Longevity phenomenon is a relevant aspect for insurance companies which are obliged to quantify the impact of uncertainty of mortality trend on issued products, in order to manage the risk derived from it. Recently, significant tools have been developed for transferring longevity risk to the capital markets, bringing additional capacity, flexibility and transparency to complement existing insurance solutions. In particular, hedging longevity risk with index-based longevity hedges can have several advantages. Nevertheless, the difference between the insurer’s mortality experience based on annuitant mortality and the hedged standardized index based on reference population mortality give rise to the so-called basis risk. The presence of basis risk means that hedge effectiveness will not be perfect and that, post implementation, the hedged position will still have some residual risk. The present paper seeks to contribute to that literature by setting out a framework for quantifying the basis risk. In particular we propose a model that measure the population basis risk involved in a longevity hedge, in the functional demographic model setting. Moreover, while most existing models are designed for a single population the research objective is to model mortality of two populations, in order to align with the hedging purpose. Finally, longevity hedging strategies are developed by involving mortality-linked securities

Measuring and Hedging the basis risk by Functional Demographic Models / Coppola, Mariarosaria; D’Amato, Valeria; Levantesi, Susanna; Menzietti, Massimiliano; Russolillo, Maria. - In: MATHEMATICAL METHODS IN ECONOMICS AND FINANCE. - ISSN 1971-6419. - STAMPA. - 1:7(2015), pp. 19-39.

Measuring and Hedging the basis risk by Functional Demographic Models

LEVANTESI, Susanna;
2015

Abstract

Longevity phenomenon is a relevant aspect for insurance companies which are obliged to quantify the impact of uncertainty of mortality trend on issued products, in order to manage the risk derived from it. Recently, significant tools have been developed for transferring longevity risk to the capital markets, bringing additional capacity, flexibility and transparency to complement existing insurance solutions. In particular, hedging longevity risk with index-based longevity hedges can have several advantages. Nevertheless, the difference between the insurer’s mortality experience based on annuitant mortality and the hedged standardized index based on reference population mortality give rise to the so-called basis risk. The presence of basis risk means that hedge effectiveness will not be perfect and that, post implementation, the hedged position will still have some residual risk. The present paper seeks to contribute to that literature by setting out a framework for quantifying the basis risk. In particular we propose a model that measure the population basis risk involved in a longevity hedge, in the functional demographic model setting. Moreover, while most existing models are designed for a single population the research objective is to model mortality of two populations, in order to align with the hedging purpose. Finally, longevity hedging strategies are developed by involving mortality-linked securities
2015
basis risk; Lee Carter model; FDM; q-forward.
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Measuring and Hedging the basis risk by Functional Demographic Models / Coppola, Mariarosaria; D’Amato, Valeria; Levantesi, Susanna; Menzietti, Massimiliano; Russolillo, Maria. - In: MATHEMATICAL METHODS IN ECONOMICS AND FINANCE. - ISSN 1971-6419. - STAMPA. - 1:7(2015), pp. 19-39.
File allegati a questo prodotto
File Dimensione Formato  
Coppola_Measuring_2015.pdf

solo gestori archivio

Tipologia: Documento in Post-print (versione successiva alla peer review e accettata per la pubblicazione)
Licenza: Tutti i diritti riservati (All rights reserved)
Dimensione 1.14 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
1.14 MB Adobe PDF   Contatta l'autore

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/847172
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact