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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The embedded value concept and its application in South Africa

Huang, Jen-Chieh 14 November 2006 (has links)
Faculty of Science School of Statistics and Actuarial science 9802374m nhuang@glenrandmib.co.za / The purpose of this research report is to review the embedded value concept and to examine its practical use in South Africa. Important recent developments relating to the embedded value concept are discussed and compared with the existing embedded value concept. These developments include fair value accounting, market-consistent embedded value and the European Embedded Value Principle. In the second part of the report, the disclosure of the embedded value information of four major South African life assurance companies is examined. It was found that the market capitalisations of these companies were smaller than their embedded values for most of the period under the investigation. Reasons for this phenomenon are considered and tested against the data available. It was found that the risk discount rates used by some life assurance companies in calculating their embedded values may be too low. It appears that a ‘herding’ tendency exists among South African life assurance companies when selecting risk discount rates for the embedded value calculation. It is suggested that a more market consistent approach for the embedded value calculation and a better disclosure for the embedded value reporting should be considered by life assurance companies in South Africa. This should improve investors’ understanding and confidence in the embedded value disclosed, which in turn should help narrow or eliminate the discount of the market capitalisation to the embedded value observed in the market.
2

Trading mortality

Simpson, Nathaniel 26 June 2012 (has links)
This dissertation sets out to describe a set of financial instruments whose cash flows are driven by the movements in some underlying population's mortality rates. For example, a longevity bond where the coupons are determined with reference to the proportion of the initial population that are alive at the coupon date. Other examples include mortality swaps and mortality swaptions which are analogous to interest rate swaps and interest rate swaptions. It also aims to show there are risks associated with mortality and that these mortality driven instruments can be used to manage some of these risks. These instruments should also enable portfolios that replicate mortality driven cash ows to be constructed. This would in turn allow the market consistent valuation of these cash flows. To construct a pricing framework for these mortality based instruments a stochastic mortality model is needed. In this dissertation the stochastic mortality model used was the Lee-Carter model. The Lee-Carter model in essence models mortality rates per age by calendar year or cohort year using Time Series techniques. Copyright / Dissertation (MSc)--University of Pretoria, 2012. / Mathematics and Applied Mathematics / unrestricted

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