IFRS-DR_1 Problem Set (Half Year Shifts)

Question 2 & 4

can you explain this .5 shifting? I understand the .5 shift for discounting, because AY mid-term is half the year.

But taking avg of t and t+1's CF to convert to IY is confusing me.

Comments

  • Sorry which file are you referring to? This is not one of the sample questions

  • One of the excel file downloads... The name of file is in subject

  • Why are we taking the avg in step 2b from 2a?
    -> But why are we shifting the CF 'back' by half a year?
    I guess the discounting makes sense bc you are moving from half yr accidents to time 0, but the CF avg is weird.

  • I'll get back to you later this week as I'm travelling for work
  • edited March 16

    You are allocating the cash flows to issue years in step 2. Think of it this way: For claims in AY 2022, half of them will be for policies issued in 2021 and half will be from policies issued in 2022 on average, assuming uniform writing of premium. This is why it makes more sense to discount by issue year rather than by AY

  • edited March 14

    I think you meant 2021 for one of them?
    makes sense

  • yup I meant half in 2021 and half in 2022

  • I wonder how do we know whether to use Issue Year vs Accident year?

  • @uwt3yao111 I had the same question, and I assume it is because it says "RA applied to issue year" in the question and since RA is part of the FCF that it is asking for. Not sure if there would be a question where it says accident year instead of issue year though, or if this is always the case.

  • Usually it would be pretty obvious (i.e. they will specifically call out to use issue year). Otherwise you will be fine to just use AY if nothing is said.

  • No, you cannot. The latest AY a claim from a policy issued in PY X can occur is in AY X +1. This is the first basic concept explained in exam 5. For a given PY say 2024, the first day a policy can be issued is Jan 1 2025 which means any loss should it occur would be in AY 2025. The last day a policy can be issued is Dec 31 2025, which means any loss should it occur would be in AY 2026. It only spans at most two years
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