Income Statement
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Based on past exams, the main things you need to know (in rough order of importance) are:
- surplus: calculation of surplus, surplus changes, non-I/S surplus changes & reasons for surplus changes
- statutory income: calculation of statutory income
- basic accounting terms and concepts: (SAP = Statutory Accounting Principles)
- => balance sheet, income statement, assets, liabilities, revenue, expenses, reinsurance
- calculation of of bond values
reference part (a) part (b) part (c) part (d) E (2018.Spring #9) define:
- insurer recoverabledefine:
- insurer payabledefine:
- reinsurer funds helddefine:
- reinsurance provisionE (2018.Spring #10) statutory income:
- calculateexpense allocation:
- impact on profitabilityexpense allocation:
- actuary's involvementE (2017.Fall #9) statutory income:
- calculateusers & purpose:
- B/S & I/S 1E (2017.Fall #10) surplus:
- calculate surplusE (2017.Fall #13) calculate:
- value of bondsregulator concerns:
- regarding assetsE (2016.Fall #14) surplus:
- calculate surplusfinancial health:
- evaluateE (2015.Fall #15) surplus:
- non-I/S surplus changessurplus:
- total surplus changesurplus:
- reasons for surplus chgE (2014.Fall #12) surplus:
- calculate surplussee NAIC.IRIS see Odomirok.10-Notes E (2013.Fall #19) SAP:
- identify errorssurplus:
- calculate surplusreinsurance:
- reasons to purchaseregulator concerns:
- fair valueE (2012.Fall #14) surplus:
- impact on surplussee Odomirok.19-RBC
- 1 B/S stands for Balance Sheet, and I/S stands for Income Statement.
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In Plain English!
If you've taken a university course in accounting then you're in good shape you're familiar with the layout of financial statements. If you haven't, it's not a great problem, but it might be a little harder to understand the big picture.
SAP versus GAAP
Before doing anything else, you need to know the frameworks that companies use for accounting.
Question: what is SAP and what is GAAP
- Both are frameworks of accounting principles/rules for reporting financial transactions and operating results:
- ==> SAP: prescribed by an insurer’s domiciliary state
- ==> GAAP: used by public & private companies (insurers & non-insurers)
Obviously there is some difference between how insurers and non-insurers do their accounting.
Question: why do insurers follow different accounting rules
- ==> SAP:
- used by regulators
- primary concern is solvency
- SAP is more conservative (protects policyholders)
- ==> SAP:
- ==> GAAP:
- used by investors/creditors
- primary concern is measurement of earnings
- ==> GAAP:
That's all well and good, but what do we mean when we say SAP is more conservative? Well, GAAP came first and SAP evolved from GAAP to satisfy the specific goal of monitoring for solvency.
Question: what are the specific differences between SAP and GAAP
- The answer is covered in detail in a another chapter of Odomirok, Odomirok.22-23-GAAP, but just to give you a taste, here are couple of the more important differences:
item ! SAP treatment GAAP treatment asset recognition asset is recognized when expense is incurred may defer recognition to to achieve matching of revenue & expenses (Ex: DAC) reinsurance in loss reserves loss reserves are recorded NET of reinsurance loss reserves are recorded GROSS of reinsurance deferred income taxes taxes not deferred tax can be deferred
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Memorize:
Conceptual:
Calculational: