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Life Insurance Capital Adequacy Test

255 Albert Street
Ottawa, Canada
K1A 0H2

www.osfi-bsif.gc.ca

Guideline

Subject: Life Insurance Capital Adequacy Test

No: A Issue Date: September 2016

Effective Date: January 1, 2018

Subsection 515(1), 992(1) and 608(1) of the Insurance Companies Act (ICA) requires federally

regulated life insurance companies and societies, holding companies and companies operating in

Canada on a branch basis, respectively, to maintain adequate capital or to maintain an adequate

margin of assets in Canada over liabilities in Canada. Guideline A: Life Insurance Capital

Adequacy Test is not made pursuant to subsections 515(2), 992(2) and 608(3) of the ICA.

However, the guideline along with Guideline A-4: Regulatory Capital and Internal Capital

Targets provide the framework within which the Superintendent assesses whether a life insurer
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maintains adequate capital or an adequate margin pursuant to subsection 515(1), 992(1) and

608(1). Notwithstanding that a life insurer may meet these standards; the Superintendent may

direct the life insurer to increase its capital under subsection 515(3), 992(3) or 608(4).

This guideline establishes standards, using a risk-based approach, for measuring specific life

insurer risks and for aggregating the results to calculate the amount of a life insurers regulatory

required capital to support these risks. The guideline also defines and establishes criteria for

determining the amount of qualifying regulatory available capital.

The Life Insurance Capital Adequacy Test is only one component of the required assets that

foreign life insurers must maintain in Canada. Foreign life insurers must also vest assets in

Canada per the ICA.

Life insurers are required to apply this guideline for reporting periods ending on or after

January 1, 2018. Early application is not permitted.

1
For purposes of this guideline, life insurers or insurers refer to all federally regulated insurers, including

Canadian branches of foreign life companies, fraternal benefit societies, regulated life insurance holding

companies and non-operating life insurance companies.

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Contents

Chapter 1 Overview and General Requirements ..4

1.1. Overview 4

1.2. Minimum and Supervisory Target ratios ..6

1.3. Accounting basis 6

1.4. General requirements ..7

1.5.Minimum amount of Available Capital .8

Chapter 2 Available Capital 9

2.1. Tier 1 9

2.2. Tier 2 .27

2.3. Capital Composition and Limitations ..34

2.4. Transition 35

Appendix 2-AInformation Requirements for Capital Confirmations 37

Chapter 3 Credit Risk On-Balance Sheet Items ..39

3.1. Credit Risk Required Capital for On-balance Sheet Assets ..39

3.2. Collateral .49

3.3. Guarantees and credit derivatives ..56

3.4. Asset backed securities 61

3.5. Repurchase, reverse repurchase and securities lending agreements .64

Chapter 4 Credit Risk Off-Balance Sheet Activities .66

4.1. Over-the-counter derivatives contracts 66

4.2. Netting of derivative contracts .69

4.3. Off-balance sheet instruments other than derivatives ..73

4.4. Commitments 76

Chapter 5 Market Risk 80

5.1 Interest rate risk80

5.2 Equity risk ..89

5.3 Real estate risk .96

5.4 Mutual funds .96

5.5 Index-linked products risk .97

5.6 Currency risk .99

Chapter 6 Insurance Risk 103

6.1. Projection of insurance liability cash flows 104

6.2. Mortality risk .105

6.3. Longevity risk 110

6.4. Morbidity risk 111

6.5. Lapse and policyholder behaviour risk .115

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6.6. Expense risk 117

6.7 Credit for reinsurance and special policyholder arrangements .118

Chapter 7 Segregated Fund Guarantee Risk ..122

7.1. Products..122

7.2. Documentation and reporting .123

7.3. Total gross calculated requirement ..126

7.4. Classifying the asset exposure 131

7.5. Determining the risk attributes135

7.6. Retrieving the appropriate nodes ..141

7.7. Use of supplied functions to determine the requirement ..142

7.8. Margin Offset Adjustment 150

7.9. Credit for reinsurance ceded or capital markets hedging ..150

7.10. Custom factors and internal models .151

7.11. Analysis of results .152

Chapter 8 Operational Risk ..153

8.1 Operational risk formula ..153

8.2 Operational risk exposures and factors .153

Chapter 9 Participating and Adjustable Products ..156

9.1. The participating product credit 156

9.2. The contractually adjustable product credit 158

Chapter 10 Credit for Other Risk Mitigation and Risk Transfer 161

10.1. Introduction .161

10.2. Definitions162

10.3. Valuation basis for ceded liabilities 163

10.4. Deductions from Available Capital for unregistered reinsurance 164

10.5. Collateral and letters of credit 166

10.6. Calculation of required capital/margin or eligible deposits 169

Chapter 11 Aggregation and Diversification of Risks .172

11.1. Within-risk diversification ..172

11.2 Between-risk diversification ..175

11.3 Base Solvency Buffer 177

Chapter 12 Life Insurers Operating in Canada on a Branch Basis 178

12.1. LIMAT Ratios 178

12.2. Available Margin .179

12.3. Surplus Allowance and Eligible Deposits182

12.4. Required Margin ..182

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Chapter 1 Overview and General Requirements

This chapter provides an overview of the Life Insurance Capital Adequacy Test (LICAT)

guideline and sets out general requirements. Details on specific components of the LICAT are

contained in subsequent chapters.

1.1. Overview

1.1.1. LICAT Ratios

The LICAT measures the capital adequacy of an insurer and is one of several indicators used by

OSFI to assess an insurers financial condition. The ratios should not be used in isolation for

ranking and rating insurers.

Capital considerations include elements that contribute to financial strength through periods

when an insurer is under stress as well as elements that contribute to policyholder and creditor

protection during wind-up.

The Total Ratio focuses on policyholder and creditor protection. The formula used to calculate

the Total Ratio is:

ase

The Core Ratio focuses on financial strength. The formula used to calculate the Core Ratio is:

Tier 1apital

ase

1.1.2. Available Capital

Available Capital comprises Tier 1 and Tier 2 capital, and involves certain deductions, limits and

restrictions. The definition encompasses Available Capital within all subsidiaries that are

consolidated for the purpose of calculating the Base Solvency Buffer, which is described below.

Available Capital is defined in Chapter 2.

1.1.3.Surplus Allowance

The amount of the Surplus Allowance included in the numerator of the Total and Core Ratios is

based on provisions for adverse deviations (PfADs) calculated under the Canadian Asset

Liability Method (CALM), or any other method prescribed under the Standards of Practice of

the Canadian Institute of Actuaries, that is used to determine insurance contract liabilities

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reported on the insurers financial statements.
2
The specific PfADs included in the Surplus

Allowance used to calculate the LICAT ratios are:

1) All PfADs relating to scenario assumptions for risk-free interest rates associated with
insurance contracts other than segregated fund contracts, calculated net of all reinsurance;

and

2) All PfADs for non-economic assumptions associated with insurance contracts other than
segregated fund contracts, calculated net of registered reinsurance only.

3

All other PfADs, including PfADs for economic assumptions other than those for risk-free

interest rates (e.g. credit spreads and foreign currencies), and PfADs associated with segregated

fund contracts, are excluded from the Surplus Allowance.

1.1.4. Eligible Deposits

Subject to limits, excess deposits placed by unregistered reinsurers (reference sections 6.7.1 and

10.6.4) and claims fluctuation reserves (reference section 6.7.4) may be recognized as Eligible

Deposits in the calculation of the Total Ratio and Core Ratio. Recognition of these amounts is

subject to the criteria for risk transfer described in section 10.6.

1.1.5. Base Solvency Buffer

Insurers capital requirements are set at a supervisory target level that, based on expert judgment,

aims to align with a conditional tail expectation (CTE) of 99% over a one-year time horizon

including a terminal provision. The risk capital requirements in this guideline are used to

compute capital requirements at the target level.

An insurers Base Solvency Buffer (reference section 11.3) is equal to aggregate capital

requirements net of credits, multiplied by a scalar of 1.05. Aggregate capital requirements

comprise requirements for each of the following five risk components:

1) credit risk (Chapters 3 and 4);

2) market risk (Chapter 5);

3) insurance risk (Chapter 6);

4) segregated funds guarantee risk (Chapter 7); and

5) operational risk (Chapter 8).

2
If approximations are permitted by the CIA Standards of Practice and used to calculate the PfADs those

approximations should continue to be used for LICAT purposes.
3
The PfADs in the Surplus Allowance include insurance risk PfADs for all business that an insurer has assumed

under modified coinsurance arrangements, and exclude insurance risk PfADs for business that the insurer has

ceded under registered modified coinsurance arrangements.

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Aggregate requirements are reduced by credits for:

1) qualifying in-force participating and adjustable products (Chapter 9);

2) other risk mitigation and risk transfer (Chapter 10); and

3) risk diversification (Chapter 11).

The Base Solvency Buffer used in the LICAT ratios is calculated net of registered reinsurance.

1.1.6. Foreign life insurers
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The Life Insurance Margin Requirements and Adequacy of Assets in Canada Test (LIMAT)

Ratios are designed to measure the capital adequacy of foreign insurers. These ratios and their

components (Available Margin, Surplus Allowance and Required Margin) are described in

Chapter 12, Life insurers Operating inanada on aranchasis.

The LIMAT is only one element in the determination of the required assets that foreign insurers

must maintain in Canada. Foreign insurers must also vest assets in Canada pursuant to section

610 of the Insurance Companies Act.

1.2. Minimum and Supervisory Target ratios

OSFI has established a Supervisory Target Total Ratio of 100% and a Supervisory Target Core

Ratio of 70%. The Supervisory Targets provide cushions above the minimum requirements and

facilitate OSFIs early intervention process
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. The Superintendent may, on a case by case basis,

establish alternative targets in consultation with an insurer based on that insurers individual risk

profile.

Insurers are required, at minimum, to maintain a Total Ratio of 90% and a Core Ratio of 60%.

Insurers should refer to Guideline A4 Regulatory Capital and Internal Capital Targets for

OSFIs definitions and expectations around the Minimum and Supervisory Target ratios and

expectations regarding internal capital targets and capital management policies.

1.3. Accounting basis

Unless indicated otherwise, the starting basis for the amounts used in calculating Available

Capital, Available Margin, Surplus Allowance, Base Solvency Buffer, Required Margin and any

of their components are those reported in, or used to calculate the amounts reported in, the

insurers financial statements and other financial information contained in the Life Quarterly

4
Within this guideline, the term foreign life insurer has the same meaning as life insurance foreign company

in section 2 of the Insurance Companies Act.
5
Industry-wide Supervisory Targets are not applicable to regulated insurance holding companies and non-

operating insurance companies.

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Return and Life Annual Supplement, all of which have been prepared in accordance with

Canadian GAAP
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in conjunction with OSFI instructions and accounting guidelines.

For LI AT purposes, the insurers balance sheet, financial statements and other financial

information as reported in the LICAT Annual Supplement deconsolidation reconciliation page

are subject to the following additional specifications:

1) Financial statements should be restated so that only subsidiaries (whether held directly or
indirectly) that carry on a business that an insurer could carry on directly (e.g., life

insurance, real estate and ancillary business subsidiaries) are reported on a consolidated

basis.

2) Consolidated equity investments in non-life solvency regulated financial corporations
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that are controlled should be deconsolidated and reported using the equity method of

accounting.

1.4. General requirements

1.4.1. Opinion of the Appointed Actuary

The Appointed Actuary is required to sign, on the front page of the LICAT Annual Supplement,

an opinion as to the accuracy of the return in accordance with subsection 2480 of the CIA

Practice-Specific Standards for Insurers (Standard). The text of the required opinion is:

I have reviewed the calculation of the LICAT Ratios of [Company name] as at

[Date]. In my opinion, the calculations of the components of Available Capital,

Surplus Allowance, Eligible Deposits and Base Solvency Buffer have been

determined in accordance with the Life Insurance Capital Adequacy Test guideline

and the components of the calculation requiring discretion were determined using

methodologies and judgment appropriate to the circumstances of the company.

[Note: For a foreign insurer LICAT Ratios, Available Capital and Base

Solvency Buffer are replaced by LIMAT Ratios, Available Margin and

Required Margin.]

The memorandum that the Appointed Actuary is required to prepare under the Standard to

support this certification must be available to OSFI upon request.

6
The Canadian Accounting Standards Board has adopted International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) as

Canadian GAAP for publicly accountable enterprises, including insurers.The primary source of Canadian

GAAP is the Chartered Professional Accountants of Canada Handbook.
7
Non-life solvency regulated financial corporations include entities engaged in the business of banking, trust and

loan business, property and casualty insurance business, the business of cooperative credit societies or that are

primarily engaged in the business of dealing in securities, including portfolio management and investment

counselling.

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1.4.2. Authorized official signature

Each life insurer is required to have an authorized Officer endorse the following statement on the

LICAT Quarterly Return and the LICAT Annual Supplement:

I confirm that I have read the Life Insurance Capital Adequacy Test guideline and related

instructions issued by the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions and that this

form is completed in accordance with them.

The Officer attesting to the validity of this statement on the LICAT Annual Supplement must be

different from the insurers Appointed Actuary.

1.4.3. Audit requirement

Life insurers are required to retain an Auditor appointed pursuant to section 337 or 633 of the

ICA to report on the year-end LICAT Quarterly Return in accordance with the relevant standards

for such assurance engagements, as promulgated by the Canadian Auditing and Assurance

Standards Board (AASB).

1.4.4. Best Estimate Assumptions

Best Estimate Assumptions used to calculate the capital requirements for insurance and market

risks are the assumptions used in the CALM base scenario and consist of:

1) base scenario assumptions for interest rates as specified by CIA standards of Practice;
and

2) best estimates for all other assumptions, where these assumptions are consistent with the
base scenario for interest rates.

1.5.Minimum amount of Available Capital

Notwithstanding the minimum and target Total and Core Ratios described in the Guideline,

insurers are required to hold a minimum amount of Available Capital /Available Margin, as

calculated in this Guideline, of $5 million or such amount as specified by the Minister of

Finance.

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Chapter 2 Available Capital

This chapter defines the elements included in Available Capital, establishes criteria for assessing

instruments and sets capital composition limits.

The primary considerations for assessing the capital elements of an insurer include:

1) availability: the extent to which the capital element is fully paid and available to absorb
losses;

2) permanence: the period for which the capital element is available to absorb losses;

3) absence of encumbrances and mandatory servicing costs: the extent to which the capital
element is free from mandatory payments or encumbrances; and

4) subordination: the extent to which and in what circumstances the capital element is
subordinated to the rights of policyholders and general creditors of the insurer in an

insolvency or winding-up.

Total available capital comprises Tier 1 and Tier 2 capital, which are defined in sections 2.1 and

2.2 below.

2.1. Tier 1

2.1.1. Gross Tier 1

Gross Tier 1 is equal to the sum of:

Tier 1 Capital Instruments

1) Common shares issued by the insurer, other than those issued by consolidated
subsidiaries and held by third party investors, that meet the criteria specified in section

2.1.1.1;

2) Tier 1 Capital Instruments other than Common Shares issued by the insurer, other than
those issued by consolidated subsidiaries and held by third party investors,

a. that meet the criteria specified in sections 2.1.1.2 to 2.1.1.4;

b. prior to August 7, 2014 that do not meet the criteria specified in sections 2.1.1.2
to 2.1.1.4 but that meet the Tier 1 criteria specified in Appendix 2-B and

Appendix 2-C of the OSFI guideline Minimum Continuing Capital and Surplus

Requirements effective January 1, 2016, subject to transition measures in section

2.4.1;

3) Instruments issued by consolidated subsidiaries of the insurer and held by third party
investors

a. that meet the criteria for classification as Common Shares as specified in section
2.1.1.1, or as Tier 1 Capital Instruments other than Common Shares as specified

in sections 2.1.1.2 to 2.1.1.4, subject to section 2.1.1.5 and transition measures in

section 2.4.2;

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b. prior to August 7, 2014 that do not meet the criteria specified in sections 2.1.1.2
to 2.1.1.4 but that meet the Tier 1 criteria specified in Appendix 2-B and

Appendix 2-C of the OSFI guideline Minimum Continuing Capital and Surplus

Requirements effective January 1, 2016, subject to transition measures in sections

2.4.1 and 2.4.2.

Tier 1 Elements other than Capital Instruments

4) Contributed Surplus

a. Share premium resulting from the issuance of capital instruments included in
Gross Tier 1

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;

b. Other contributed surplus, resulting from sources other than profits (e.g.,
members contributions and initial funds for mutual companies and other

contributions by shareholders in excess of amounts allocated to share capital for

joint stock companies) excluding any share premium resulting from the issuance

of capital instruments included in Tier 2;

5) Adjusted Retained Earnings;

6) Adjusted Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income (AOCI);

7) Participating account (joint stock companies);

8) Non-participating account (mutual companies); and

9) Tier 1 elements, other than capital instruments, attributable to non-controlling interests,
subject to section 2.1.1.5.

To determine Adjusted Retained Earnings, the following items are reversed from retained

earnings
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:

1) Changes to own credit risk: Accumulated after-tax gains or losses on fair-valued
liabilities that arise from changes to the insurers own credit risk;

2) Real estate:

a. After-tax fair value gains or losses on owner-occupied property upon conversion
to IFRS (cost model)

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;

b. Accumulated after-tax revaluation loss on owner-occupied property (revaluation
model);

c. Accumulated net after-tax fair value gains after transition to IFRS on investment
properties that do not back policy liabilities under CALM

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;

8
Where repayment of the premium is subject to the Superintendents approval.

9
The amount of retained earnings reported by fraternal benefit societies for LICAT purposes should be the lower

of the insurance fund surplus or the total surplus.
10

The amount reversed should equal the difference between deemed cost on transition to IFRS, and the moving

average market value immediately prior to conversion to IFRS.
11

For investment property acquired before transition to IFRS that was previously classified as owner-occupied

property, the cost base for calculating the gain is either the propertys deemed cost on transition to IFRS (cost

Life A LICAT

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d. Gains or losses up to the transfer date on owner-occupied property that was
previously classified as investment property

12
;

3) Discretionary participation features reported in a component of equity that is included in
Gross Tier 1.

and the following item is added to retained earnings:

4) Accumulated gains reported in Other Comprehensive Income (OCI) up to the transfer
date on investment property that was previously classified as owner-occupied property,

and that does not back policy liabilities under CALM.

To determine Adjusted AOCI, the following items are reversed from total reported AOCI:

1) Changes in own credit risk: Accumulated after-tax gains and losses on fair-valued
liabilities that arise from changes to an insurers own credit risk;

2) Cash flow hedge reserve: Accumulated fair value gains and losses on derivatives held as
cash flow hedges relating to the hedging of items that are not fair-valued on the balance

sheet (e.g., loans and debt obligations); and

3) Owner-occupied property: Accumulated after tax fair value revaluation gains on own-use
property (revaluation method).

2.1.1.1 Qualifying Criteria for Common Shares

Capital instruments classified as common shares must meet all of the following criteria:

1) The shares represent the most subordinated claim in liquidation of the insurer.

2) The investor is entitled to a claim on the residual assets that is proportional with its share
of issued capital, after all senior claims have been paid in liquidation (i.e., has an

unlimited and variable claim, not a fixed or capped claim).

3) The principal is perpetual and never repaid outside of liquidation (setting aside
discretionary repurchases or other means of effectively reducing capital in a discretionary

manner that are allowable under relevant law and subject to the prior approval of the

Superintendent).

4) The insurer does not, in the sale or marketing of the instrument, create an expectation at
issuance that the instrument will be bought back, redeemed or cancelled, nor do the

statutory or contractual terms provide any feature that might give rise to such expectation.

5) Distributions are paid out of distributable items (retained earnings included). The level of
distributions is not in any way tied or linked to the amount paid in at issuance and is not

subject to a contractual cap (except to the extent that an insurer is unable to pay

model) or its carrying value immediately after transition to IFRS (revaluation model). For similarly reclassified

investment property acquired after transition to IFRS, the cost base for calculating the gain is the propertys

original acquisition cost.
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The amount of the reversal is the difference between the propertys deemed cost on the date of transfer into

owner-occupied property, and either the moving average market value immediately prior to conversion to IFRS

net of subsequent depreciation if the property was acquired before conversion to IFRS, or the original acquisition

cost net of subsequent depreciation if the property was acquired after conversion to IFRS.

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distributions that exceed the level of distributable items or to the extent that distributions

on senior ranking capital must be paid first).

6) There are no circumstances under which the distributions are obligatory. Non-payment is
therefore not an event of default.

7) Distributions are paid only after all legal and contractual obligations have been met and
payments on more senior capital instruments have been made. This means that there are

no prefere

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[SOLVED] c++ flex finance scheme GMM Excel Life Insurance Capital Adequacy Test
$25