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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Designing and pricing guarantee options in defined contribution pension plans

Andrea ConsiglioM. TumminelloStavros A. ZeniosAndrea ConsiglioM. TumminelloStavros A. Zenios

subject

Statistics and ProbabilityPensions; Minimum guarantee; Defined benefit; Defined contribution; Embedded options; Risk sharing; Portfolio selection; Stochastic programmingRisk sharingEconomics and EconometricsPensionActuarial scienceComputer sciencePensionStochastic programmingAsset allocationMinimum guaranteeEmbedded optionPortfolio selectionEmbedded optionStochastic programmingDefined contributionSettore SECS-S/06 -Metodi Mat. dell'Economia e d. Scienze Attuariali e Finanz.Defined benefitValuation of optionsPortfolioAsset (economics)Statistics Probability and UncertaintyPut option

description

Abstract The shift from defined benefit (DB) to defined contribution (DC) is pervasive among pension funds, due to demographic changes and macroeconomic pressures. In DB all risks are borne by the provider, while in plain vanilla DC all risks are borne by the beneficiary. However, for DC to provide income security some kind of guarantee is required. A minimum guarantee clause can be modeled as a put option written on some underlying reference portfolio and we develop a discrete model that selects the reference portfolio to minimize the cost of a guarantee. While the relation DB–DC is typically viewed as a binary one, the model shows how to price a wide range of guarantees creating a continuum between DB and DC. Integrating guarantee pricing with asset allocation decision is useful to both pension fund managers and regulators. The former are given a yardstick to assess if a given asset portfolio is fit-for-purpose; the latter can assess differences of specific reference funds with respect to the optimal one, signaling possible cases of moral hazard. We develop the model and report numerical results to illustrate its uses.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.insmatheco.2015.10.002