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Atlanta Marriott Marquis, International 8
Hosted By:
American Economic Association
The Financial Economics of Pensions and Insurance Companies
Paper Session
Sunday, Jan. 6, 2019 10:15 AM - 12:15 PM
- Chair: David Scharfstein, Harvard University
Asset Insulators
Abstract
We propose that financial institutions can act as asset insulators, holding assets for the long run to protect their valuations from consequences of exposure to financial markets. We illustrate the empirical relevance of this theory for the balance sheet behavior of a large class of intermediaries, life insurance companies. The pass-through from assets to equity is an especially informative metric for distinguishing the asset insulator theory from Modigliani-Miller or other standard models. We estimate the pass-through using security-level data on insurers' holdings matched to corporate bond returns. Uniquely consistent with the insulator view, outside of the 2008-2009 crisis insurers lose as little as 10 cents in response to a dollar drop in asset values, while during the crisis the pass-through rises to roughly 1. The rise in pass-through highlights the fragility of insulation exactly when it is most valuable.Insurers as Asset Managers and Systemic Risk
Abstract
Financial intermediaries often provide guarantees that resemble out-of-the-money put options, exposing them to tail risk. Using the U.S. life insurance industry as a laboratory, we present a model in which variable annuity (VA) guarantees and associated hedging operate within the regulatory capital framework to create incentives for insurers to overweight illiquid bonds (“reach-for-yield”). We then calibrate the model to insurer-level data, and show that the VA-writing insurers’ collective allocation to illiquid bonds exacerbates system-wide fire sales in the event of negative asset shocks, plausibly erasing up to 20-70% of insurers’ equity capital.Discussant(s)
Ralph Koijen
,
New York University
David Thesmar
,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Robin Greenwood
,
Harvard University
JEL Classifications
- G1 - General Financial Markets
- G2 - Financial Institutions and Services