1 / 26

An introduction to Liability Driven Investment

An introduction to Liability Driven Investment. John Belgrove 5 June 2006. Old Approach Vs. New Approach. Liabilities. Benchmark. Assets. Benchmark risk. Conventional. Tracking error. Benchmark risk. Liability-driven. Tracking error. Too much focus on this.

kberke
Download Presentation

An introduction to Liability Driven Investment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. An introduction to Liability Driven Investment John Belgrove 5 June 2006

  2. Old Approach Vs. New Approach Liabilities Benchmark Assets Benchmark risk Conventional Tracking error Benchmark risk Liability-driven Tracking error Too much focus on this

  3. Asset vs. Liability Cashflows:Conventional Approach

  4. Asset vs. Liability Cashflows:Full Cashflow Matching

  5. LDI – low risk approach

  6. Low risk approach • “Risk” - possibility that assets and liabilities don’t move in tandem in response to market movements • Construct assets so that as far as practicable assets move in line with liabilities in response to changes in market conditions

  7. Asset v liability cashflows • Pure bond solution in previous slide • is very lumpy • is short on duration

  8. Introduction to swaps • A swap can be thought of as a positive holding in one asset and a negative holding in another • We construct swap to • PAY AWAY to counterparty the cashflows from the bonds (or cash) actually held • RECEIVE from counterparty the cashflows that (as far as practicable) replicate liability cashflows

  9. No swap overlay Bond receipts Cash inflows Cash outflows Pension payments Source: Barclays Capital

  10. Swap receipts Cash inflows Cash outflows Swap payments With swap overlay Source: Barclays Capital

  11. What do swaps add? • Can be more bespoke – can construct in many flavours, which aren’t readily available in physical space • Zeroes • fixed/real/LPI • Currency • Address lumpiness of bond portfolio • Mitigate (not fully) short duration in bond portfolio

  12. Pitfalls of using swaps

  13. Understanding • Trustees don’t understand what can often be a complex solution • Mistaken belief that they are fully hedged • Surprise on seeing volatility from quarter to quarter • Consultants need to explain the residual risk and manage expectations

  14. Nature of swap market • To implement LDI need • at the very least, vanilla swaps, both • LIBOR to fixed • Inflation • possibly something more exotic • LPI 0 to 5 • LPI 0 to 2.5 • etc

  15. Nature of swap market • Vanilla LIBOR to fixed • very liquid • many banks in market • transparent pricing (Bloomberg quotes etc) • narrow spreads • easy to get in and out

  16. Nature of swap market • Vanilla inflation • fewer players (say 4 or 5; 2 dominate) • limited scope to diversify counterparty risk (albeit limited due to collateralisation) • but fairly liquid

  17. Nature of swap market • Exotic • as previous slide but more so • LPI 0 to 5 becoming more liquid • anything more fancy still illiquid • less transparency • wider spreads • harder to unwind

  18. Role of banks; supply of suitable swaps • Bank seeks to find natural counterparty • aim that your pay leg is A N Other’s receive leg • aim that your receive leg is A N Other’s pay leg • bank hedges residual risk • the lower that risk, the better terms they can offer • partly why vanilla swaps more liquid • terms can vary depending on availability of “other side”

  19. Suitability of match • Vanilla swaps give less precise match • pure inflation swap doesn't hedge vs deflation • “manufacture” hedge from fixed and inflation • hedge sensitive if cap/floor near inflation level • so hard to hedge e.g. LPI 0 to 2.5 • Exotic swaps give closer match – still not perfect • how do you match future retirees? • Either kind offers substantially longer duration than physical assets (but can still be short)

  20. Basis risk • Be clear what is meant by “liabilities” • Example – one client sought to manage volatility of FRS17 funding level • AA physical plus swap overlay • residual noise due to volatile AA/swap spread • This is arguably accounting tail wagging strategy dog

  21. Swaps and high return strategy • Suppose you execute a swap to turn liability cashflows into LIBOR • If achieve LIBOR on the physical, and liability cashflows pan out as expected you’re fine • Risk of not getting LIBOR on the physical – e.g. if put swap overlay on equities • At total scheme level can argue that equity noise swamps the risk reduction given by the swap – swap approach overengineered?

  22. Risks: Removable Risks • Interest rate risk • Inflation rate risk • Duration risk • Convexity risk (full cashflow matching) • Counterparty risk (via daily marking-to-market), although not completely removed (replacement risk)

  23. Risks: Non-Removable Risks • Reinvestment risk for the very long-dated liabilities(>50y) • Salary inflation risk for active liabilities • Demographic related risks (mainly longevity risk) • Change in benefit payments • Change in membership (withdrawals, redundancies, etc) • Covenant risk – Company default on payments • Contributions above/below benefit accrual • Actuaries valuation assumptions (yield curve risk) • Data risk (cashflow model)

  24. Unconstrained UK Equities 30% Unconstrained Global Equities 30% Passive Corporates 25% Monitoring Commitment Property 5% Low Medium High Possible Structures: Active Approach Equities (60%) Bonds (25%) Liquidity 1 Very Liquid 2 Fairly Liquid 4 Very illiquid 3 Fairly illiquid  Alternatives (15%) Private Equity 5% Active Currency 5% 

  25. Attribution: Change In Funding Level

  26. Any Other Questions

More Related