Longevity Derivatives

Longevity Derivatives

Longevity derivatives are a class of securities that provide a hedge for parties exposed to longevity risks through their businesses, such as pension plan managers and insurers. It's no secret that average life expectancy figures are on the rise, and even a minimal increase can prove costly and weigh significantly on the cash flows of organizations obliged to provide payouts until clients pass away. Longevity derivatives are designed to offer some protection against these risks by enabling investors to make money on the side from people living longer. Longevity derivatives are a class of securities that provide a hedge for parties exposed to longevity risks through their businesses, such as pension plan managers and insurers. Aside from giving pension funds and certain insurance companies an option to protect themselves against longevity risk, annuity payers being an obvious example, these derivatives also may appeal to other parties. Longevity derivatives are a class of securities that provide a hedge against longevity risks.

Longevity derivatives are a class of securities that provide a hedge against longevity risks.

What Are Longevity Derivatives?

Longevity derivatives are a class of securities that provide a hedge for parties exposed to longevity risks through their businesses, such as pension plan managers and insurers. These derivatives are designed to deliver increasingly high payouts as a selected population group lives longer than originally expected or calculated.

Longevity derivatives are a class of securities that provide a hedge against longevity risks.
They are designed to deliver increasingly high payouts as a selected population group lives longer than originally expected.
Longevity derivatives come in the form of survivor bonds, forward contracts, options, and swaps.

Understanding Longevity Derivatives

Derivatives are securities that derive their value from price fluctuations in an underlying asset or group of assets. Aside from speculating on future movements, they are commonly used to hedge, which is a form of insurance that basically involves taking an opposite position in a related security to offset losses.

One of the biggest risks facing pension funds and insurers is that their customers will live longer than anticipated. It's no secret that average life expectancy figures are on the rise, and even a minimal increase can prove costly and weigh significantly on the cash flows of organizations obliged to provide payouts until clients pass away.

Longevity derivatives are designed to offer some protection against these risks by enabling investors to make money on the side from people living longer. In theory, this means entities that lose money when their customers don't die also have an opportunity to profit from longer life expectancies, thereby reducing and maybe even potentially nullifying the impact of one of their greatest threats.

Types of Longevity Derivatives

The first and most prevalent form of longevity derivatives is the longevity or survivor bond.

These fixed-income instruments pay a coupon based on the "survivorship" of a stated population group, which is usually determined by a nominated index responsible for measuring a certain demographic's lifespan. As the mortality rate of the stated population group rises, coupon payments drop until they eventually reach zero.

Benefits of Longevity Derivatives

Aside from giving pension funds and certain insurance companies an option to protect themselves against longevity risk, annuity payers being an obvious example, these derivatives also may appeal to other parties.

Speculators choose to acquire longevity derivatives from companies for several reasons. One is that longevity risk has shown low correlations with other types of investment risk, such as market risk or currency risk.

Because longevity derivatives don't tend to move in lockstep with equity or debt market returns, they are potentially attractive investments and an ideal way to diversify portfolios.

Longevity derivatives exhibit low correlation to other asset classes, making them potentially attractive investments and useful diversifiers.

Limitations of Longevity Derivatives 

Because they are a new class of product — the first longevity bond was announced in 2004 — their effectiveness is still not fully recognized. The best way to package longevity derivatives to investors and insurer groups and how to best capture sample populations and use leverage most effectively remain issues to be resolved.

Longevity derivatives have been accused of being illiquid, difficult to price, and expensive — there aren’t many entities queuing up to be on the other end of the trade. As the market grows and matures, these complaints are gradually being addressed and ironed out.

Related terms:

Accounting

Accounting is the process of recording, summarizing, analyzing, and reporting financial transactions of a business to oversight agencies, regulators, and the IRS. read more

Asset

An asset is a resource with economic value that an individual or corporation owns or controls with the expectation that it will provide a future benefit. read more

Bond : Understanding What a Bond Is

A bond is a fixed income investment in which an investor loans money to an entity (corporate or governmental) that borrows the funds for a defined period of time at a fixed interest rate. read more

Commodity Market

A commodity market is a physical or virtual marketplace for buying, selling, and trading commodities. Discover how investors profit from the commodity market.  read more

Contingent Credit Default Swap (CCDS)

A contingent credit default swap (CCDS) is a tailored credit default swap that depends on two triggering events for payout. read more

Correlation

Correlation is a statistical measure of how two securities move in relation to each other.  read more

Coupon

A coupon is the annual interest rate paid on a bond, expressed as a percentage of the face value, also referred to as the "coupon rate." read more

Credit Derivative

A credit derivative is a financial asset in the form of a privately held bilateral contract between parties in a creditor/debtor relationship. read more

Derivative

A derivative is a securitized contract whose value is dependent upon one or more underlying assets. Its price is determined by fluctuations in that asset. read more

Diversification

Diversification is an investment strategy based on the premise that a portfolio with different asset types will perform better than one with few. read more

show 14 more