence f 0 t
p0
decreases.
A deceptively straightforward answer which many students struggled to find. The key
point is to compare the 2 parameters as shown.
Page 2
1.75 p45.5
September 2005
Examiners Report
1 q45
*(1 q46 ) *(1 0.25q47 )
1 0.5q45
1 0.001465
*(1 0.001622) *(1 0.25*0.001802)
1 0.5*0.001465
0.999267 *0.998378*0.99955 0.997197
(a)
1 e
(b)
(12)
0.01875
0.018575
p20
k 1
1 e
60:50:20
e
k 1
k
0.015dt
0
0.015k
k 1
0.015
1 e
0.015
66.168.
is the present value of 1 p.a. payable monthly in advance while two lives
aged 60 and 50 are both still alive, for a maximum period of 20 years.
(12)
60:50:20
(12)
(12)
60:50
v 20 20 p60:50 80:70
(a60:50 11
) v 20 20 p60:50 (a80:70 11 )
24
24
(15.161 0.458) v 20
6953.536 9392.621
(6.876 0.458) 12.747
9826.131 9952.697
Page 3
where
t
hh
p20
*
20 t
ss
* 1 p20
t*
44 t
0
t u 1
u
ss
p21
t du dt
ss
1 p20 t
ss
p21
0 t
Examiners Report
hh
p20
45
September 2005
is the probability that a life who is sick at age 20 t is sick continuously for
one year thereafter
is the probability that a life who is sick at age 21 t is still sick at
age 21 t u
This question was not done well and few students obtained the whole result. Partial
credits were given for correct portions. There were other potentially correct
approaches which were credited provided proper definitions of symbols given.
12
5
12
5
4.5477
D70
D65
v5
12
a70
l70
l65
12
9238.134
9647.797
D70 12
a
D65 70
0.957538
D67
D62
v5
12
l70 D67 12
a
l65 D62 67
0.787027
a67
a70|67
10, 000 1
9605.483
9804.173
12
a67
12)
a70:67
0.80527
Page 4
l70 D67 12
a
l65 D62 70|67
(i)
September 2005
Examiners Report
10, 000a
A
B
max K 60
1, K 60
1|
A
B
A
B
P 10, 000 a60
a60
a60
* a60
Variance =
108
d2
181,940
2
60 :60
108
0.038462
60 :60
* 1 0.075444*11.957
1 0.038462*18.194
10
(i)
vT20
I eaK
20
fvT20
GaK
20
100,000 A 20
3,000 IA
20
200 0.05Ga 20
684.49
Page 5
September 2005
Examiners Report
110,000 A23
4,000 IA
23
0.95 * 684.48 * a 23
24, 057.48
11
Unit fund
Year
Fund at the start of the year
Premium
Allocation to units
Interest
Management charge
Fund at the end of the year
0
10000
8075
646
109.0123
8611.988
8611.988
10000
8075
1334.959
225.274
17796.67
3
17796.67
10000
8075
2069.734
349.268
27592.14
1925
600
53
115.156
0
109.013
1371.857
1925
100
73
24.995
0
225.274
2098.28
1925
100
73
0
4138.821
349.268
1891.55
Page 6
4138.821 (1
p64)) / 1.04
1768.192*p63 = 350.146
September 2005
Examiners Report
0.989888
0.978659
1371.857
1.15
350.146* p62
p62 2 p62
1.15 1.152
1455.003
26007.788
Profit margin =
1455.003
1.152
26007.788
5.59%
Most students completed the tables satisfactorily in this question but struggled to get
the revised profit vectors. Very few produced a complete result.
12
(i)
1000 200000* A
50m :50 f
50m :50 f
50m :50 f
a50m
50m :50 f
a50 f
a50m:50 f
1.040.5 * A
1.040.5 *(1 d * a
50m :50 f
50m :50 f
P
(ii)
2,168.02 .
1
a
50 :50
= 200000 * (1.04)0.5 *
at 4%
1
20.694
.04
1.04
= 2011.39
We require 3 provisions at end of 5th policy year
Page 7
September 2005
Examiners Report
55m :55 f
200000 * (1.04)0.5 * 1
50m :50 f
= 200000 * (1.04)0.5 1
= 11196.46
Male only alive
200000 A55m
= 200000 * (1.04)0.5 * 1
2011.39 a55m
.04
*17.364
1.04
2011.39 *17.364
.04
*18.210
1.04
2011.39 *18.210
= 32820.60
Female only alive
200000 A55 f
2011.39 a55 f
= 200000 * (1.04)0.5 * 1
= 24482.39
Mortality Profit Loss
= Expected Death Strain
no actual claims
Result
= (4900 * q54m * q54 f
1) (200000 *1.040.5
24482.39)
1 actual claim
September 2005
Examiners Report
1) (179478.39)
163109.96
(c) Both lives alive beginning 2004, males only die during 2004 -1 actual claim. Here
the claim cost is the change in provision from joint lives to female only
surviving i.e.
Result = (4900 * q54m * q54 f
1) (24482.39 11196.46)
1) (13285.93)
= 50845.17
(d) Both lives alive beginning 2004, females only die during 2004 no actual claims.
Claim cost change in provision from joint lives to male only surviving
Result = (4900 * p54m * q54 f
0) (32820.611 11196.46)
14876.77
13
(i)
Page 9
1
s26 t 3 s26 t
3
to a retiree aged exactly 26 + t.
Define z26
September 2005
s26
r
; a26
t 1
Examiners Report
Past service:
Assume that retirements take place uniformly over the year of age between 60
and 65. Retirement for those who attain age 65 takes place at exact age 65.
Consider retirement between ages 26 + t and 26 + t + 1, 34 t
38 .
and
D26
z26
26 t
r
r26 t a26
ra
50000*5 zC26
t
s
60
D26
s25.25v 26l26
For retirement at age 65, the present value of the benefits is:
50000*5 z65 v65 r65 r
a65
60
s25.25 v 26 l26
ra
where zC65
ra
50000*5 zC65
s
60
D26
r
z65v65r65 a65
ra
where z M 60
39
ra
C26
t 34
Future service:
Assume that retirements take place uniformly over the year of age, between
ages 60 and 65. Retirement at 65 takes place at exactly age 65.
If retirement takes place between ages 60 and 61, the number of future years
service to count is 34. If retirement takes place at age 61 or after, the number
of future years service to count is 35.
For retirement between ages 60 and 61, the present value of the retirement
benefits is:
Page 10
September 2005
60 1 2
r60 i
34*50000 z60 1 2 v
a
26
60
s25.25 v
l26 60
Examiners Report
ra
34*50000 zC60
s
60
D26
For retirement at later years, the formula is similar to the above, with 35 in
place of 34.
Adding all these together gives:
50000
ra
ra
34 z C60
35( z C61
...
60 D26
where
50000
60 D26
ra
M 60
ra
C65
)
ra
M 60
ra
35* zC60
z
t
ra
C60
t 0
(ii)
s
v
50000* 4* 26.25 t
s25.25
v 26
d
where sC26
s26.25 t v
26 t
d 26
d 26 t
l26
50000* 4*
d
C26
s
D26
Adding the present value of benefits for all possible years of death gives
38 s
50000* 4*
s
t 0
d
where s M 26
38
d
C26
d
C26
D26
s
t
200000*
d
M 26
D26
t 0
Examiners felt that this question was quite simple provided students
constructed proper definitions and followed them through logically allowing
of course for the adjusted salary scale. The above answer is one of a number
possible and full credit was given for credible alternatives.
Page 11
September 2005
Examiners Report
Many students, however struggled with this question despite these remarks.
Page 12
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
EXAMINATION
5 April 2006 (pm)
Enter all the candidate and examination details as requested on the front of your answer
booklet.
2.
You must not start writing your answers in the booklet until instructed to do so by the
supervisor.
3.
4.
Attempt all 14 questions, beginning your answer to each question on a separate sheet.
5.
CT5 A2006
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
Active
Retired
Dead
(i)
(ii)
Suggest a reason why a life insurance company might use the super compound
method of adding bonuses as opposed to the compound method.
[1]
[Total 3]
65:60
(b)
5 p65:60
(c)
1
2 q65:65
[4]
State the main difference between an overhead expense and a direct expense incurred
in writing a life insurance policy and give an example of each.
[4]
CT5 A2006 2
A life office issues term assurance policies to 500 lives all aged 30 exact with a term
of 25 years. The benefit of 10,000 is payable at the end of the year of death of any
of the lives into a special fund. Calculate the expected share of this fund for each
survivor after 25 years.
Basis:
Mortality
Interest
AM92 Select
4% per annum
[4]
A life office has issued for a number of years whole-life regular premium policies to a
group of lives through direct advertising. Assured lives are only required to complete
an application form with no further evidence of health. Outline the forms of selection
that the insurer should expect to find in the mortality experience of the lives.
[5]
(i)
Show that:
t
(ii)
px
px t (
x t
x t s)
[2]
tV x
(1
tV x ) x t
tV x
[4]
Px
[Total 6]
(i)
(ii)
CT5 A2006 3
(i)
axy:n
(ii)
[3]
Express a xy:n as the expected value of random variables and hence show that
a xy:n
1 Axy:n
[4]
[Total 7]
10
4
195
(i)
Calculate the profit or loss arising from mortality in the 13th policy year.
[7]
(ii)
[2]
Basis:
Mortality
Interest
Expenses
AM92 Ultimate
4% per annum
none
[Total 9]
11
Give a formula to value this benefit for an employee currently aged x with n
years of past service, defining all terms used.
[5]
(ii)
Using the Pension Scheme Tables from the Actuarial Formulae and Tables,
calculate the value for an employee currently aged 30 exact with exactly 10
years past service.
[2]
(iii)
CT5 A2006 4
12
(i)
(ii)
The data in the following table are taken from data published by the Office of
National Statistics in 2001.
England and Wales
Population
Number of
births
Population
Number of
births
Under 25
3,149,000
153,000
71,000
4,000
25 35
3,769,000
339,000
74,000
6,000
35+
3,927,000
103,000
82,000
1,000
(a)
Using the population for England and Wales as the standard population
calculate crude birth rates and the directly and indirectly standardised
birth rates for Tyne and Wear.
(b)
CT5 A2006 5
13
Show that the monthly premium is 647.47 if the life insurance company
assumes that future simple reversionary bonuses will be declared at the rate of
2% per annum and vesting at the end of each policy year (i.e. the death benefit
does not include any bonus relating to the policy year of death).
Basis:
mortality
interest
initial expenses
renewal expenses
claims expenses
AM92 Select
4% per annum
250 plus 50% of the gross annual premium
3% of the second and subsequent monthly premiums
300 on death; 150 on maturity
[7]
(ii)
At age 60 exact, immediately before the premium then due, the life wishes to
surrender the policy. The life insurance company calculates a surrender value
equal to the gross retrospective policy value, assuming the same basis as in (i)
above.
Calculate the surrender value using the retrospective policy value at the end of
the 25th policy year immediately before the premium then due and just after
the declared bonus has increased the sum assured plus reversionary bonuses to
375,000. Assume that the life insurance company has declared a simple
bonus throughout the duration of the policy consistent with the bonus loading
assumption used to derive the premium in (i) above.
[6]
(iii)
State with a reason whether the surrender value would have been larger, the
same or smaller than in (ii) above if the office had used the prospective gross
premium policy value, on the same basis.
[1]
[Total 14]
CT5 A2006 6
14
A life insurance company issues a 3-year unit linked endowment policy to a life aged
45 exact under which level premiums are payable yearly in advance. In the 1st year,
35% of the premium is allocated to units and 105% in the 2nd and 3rd years. The
units are subject to a bid-offer spread of 5% and an annual management charge of
0.5% of the bid value of units is deducted at the end of each policy year.
Management charges are deducted from the unit fund before death and surrender
benefits are paid.
If the policyholder dies during the term of the policy, the death benefit of the bid
value of the units is payable at the end of the year of death. The policyholder may
surrender the policy only at the end of each year. On surrender or on survival to the
end of the term, the bid value of the units is payable at the end of the year of exit.
The company uses the following assumptions in its profit test of this contract:
Rate of growth on assets in the unit fund
Rate of interest on non-unit fund cash flows
Independent rates of mortality
Independent rates of withdrawal
Initial expenses
Renewal expenses
Initial commission
Renewal commission
5% per annum
4% per annum
AM92 Ultimate
5% per annum
250
50 per annum on the 2nd and 3rd
premium dates
20% of 1st premium
2.5% of the 2nd and 3rd years
premiums
The company sets premiums so that the net present value of the profit on the policy is
15% of the annual premium.
(i)
Using a risk discount rate of 8% per annum, calculate the premium for the
policy on the assumption that the company does not zeroise future expected
negative cash flows.
[12]
(ii)
Explain why the company might need to zeroise future expected negative
cash flows on the policy.
[2]
[Total 14]
END OF PAPER
CT5 A2006 7
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
EXAMINATION
April 2006
Subject CT5
Contingencies
Core Technical
Introduction
The attached subject report has been written by the Principal Examiner with the aim of
helping candidates. The questions and comments are based around Core Reading as the
interpretation of the syllabus to which the examiners are working. They have however given
credit for any alternative approach or interpretation which they consider to be reasonable.
M Flaherty
Chairman of the Board of Examiners
June 2006
Comments
No comments are given.
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
10, 000 e
( t p xaa
x t
pxar
April 2006
Examiners Report
x t ) dt
(i)
(ii)
The sum assured and bonuses increase more slowly than under other methods
for the same ultimate benefit, enabling the office to retain surplus for longer
and thereby providing greater investment freedom.
(a)
65:60
(b)
5 p65:60
l70 l65
.
l65 l60
(c)
1
2 q65:65
. 2 q65:65
(1
2 p65 . 2 p65 )
65
60
9238.134 9647.797
.
9647.797 9826.131
.(1
0.940160
2 p65:65 )
9521.065 9521.065
.
9647.797 9647.797
0.013050
Overhead expenses are those that in the short term do not vary with the amount of
business.
An example of an overhead expense is the cost of the company s premises (as the sale
of an extra policy now will have no impact on these costs).
Direct expenses are those that do vary with the amount of business.
An example of a direct expense is commission payment to a direct salesman (as the
sale of an extra policy now will have an impact on these costs).
Page 2
April 2006
Examiners Report
. 25 p[30]
10, 000(1.0425 ( A[30] v 25 . 25 p[30] . A55 ))
25 p[30]
9923.7497
x0.38950)
9557.8179
9923.7497
536.65
Page 3
(i)
1
s px
px
x t s
ln( s px t )
(ln l x
Examiners Report
ln l x t )
t s
x t
Multiplying through by s px
(ii)
April 2006
Now
t Vx
Ax
ax
Px ax
ax t
ax
p x t ds
px t (
x t s )ds
x t
p x t ds
x t ax t
Ax
x t (1
t Vx )
t Vx
x t (1
Page 4
x t ax t
Ax t )
ax
t Vx )
(1
t Vx ) x t
t Vx
(1
t Vx ) x t
t Vx
ax t
ax
1
ax
ax
ax
Px
(1
ax t )
ax
(i)
April 2006
Examiners Report
70:67
70 67 70:67
11.562 14.111 10.233
15.440
(ii)
Variance:
1
d
Axy ( Axy ) 2
(1 (1 v 2 ). 2xy ) (1 d .xy ) 2
where normal functions are at a rate of interest i and functions with a left
superscript are at a rate of interest i2+2i.
The expression (1-v2) in the right hand side of the above equation can also be
expressed as 2d.
(i)
(ii)
a xy:n
E (amin(max(T
x ,Ty ),n )
Tx and Ty are random variables which measures the complete lifetime of two
lives aged x and y
E (amin(max(T
x ,Ty ), n )
1 E (v
1 v
1 Axy:n
Page 5
10
(i)
April 2006
Examiners Report
Let P be the net premium for the policy payable annually in advance. Then,
equation of value becomes:
Pa45:15
v 20 20 p45 )
773.52
v 7 7 p58 ) Pa58:2
13,260.25 = 3,260.25
3, 260.25
3, 665.66
The death strain at risk is negative. Hence, the life insurance company makes
money on early deaths.
More people die than expected during the year considered so the company
makes a mortality profit.
11
(i)
Mr
1, 000.n. x
Dx
v xlx
Where Dx
C xr
vx
r
C65
M xr
Rx
1, 000.
Dx
rx for x < 65
65
v r65
65 x
C xr
t 0
r
Mx
Page 6
M xr C xr for x < 65
Rx
April 2006
Examiners Report
Mx
t 0
782
25,502
1000.
7,874
7,874
(ii)
1, 000.10.
(iii)
Nx
Dx
N 30
4, 231.902
90684, D30
Therefore C
12
4, 231.902
7874
367.45
Definitions:
(i)
(a)
(b)
(c)
Page 7
(a)
April 2006
Examiners Report
Calculations.
England and Wales
Total
Population
Number of births
Population
Number of births
10,845,000
595,000
227,000
11,000
Expected number of
births
Under 25
3,149,000
0.0563
177,408
25 35
3,769,000
0.0811
305,595
35+
3,927,000
0.0122
47,890
Total
10,845,000
530,893
Fertility rate
Population
Expected Births
Under 25
0.0486
71,000
3,450
25 35
0.0899
74,000
6,656
35+
0.0262
82,000
2,151
227,000
12,256
Total
The indirectly standardised rate does not require local records of births
to be analysed by age grouping.
The standardised rates are similar so the approximation is acceptable.
Both standardised rates are higher than the crude rate, showing that the
reason for the low cruder rate compared to the national population is
due to population distribution by age.
Both standardised rates are below the crude rate for England and
Wales so the birth rate of Tyne and Wear is lower, even allowing for
the age distribution.
Page 8
13
(i)
April 2006
Examiners Report
12 a[35]:30
12 P 17.631
11
(1 v30 30 p[35] )
24
11
689.23
1
24
2507.02
207.5841P
0.03 12 Pa (12)
[35]:30
5000 IA
1
[35]:30
where
IA
1
[35]:30
7.47005
IA
[35]
689.23
7.89442 30 0.52786
2507.02
0.946137
689.23
2507.02
207.5841P
126,506.762
195.3866
647.47
Page 9
April 2006
Examiners Report
(a)
(1 i ) 25
(12)
0.97 12 Pa[35]:25
p
25 [35]
1
245,300 A[35]:25
5, 000 IA
1
[35]:25
where
IA
1
[35]:25
IA
7.47005
retrospective
v 25 25 p[35] IA
60
25 A60
882.85
8.36234 25 0.4564
2507.02
0.507198
1
A[35]:25
A[35]:25
v 25 25 p[35]
a (12)
a[35]:25
11
(1 v 25 25 p[35] ) 16.029 0.29693 15.73207
24
[35]:25
25V
[35]
Page 10
Surrender value would be the same i.e. 25V retrospective 25V prospective at
4% per annum rate of interest as the equality of bases ensures that the
prospective and retrospective reserves of any policy at any given time t
should be equal.
14
(i)
April 2006
Examiners Report
Let P be the annual premium required to meet the company s profit criteria.
Then:
(a)
qxw (1 qwd )
aq
q xd
qxw
45
46
47
0.001465
0.001622
0.001802
0.05
0.05
0.05
(b)
d
x
0.001465
0.001622
0.001802
aq
w
x
ap
t 1 ( ap ) x
0.049927 0.948608 1
0.049919 0.948459 0.948608
0.049910 0.948288 0.899716
Value of units
at start of year
Allocation
Bid/offer
Interest
Management
charge
Value of units
at start of year
Year 1
0
Year 2
0.347379P
Year 3
1.405063P
0.35P
0.0175P
0.016625P
0.001746P
1.05P
0.0525P
0.067244P
0.007061P
1.05P
0.0525P
0.120128P
0.012613P
0.347379P
1.405063P
2.510077P
Page 11
April 2006
Examiners Report
Unallocated
premium
Bid/offer
Expenses
Interest
Management
charge
End of year
cashflows
Probability in
force
Discount factor
Expected
present value
of profit
Year 1
0.65P
Year 2
-0.05P
Year 3
-0.05P
0.0175P
0.2P+250
0.0187P-10
0.001746P
0.0525P
0.025P+50
-0.0009P-2
0.007061P
0.0525P
0.025P+50
-0.0009P-2
0.012613P
0.487946P-260
-0.016339P-52 -0.010787P-52
0.948608
0.899716
0.925926
0.857339
0.793832
0.430809P320.170863
Page 12
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
EXAMINATION
12 September 2006 (pm)
Subject CT5
Contingencies
Core Technical
Time allowed: Three hours
INSTRUCTIONS TO THE CANDIDATE
1.
Enter all the candidate and examination details as requested on the front of your answer
booklet.
2.
You must not start writing your answers in the booklet until instructed to do so by the
supervisor.
3.
4.
Attempt all 12 questions, beginning your answer to each question on a separate sheet.
5.
CT5 S2006
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
Healthy
Critically ill
Dead
Under these policies, a lump sum benefit is payable on the occasion that a life
becomes critically ill during a specified policy term. No other benefits are payable.
A 20-year policy with sum assured 200,000 is issued to a healthy life aged 40 exact.
(i)
Write down a formula, in integral terms, for the expected present value of
benefits under this policy.
[2]
(ii)
:
:
:
Interest:
0.01
0.02
3
8% per annum
[3]
[Total 5]
70: 1
CT5 S2006
A life insurance company issues a reversionary annuity contract. Under the contract
an annuity of 20,000 per annum is payable monthly for life, to a female life now
aged 60 exact, on the death of a male life now aged 65 exact. Annuity payments are
always on monthly anniversaries of the date of issue of the contract.
Premiums are to be paid monthly until the annuity commences or the risk ceases.
Calculate the monthly premium required for the contract.
Basis:
Mortality:
Interest:
Expenses:
Tx and Ty are the complete future lifetimes of two lives aged x and y respectively:
Let the random variable g(T) take the following values
g(T) =
aT
aT
if
Tx
Ty
if
Tx
Ty
(i)
[2]
(ii)
[2]
(iii)
Write down an expression for the variance of g(T) using assurance functions.
[2]
[Total 6]
CT5 S2006
A member of a pension scheme is aged 55 exact, and joined the scheme at age 35
exact. She earned a salary of 40,000 in the 12 months preceding the scheme
valuation date.
The scheme provides a pension on retirement for any reason of 1/80th of final
pensionable salary for each year of service, with fractions counting proportionately.
Final pensionable salary is defined as the average salary over the three years prior to
retirement.
Using the functions and symbols defined in, and assumptions underlying, the
Example Pension Scheme Table in the Actuarial Tables:
(i)
Calculate the expected present value now of this member s total pension.
[4]
(ii)
The following data relate to a certain country and its biggest province:
Age-group
Country
Population
Deaths
0-19
20-44
45-69
70 and over
Total
2,900,000
3,500,000
2,900,000
700,000
10,000,000
580
2,450
20,300
49,000
72,330
Province
Population
800,000
1,000,000
900,000
300,000
3,000,000
The population figures are from a mid-year census along with the deaths that occurred
in that year.
There were 25,344 deaths in the province in total.
Calculate the Area Comparability Factor and a standardised mortality rate for the
province.
[6]
A pure endowment policy for a term of n years payable by single premium is issued to
lives aged x at entry.
(i)
Derive Thiele s differential equation for t V , the reserve for this policy at time
t (0 < t < n).
[5]
(ii)
(iii)
CT5 S2006
[2]
[2]
[Total 9]
Initial:
Renewal:
AM92 Ultimate
None
600
100 at the start of each of the second and
third policy years
6% per annum
4% per annum
10% per annum
(i)
Calculate the expected net present value of the profit on this contract.
(ii)
State, with a reason, what the effect would be on the profit if the insurance
company did hold non-unit reserves to zeroise negative cashflows, assuming it
used a discount rate of 4% per annum for calculating those reserves. (You do
not need to perform any further calculations.)
[2]
[Total 12]
CT5 S2006
[10]
10
A life insurance company is reviewing the 2005 mortality experience of its portfolio
of whole life assurances.
You are given the following information:
Age exact on
1 Jan 2005
69
70
500,000
400,000
175,000
150,000
There were 2 death claims during 2005 arising from these policies as follows:
Date of issue of
policy
Sum assured
1 Jan 1980
1 Jan 1982
45
46
12,000
10,000
(ii)
Calculate the mortality profit or loss for 2005 in respect of this group of
policies.
[8]
(a)
Calculate the amount of expected death claims for 2005 and compare it
with the amount of actual claims.
(b)
Suggest a reason for this result compared with that obtained in (i).
[4]
[Total 12]
CT5 S2006
11
A life insurance company issues identical deferred annuities to each of 100 women
aged 63 exact. The benefit is 5,000 per annum payable continuously from a
woman s 65th birthday, if still alive at that time, and for life thereafter.
(i)
Write down an expression for the random variable for the present value of
future benefits for one policy at outset.
[3]
(ii)
(iii)
12
Mortality:
Interest:
PFA92C20
4% per annum
[2]
Calculate the total variance of the present value at outset of these annuities,
using the same basis as in part (ii).
[8]
[Total 13]
A life insurance company issues a 10-year decreasing term assurance to a man aged
50 exact. The death benefit is 100,000 in the first year, 90,000 in the 2nd year, and
decreases by 10,000 each year so that the benefit in the 10th year is 10,000. The
death benefit is payable at the end of the year of death.
Level premiums are payable annually in advance for the term of the policy, ceasing
on earlier death.
(i)
6% per annum
AM92 Select
200 and 25% of the total annual premium (all incurred
on policy commencement)
Renewal expenses: 2% of each premium from the start of the 2nd policy year
and 50 per annum, inflating at 1.923% per annum, at
the start of the second and subsequent policy years
Claim expenses:
200 inflating at 1.923% per annum
Inflation:
For renewal and claim expenses, the amounts quoted are
at outset, and the increases due to inflation start
immediately.
[8]
(ii)
Write down an expression for the gross future loss random variable at the end
of the ninth year, using whatever elements of the basis in (i) that are relevant.
[3]
(iii)
Calculate the gross premium reserve at the end of the ninth year, using the
premium basis.
[3]
(iv)
END OF PAPER
CT5 S2006
[2]
[Total 16]
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
EXAMINATION
September 2006
Comments
No comments are given
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
If funds chose at random which annuities to insure and which to self-insure, we would
expect approximately the same mortality experience in both groups. The self-insured
experience is heavier, meaning their lives are somehow below standard on average.
The most likely explanation is that the pension funds make informed decisions based
on the health or reason for retirement of the pensioners. Those retiring early due to
ill-health or those known to have poor health are retained for payment directly by the
fund. That should be cheaper than paying a premium to the insurer based on normal
mortality for these lives. The remainder of the lives, known to be on reasonable health
are insured.
This is adverse selection.
Sensible comments regarding other forms of selection are also acceptable.
20
(i)
HH
t p40 40+t dt
20
HH
= 200, 000 et t p40
40+t dt
0
t
20
= 200, 000 e t e
( 40 + r +40 + r ) dr
0
40+t dt
where:
t
HH
p40
is the probability that the healthy life aged 40is healthy at age 40+t
HH
p40
is the probability that the healthy life aged 40 is healthy at all points up
to age 40+t (These 2 probabilities are the same for this model)
t
= ln(1.08) = 0.076961
(ii)
t
20
( 40 + r +40 + r ) dr
0
40+t dt
0
t
20
{(0.01) +(0.02)}dr
0
(0.02)dt
0
20
= 200, 000 e
0
(0.076961)t (0.03)t
20
0
0.106961
Page 2
A1
70:1
A1
70:1
EPV of benefits:
(12)
(12)
(12)
20, 000a65|60
= 20, 000(a60
a65:60
) = 20, 000(a60 a65:60 ) = 20, 000(15.652 11.682)
= 79, 400
EPV premiums:
(The premium term will be the joint lifetime of the two lives because if his death is
first the annuity commences or if her death is first, there will never be any annuity.)
Let P be the monthly premium
(12)
12 Pa65:60
= 12 P(a65:60 11
) = 12 P(12.682 0.458) = 146.688 P
24
(i)
(ii)
This is the present value of a joint life annuity of amount 1 per annum payable
continuously until the first death of 2 lives (x) and (y).
Page 3
(iii)
(i)
Var[ g (T )] =
A xy ( A xy ) 2
ia
ra
+ z M 55
)
20 ( z M 55
20 (34, 048 + 128, 026)
= 40, 000
= 119, 737
80
s54 D55
80 (9.745)(1,389)
ia
ra
(k )(40, 000)
(ii)
N 55
88, 615
= 41, 628 ( k )(40, 000)
= 41, 628 k = .159
s54 D55
(9.745)(1,389)
ACF =
s Exc,t s mx,t
x
Exc,t
Exc,t s mx,t
x
Exc,t
x
Here
s
E xc,t
E xc,t s m x ,t
E xc,t
Age-group
Population
Deaths
Population
019
2044
4569
70 and over
2,900,000
3,500,000
2,900,000
700,000
580
2,450
20,300
49,000
800,000
1,000,000
900,000
300,000
leading to
m x ,t
0.0002 160
0.0007 700
0.007 6,300
0.07
Total
Page 4
10,000,000
72,330
3,000,000
E xc,t s m x ,t
21,000
28,160
ACF =
28,160
=
3, 000, 000
8
tV
(i)
=
n t
px +t e( nt )
l
( nt px +t ) = ln( nt px +t ) = ln x + n = {ln(l x+ n ) ln(l x +t )} = x+t
t
t l x +t t
n t p x +t t
( nt px +t ) = ( x +t )( nt px+t )
t
( nt )
(e
) = e( nt )
t
( n t )
( x +t )( nt px +t )} + { nt px+t e( nt ) } = nt px +t e( nt ) ( x+t + )
t V = {e
t
t V = ( x +t + ) t V
t
(ii)
The change in reserve at time t consists of the interest earned and the release
of reserves from the deaths.
(The release may be more easily seen if the last line of (i) is rewritten as:
(iii)
nV
= 1.
Page 5
(i)
Survival table
qx
x
60
61
62
px
0.008022
0.009009
0.010112
t-1px
0.99198
0.99099
0.98989
1
0.991978
0.983041
Unit fund
Value of
units at
start of
year
Year 1
Year 2
Year 3
Allocation
0.00
4,247.65
9,665.87
4,250.00
5,200.00
5,200.00
Bid/offer
212.50
260.00
260.00
Interest
Management
charge
Value of
units at
end of year
242.25
551.26
876.35
32.10
73.04
116.12
4,247.65
9,665.87
15,366.10
Non-unit fund
Unallocated
premium
Year 1
Year 2
Year 3
Bid/offer
750.00
-200.00
-200.00
212.50
260.00
260.00
Non-unit
fund cash
flow (profit
vector)
Year 1
Year 2
Year 3
282.73
-61.66
27.66
Total NPV
Expenses
Interest
Management
charge
600.00
100.00
100.00
14.50
-1.60
-1.60
32.10
73.04
116.12
Probability
in force at
start of
year
1
0.991978
0.983041
Profit
signature
Discount
factor
282.73 0.909091
-61.16 0.826446
27.19 0.751315
Extra
death
benefit
End of year
cashflows
126.37
93.10
46.86
282.73
-61.66
27.66
Expected
present
value of
profit
257.03
-50.55
20.43
226.91
Page 6
The NPV would decrease. Holding reserves would delay the emergence of
some of the Year 1 cash flow, and as the non-unit fund earns 4%, well below
the risk discount rate, the NPV would reduce.
10
(i)
The 2 deaths were 70 and 69 respectively at 1/1/2005. The reserves for these
policies at 31/12/2005 were
26V
a
9.998
24V
a
10.375
= 10, 000 1 70 = 10, 000 1
= 4, 410.92
18.563
a46
(a)
Expected claims:
(q69)(500,000)+(q70)(400,000)
= (0.022226)(500,000) + (0.024783)(400,000)
= 11,113 + 9,913.2 = 21,026.20
Actual claims:
12,000 + 10,000 = 22,000
(b)
Actual claims were higher than expected claims but the company still
made a mortality profit. This can only have occurred because the
deaths were disproportionately concentrated on lower DSAR lives
(policies more mature on average). (This can be seen by comparing the
ratio of reserves to sum assured for the death claim policies with the
corresponding ratio for the full portfolio.)
Page 7
11
(i)
g(T) =
5, 000v 2 aT
if T63 < 2
63 2
63
a2 )
(ii)
E[ g (T )] = (100)(5, 000)v 2 2 p63a65 = (500, 000)(0.92456)(0.992617)(14.871 0.5)
= (500, 000)(13.1887) = 6,594,350
(iii)
Var[ g (T )] = E[ g (T ) 2 ] E[ g (T )]2
For 1 of annuity:
E[ g (T ) ] = t p6363+t [v 2 at 2 ]2 dt
2
Let t = r + 2
E[ g (T ) ] = r + 2 p6363+ r + 2 [v 2 ar ]2 dr
2
0
2
1 v r
= r p652 p6365+ r v
dr
0
4
=
=
2 p63v
2
r p6565+r [1 2v
2 p63v
2
+ v 2 r ]dr
0
4
[1 2 A65 + A65 ]
where
0.04
A65 = (1.04)0.5 (1 da65 ) = 1.019804{1
(14.871)} = 0.436515
1.04
2
(0.992617)(0.85480)
(0.039221) 2
Page 8
12
EPV benefits:
110, 000 A 1
[50]:10
1
[50]:10
(functions @ 6% p.a.)
= 110, 000{ A[50] v10 10 p[50] A60 } 10, 000{( IA)[50] v10 10 p[50] (10 A60 + ( IA)60 )}
= 110, 000 A[50] 10, 000( IA)[50] + v10 10 p[50]{10, 000(( IA)60 A60 )}
= (110, 000)(0.20463) (10, 000)(4.84789) + (0.55839)(0.95684){10, 000(5.46572 0.32692)}
= 22,509.30 48, 478.90 + 27, 456.09 = 1, 486.49
EPV expenses
6%
4%
200 + 0.25 P + 0.02 Pa[50]:9
+ 50a[50]:9
+ 200 A 1
4%
[50]:10
4%
p A )
(4%) 10 [50] 60
6%
4%
= 150 + 0.23P + 0.02 Pa[50]:10
+ 50a[50]:10
+ 200( A[50] v10
.06
+ 200(1.01923)9 v
.04
+50(1.01923)9 0.98(281.53)
or
GFLRV = 10, 000v
.06
+ 200(1.01923)10 v
.06
+50(1.01923) 0.98(281.53)
9
Page 9
(iv)
The reserve is negative. The expected future income exceeds expected future
outgo, because past outgo exceeded past income, meaning the office needs a
net inflow in the last year to recoup previous losses. However, it is at risk of
the policy lapsing, and never getting this net inflow.
Page 10
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
EXAMINATION
17 April 2007 (am)
Enter all the candidate and examination details as requested on the front of your answer
booklet.
2.
You must not start writing your answers in the booklet until instructed to do so by the
supervisor.
3.
4.
Attempt all 14 questions, beginning your answer to each question on a separate sheet.
5.
CT5 A2007
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
Calculate
(i)
5|10q[52]
(ii)
Basis:
Mortality: AM92 Select
[3]
State, with examples, three distinct types of selection in the membership of a pension
scheme.
[3]
i = ill
x
d = dead
Assume that the transition probabilities are constant at all ages with = 2%, = 6%,
= 1% and = 3%.
An able life age 55 exact takes out a 10-year sickness contract that provides a noclaim bonus of 100 if the insured remains able for the full duration of the contract.
Calculate the expected present value of the bonus at the beginning of the contract with
a force of interest of 0.04.
[4]
(i)
In the context of net premiums and reserves, state the conditions necessary for
equality of prospective and retrospective reserves.
[2]
(ii)
Give two reasons why, in practice, these conditions may not hold.
CT5 A20072
[2]
[Total 4]
[5]
A term assurance contract for a life aged 50 exact for a term of 10 years provides a
benefit of 10,000 payable at the end of the year of death. Calculate the expected
present value and variance of benefits payable under this contract.
Basis:
Mortality: AM92 Select
Interest:
4% per annum
[6]
You are given the following statistics in relation to the mortality experience of
Actuaria and its province Giro:
Actuaria
Exposed to risk Number of deaths
Age
019
2039
4059
6079
(i)
(ii)
300,000
275,000
200,000
175,000
25
35
100
500
Exposed to risk
12,000
10,000
9,000
8,000
Giro
Number of deaths
2
3
6
50
[2]
CT5 A20073
If the life dies within the guarantee period then the survivors pension
commences with the first payment immediately after the end of the guarantee
period.
(b)
If the life dies after the guarantee period has expired then the survivors
pension commences with the first payment immediately after the death of the
first life.
10
Let X be a random variable representing the present value of the benefits of a whole of
life assurance, and Y be a random variable representing the present value of the
benefits of a temporary assurance with a term of n years. Both assurances have a sum
assured of 1 payable at the end of the year of death and were issued to the same life
aged x.
(i)
(ii)
Describe the benefits provided by the contract which has a present value
represented by the random variable X - Y.
[1]
Show that
Ax ( n | Ax ) 2 2 A1x:n
CT5 A20074
[7]
[Total 8]
11
A five-year unit-linked policy issued to a life aged 50 exact has the following pattern
of end of year cashflows per policy in force at the start of each year:
(-95.21, -30.18, -20.15, 77.15, 120.29)
12
(i)
Explain why a life office might need to set up non-unit reserves in respect of a
unit-linked life assurance policy.
[2]
(ii)
Calculate the non-unit reserves required for the policy in order to zeroise
negative cashflows assuming AM92 Ultimate mortality and that reserves earn
interest at the rate of 5% per annum.
[2]
(iii)
Determine the net present value of the profits before and after zeroisation
assuming the risk discount rate used is 8% per annum and state with reasons
which of these figures you would expect to be higher.
[6]
[Total 10]
A life office issued 750 identical 25-year temporary assurance policies to lives aged
30 exact each with a sum assured of 75,000 payable at the end of year of death.
Premiums are payable annually in advance for 20 years or until earlier death.
(i)
Show that the annual net premium for each policy is approximately equal to
104 using the basis given below.
[2]
(ii)
Calculate the net premium reserve per policy at the start and at the end of the
[4]
20th year of the policy.
(iii)
Calculate the mortality profit or loss to the life office during the 20th year if
twelve policyholders die during the first nineteen years of the policies and two
[4]
policyholders die during the 20th year.
Basis:
Mortality:
Interest:
AM92 Ultimate
4% per annum
[Total 10]
CT5 A20075
13
A life office issues with-profit whole of life contracts, with the sum assured payable
immediately on death of the life assured. Level premiums are payable monthly in
advance to age 65 or until earlier death.
The life office markets two versions of this policy, one assumed to provide simple
bonuses of 4% per annum of the sum assured vesting at the end of each policy year
and the other assumed to provide compound bonuses of 4% of the sum assured, again
vesting at the end of each policy year. The death benefit under each version does not
include any bonus relating to the policy year of death.
The following basis is assumed to price these contracts:
Mortality
Interest
Initial expenses
Renewal expenses
Initial commission
Renewal commission
Claims expenses
AM92 Select
4% per annum
300
2.5% of the second and subsequent monthly premiums
50% of the gross annual premium
2.5% of the second and subsequent monthly premiums
250 at termination of the contract
Calculate the level monthly premium required for each version of this policy issued to
a life aged 30 exact at outset for an initial sum assured of 50,000.
[12]
14
A life office issues a 4-year non profit endowment assurance policy to a male life
aged 61 exact for a sum assured of 100,000 payable on survival to the end of the
term or at the end of the year of death if earlier. Premiums are payable annually in
advance throughout the term of the policy.
There is a surrender benefit payable equal to a return of premiums paid, with no
interest. This benefit is payable at the end of the year of surrender.
The life office uses the following assumptions to price this contract:
Mortality
Surrenders
Interest
Initial expenses
Renewal expenses (on the second
and subsequent premium dates)
AM92 Select
None
4% per annum
500
50 per annum plus 2.5% of the premium
In addition, the company holds net premium reserves, calculated using AM92
Ultimate mortality and interest of 4% per annum.
In order to profit test this contract, the life office assumes the same mortality and
expense assumptions as per the pricing basis above. In addition, it assumes it earns
5% per annum on funds and that 5% of all policies still in force at the end of 1, 2, and
3 years then surrender.
Calculate, using a risk discount rate of 8% per annum, the expected profit margin on
this contract.
[18]
END OF PAPER
CT5 A20076
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
EXAMINATION
April 2007
M A Stocker
Chairman of the Board of Examiners
June 2007
Comments
Comments, where applicable, are given in the solutions that follow.
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
(i)
5|10 q[52]
(ii)
65
EPV = 100e
= 100e0.09*[6555]
= 100e 0.9
= 40.66
(i)
(ii)
Page 2
The basis is the same as the basis used to calculate the premiums used in
the reserve calculation.
The assumptions used for the retrospective calculation (for which the
experienced conditions over the duration of the contract up to the valuation
date are used) are not generally appropriate for the prospective calculation
(for which the assumptions considered suitable for the remainder of the
policy term are used).
1000* 0.05*e
0
0.09t
dt = 1000*0.05 / 0.09
= 555.56
29
4 25, 000 t =0
s36l35v35
definitions:
Page 3
Present value
1
10000 A[50]:10
= 10000( A[50] v10
l60
l[50]
A60 )
9706.0977
0.45640) = 336.60
Variance
1
1
= 100002 ( 2 A[50]:10
( A[50]:10
)2 )
= 100002 (( 2 A[50] v 20
l60
l[50]
9706.0977
The function with the 2 suffix is calculated at rate i2+2i i.e 8.16% in this case.
(i)
SMR =
Ecx,t mx,t
x
Ecx,t s mx,t
x
E xc,t = central exposed to risk in population being studied between age x and age x + t
mx,t = central mortality rate in population being studied for ages x to x + t
s
(ii)
Page 4
5
(12)
+7500v5 (1 5 p 60) 5 p55 a(12)
65
60 + 7500v (1 5 p 55) 5 p60 a
l60l55
l65
l60
+7500v5 [(1 l 65 / l 60)l 60 / l 55)(a60 11/ 24) + (1 l 60 / l 55)l 65 / l 60)(a65 11/ 24)]
= 15000 (1 0.82193) / 0.039157 + 7500 0.82193 9647.797
+7500 0.82193 9647.797
9826.131
9848.431
9917.623
9826.131
The following is an alternative derivation of the formula for the purchase price above.
(12)
(12)
15, 000a5|(12) + 15, 000v5 5 p60 (1 5 p55 )a65
+ 7,500v5 5 p55 (1 5 p60 )a60
(12)
(12)
(12)
+ v5 5 p60 5 p55 (15, 000a65
+ 7,500[a60
a65:60
])
10
(i)
(ii)
X = vk+1
Cov(X, Y)
all k
v k +1 0 k < n
Y=
kn
0
Page 5
Now E[XY] =
k =0
k = n 1
k =0
(v k +1 ) 2 P[ K x = k ] +
k =
vk +1 0 P[ K x = k ]
k =n
(v 2 ) k +1 P[ K x = k ]
= 2 A1x:n
Where 2A is determined using a discount function v2 , i.e. using an interest rate
i* = (1 + i)2 1 = 2i + i2
Then: Cov(X, Y) = 2 A1x:n Ax . A1x:n
Now: Var(X Y) = Var(X) + Var(Y) 2 Cov(X, Y)
= ( 2 Ax ( Ax ) 2 ) + ( 2 A1x:n ( A1 ) 2 ) 2( 2 A1x:n Ax . A1x:n )
x:n
= 2 Ax 2 A1x:n ( Ax A1x:n ) 2
= 2 Ax 2 A1x:n ( nAx ) 2
The Examiners regret that two typographical errors occurred in the question wording set in
the Examination:
In line 2 of 10(ii) the symbol shown as 2 A1x should have been 2 A1x:n .
In the same line the function on the left hand side of the equation should have read
Cov(X,Y) and not have included in the brackets 2 assurance functions (which as
erroneously stated would have equated to zero).
In the event this question was done well despite the errors. The majority of students
attempting the question noticed the first error as obvious and adjusted accordingly. The
second error was rarely noticed by students who often went on to produce an otherwise good
proof.
The question has been corrected for publication. The Examiners wish to sincerely apologise
for these errors and wish to assure students that the marking system was sympathetically
adjusted to meet the circumstances.
Page 6
11
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
Before zeroisation, the net present value (based on a risk discount rate of 8%)
is:
NPV =
+
+
1.08
1.082
1.083
1.084
1.085
95.21 0.99749 30.18 0.99469 20.15 0.99155 77.15 0.98804 120.29
+
+
1.08
1.082
1.083
1.084
1.085
Page 7
12
(i)
1
Net premium per policy is P where Pa30:20 = 75, 000 A30:25
P=
9557.8179
=
9712.0728
21.834 1.0420
17.444
9925.2094
( 0.16023 0.14070 ) = 104.30
= 75, 000
( 21.834 7.7903)
(ii)
Net premium reserve per policy at the end of the 20th year
1
= 75, 000 A50:5
0 = 75, 000 A50 v5 5 p50 A55
9557.8179
Net premium reserve per policy at the start of the 20th year
Sq49 + 20Vp49
P
1+ i
75, 000q49 + 1051.06 p49
=
104.30
1.04
75, 000 0.002241 + 1051.06 0.997759
=
104.30
1.04
= 1065.68
(iii)
Page 8
13
(i)
Let P be the monthly premium for the contract with simple bonus. Then
equation of value (at 4% p.a. interest) is:
12 P(.95a(12)
[30]:35
where a(12)
[30]:35
= a[30]:35
11
11
8821.2612
1 v35 35 p[30] = 19.072 1 1.0435
24
24
9923.7497
= 18.7169
Therefore:
12 P(.95 18.7169) 5.95 P = (48, 000 + 250) 1.040.5 0.16011 + 2, 000 1.040.5 6.91644 + 300
i.e.
207.42266 P = 7,878.299 + 14,106.825 + 300
P=
(ii)
22, 285.124
= 107.44
207.42266
Let P be the monthly premium for the contract with compound bonus. Then
equation of value (at 4% p.a. interest) is:
@ 4%
(12)
12 P(.95a[30]:35
) 5.95 P = 50, 000 v 0.5 q[ x ] + v1.5 p[ x ]q[ x ]+1 (1.04) + ... + 250 A[30]
+ 300
1.04
50, 000
@ 4%
v 1.04q[ x ] + v 2 1.042 p[ x ]q[ x ]+1 + ... + 250 A[30]
+ 300
0.5
(1.04 )
50, 000
(1.04 )
0.5
@ 0%
@ 4%
A[30]
+ 250 A[30]
+ 300
@ 0%
=1
where A[30]
50, 000
(1.04 )
0.5
49,369.854
= 238.02
207.42266
Page 9
14
q[dx ] = ( aq )[ x ]
q[sx ]
( aq )[sx] = q[sx]
61
62
63
64
0.006433
0.009696
0.011344
0.012716
0.05
0.05
0.05
0.04968
0.04952
0.04943
(ap)[61]+t 1
t 1 ( ap )[61]
1
2
3
4
0.943887
0.940784
0.939226
0.987284
1
0.94389
0.88799
0.83403
= 1
a62:3
2V61:4
= 1
a63:2
3V61:4
= 1
a64:1
Page 10
a61:4
a61:4
a61:4
= 1
2.857
= 0.23240
3.722
= 1
1.951
= 0.47582
3.722
= 1
1.000
= 0.73133
3.722
(1 ( aq ) )
d
[ x]
Year t
1
2
3
4
Prem
Expense
Opening
reserve
Interest
Death
Claim
Surr
Claim
Mat
Claim
Closing
reserve
Profit
vector
23565.4
23565.4
23565.4
23565.4
500
639.1
639.1
639.1
0
23240.0
47582.0
73133.0
1153.3
2308.3
3525.4
4803.0
643.3
969.6
1134.4
1271.6
1170.7
2333.9
3494.5
0
0
0
0
98728.4
21935.9
44764.4
68688.4
0
468.8
406.7
716.4
862.3
Year t
Profit signature
Discount factor
1
2
3
4
468.8
383.9
636.2
719.2
.92593
.85734
.79383
.73503
434.1
329.1
505.0
528.6
Premium
t 1 p[61]
Discount factor
NPV of premium
1
2
3
4
23565.4
23565.4
23565.4
23565.4
1
0.94389
0.88799
0.83403
1
.92593
.85734
.79383
23565.4
20595.6
17940.6
15602.1
1, 796.8
= 0.0231 i.e. 2.31%
77, 703.7
Page 11
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
EXAMINATION
28 September 2007 (am)
Enter all the candidate and examination details as requested on the front of your answer
booklet.
2.
You must not start writing your answers in the booklet until instructed to do so by the
supervisor.
3.
4.
Attempt all 14 questions, beginning your answer to each question on a separate sheet.
5.
CT5 S2007
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
=
=
=
=
0.017
0.468
0.03
0.024
In a special mortality table with a select period of one year, the following
relationships are true for all ages:
0.5 q[ x ]
= (0.33)qx
0.5 q[ x ]+ 0.5
= (0.5)qx
Express p[ x ] in terms of px .
[2]
[3]
A twelve-year life insurance contract has the following profit signature before any
non-unit reserves are created:
(+1, -1, +1, +1, +1, -1, 0, -1, +1, -1, +1, +1)
Non-unit reserves are to be set up to zeroise the negative cash flows.
Write down the revised profit signature, ignoring interest.
[3]
An annuity makes monthly payments in arrear to a life aged 65 exact where each
payment is 1.0039207 times greater than the one immediately preceding. The first
monthly amount is 1,000.
Calculate the expected present value of the annuity using the following basis:
Mortality: PFA92C20
Interest:
9% per annum
[4]
(i)
[2]
(ii)
State the main disadvantage of this rate and outline how is it overcome in
practice.
[2]
[Total 4]
CT5 S20072
[5]
A life insurance company sells two whole life contracts to lives aged 40 exact at
entry. Level monthly premiums are payable in advance until the death of the life
assured. Death benefits are paid at the end of the year of death.
Under policy A, the sum assured is 100,000 during the first year and it increases by
5,000 at the end of each year for surviving policyholders.
Policy B is a with profit policy with initial sum assured of 100,000. The company
intends to declare simple annual reversionary bonuses of 5% of the original sum
assured each year, vesting at the end of each policy year.
After ten years, the total declared bonuses under the with profit policy amount to
50,000.
Calculate the net premium reserve required for each policy after ten years.
Basis:
Mortality: AM92 Select
Interest:
4% per annum
[6]
class selection
spurious selection
time selection.
CT5 S20073
[6]
A life office issues an annuity to a woman aged 65 exact and a man aged 68 exact.
The annuity of 20,000 per annum is payable annually in arrears for as long as either
of the lives is alive.
The office values this benefit using the following basis:
Interest:
Mortality:
10
4% per annum
PFA92C20
PMA92C20
(i)
(ii)
Calculate the probability that the life office makes a profit in this case if it
charges a single premium of 320,000.
[4]
[Total 6]
[2]
A policy provides a benefit of 500,000 immediately on the death of (y) if she dies
after (x).
(i)
(ii)
Write down an expression for the expected present value of the benefit in
terms of an integral.
(iii)
11
Female:
Males:
[2]
Suggest, with a reason, the most appropriate term for regular premiums to be
payable under this policy.
[2]
[Total 6]
Let X be a random variable representing the present value of the benefits of a pure
endowment contract and Y be a random variable representing the present value of the
benefits of a term assurance contract which pays the death benefit at the end of the
year of death. Both contracts have unit sum assured, a term of n years and were
issued to the same life aged x.
(i)
(ii)
CT5 S20074
12
13
4% per annum
AM92 Select
(i)
Calculate the profit or loss from mortality for this group for the year ending
31 December 2006.
[7]
(ii)
[2]
[Total 9]
Show that the annual premium is approximately 2,007, using the following
basis:
Interest:
Mortality:
Expenses:
Initial:
Renewal:
Claim:
6% p.a.
AM92 Ultimate
300 plus 50% of the annual premium
2% of the second and subsequent annual premiums
600 on death; 200 on maturity
[6]
(ii)
Write down the gross premium future loss random variable after 25 years,
immediately before the premium then due is paid.
[3]
(iii)
Calculate the retrospective policy reserve after 25 years, using the same basis
as in (i), but with 4% p.a. interest.
[6]
(iv)
Explain whether the reserve in (iii) would have been smaller, the same or
greater than in (iii) if the office had used the prospective gross premium
reserve, on the same basis.
[3]
[Total 18]
CT5 S20075
14
A life office uses the following three-state model to calculate premiums for a 2-year
accelerated critical illness policy issued to healthy policyholders aged 63 exact at
entry.
C: Critically ill
H: Healthy
D: Dead
In return for a single premium payable at entry, the office will pay benefits of:
100,000 if the policyholder dies from the healthy state;
60,000 if he is diagnosed as having a critical illness;
40,000 if he dies from the critically ill state.
All benefits are payable at the end of the relevant policy year.
Let St represent the state of the policyholder at age 63 + t, so that S0 = H and for t = 1,
2, St = H, C or D. The transition probabilities are defined as follows:
ij
p63
+t = Pr(St+1= j | St = i ).
HC
p63
+t
HD
p63
+t
CD
p63
+t
0
1
0.04
0.06
0.02
0.03
0.25
0.33
(i)
[3]
(ii)
Calculate the net present value at entry of the benefits assuming a rate of
interest of 10% per annum for each of the outcomes in (i).
[3]
(iii)
[3]
(iv)
Calculate the mean and variance of the present value at entry of the total
benefits per policy.
[5]
(v)
The office expects to sell 10,000 of these policies. The single premium is set
at a level which will ensure that the probability that the office makes a profit is
0.95. Calculate the amount of the single premium, assuming the profit is
normally distributed.
[6]
[Total 20]
END OF PAPER
CT5 S20076
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
EXAMINATION
September 2007
Introduction
The attached subject report has been written by the Principal Examiner with the aim of
helping candidates. The questions and comments are based around Core Reading as the
interpretation of the syllabus to which the examiners are working. They have however given
credit for any alternative approach or interpretation which they consider to be reasonable.
M A Stocker
Chairman of the Board of Examiners
December 2007
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
t +1Vx
(+1, -1, +1, +1, +1, -1, 0, -1, +1, -1, +1, +1)
(+1, -1, +1, +1, +1, -1, 0, -1, 0, 0, +1, +1)
(+1, -1, +1, +1, +1, -1, -1, 0, 0, 0, +1, +1)
(+1, -1, +1, +1, +1, -2, 0, 0, 0, 0, +1, +1)
(+1, -1, +1, +1, -1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, +1, +1)
(+1, -1, +1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, +1, +1)
(0, 0, +1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, +1, +1)
= ( NUCF )10 .
Page 2
1
1.091/12
1.0039207 + +
+ 2 /12 p65 1.0039207
2 /12 + 3/12 p65
3/12
1.09
1
1.041/12
1.048076
1.09
+ 2 /12 p65
1.09
1 leading to
= 1.04
1
1.042 /12
+ 3/12 p65
1
1.043/12
++
12,000
(12)
= 1.0039207
a65
@ 4%p.a.
s Exc,t mx,t
5
(i)
Exc,t
Where:
s
Exc,t : Central exposed to risk in standard population between ages x and x+t
The main disadvantage is that it requires age-specific mortality rates, mx,t , for
the group / population in question, and these are often not available
conveniently. To overcome this, indirect standardisation, which relies on
easily available data, can be used.
Page 3
0.5| q75
UDD t qx = (t )qx , 0 t 1
(a)
0.5| q75
0.5 p75
0.5 p75 (1
p75.5 ) =
using
0.5| q75
= [( 0.5 p75 )( 0.5 q75.5 ) + ( p75 )( 0.5 q76 )] = [(1 0.5 q75 )( 0.5 q75.5 ) + (1 q75 )( 0.5 q76 )]
(0.5)(.05)
t
t
t
Constant force of mortality t px + r = e = (e ) = ( px ) , 0 r + t 1
0.5| q75
Policy A:
10V
(12)
= 145, 000 A50 + 5, 000( IA)50 ( NP)a50
where NP from
NP
and
10V
Policy B:
10V
(12)
= 150, 000 A50 ( NP)a50
where NP from
Page 4
(a)
10V
(b)
(c)
Time selection: within a population, mortality varies over calendar time. The
effect is usually noticed at all ages and usually rates become lighter over time
e.g. ELT12 male mortality vs. ELT15male
(i)
68:65
f
= 20, 000(a68 + a65
a68:65 )
27 68:65
f
m
= ( 27 q68
)( 27 q65
) = (1
m
l95
m
l68
)(1
f
l92
f
l65
1,020.409
3,300.559
= (1 9,440.717
)(1 9,703.708
) = (0.891914)(0.65987) = 0.5885
Page 5
10
(i)
500, 000vTy
g (T ) =
0
(ii)
E[ g (T )] = 500, 000 vt (1 t px ) t p y y +t dt
Ty > Tx
Ty Tx
(iii)
11
(i)
Lifetime of (y). If (y) dies first, no benefit is possible and if (y) dies second,
SA becomes payable immediately. (x)s lifetime is irrelevant in this context.
Premium could be payable for joint lifetime of (x) and (y) but this is shorter
than (y) and therefore we use (y)s lifetime.
v n
X =
0
Kx n
Kx < n
0
Y = K +1
v x
Kx n
Kx < n
XY = 0 for all K x
COV ( X , Y ) = E[ XY ] E[ X ]E[Y ] = 0 ( Ax:n1 )( A1x:n )
(ii)
12
(i)
Page 6
13
(ii)
(i)
Pa30:35 = 200, 600 A30:35 400 A30:351 + (0.02) Pa30:35 0.02 P + 300 + (0.5)( P)
(ii)
K55 +1
(0.98)(2, 007)(aK +1 )
200, 600v
55
GFLRV =
10
200, 200v (0.98)(2, 007)(a10 )
K55 < 10
K55 10
Page 7
25V
retro
1
{0.98Pa30:25
v 25 25 p30
1
}
0.48 P 300 200, 600 A30:25
retro
(iv)
1
{[2, 007][(0.98)(16.100) (0.48)] 300 (200, 600)(0.01953)}
0.36123
1
{30, 703.09 300 3,917.72} = 73,319.96
0.36123
14
Outcome
HH
p63
+t
CC
p63
+t
DD
p63
+t
0.94
0.91
0.75
(not needed)
0.67
1.00
(not needed)
1.00
PV of Cash
flow (000's)
PV Ben
(PV Ben)2
Prob.
Prob.
E[PVB]
E[PVB2]
HH
0.00
HC
60v2
49.59
HD
100v2
82.64
CC
60v
54.55
CD
60v+40v2
87.60
DD
100v
90.91
8264.46
Total
Page 8
79.73554
0.02
9.56364 677.61492
= (1,000)2{(677.61492 - (9.56364)2}
= 586,151,710 = (24,210.57)2
(v)
= 0.05
2, 421, 057
2, 421, 057
= 1 (0.05) = 1.6449
2, 421, 057
Page 9
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
EXAMINATION
14 April 2008 (am)
Enter all the candidate and examination details as requested on the front of your answer
booklet.
2.
You must not start writing your answers in the booklet until instructed to do so by the
supervisor.
3.
4.
Attempt all 13 questions, beginning your answer to each question on a separate sheet.
5.
CT5 A2008
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
(a)
Express
(b)
5|10 q40
in words.
[2]
[4]
Explain why a life insurance company will need to set up reserves for the endowment
assurance contracts it has sold.
[4]
A life insurance company sells a term assurance and critical illness policy with a 20
year term to a life aged 40 exact. The policy provides a benefit of 50,000 payable
immediately on death or earlier diagnosis of critical illness. No further benefit is paid
in the event of death within the term after a prior critical illness claim has been paid.
The company prices the policy using the following multiple state model:
Healthy (h)
x
Dead (d)
Calculate the expected present value of the benefits under the policy.
Basis: i = 5% per annum
x = 0.005 at all ages
x = 0.006 at all ages
x = 0.003 at all ages
[5]
Derive an expression for the present value of the reversionary annuity using
random variables for the future lifetimes.
(b)
CT5 A20082
A parent who has just died left a bond in their will that provides a single payment of
15,000 in 10 years time. The payment of 15,000 will be shared equally between
the local cats home and such of the parents two sons (currently aged 25 and 30
exact) who are then still alive. Calculate the expected present value of the share due
to the cats home.
Basis: Mortality AM92 Ultimate
Interest 3% per annum
[5]
A defined benefit pension scheme provides a pension on retirement for any reason of
one-sixtieth of final pensionable salary for each year of service (with proportion for
part years of service). Final pensionable salary is average salary over the three years
immediately preceding retirement. Calculate the cost of providing future service
benefits for a new member aged 40 exact as a percentage of salary.
Basis: Example Pension Scheme Table in the Formulae and Tables for Examinations
Handbook
[6]
(i)
Show that
t s qx+ s
(t s )qx
,
(1 sqx )
( 0 s < t 1)
[4]
CT5 A20083
[3]
[Total 7]
A life insurance company prices annuities using a basis which incorporates the
location of the proposing annuitants as an additional rating factor.
(i)
Identify three factors that influence mortality and would cause the insurance
company to adopt location as a rating factor. State which form of selection is
demonstrated by the use of location as a rating factor.
[4]
(ii)
The company has produced the following data in respect of two locations.
Calculate the standardised mortality ratio for each location based on the
standard mortality table ELT15(Males).
Age
60
61
62
63
Location A
Initial exposed Number
to risk
of deaths
100
1
175
3
190
2
210
3
Location B
Initial exposed Number
to risk
of deaths
200
3
150
3
170
3
100
2
[4]
[Total 8]
10
A male life aged 60 exact wants to buy the following benefits within one policy:
(a)
(b)
Interest
4% per annum
[10]
CT5 A20084
11
AM92 Select
6% per annum
1.92308% of the sum assured, compounded and
vesting at the end of each policy year
Initial
350 plus 50% of the annual premium
Renewal 5% of each premium payable in the second and
subsequent years
[7]
At aged 55 exact, immediately before the premium then due and just after the
declared bonus relating to the 5th policy year has been added to the policy, the policy
is still in force.
(ii)
Calculate the reserve for the policy at this point in time using a gross premium
prospective basis assuming the same basis as in (i) above. You should also
assume that the life insurance company has declared a compound bonus
throughout the duration of the policy consistent with the bonus loading
assumption used to derive the premium in (i) above.
[5]
[Total 12]
CT5 A20085
12
10-year term assurances with a sum assured of 50,000 where the death benefit is
payable at the end of the policy year of death
For the term assurance and pure endowment policies, premiums are paid annually in
advance.
The company sold 5,000 policies of each type to lives then aged 50 exact. During the
first policy year, there were five actual deaths from each of the two types of policies
written.
(i)
Assuming each type of policy was sold to a distinct set of lives (i.e. no life
buys more than one type of policy).
(a)
Calculate the death strain at risk for each type of policy at the end of
the second policy year of the policies.
(b)
During the second policy year, there were ten deaths from each of the
two types of policy written. Calculate the total mortality profit or loss
to the company during the second policy year.
Basis:
Interest
Mortality
Expenses
4% per annum
AM92 Ultimate for term assurance and pure endowment
Nil
[11]
(ii)
The company now discovers that 5,000 lives had bought one of each type of
policy.
(a)
(b)
State whether the variance of the benefits paid out by the company in
future years would be higher, lower or unchanged to that in (i). Explain
your answer by general reasoning.
[3]
[Total 14]
CT5 A20086
13
A life insurance company issues a 4-year unit-linked endowment policy to a life aged
50 exact under which level premiums of 750 are payable yearly in advance
throughout the term of the policy or until earlier death. In the first policy year, 25%
of the premium is allocated to units and 102.5% in the second and subsequent years.
The units are subject to a bid-offer spread of 5% and an annual management charge of
1% of the bid value of units is deducted at the end of each policy year.
Management charges are deducted from the unit fund before death, surrender and
maturity benefits are paid.
If the policyholder dies during the term of the policy, the death benefit of 3,000 or
the bid value of the units, whichever is higher, is payable at the end of the policy year
of death. The policyholder may surrender the policy only at the end of each policy
year. On surrender, the bid value of the units is payable at the end of the policy year
of exit. On maturity, 110% of the bid value of the units is payable.
The company uses the following assumptions in carrying out profit tests of this
contract:
Rate of growth on assets in the unit fund
Rate of interest on non-unit fund cash flows
Mortality
Initial expenses
Renewal expenses
Initial commission
Renewal commission
Risk discount rate
In addition assume that at the end of each of the first 3 years, 10% of all policies still
in force then surrender.
(i)
Calculate the profit margin for the policy on the assumption that the company
does not zeroise future expected negative cash flows.
[13]
(ii)
Calculate the expected reserve that must be set up at the end of each
policy year, per policy in force at the start of each policy year.
(b)
Calculate the profit margin allowing for the cost of setting up these
reserves.
[5]
[Total 18]
END OF PAPER
CT5 A20087
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
Introduction
The attached subject report has been written by the Principal Examiner with the aim of
helping candidates. The questions and comments are based around Core Reading as the
interpretation of the syllabus to which the examiners are working. They have however given
credit for any alternative approach or interpretation which they consider to be reasonable.
M A Stocker
Chairman of the Board of Examiners
June 2008
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
The probability that an ultimate life age 40 dies between 45 and 55 (all exact)
5|10 q40
The following are three types of guaranteed reversionary bonuses. The bonuses are
usually allocated annually in arrears, following a valuation.
Simple the rate of bonus each year is a percentage of the initial (basic) sum assured
under the policy. The effect is that the sum assured increases linearly over the term of
the policy.
Compound the rate of bonus each year is a percentage of the initial (basic) sum
assured and the bonuses previously added. The effect is that the sum assured increases
exponentially over the term of the policy.
Super compound two compound bonus rates are declared each year. The first rate
(usually the lower) is applied to the initial (basic) sum assured. The second rate is
applied to bonuses previously added. The effect is that the sum assured increases
exponentially over the term of the policy. The sum assured usually increases more
slowly than under a compound allocation in the earlier years and faster in the later
years.
(Note: credit given if special reversionary bonus mentioned)
The expected cost of paying benefits usually increases as the life ages and the
probability of a claim by death increases. In the final year the probability of payment
is large, since the payment will be made if the life survives the term, and for most
contracts the probability of survival is large.
Level premiums received in the early years of a contract are more than enough to pay
the benefits that fall due in those early years, but in the later years, and in particular in
the last year of an endowment assurance policy, the premiums are too small to pay for
the benefits. It is therefore prudent for the premiums that are not required in the early
years of the contract to be set aside, or reserved, to fund the shortfall in the later years
of the contract.
If premiums received that were not required to pay benefits were spent by the
company, perhaps by distributing to shareholders, then later in the contract the
company may not be able to find the money to pay for the excess of the cost of
benefits over the premiums received.
(Credit given for other valid points)
Page 2
Value =
20
hh
50, 000 vt . t p40
( 40+t + 40+t )dt
0
20
hh
0.008dt
= 50, 000 e ln(1.05)t . t p40
0
40+t
hh
t p40
hh
t p40
= exp(
( s + s )ds )
40
40+t
= exp(
=e
0.008ds )
40
0.008t
Therefore, value =
20
= 400
= 400*[e
/ .05679]020
= 400*(5.65531 + 17.60873)
= 4781.4
(a)
Define random variables Tx and Ty for the complete duration of life for the
lives aged x and y.
Define a random variable Z for the value of the reversionary annuity, which
has the following definition:
Z = aTy | aTx | if Ty > Tx = 0 otherwise
Z = aTy | aTxy | where Txy is a random variable for the duration to the first
death
Ty
Txy
(1 v ) (1 v
Z=
(b)
E[ Z ] =
Txy
( E[v
Txy
(v
v y)
] E[v y ]) ( A xy A y )
=
Page 3
ra
ia
1
( R 40 + R 40 ) 1
(2884260 + 887117)
.S .
= .S .
= 2.5S
s
60
60
25059
D40
k
N 40
k
(363573)
.S . s
=
.S .
= k /100*14.5S
100
25059
D40 100
Page 4
value
3672.67
38.52
32.95
0.46
(i)
t s qx+ s
= (1 t s px + s )
= (1
px
)
s px
= (1
(1 t qx )
)
(1 s qx )
= (1
(1 tqx )
)
(1 sq x )
=
(ii)
= s.qx
(t s ).qx
(1 s.qx )
= 0.5q62/(1-0.25q62) = 0.50.00355/(1-0.25*0.00355)
= 0.001777
(a)
0.5q62.25
(b)
t s qx+ s
(i)
= 0.001776
Page 5
Age
Standard
Mortality
Rate
0.01392
0.01560
0.01749
0.01965
60
61
62
63
Total
Location A
Number
Initial
of deaths
Exposed
to risk
100
1.4
175
2.7
190
3.3
210
4.1
11.5
Location B
Number
Initial
Exposed of deaths
to risk
200
2.8
150
2.3
170
3.0
100
2.0
10.1
10
(a)
wife
(12)
(12)
value = 5000(a55
a60:55
) = 5000(18.210 14.756) = 17, 270
Note no effect of monthly payments
(b)
grandson
value =
(12)
2000(a8|(12) a60:55:8|
)
a8|(12)
(1 v8 )
i (12)
= 6.7327 x 0.04
0.039285
= 6.855
(12)
(12)
(12)
= a60:55
v8 8 p60 . 8 p55 a68:63
a60:55:8|
9440.717 9775.888
(11.372 1 + 11/ 24)
9826.131 9917.623
= 6.721
Therefore value = 2000(6.855-6.721) = 268
Page 6
11
(i)
EPV of premiums:
Pa[50]:10 = 7.698 P
EPV of benefits:
75, 000
(1.06)1/ 2{q[50] (1 + b)v +1 q[50] (1 + b) 2 v 2
(1 + b)
+.... + 9 q[50] (1 + b)10 v10 } + 75, 00010 p[50] (1 + b)10 v10
where b = 0.0192308
=
75, 000
1
1
@ i ' + 75, 000 10 p[50]
(1.06)1/ 2 A[50]:10
(1 + b)
(1 + i ' )10
75, 000
(1.06)1/ 2 (.68007 .64641) + 75, 000 .64641 = 2,550.091 + 48, 480.75
1.0192308
= 51, 030.84
where i ' =
1.06
1 = 0.04
1+ b
82, 494.3
1
1
(1.06)1/ 2 A55:5
+ 0.05 Pa55:5
@ i ' + 82, 494.3 5 p55
(1 + b)
(1 + i ' )5
82, 494.3
(1.06)1/ 2 (.82365 .79866) @ i ' + 82, 494.3 0.79866 + 0.05 7486.54 4.423
1.0192308
= 2, 082.43 + 65,884.90 + 1, 655.65 = 69, 622.98
=
Page 7
12
(i)
(a)
Annual premium for pure endowment with 50,000 sum assured given
by:
P PE =
50, 000
50, 000
10 p50 v10 =
0.64601 = 3885.10
a50:10
8.314
Annual premium for term assurance with 50,000 sum assured given
by:
PTA = P EA P PE =
=
P PE
PE
TA
= 2V EA 2V PE
Sums at risk:
Pure endowment: DSAR = 0 8,276.96 = 8,276.96
Term assurance: DSAR = 50,000 166.71 = 49,833.29
Page 8
(a)
The actual mortality profit would remain as that calculated in (i) (b).
(b)
The variance of the benefits would be lower than that calculated in (i).
In this case, the company would not pay out benefits under both the PE
and the TA but will definitely pay out one of the benefits. Under the
scenario in (i), the company could pay out all the benefits (if all the TA
policyholders die and the PE policyholders survive). Alternatively,
they could pay out no benefits at all (if all the TA policyholders
survive and the PE policyholders immediately die).
Page 9
13
Annual premium
750.00
25.0%
8.5%
Allocation % (2nd yr +)
Interest on
investments
6.5%
Man charge
1.0%
Interest on sterling
provisions
5.5%
B/O spread
5.0%
Minimum death
benefit
Initial expense
3000.00
% prm
Total
150
10.0%
225
65
2.5%
83.75
Renewal expense
(i)
Page 10
qxd
qxs
50
0.001971
0.1
51
0.002732
0.1
52
0.003152
0.1
53
0.003539
0.0
(aq) dx
(aq) sx
(ap)
t 1 ( ap )
50
0.001971
0.09980
0.898226
1.000000
51
0.002732
0.09973
0.897541
0.898226
52
0.003152
0.09968
0.897163
0.806195
53
0.003539
0.00000
0.996461
0.723288
102.50%
yr 2
yr 3
yr 4
0.000
187.806
968.018
1790.635
alloc
187.500
768.750
768.750
768.750
B/O
9.375
38.4375
38.4375
38.4375
11.578
59.678
110.392
163.862
1.897
9.778
18.087
26.848
187.806
968.018
1790.635
2657.961
value of units at
start of year
interest
management
charge
value of units at
year end
yr 2
yr 3
yr 4
unallocated
premium
562.500
18.750
18.750
18.750
B/O spread
9.375
38.4375
38.4375
38.4375
225.000
83.750
83.750
83.750
19.078
3.523
3.523
3.523
man charge
1.897
9.778
18.087
26.848
extra death
benefit
5.543
5.551
3.812
1.210
0.000
0.000
0.000
264.855
362.307
63.359
53.311
306.804
expenses
interest
Extra maturity
benefit
end of year
cashflow
Page 11
probability in
force
discount factor
0.898226
0.806195
0.723288
0.921659
0.849455
0.782908
0.721574
620.894
513.620
424.701
expected p.v. of
profit
91.809
premium
signature
750.000
expected p.v. of
premiums
2309.215
profit
margin
3.98%
(ii)
(a)
3V
1V
These need to be adjusted as the question asks for the values in respect
of the beginning of the year. Thus we have:
Year 3 290.809(ap)52 = 260.903
Year 2 297.833(ap)51 = 267.318
Year 1 313.437(ap)50 = 281.538
(b)
Based on the expected provisions calculated in (a) above, the cash flow
for years 2, 3 and 4 will be zeroised whilst year 1 will become:
362.307 281.538 = 80.769
Page 12
80.769
0.898226
0.806195
0.723288
0.921659
0.849455
0.782908
0.721574
expected p.v. of
profit
74.442
profit margin
3.22%
Page 13
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
EXAMINATION
22 September 2008 (am)
Enter all the candidate and examination details as requested on the front of your answer
booklet.
2.
You must not start writing your answers in the booklet until instructed to do so by the
supervisor.
3.
4.
Attempt all 14 questions, beginning your answer to each question on a separate sheet.
5.
CT5 S2008
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
Calculate (to the nearest integer) the lower quartile of the complete future lifetime of a
person aged 25 exact who is subject to mortality according to ELT15 (Females). [3]
The profit signature of a 3-year assurance contract issued to a life aged 57 exact, with a
premium payable at the start of each year of 500 is (250, 150, 200).
Calculate the profit margin of the contract.
Basis:
Mortality
AM92 Ultimate
Lapses
None
Risk discount rate 12% per annum
In order to value the benefits in a final salary pension scheme as at 1 January 2008, a
s
salary scale, s x , has been defined so that x +t is the ratio of a members total
sx
earnings between ages x + t and x + t + 1 to the members total earnings between ages
x and x + 1. Salary increases take place on 1 July every year. One member, whose
date of birth is 1 April 1961, has an annual salary rate of 75,000 on the valuation
date.
Write down an expression for the members expected earnings during 2008.
[3]
[3]
Write down an alternative expression for each of the following statements. Use
notation as set out in the International Actuarial Notation section of the Formulae
and Tables for Examinations where appropriate and express your answer as concisely
as possible.
(i)
Probability[maximum{Tx, Ty} n]
[1]
(ii)
[1]
(iii)
Probability{n < Tx m}
[1]
(iv)
Limit dt 0
(v)
E[aminimum( n1, K
1
Probability[minimum{Tx , Ty } t + dt | Tx > t , Ty > t ]
dt
x)
+ 1]
[1]
[1]
[Total 5]
CT5 S20082
(i)
[2]
(ii)
Calculate s50:20 .
[3]
Basis:
Mortality:
Interest:
AM92 Ultimate
4% per annum
[Total 5]
A select life aged 62 exact purchases a 3-year endowment assurance with sum assured
100,000. Premiums of 30,000 are payable annually in advance throughout the term
of the policy or until earlier death. The death benefit is payable at the end of the
policy year of death.
Calculate the expected value of the present value of the profit or loss to the office on
the contract, using the following basis:
Interest
Expenses
Mortality
Write down an expression for (aq)x in terms of the single decrement table
probabilities qx , qx , and qx , assuming each of the three modes of decrement
is uniformly distributed over the year of age x to x + 1 in the corresponding
single decrement table.
[2]
(ii)
CT5 S20083
[4]
[Total 6]
A life insurance company sells 1,000 whole life annuities on 1 January 2007 to
policyholders aged 65 exact. Each annuity is for 25,000 payable annually in arrear.
5 annuitants die during 2007.
The office holds reserves using the following basis:
Mortality
Interest
PFA92C20
4% per annum
(i)
Calculate the profit or loss from mortality for this group for the year ending
31 December 2007.
[4]
(ii)
[2]
[Total 6]
A new member aged 35 exact, expecting to earn 40,000 in the next 12 months, has
just joined a pension scheme. The scheme provides a pension on retirement for any
reason of 1/60th of final pensionable salary for each year of service, with fractions
counting proportionately. Final pensionable salary is defined as the average salary over
the three years prior to retirement.
Members contribute a percentage of salary, the rate depending on age. Those under
age 50 contribute 4% and those age 50 exact and over contribute 5%.
The employer contributes a constant multiple of members contributions to meet
exactly the expected cost of pension benefits.
Calculate the multiple needed to meet this new members benefits.
All elements of the valuation basis are contained in the Example Pension Scheme
Table in the Formulae and Tables for Examinations.
[6]
10
Calculate the variance of the present value of benefits under an annuity payable to a
life aged 35 exact. The annuity has payments of 1 per annum payable continuously
for life.
Basis:
Mortality
Interest
11
= 0.02 throughout
= 0.05
[7]
A life insurance company has reviewed its mortality experience. For each age, it has
pooled all the deaths and corresponding exposures from its entire portfolio over the
previous ten years, and derived a single mortality table.
List three types of selection which might be likely to produce heterogeneity in this
particular investigation. In each case, explain the nature of the heterogeneity and how it
could be caused, and state how the heterogeneity could be reduced.
[9]
CT5 S20084
12
(1)
(2)
(3)
(i)
(ii)
Calculate the expected value of benefits under structure (2) for an individual
aged 45 exact at the start, using the following basis:
Interest
Mortality
Expenses
[4]
8% per annum
AM92 Select
ignore
[4]
(iii)
Calculate the expected value of benefits, using the same policy and basis as in
(ii) but reflecting the following changes:
(a)
Bonuses vest at the start of each policy year (the death benefit is
payable at the end of the policy year of death).
(b)
(c)
CT5 S20085
13
Two lives, a female aged 60 exact and a male aged 65 exact, purchase a policy with
the following benefits:
(i)
an annuity deferred ten years, with 20,000 payable annually in advance for as
long as either of them is alive
(ii)
a lump sum of 100,000 payable at the end of the policy year of the first death,
should this occur during the deferred period
Level premiums are payable monthly in advance throughout the deferred period or
until earlier payment of the death benefit.
Calculate the monthly premium.
Basis:
Mortality
Female
Male
Interest
4% per annum
Expenses
Initial
Renewal
PFA92C20
PMA92C20
350
2.5% of each monthly premium excluding the first.
[14]
14
A life insurance company issues a decreasing term assurance policy to a life aged 55
exact. The death benefit, which is payable immediately on death, is 100,000 in the
first policy year, 90,000 in the second year thereafter reducing by 10,000 each year
until the benefit is 10,000 in the 10th year, with cover ceasing at age 65.
The policy is paid for by level annual premiums payable in advance for 10 years,
ceasing on earlier death.
The life office uses the following basis for calculating premiums and reserves:
Basis:
Mortality
AM92 Select
Interest
4% per annum
Expenses
Initial
Renewal
Claim
CT5 S20086
(i)
Write down the gross premium future loss random variable at the start of the
policy. Use P for the annual premium.
[4]
(ii)
(iii)
END OF PAPER
CT5 S20087
[10]
[2]
[Total 16]
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
Introduction
The attached subject report has been written by the Principal Examiner with the aim of
helping candidates. The questions and comments are based around Core Reading as the
interpretation of the syllabus to which the examiners are working. They have however given
credit for any alternative approach or interpretation which they consider to be reasonable.
R D Muckart
Chairman of the Board of Examiners
November 2008
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
Let t equal future lifetime. Lower quartile means that 25% of people have future
lifetime less than t.
t q25
= 0.25
l25+t
= 0.75
l25
l25+t
= 0.75 l25+t = 74, 098
98, 797
s46.75
s46.25
(s46 + 3s47) is a satisfactory alternative to the numerator above and (3s46 + s47) a
satisfactory alternative for the denominator.
Alternative: 75, 000{0.5 + 0.5(
Page 2
s47.25
)}
s46.25
(i)
n q xy
(ii)
A1x:n
(iii)
n|m n q x
(iv)
x +t: y +t or x +t + y +t
(v)
ax:n
It is the accumulation of an n-year annuity due i.e. the expected fund per survivor
after n years, from a group of people, initially aged x, who each put 1 at the start of
each of the n years, if they are still alive, into a fund earning interest at rate i per
annum.
a50:20
s50:20 =
=
v 20 20 p50
1
v
20
20 p50
1
(17.444) 10.375 = 35.715
(0.45639)(0.82928)
6
x
62
63
64
q[x]
q[x-1]+1
q[x-2]+2
q[x-3]+3
0.009
0.01
0.011
0.018
0.02
0.022
0.006
0.0045
0.005 0.006667
0.0055 0.007333
qx
0.018
0.02
0.022
Page 3
Premium
Interest
30,000.00
30,000.00
30,000.00
2,250.00
2,250.00
2,250.00
Death Cost
450.00
666.67
1,100.00
Maturity Cost
Profit Vector
Profit Signature
98,900.00
31,800.00
31,583.33
-67,750.00
31,800.00
31,441.21
66,995.49
NPV
29,581.40
27,207.10
53,928.73
2,859.77
(i)
(ii)
(aq)x
= t px t px t p x x +t dt
0
px = 1 t 2 qx t px x +t =
t p x = 2tq x
dt
t px t
px t
p x x +t dt
2
2
= qx {1 (qx + qx ) + (qx q x )}
3
4
(i)
(ii)
Page 4
We expected 4.681 deaths and had more than this with 5. There is no death
benefit, just a release of reserves on death, so more deaths than expected leads
to profit.
ra
ia
PV of contribution:
s
40, 000
(0.04) N 35 + (0.01) N 50
s
D35
= 40, 000
10
Variance of aT =
Ax ( Ax )2
2
Ax = e
t p x x +t dt = e
t t
dt = et (+ ) dt =
(e t ) =
(0 1)
0
+
+
0.02
=
=
+ 0.07
Similarly, A x = e 2t t px x +t dt = et et dt =
2
Variance of aT
0.02
=
+ 2 0.12
0.02 0.02 2
)
(
= 0.12 0.07
= 34.01
0.052
Alternatively
Variance of X = E[ X 2 ] {E[ X ]}2
Here X=
E[ X ] =
0
Tx |
1 e Tx
1 e t
1 et t
1
p
dt
=
e
dt
=
(et ) (e (+ )t )dt
t x x +t
= {(e
)(
)(e
)} = {(0 (1)) (
)(0 (1))}
0
0
+
1
1 +
1
1
)} = {
}=
= {1 (
=
= 14.2857
+
+
+ 0.07
t
( + )t
Page 5
1 e t 2
1 2et + e2t t
E[ X ] = (
) t px x +t dt = (
)e dt
2
2
(e
)(e(+ )t ) + (
)(e (2+ )t )}
0
0
0
2 +
+
)(0 (1)) + (
)(0 (1))}
= 2 {(0 (1)) 2(
2 +
+
1
2
1
0.04 0.02
)+(
)} =
{1
} = 238.0952
= 2 {1 (
+
2 +
0.07 0.12
+
0.052
{(e t ) (2)(
11
Class selection
People with same age definition will have different underlying mortality due to
particular permanent attributes, e.g. sex. The existence of such classes would be
certainly found in these data: e.g. male / female smoker / non-smoker, people having
different occupational and/or social backgrounds, etc.
Solution would be to subdivide the data according to the nature of the attribute.
Time selection
Where mortality is changing over calendar time, people of the same age could
experience different levels of mortality at different times. This might well be a
problem here, as data from as much as ten years apart are being combined.
Solution would be to subdivide the data into shorter time periods.
Temporary initial selection
Page 6
Self selection
12
(i)
(ii)
(a)
(b)
100,000(1.0384615)20 = 212,720
(c)
6%
} = 210,357
100,000{1 + 0.03 s20
100, 000 A
1.08
1 = 4%
1.0384615
100, 000
(0.46982 0.41089)
1.0384615
1.0384615*5,675+41,089 = 46,982
(b)
(1.08)0.5*5,675+41,089 = 46,987
(c)
Page 7
13
(a)
A[45]:20| at 4%
(c)
1
A[45]:20| at 4% = A[45]:20| + A[45]:20|1 = {(1.04)0.5 A[45]:20|
} + A[45]:20|1
65:60:10
= 350 + 0.025P(12a(12)
65:60:10
1
1) + 100, 000 AP
65:60:10
65:60:10
11
(1 v10 10 p65 10 p60 )
24
= 7.991 (0.458)(1 0.56131)
= a65:60:10
65:60:10
0.04
(7.991) 0.56131 = 0.13134
1.04
1 10|
AP
= A65:60 v10 10 p65 10 p60 A75:70 = 1 da65:60 v10 10 p65 10 p60 (1 da75:70 )
65:60
0.04
0.04
(12.682) (0.67556)(0.87120)(0.95372)(1
8.357
1.04
1.04
= 0.51223 0.38089 = 0.13134
= 1
or
65:60
10| a
= v10 10 p65 10 p60 a75:70 + v10 10 p65 (1 10 p60 )a75 + v10 (1 10 p65 ) 10 p60 a70
= v10 10 p65 10 p60 (a75 + a70 a75:70 ) + v10 10 p65 (1 10 p60 )a75 + v10 (1 10 p65 ) 10 p60 a70
= (0.67556)(0.87120)(0.95372)(9.456 + 12.934 8.357)
+(0.67556)(0.87120)(1 0.95372)(9.456)
+(0.67556)(1 0.87120)(0.95372)(12.934)
= 7.877 + 0.258 + 1.073 = 9.208
Page 8
or
65:60
10| a
14
(i)
GFLRV=
4%
300 + 0.25 P + 0.05 P * amin(
K
[55] ,9)
(ii)
T[55]
0%
+ 50* amin(
K
[55] ,9)
4%
P * amin(
K
[55] +1,10)
4%
4%
0%
P * a[55]:10
= 250 + 0.20 P + 0.05 P * a[55]:10
+ 50a[55]:10
+110, 000 A
[55]:10
4%
a[55]:10
= 8.228
0%
a[55]:10
= (1 + e[55] ) 10 p[55] (1 + e65 )
8,821.2612
= 26.037
17.645
9,545.9929
= 26.037 (0.92408)17.645
= 9.732
1
[55]:10
Page 9
P *8.228
= 250 + 0.20 P + 0.05 P *8.228 + 50*9.732 + 110, 000*0.06044
10, 000*0.37278 + 200*(1 0.92408)
P *7.6166 = 250 + 486.60 + 6, 648.40 3, 727.80 + 15.18
P = 3, 672.38 / 7.6166 = 482.15
(iii)
9V
Page 10
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
EXAMINATION
24 April 2009 (am)
Enter all the candidate and examination details as requested on the front of your answer
booklet.
2.
You must not start writing your answers in the booklet until instructed to do so by the
supervisor.
3.
4.
Attempt all 14 questions, beginning your answer to each question on a separate sheet.
5.
CT5 A2009
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
A40:20
[3]
(ii)
A40:20
[1]
[4]
[Total 4]
Explain, in the context of the lapse rates of life insurance policies, what is meant
by:
(a)
(b)
(c)
class selection
temporary initial selection
time selection
1 1
A population is subject to two modes of decrement and where qx = + qx .
3 4
[5]
[5]
The random variable Txy represents the time to failure of the joint-life status (x y).
(x) is subject to a constant force of mortality of 0.02 and (y) is subject to a
constant force of mortality of 0.03. (x) and (y) are independent with respect to
mortality.
Calculate the value of E[Txy].
CT5 A20092
[5]
A life insurance company issues a special annuity contract to a male life aged 70
exact and a female life aged 60 exact. Annuity payments are due on the first day
of the month.
Under the contract an annuity of 50,000 per annum is payable monthly to the female
life, provided that she survives at least 5 years longer than the male life. The annuity
commences on the monthly policy anniversary next following the fifth anniversary
of the death of the male life and is payable for the balance of the female's lifetime.
Calculate the single premium required for the contract.
Basis: Mortality: PMA92C20 for males, PFA92C20 for females
Interest: 4% per annum
Expenses: Nil
[5]
(i)
(ii)
[2]
[Total 5]
A life insurance company sells a policy with a 10 year term to a healthy life aged 55
exact. The policy provides the following benefits:
The company prices the policy using the following multiple state model:
Able (a)
Ill (i)
x
x
x
Dead (d)
Give a formula for the expected present value of the benefits under the policy.
CT5 A20093
[5]
10
A life insurance company issues a term assurance policy for a term of 10 years to two
lives whose ages are x and y, in return for the payment of a single premium. The
following benefits are payable under the contract:
In the event of either of the lives dying within 10 years, a sum assured of
100,000 is payable immediately on the first death if it is the life aged x or
50,000 if the life aged y.
In the event of the second death within the remainder of the 10 year term, a
further sum assured of twice the original claim previously paid is payable
immediately on the second death.
11
On 1 January 2001, the company sold 5,000 endowment assurance policies and 2,500
temporary immediate annuity policies, all to lives aged 45 exact.
(i)
Calculate the death strain at risk for each type of policy during 2008.
Basis: Mortality: AM92 Select
Interest:
4% per annum
Expenses: Nil
[4]
During the first seven policy years, there were 65 deaths from the endowment
assurance policies and 30 deaths from the temporary immediate annuity policies.
During 2008, there were 10 deaths from the endowment assurance policies and 5
deaths from the temporary immediate annuity policies.
(ii)
Calculate the total mortality profit or loss to the company during 2008 using
the basis in (i) above.
[5]
[Total 9]
CT5 A20094
12
(i)
Explain the terms unit fund and non-unit fund in the context of a unitlinked life assurance contract.
[4]
(ii)
Explain why a life insurance company might need to set up reserves in order
to zeroise future expected negative cashflows in respect of a unit-linked life
assurance contract.
[2]
(iii)
1
375.4
2
152.0
3
136.2
4
118.0
The rate of interest earned on non-unit reserves is 5.5% per annum and
mortality follows the AM92 Select table.
Calculate the reserves required at times t = 1, 2 and 3 in order to zeroise future
negative cash flows.
[4]
[Total 10]
13
A life insurance company issues a 3-year savings contract to unmarried male lives
that offers the following benefits:
AM92 Ultimate
10% per annum
5% per annum
5% per annum
0.5% of each premium
[12]
CT5 A20095
14
A life insurance company issues a 5-year with profits endowment assurance policy to
a life aged 60 exact. The policy has a basic sum assured of 10,000. Simple
reversionary bonuses are added at the start of each year, including the first. The sum
assured (together with any bonuses attaching) is payable at maturity or at the end of
year of death, if earlier. Level premiums are payable annually in advance throughout
the term of the policy.
(i)
AM92 Select
6% per annum
60% of the first premium
5% of the second and subsequent premiums
A simple reversionary bonus will declared each
year at a rate of 4% per annum
[5]
The office holds net premium reserves using a rate of interest of 4% per annum and
AM92 Ultimate mortality.
In order to profit test this policy, the company assumes that it will earn interest at 7%
per annum on its funds, mortality follows the AM92 Ultimate table and expenses and
bonuses will follow the premium basis.
(ii)
Calculate the expected profit margin on this policy using a risk discount rate
of 9% per annum.
[14]
[Total 19]
END OF PAPER
CT5 A20096
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
Introduction
The attached subject report has been written by the Principal Examiner with the aim of
helping candidates. The questions and comments are based around Core Reading as the
interpretation of the syllabus to which the examiners are working. They have however given
credit for any alternative approach or interpretation which they consider to be reasonable.
R D Muckart
Chairman of the Board of Examiners
June 2009
Comments
Where relevant, comments for individual questions are given after each of the solutions that
follow.
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
510
q[40]+1 is the probability that a life now aged 41 exact and at the beginning of the
second year of selection will die between the ages of 46 and 56 both exact.
Value is:
lx = 110 x
dx = lx lx + 1
= (110 x) (110 x 1)
= 1 for all x
(i)
A1
40:20
19
= vt +1 * d 40 + t / l 40
19
= vt +1 / l 40
= a20 / l 40
= 13.5903 / (110 40)
= 0.19415
(ii)
A40:20 = A 1
40:20
+ v 20 * l60 / l40
Page 2
Dx = s x 1v xl x
D x +t = s x +t v x +t +0.5lx +t +0.5
Nx =
s
t = NRA x 1
Nx =
D x +t
t =0
t = NRA x 1
D x +t
t =0
sN
Nx
x
5000
(0.04). S s
Dx
Dx
(a)
(b)
Lapse rates may vary by policy duration as well as age for shorter durations.
At shorter durations lapse rates may be the result of misguided purchase
by policyholder whereas at longer durations the policy has become more
stable.
(c)
Lapse rates vary with calendar time for all major risk factors, e.g.
economic prosperity varies over time and this results in a similar variation in
lapse rates.
Other valid comments were credited. Many students ignored lapses altogether attempting to
answer the question from a mortality standpoint only. No credit was given for this.
Page 3
Assumptions
Then
(aq)x
t
t ( ap ) x . x +t .
t
0
px
px
(ap) x
.dt = ( t px x +t ). t
px
.dt
px x +t = qx
t ( ap ) x
t px
= t px = 1 t.qx
Therefore:
1
qx
t2
1
t q x = q x 1 q x
2
0
2
( )
1
1 1 1 1 1
= + qx 1 qx = + qx qx
8
3 4 2 3 12
= qx 1 * 4* qx
3
2
5
= qx 2qx
3
This question was essentially course bookwork plus a substitution. To gain good credit it
was necessary to work though the solution as above.
Page 4
= 0.05 t.e.05t dt
0
Integrating by parts:
Alternatively:
E[Txy ] =
tpx.tpydt
= e .02t e .03t dt
0
= e .05t dt
0
f
m
50000 vt +5 (1 t p70
) t +5 p60
dt
0
f
f
t
m
= 50000v5 5 p60
v (1 t p70 ) t p65dt
0
f
m f
= 50000v5 5 p60
(a65f a70:
65)
Page 5
Other methods were credited. Students who developed the formulae without recourse to
continuous functions were given full credit.
(i)
(ii)
zx =
s x 1 + s x 2 + ..... + s x y
y
Other versions credited. Strictly speaking Final Salary is not an average but this caused no
confusion and was fully credited
10
aa
ai
25000 et ( t p55
55+t + t p55
55+t )dt
0
10
aa
ai
+ e t (0. t p55
+ 1000 t p55
)dt
0
where:
= the force of interest
aa
t p 55 = the probability that an able life age 55 is able at age 55 + t
t
Page 6
ai
p55
= the probability that an able life age 55 is ill at age 55 + t
10
dt
10
+100000 t p x . x +t .et dt
0
t px = e
0.02 dr
0
= e .02t
py = e
0.03dr
0
= e .03t
Therefore value =
10
.03t
10
10
= 6000 e
0
.07t
10
dt + 2000 e
0
.06t
10
dt 4500 e .09t dt
0
0.07
= 28,518
=
Page 7
11
(i)
Annual premium for endowment with 75,000 sum assured given by:
P =
Page 8
12
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
Year t
1
2
3
4
q[50]+t1
0.001971
0.002732
0.003152
0.003539
p[50]+t1
0.998029
0.997268
0.996848
0.996461
118.0
= 111.85
1.055
3V
2V
1V
Page 9
13
etc. which assumes that the decrements in each single decrement table are uniformly
distributed over each year of age
x
40
41
42
q xd
qxs
0.0009370 0.10
0.0010140 0.10
0.0011040 0.10
qxm
0.05
0.05
0.05
(aq) dx
(aq) sx
(aq ) m
x
0.0008683 0.0974547 0.0474781
0.0009396 0.0974510 0.0474763
0.0010230 0.0974466 0.0474742
(al ) x
1,000,000
854,198.9
729,599.6
623,119.0
(ad ) dx
868.3
802.6
746.4
(ad ) sx
97,454.7
83,242.5
71,097.0
(ad ) m
x
47,478.1
40,554.2
34,637.2
1, 000, 000
1, 000, 000
1, 000, 000
PV of withdrawal benefits =
1
83, 242.5 2
71, 097.0 3
97, 454.7
v0.05 + 2
v0.05 + 3
v0.05 1.05 2
= P 1
1, 000, 000
1, 000, 000
1, 000, 000
Page 10
1, 000, 000
623,119.0 3
v0.05 = 2691.3681
1, 000, 000
14
(i)
6%
l65
l
5
5
v0.06
( 5 A65 + ( IA)65 ) + 5 65 v0.06
l[60]
l[60]
and
l65 8821.2612
=
l[60] 9263.1422
8984.3456
= 2476.32
3.6281
Page 11
a
3.722
= 10, 000 1 61:4 + 400 A61:4 = 10, 000 1
+ 400 0.85685 = 2162.52
a
4.550
60:5
a62:3
2.857
1
+ 800 A62:3 = 10, 000 1
2V60:5 = 10, 000
+ 800 0.89013 = 4432.98
a
4.550
60:5
a63:2
1.951
1
+ 1200 A63:2 = 10, 000 1
3V60:5 = 10, 000
+ 1200 0.92498 = 6822.06
a
4.550
60:5
a64:1
1.000
10,
000
V
=
1
+ 1600 A64:1 = 10, 000 1
4 60:5
+ 1600 0.96154 = 9340.66
a
4.550
60:5
Year t
1
2
3
4
5
Prem
Expense
2476.32
2476.32
2476.32
2476.32
2476.32
1485.79
123.82
123.82
123.82
123.82
Opening
reserve
0
2162.52
4432.98
6822.06
9340.66
Interest
69.34
316.05
474.98
642.22
818.52
Year t
t 1 p
Profit signature
1
2
3
4
5
1.0
0.991978
0.983041
0.973101
0.962062
1168.73
338.00
387.45
438.85
492.27
Death
Claim
83.43
97.30
113.25
131.59
152.59
Mat
Claim
0
0
0
0
11847.41
Discount
factor
.91743
.84168
.77218
.70843
.64993
Closing
reserve
2145.17
4393.04
6753.08
9234.20
0
NPV of profit
signature
1072.23
284.49
299.18
310.89
319.94
Premium
t 1 p
1
2
3
4
5
2476.32
2476.32
2476.32
2476.32
2476.32
1.0
0.991978
0.983041
0.973101
0.962062
Discount
factor
1
.91743
.84168
.77218
.70843
NPV of premium
142.28
= 0.0138 i.e. 1.38%
10,327.34
Profit
vector
1168.73
340.73
394.13
450.99
511.68
2476.32
2253.63
2048.92
1860.73
1687.74
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
EXAMINATION
5 October 2009 (am)
Enter all the candidate and examination details as requested on the front of your answer
booklet.
2.
You must not start writing your answers in the booklet until instructed to do so by the
supervisor.
3.
4.
Attempt all 14 questions, beginning your answer to each question on a separate sheet.
5.
CT5 S2009
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
Evaluate
2
20 q[45]:[45]
[3]
[3]
Population
Number of deaths
121,376
134,292
133,277
104
127
132
(i)
[1]
(ii)
Calculate the standardised mortality ratio for this population using AM92
Ultimate.
[3]
[Total 4]
Derive an expression for the variance of the present value of a temporary annuitydue in terms of assurance functions for a life aged x with a term of n years.
[4]
A life insurance company sells annual premium whole life assurance policies with
benefits payable at the end of the year of death. Renewal expenses are incurred at the
start of each year, and claim expenses are nil.
(a)
(b)
CT5 S20092
(a)
(b)
(i)
(ii)
(i)
(ii)
10
[5]
Explain why an insurance company might not use questions requesting genetic
information from prospective policyholders?
[3]
[Total 8]
A pension fund provides a pension from normal retirement age of 1,000 per annum
for each complete year of service. The pension is payable monthly in advance for 5
years certain and for the whole of life thereafter and is only paid if the life remains in
service to normal retirement age of 65.
Calculate the expected present value of the pension for a new entrant aged 62 exact.
Basis: Interest:
4% per annum
Mortality after retirement: PMA92C20
Independent decrement rates before retirement
Age x
q xd
qxw
62
63
64
0.005650
0.006352
0.007140
0.015672
0.078441
0.055654
[8]
CT5 S20093
11
A life insurance company offers special endowment contracts that mature at age 65.
Premiums are payable annually in advance on 1 January each year. The sum assured
payable at the end of year of death during the term is one half of the sum assured that
will be paid if the policyholder survives until maturity.
Details of these contracts in force on 31 December 2007 are:
Exact age
60
12,250,000
440,000
The claims in 2008 were on policies with the following total sums assured and annual
premiums:
Total sums assured
payable on maturity ()
200,000
7,000
Calculate the mortality profit or loss in 2008 given that the company calculates
reserves for these contracts using the gross prospective method.
Basis: Mortality: AM92 Ultimate
Interest:
4% per annum
Expenses: Nil
[9]
12
(i)
(ii)
Calculate:
[3]
(a)
1000A30:40
(b)
The annual premium payable continuously until the 2nd death for the
above assurance in (a) with a sum assured of 1,000.
Basis: = .02 for a life aged 30 exact at entry level throughout their life
= .03 for a life aged 40 exact at entry level throughout their life
= .05 throughout
Expenses: Nil
[7]
(iii)
Outline the main deficiency of the above premium paying scheme and suggest
an alternative.
[3]
[Total 13]
CT5 S20094
13
A life insurance company issues a 35-year non profit endowment assurance policy to
a life aged 30 exact. Level premiums are payable monthly in advance throughout the
term of the policy. The sum assured of 75,000 is payable at maturity or at the end of
year of death of the life insured, if earlier.
(i)
Claims expense:
Inflation:
(ii)
AM92 Select
6% per annum
250 plus 50% of the gross annual premium
75 per annum, inflating at 1.92308% per
annum, at the start of the second and subsequent
policy years and 2.5% of the second and
subsequent monthly premiums
300 inflating at 1.92308% per annum
For renewal and claim expenses, the amounts
quoted are at outset, and the increases due to
inflation start immediately.
[7]
CT5 S20095
14
A life insurance company issues a special term assurance policy for a 3-year term.
Under the policy, a sum assured of 10,000 is paid at the end of the year of death. In
addition on survival to the end of the term 50% of total premiums paid are returned.
Basis: Initial expenses:
Renewal expenses:
Reserves:
Mortality experience:
Withdrawals:
Surrender Value:
Interest earned:
Risk discount rate:
(i)
On the basis of the above information, calculate the level annual premium
payable in advance for a life aged 57 exact to achieve the required rate of
return.
[12]
(ii)
Discuss the effect of increased withdrawal rates on the rate of return to the
company from this policy.
[2]
Following comments from the marketing department, it has been decided to allow a
surrender value at the end of years 1 and 2 equal to 25% of total premiums paid.
(iii)
END OF PAPER
CT5 S20096
[3]
[Total 17]
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
Introduction
The attached subject report has been written by the Principal Examiner with the aim of
helping candidates. The questions and comments are based around Core Reading as the
interpretation of the syllabus to which the examiners are working. They have however given
credit for any alternative approach or interpretation which they consider to be reasonable.
R D Muckart
Chairman of the Board of Examiners
December 2009
Comments for individual questions are given with the solutions that follow.
Faculty of Actuaries
Institute of Actuaries
1
2
20 q[45]:[45]
1 / 2 * 20 q[45]:[45]
1 / 2 * (1
20 p[45] )
1 / 2 * (1
l65
l[45]
)2
1 / 2 * (1 8821.2612 / 9798.0837) 2
.00497
2
Define
k (ap) x =
the probability that a life aged x is alive and not diagnosed as critically ill at
time k
(aq)tx k = the probability that a life aged x + k is diagnosed as critically ill in the
following year
vk
t
k ( ap ) x .( aq ) x k
k 0
Students often failed to define symbols adequately. The continuous alternative was
also fully acceptable
3
For contant force of mortality at age 72:
p72
(1 q72 ) .969268 e
Hence
0.5 p72.25
0.5 q72.25
dt
ln(.969268) .031214
e
0.75
.031214 dt
0.25
.984514
1 .984504
.015486
Page 2
1
0
.015607
Generally well done. The alternative very quick answer of 1 ( p 72)1/2 was fully
acceptable
4
(i) Crude rate = (104+127+132)/(121376+134292+133277)=0.000933
(ii)
Age
Population
40
41
42
121,376
134,292
133,277
Expected
Number of
deaths
0.000937 114
0.001014 136
0.001104 147
qx
5
var amin( K x
1,n )
var
1 v min( K x
d
1,n )
1
var v min( K x 1,n )
2
d
1 2
Ax:n ( Ax:n )2 where 2 Ax:n is at rate (1 i )2 1
2
d
6
a. ( tV ' GP-et )(1 i )
Page 3
qx t S
px t ( t 1V ' )
where
tV
'
GP
et
office premium
renewal expenses incurred at time t
i
S
qx t
px
7
Direct expenses are those that vary with the amount of business written. Direct
expenses are divided into:
Initial expenses
Renewal expenses
Termination expenses
Examples of each:
Initial expenses those arising when the policy is issued e.g. initial commission
Renewal expenses those arising regularly during the policy term e.g. renewal
commission
Termination expenses those arising when the policy terminates as a result of an
insured contingency (e.g. death claim for a temporary life insurance policy)
Generally well done and other valid comments and examples were credited.
8
(i) Pensioners retiring at normal retirement age
Pensioners retiring before normal retirement age
Pensioners retiring before normal retirement age on the grounds of ill-health
(ii) Class selection ill-health pensioners will have different mortality to other
retirements.
Temporary initial selection the difference between these classes will
diminish with duration since retirement
Page 4
Anti-Selection and Time Selection were credited provided they were properly justified.
Generally well done.
9
(i) To set premium rates to ensure the probability of a profit is set at an
acceptable level then the insurer takes advantage of the Central Limit Theorem
while pooling risks which are independent and homogeneous.
Independence of risk usually follows naturally.
Homogeneity is ensured by careful underwriting. Risk groups are separated
by the use of risk factors, such as age and sex.
The life assurance company uses responses to questions to allocate prospective
customers to the appropriate risk group.
Enough questions should be asked to ensure that the variation between
categories is smaller than the random variation that remains but in practice
there will be limits on the number and type of questions that can be asked.
(ii) Equity insurance is about pooling of risks and the use of genetic information
reduces that pooling.
Ethics use of genetic information could create an underclass of lives who
are not able to obtain insurance products at an affordable price, given the
results of their genetic tests.
In some countries legislation may prohibit genetic testing or there might be
political or social reasons why it is avoided.
Generally part (i) was done poorly with students failing to appreciate the key points. Part (ii) was
done better but in this case also most students failed to obtain all the main valid points.
10
Pension at retirement = 3
1000 = 3000
Annuity at retirement
(12)
(12) v5 . 5 p 65 70
5
a5 .
i
d
(12)
(12)
v5 . 5 p 65 70
Page 5
9238.134
. 11.562 11
24
9647.797
13.28659
(aq) x
qx
qx
qx .qx
= 29778
A large proportion of students whilst understanding how to approach this question failed
to calculate some or all of it correctly. In some cases certain parts were omitted or
calculated wrongly. Credit was given where parts of the solution were correct.
11
Let EDS and ADS denote the expected and actual death strain in 2008. Then
EDS
q60 Si
Si ( A61:4
l65 4
v ) Pa
i 61:4
l61
where S i is the death benefit per policy and the summation is over all policies in force
at start of the year i.e. (where figures are in 000s)
EDS
q60
Si
Si ( A61:4
0.008022
0.008022
6125 8623.75
l65 4
v )
l61
Pi a61:4
8821.2612
0.854804
9212.7143
440 3.722
20.045
The actual death strain is obtained by summation of the death strains at risk over the
policies that become claims. Therefore
ADS
Si
Si ( A61:4
claims
Si
claims
100
Si ( A61:4
claims
167.5333 26.054
l65 4
v ) Pa
i 61:4
l61
l65 4
v )
l61
Pi a61:4
claims
41.479
Page 6
This question was very poorly done. Students failed to properly identify the data and
the subtleties of a Pure Endowment contract.
12
(i) The expected present value of a continuous assurance for a sum assured of
1000 calculated at a force of interest on 2 lives aged x and y whereby the
sum is paid on the death of x only if life aged x dies after life aged y.
(ii) For both parts (a) and (b):
t
0
rdr
t
0.02 dr
0
0.02t
0.03t
_ 2
t
(a) 1000 A 30 : 40 1000 0 v tp30(1 tp 40)
1000 0 e
.05t
*e
1000 0 .02*(e
.02t
.07t
t dt
.03t
*(1 e
.1t
e
.07t
) *.02dt
)dt
.02 / .1* e
.1t
]0
____
a30:40
(e
[ e
(e
.07t
.07t
.02t
.08t
/ .07 e
.03t
1.t
e
.08t
.05t
)dt
)dt
/ .08 e
.1t
/ .1]0
(iii)If the life age 30 dies first the policy ceases without benefit yet the premium is
expected to be maintained by the life aged 40 so long as they survive. There is
no incentive to continue.
The sensible option would be to establish the premium paying period as
ceasing on the death of the life aged 30.
Page 7
13
(i) Let P be the monthly premium for the contract. Then:
EPV of premiums valued at rate i where i = 0.06 is:
12 Pa(12)
[30]:35
where v35
12 P(a[30]:35
l65
l[30]
12 P(15.152
0.13011
l
11
(1 v35 65 ))
24
l[30]
8821.2612
9923.7497
0.11566
11
(1 .11566)) 12 P 14.74668 176.9601P
24
EPV of expenses not subject to inflation and therefore valued at rate i where i
= 0.06 is:
0.025 12 Pa(12)
[30]:35
250 10.399 P
Page 8
(1 i )
1
12 P 0.975a(12) @ i % 0.025 P 12 0.5 P 250 75, 000 A[30]:30
@ i%
l
[30]:30
[30]
30
75(a@ j %
l60
[30]:30
1
1) 300 A[30]:30
@ j%
where,
l[30]
l60
9923.7497
1.06854
9287.2164
a(12)
[30]:30
1
A[30]:30
a[30]:30
A[30]:30
l
11
1 v30 60
24
l[30]
v30
l60
l[30]
14.437
11
(1 0.16294) 14.0533
24
17.759
1
A[30]:30
A[30]:30
v30
l60
l[30]
V retrospective
6.13715 12, 201.876 1.8553 445.26 250 1, 491.75 1, 256.925 8.529
53,707.84
Generally part (i) was done well. Students did however often struggle to reproduce
part (ii) which is often the case with retrospective reserves.
In this case because the reserve basis matched the premium basis the retrospective
reserve equalled the prospective reserve. If the student realised this, fully stated the
fact and then calculated the prospective reserve full credit was given.
Minimal credit was however given if just a prospective reserve method was attempted
without proper explanation.
14
(i) First calculate net premium NP and reserve tV 57:3 for t = 1 and 2
Page 9
NPa57:3
10000( A57:3
NP 2.870 8896.3
1.5 NP
175.394
NP 112.29
(112.29
1V57:3
2V57:3
v3
l60
l
) 0.5 3 NP v3 60
l57
l57
The end 3rd year reserve needs to be 1.5 times the office premium to be
calculated so as to meet the return guarantee.
We can complete the following table (denoting the office premium by P).
Note as withdrawals are assumed at the end of the year the decrements of
mortality and withdrawal are not dependent.
Year 1 Age 57
80% AM92 q select
Withdrawal
In force factor
begin year
Premium
Expenses
Death Claims
Opening Reserve
Closing Reserve
Interest
Profit vector
Profit signature
Year 2 Age 58
0.0033368
.19933264
1
Year 3 Age 59
.004944
.0995056
.79733056
.005712
0
.7140497
0.2P
33.368
0
48.334
.048P
0.05P
49.440
60.62
104.824
.057P+3.6372
0.05P
57.120
117.05
1.4914P
.057P+7.023
.848P 81.702
.848P 81.702
1.007P 90.007
.8029P 71.7653
0.4844P+66.953
0.3459P+47.808
Alternatively the Closing Reserve at End Year 3 can be taken as zero and an
additional item termed Maturity Value can be shown in Year 3 only equal to
1.4914P.
To obtain 10% return the equation is:
P
+ 71.7653/(1.1)2 47.808/(1.1)3] = 0
Page 10
1.1746
(ii)
97.6659 = 0
P = 83.15 say 83
(iii)
[0.25
0.19933264/(1.1)+0.5
0.0995056
0.79733056/(1.1)2]
= 0.07809P
Hence from above with adjustment:
1.1746
P 97.6659
0.07809P = 0
P = 89.07 say 89
Most students found this a very daunting question and overall performance was lower
than expected. Certain comments are appropriate:
Because of the stated fact that withdrawals happened at the end of the year
calculating dependent decrements was not necessary. Many students wasted
much time attempting to perform this.
Many students did not know how to calculate a net premium for this contract.
The reserve process was very straightforward if done on a recursive basis (see
question 6)
Once these facts were realised the question was then a relatively simple
manipulation of cash flows.
Credit was given to students who gave some reasonable verbal explanation of what
needed to be done even if calculations were incomplete.
Page 11