REG - Legal & General Grp - L&G Half-year Report 2017 Part 3 <Origin Href="QuoteRef">LGEN.L</Origin> - Part 1
RNS Number : 4602NLegal & General Group Plc09 August 2017Legal & General Group Plc
Half-year Results 2017 Part 3
Asset and premium flows Page 65
3.01 Legal & General investment management total assets
Active
fixed
Solu-
Real
Active
Total
For the six months
Index
income
tions1
assets
equities
AUM
ended 30 June 2017
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
At 1 January 2017
319.8
134.8
411.9
19.6
8.1
894.2
External inflows
25.4
8.3
16.0
0.8
0.1
50.6
External outflows
(29.7)
(3.0)
(9.0)
(0.5)
(0.1)
(42.3)
Overlay/advisory net flows
-
-
13.4
-
-
13.4
External net flows2
(4.3)
5.3
20.4
0.3
-
21.7
Internal net flows
(0.3)
(0.4)
0.4
0.5
(1.3)
(1.1)
Disposal of LGN5
(0.3)
(0.5)
-
-
-
(0.8)
Total net flows
(4.9)
4.4
20.8
0.8
(1.3)
19.8
Cash management movements3
-
4.1
-
-
-
4.1
Market and other movements2
16.6
1.7
13.4
0.8
0.5
33.0
At 30 June 20174
331.5
145.0
446.1
21.2
7.3
951.1
Assets attributable to:
External
853.2
Internal
97.9
Assets attributable to:
UK
752.8
International
198.3
Active
fixed
Solu-
Real
Active
Total
For the six months
Index
income
tions1
assets
equities
AUM
ended 30 June 2016
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
At 1 January 2016
274.3
106.8
338.2
18.3
8.5
746.1
External inflows
17.6
4.8
9.3
0.8
-
32.5
External outflows
(20.0)
(2.2)
(6.6)
(0.7)
(0.1)
(29.6)
Overlay/advisory net flows
-
-
6.7
-
-
6.7
External net flows2
(2.4)
2.6
9.4
0.1
(0.1)
9.6
Internal net flows
(0.4)
0.7
(0.1)
0.1
-
0.3
Total net flows
(2.8)
3.3
9.3
0.2
(0.1)
9.9
Cash management movements3
-
(0.6)
-
-
-
(0.6)
Market and other movements2
28.9
16.3
41.6
(0.1)
(0.6)
86.1
At 30 June 20164
300.4
125.8
389.1
18.4
7.8
841.5
Assets attributable to:
External
749.8
Internal
91.7
Assets attributable to:
UK
689.6
International
151.9
1. Solutions include liability driven investments, multi-asset funds, and include 280.8bn at 30 June 2017 (30 June 2016: 244.0bn) of derivative notionals associated with the Solutions business.
2. External net flows exclude movements in short-term solutions assets, with maturity as determined by client agreements and are subject to a higher degree of variability. The total value of these assets at 30 June 2017 was 81.7bn (30 June 2016: 71.0bn) and the movement in these assets is included in market and other movements for Solutions assets.
3. Cash management movements include external holdings in money market funds and other cash mandates held for clients' liquidity management purposes.
4. Total assets under management have been reconciled to the financial investments and investment property held on the Consolidated Balance Sheet in note 3.04.
5. L&G Netherlands was sold on 6 April 2017 to Chesnara Plc.
Asset and premium flows Page 66
3.01 Legal & General investment management total assets (continued)
Active
fixed
Solu-
Real
Active
Total
For the year ended
Index
income
tions1
assets
equities
AUM
31 December 2016
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
At 1 January 2016
274.3
106.8
338.2
18.3
8.5
746.1
External inflows5
35.2
10.8
19.9
1.4
-
67.3
External outflows5
(45.0)
(6.5)
(12.4)
(1.2)
(0.2)
(65.3)
Overlay/advisory net flows
-
-
27.2
-
-
27.2
External net flows2
(9.8)
4.3
34.7
0.2
(0.2)
29.2
Internal net flows
(0.3)
1.5
-
0.7
0.1
2.0
Total net flows
(10.1)
5.8
34.7
0.9
(0.1)
31.2
Cash management movements3
-
(0.7)
-
-
-
(0.7)
Market and other movements2,5
55.6
22.9
39.0
0.4
(0.3)
117.6
At 31 December 20164
319.8
134.8
411.9
19.6
8.1
894.2
Assets attributable to:
External
796.7
Internal
97.5
Assets attributable to:
UK
716.8
International
177.4
1. Solutions include liability driven investments, multi-asset funds and included 251.8bn at 31 December 2016 of derivative notionals associated with the Solutions business.
2. External net flows exclude movements in short-term solutions assets, with maturity as determined by client agreements and are subject to a higher degree of variability. The total value of these assets at 31 December 2016 was 52.6bn, and the movement in these assets is included in Market and other movements for Solutions assets.
3. Cash management movements include external holdings in money market funds and other cash mandares held for clients' liquidity management purposes.
4. Total assets under management have been reconciled to the financial investments and investment property held on the Consolidated Balance Sheet in note 3.04.
5. Switches between asset classes are included in the gross inflows and outflows, and moved out of Market and other movements.
Asset and premium flows Page 67
3.02 Legal & General investment management total assets half-yearly progression
Active
fixed
Solu-
Real
Active
Total
For the year ended
Index
income
tions1
assets
equities
AUM
31 December 2016
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
At 1 January 2016
274.3
106.8
338.2
18.3
8.5
746.1
External inflows5
17.6
4.8
9.3
0.8
-
32.5
External outflows5
(20.0)
(2.2)
(6.6)
(0.7)
(0.1)
(29.6)
Overlay/ advisory net flows
-
-
6.7
-
-
6.7
External net flows2
(2.4)
2.6
9.4
0.1
(0.1)
9.6
Internal net flows
(0.4)
0.7
(0.1)
0.1
-
0.3
Total net flows
(2.8)
3.3
9.3
0.2
(0.1)
9.9
Cash management movements3
-
(0.6)
-
-
-
(0.6)
Market and other movements5
28.9
16.3
41.6
(0.1)
(0.6)
86.1
At 30 June 2016
300.4
125.8
389.1
18.4
7.8
841.5
External inflows5
17.6
6.0
10.6
0.6
-
34.8
External outflows5
(25.0)
(4.3)
(5.8)
(0.5)
(0.1)
(35.7)
Overlay / advisory net flows
-
-
20.5
-
-
20.5
External net flows2
(7.4)
1.7
25.3
0.1
(0.1)
19.6
Internal net flows
0.1
0.8
0.1
0.6
0.1
1.7
Total net flows
(7.3)
2.5
25.4
0.7
-
21.3
Cash management movements3
-
(0.1)
-
-
-
(0.1)
Market and other movements5
26.7
6.6
(2.6)
0.5
0.3
31.5
At 31 December 20164
319.8
134.8
411.9
19.6
8.1
894.2
1. Solutions include liability driven investments, multi-asset funds, and include 251.8bn at 31 December 2016 of derivative notionals associated with the Solutions business.
2. External net flows exclude movements in short term solutions assets, with maturity as determined by client agreements and are subject to a higher degree of variability. The total value of these assets at 31 December 2016 was 52.6bn and the movement in these assets is included in Market and other movements for Solutions assets.
3. Cash management movements include external holdings in money market funds and other cash mandates held for clients' liquidity management purposes.
4. Total assets under management have been reconciled to the financial investments and investment property on the Consolidated Balance Sheet in note 3.04.
5. Switches between asset classes are included in the gross inflows and outflows, and moved out of Market and other movements.
As at
As at
As at
30.06.17
30.06.16
31.12.16
bn
bn
bn
Total assets attributable to:
External
853.2
749.8
796.7
Internal
97.9
91.7
97.5
Total assets attributable to:
UK
752.8
689.6
716.8
International
198.3
151.9
177.4
Asset and premium flows Page 68
3.03 Legal & General investment management total external assets under management net flows
6
6
6
months
months
months
to
to
to
30.06.17
31.12.16
30.06.16
bn
bn
bn
LGIM total external AUM net flows1
21.7
19.5
9.6
Attributable to:
International
17.9
7.8
6.7
UK Institutional
- Defined contribution
1.7
1.2
0.8
- Defined benefit
0.4
9.8
1.4
UK Retail
1.7
0.7
0.7
1. External net flows exclude movements in short term overlay assets, with maturity as determined by client agreements and cash management movements.
3.04 Assets under management reconciliation to Consolidated Balance Sheet financial assets
As at
As at1
As at1
30.06.17
31.12.16
30.06.16
bn
bn
bn
Assets under management
951.1
894.2
841.5
Derivative notionals2
(280.8)
(251.8)
(244.0)
Third party assets3
(225.1)
(234.7)
(202.3)
Derivative liabilities
7.4
9.0
15.4
Other4
(8.0)
20.0
0.9
Total group financial investments and investment property
444.6
436.7
411.5
1. H1 16 and FY16 Cash Equivalents and Financial Investments values have been restated. Refer to footnote 1 in the Consolidated Cash Flow Statement.
2. Derivative notionals are included in the assets under management but not for IFRS reporting and are thus removed.
3. Third party assets are those that LGIM manage on behalf of others, for which the group does not have the risks or rewards and thus are not included on the IFRS balance sheet.
4. Other includes assets that are managed by third parties on behalf of the group and cash and broker balances.
Asset and premium flows Page 69
3.05 Assets under administration
LGIM
Consol-
Mature
idation
Retail
Suffolk
Retail
adjust-
Total
Nethe-
Work-
Invest-
For the six months ended
Platforms1
Life
Savings2
ment3
Savings
rlands
place
ments4
Annuities5
30 June 2017
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
At 1 January 2017
83.6
-
30.7
(4.9)
109.4
1.8
20.8
25.4
54.4
Gross inflows
-
-
0.4
-
0.4
-
3.4
2.4
2.0
Gross outflows
-
-
(1.9)
-
(1.9)
-
(0.6)
(1.6)
-
Payments to pensioners
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
(1.6)
Net flows
-
-
(1.5)
-
(1.5)
-
2.8
0.8
0.4
Market and other movements
-
-
1.0
-
1.0
-
1.3
1.3
0.8
Disposals1,7
(83.6)
-
-
4.9
(78.7)
(1.8)
-
-
-
At 30 June 2017
-
-
30.2
-
30.2
-
24.9
27.5
55.6
LGIM
Consol-
Mature
idation
Retail
Suffolk
Retail
adjust-
Total
Nethe-
Work-
Invest-
For the six months
Platforms1
Life
Savings2
ment3
Savings
rlands
place
ments4
Annuities5
ended 30 June 2016
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
As at 1 January 2016
76.9
8.6
29.6
(6.8)
108.3
1.6
14.7
22.6
43.4
Gross inflows1
2.2
0.5
0.5
(0.2)
3.0
0.1
2.3
3.0
4.0
Gross outflows
(2.9)
(0.3)
(1.8)
0.3
(4.7)
(0.1)
(0.5)
(3.2)
-
Payments to pensioners
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
(1.4)
Net flows
(0.7)
0.2
(1.3)
0.1
(1.7)
-
1.8
(0.2)
2.6
Market and other
movements
1.3
-
1.1
-
2.4
0.2
0.8
0.9
5.0
Disposals6
-
(8.8)
-
1.8
(7.0)
-
-
-
-
At 30 June 2016
77.5
-
29.4
(4.9)
102.0
1.8
17.3
23.3
51.0
LGIM
Consol-
Mature
idation
Retail
Suffolk
Retail
adjust-
Total
Nethe-
Work-
Invest-
For the year ended
Platforms1
Life
Savings2
ment3
Savings
rlands
place
ments4
Annuities5
31 December 2016
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
At 1 January 2016
76.9
8.6
29.6
(6.8)
108.3
1.6
14.7
22.6
43.4
Gross inflows1
24.2
0.5
0.8
(0.1)
25.4
0.2
4.4
6.7
7.3
Gross outflows
(25.5)
(0.3)
(3.8)
0.5
(29.1)
(0.2)
(1.1)
(6.7)
-
Payments to pensioners
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
(3.0)
Net flows
(1.3)
0.2
(3.0)
0.4
(3.7)
-
3.3
-
4.3
Market and other movements
8.0
-
4.1
(0.3)
11.8
0.2
2.8
2.8
6.7
Disposals6
-
(8.8)
-
1.8
(7.0)
-
-
-
-
At 31 December 2016
83.6
-
30.7
(4.9)
109.4
1.8
20.8
25.4
54.4
1. Prior period platforms gross inflows included Cofunds institutional net flows. At 31 December 2016 Platforms comprised 39.4bn (30 June 2016: 37.2bn) of retail assets and 44.2bn (30 June 2016: 40.3bn) of assets held on behalf of institutional clients. At 31 December 2016 platforms AUA comprised ISAs: 21.4bn (30 June 2016: 20.1bn); onshore bonds 2.8bn (30 June 2016 2.8bn); offshore bonds 0.1bn (30 June 2016 0.1bn); platform SIPPs 3.9bn (30 June 2016 3.6bn) and non-wrapped funds 54.0bn (30 June 2016 49.5bn). Platforms was sold in January 2017 to Aegon as part of the sale of Cofunds.
2. Mature Retail Savings products include with-profits products, bonds and retail pensions.
3. Consolidation adjustment represents Suffolk Life and Mature Retail Savings assets included in the Platforms column.
4. Retail Investments include 2.4bn (30 June 2016: 1.8bn) of LGIM unit trust assets held on the Cofunds platform and 3.7bn (30 June 2016: 3.4bn) of LGIM unit trust assets held on the IPS platform. The Cofunds and IPS platforms were sold in January 2017.
5. Annuities exclude LGRe and LGA assets.
6. Suffolk Life was sold on 25 May 2016 to Curtis Banks Group plc.
7. Legal & General Netherlands was sold on 6 April 2017 to Chesnara Plc.
Asset and premium flows Page 70
3.06 Assets under administration half-yearly progression
LGIM
Consol-
Mature
idation
Retail
Suffolk
Retail
adjust-
Total
Nether-
Work-
Invest-
For the year ended
Platforms1,2
Life
Savings3
ment4
Savings
lands
place
ments5
Annuities6
31 December 2016
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
bn
At 1 January 2016
76.9
8.6
29.6
(6.8)
108.3
1.6
14.7
22.6
43.4
Gross inflows1
2.2
0.5
0.5
(0.2)
3.0
0.1
2.3
3.0
4.0
Gross outflows
(2.9)
(0.3)
(1.8)
0.3
(4.7)
(0.1)
(0.5)
(3.2)
-
Payments to pensioners
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
(1.4)
Net flows
(0.7)
0.2
(1.3)
0.1
(1.7)
-
1.8
(0.2)
2.6
Market and other movements
1.3
-
1.1
-
2.4
0.2
0.8
0.9
5.0
Disposals7
-
(8.8)
-
1.8
(7.0)
-
-
-
-
At 30 June 2016
77.5
-
29.4
(4.9)
102.0
1.8
17.3
23.3
51.0
Gross inflows1
22.0
-
0.3
0.1
22.4
0.1
2.1
3.7
3.3
Gross outflows
(22.6)
-
(2.0)
0.2
(24.4)
(0.1)
(0.6)
(3.5)
-
Payments to pensioners
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
(1.6)
Net flows
(0.6)
-
(1.7)
0.3
(2.0)
-
1.5
0.2
1.7
Market and other movements
6.7
-
3.0
(0.3)
9.4
-
2.0
1.9
1.7
At 31 December 2016
83.6
-
30.7
(4.9)
109.4
1.8
20.8
25.4
54.4
1. Platforms gross inflows include Cofunds institutional net flows. Total 2016 Platforms comprise 39.4bn (30 June 2016: 37.2bn) of retail assets and 44.2bn (30 June 2016: 40.3bn) of assets held on behalf of institutional clients.
2. Platforms AUA comprise ISAs: 21.4bn (30 June 2016: 20.1bn); onshore bonds 2.8bn (30 June 2016 2.8bn); offshore bonds 0.1bn (30 June 2016 0.1bn); platform SIPPs 3.9bn (30 June 2016 3.6bn) and non-wrapped funds 54.0bn (30 June 2016 49.5bn).
3. Mature Retail Savings products include with-profits products, bonds and retail pensions.
4. Consolidation adjustment represents Suffolk Life (until disposal) and Mature Retail Savings assets included in the Platforms column.
5. At 31 December 2016 Retail Investments included 2.4bn (30 June 2016: 1.8bn) of LGIM unit trust assets held on our Cofunds platform and 3.7bn (30 June 2016: 3.4bn) of LGIM unit trust assets held on our IPS platform.
6. Annuities exclude LGRe and LGI US assets.
7. Suffolk Life was sold on 25 May 2016 to Curtis Banks Group plc.
Asset and premium flows Page 71
3.07 LGR new business
6
6
6
months
months
months
to
to
to
30.06.17
31.12.16
30.06.16
m
m
m
Backbook acquisitions
-
-
2,945
Pension risk transfer
- UK
1,504
2,698
640
- USA
115
302
45
Individual Annuities
345
220
158
Lifetime Mortgage Advances
424
389
231
Longevity Insurance1
800
900
-
Total LGR new business
3,188
4,509
4,019
1. The H1 17 value represents a reinsured longevity insurance deal transacted in June 2017. The figure quoted represents the notional size of the transaction and is based on the present value of the fixed leg cash flows discounted at the LIBOR curve. The first year's fixed cash flow is 33.8m.
3.08 Insurance new business
6
6
6
months
months
months
to
to
to
30.06.17
31.12.16
30.06.16
m
m
m
UK Retail Protection
86
88
82
UK Group Protection
28
22
36
Netherlands Protection
1
2
2
US Protection
38
34
28
Total Insurance new business
153
146
148
3.09 Gross written premiums on Insurance business
6
6
6
months
months
months
to
to
to
30.06.17
31.12.16
30.06.16
m
m
m
UK Retail Protection
609
597
582
UK Group Protection
224
100
233
General Insurance
173
170
156
Netherlands Protection
14
27
25
US Protection
491
477
420
Longevity Insurance
175
160
161
Total gross written premiums on insurance business
1,686
1,531
1,577
Asset and premium flows Page 72
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Capital and Investments Page 73
4.01 Group regulatory capital - Solvency II Directive
From 1 January 2016, the group has been required to comply with the requirements established by the Solvency II Framework Directive, as adopted by the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) in the UK and to measure and monitor its capital resources on this basis.
The Solvency II results are estimated. Further explanation of the underlying methodology and assumptions is set out in the sections below.
In December 2015, the group received approval to calculate its Solvency II capital requirements using a Partial Internal Model (together with the approval by the PRA in December 2016 of an application for major model change). The vast majority of the risk to which the group is exposed is assessed on the Internal Model basis approved by the PRA. Capital requirements for a handful of smaller entities are assessed using the Standard Formula basis on materiality grounds. The group's US insurance businesses are valued on a local statutory basis, following the PRA's approval of the group's application to use the Deduction and Aggregation method of including these businesses in the group solvency calculation.
The table below shows the estimated group Own Funds, Solvency Capital Requirement and Surplus Own Funds of the group, based on the Partial Internal Model, Matching Adjustment and Transitional Measures on Technical Provisions, including a management estimate of the recalculated Transitional Measures for Technical Provisions (Estimated TMTP) at end June 2017 as we believe this provides the most up to date and meaningful view of our Solvency II position. In line with PRA guidance, a formal recalculation of the Group's TMTP will take place no later than 1 January 2018.
(a) Capital position
As at 30 June 2017 the group had a Solvency II surplus of 6.7bn (FY 16: 5.7bn) over its Solvency Capital Requirement, corresponding to a coverage ratio on a "shareholder view" basis of 186% (31 December 2016: 171%). The shareholder view of the Solvency II capital position is as follows:
30.06.17
31.12.16
bn
bn
Core tier 1 Own Funds
11.6
11.0
Tier 1 subordinated liabilities1
-
0.6
Tier 2 subordinated liabilities2
3.1
2.1
Eligibility restrictions
(0.2)
(0.1)
Own Funds3,4
14.5
13.6
Solvency Capital Requirement (SCR)
(7.8)
(7.9)
Solvency II surplus
6.7
5.7
SCR coverage ratio5
186%
171%
1. Tier 1 subordinated liabilities of 0.6bn were repaid on 2 May 2017.
2. Tier 2 subordinated liabilities include $1.35bn of USD subordinated notes issued in 2017.
3. Own Funds do not include an accrual for the dividend of 256m (FY 16: 616m) declared after the balance sheet date.
4. Own Funds include risk margin of 6.1bn (FY 16: 6.4bn) and Estimated TMTP of 6.3bn (FY 16: 7bn).
5. Coverage ratio uses unrounded inputs.
The "shareholder view" basis excludes the SCR for the with-profits fund and the final salary pension schemes from both Own Funds and SCR. On a proforma basis the coverage ratio at 30 June 2017 would have been 180% (31 December 2016: 165%).
(b) Methodology
Own Funds comprise the excess of the value of assets over the liabilities, as valued on a Solvency II basis. Subordinated debt issued by the group is considered to be part of available capital, rather than a liability, as it is subordinate to policyholder claims. Own Funds include deductions in relation to fundability and transferability restrictions, where the surplus Own Funds of a specific group entity cannot be freely transferred around the group due to local legal or regulatory constraints.
Assets are valued at IFRS fair value with adjustments to remove intangibles and deferred acquisition costs, and to value reassurers' share of technical provisions on a basis consistent with the liabilities on the Solvency II balance sheet.
Liabilities are valued on a best estimate market consistent basis, with the application of a Solvency II Matching Adjustment for valuing annuity liabilities. This incorporates changes to the Internal Model and Matching Adjustment between June 2016 and June 2017 and the estimated impacts of a recalculation of the TMTP (Estimated TMTP) recalculated based on end June 2017 economic conditions as we believe this provides the most up to date and meaningful view of our Solvency II position. The Estimated TMTP of 6.3bn (FY 16: 7.0bn) has been amortised to 30 June 2017.
The liabilities include a Risk Margin of 6.1bn (FY 16: 6.4bn) which represents an allowance for the cost of capital for a purchasing insurer taking on the portfolio of liabilities and residual risks that are deemed to be not hedgeable under Solvency II, following the 1-in-200 stress event. This is calculated using a cost of capital of 6% as prescribed by the European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (EIOPA).
The Solvency Capital Requirement is the amount of capital required to cover the 1-in-200 worst projected future outcome in the year following the valuation, allowing for realistic management and policyholder actions and the impact of the stress on the tax position of the group. This allows for diversification between the different firms within the group and between the risks to which they are exposed.
Capital and Investments Page 74
4.01 Group regulatory capital - Solvency II Directive (continued)
(b) Methodology (continued)
All material EEA insurance firms, including Legal & General Assurance Society Limited (the Society), Legal & General Insurance Limited, and Legal & General Assurance (Pensions Management) Limited (LGIM's insurance subsidiary) are incorporated into the group's Solvency II Internal Model assessment of required capital, assuming diversification of the risks between and within those firms. These firms, as well as the non-EEA insurance firm (Legal & General Reinsurance Company Limited (LGRe) based in Bermuda) contribute over 96% of the group's SCR.
Firms for which the capital requirements are less material are valued on a Solvency II Standard Formula basis. Firms which are not regulated but which carry material risks to group solvency are modelled in the Internal Model on the basis of applying an appropriate stress to their net asset value.
Legal & General America's Banner Life and its subsidiaries are incorporated into the calculation of group solvency using a Deduction and Aggregation basis.All risk exposure in these firms is valued on a local statutory basis, with capital requirements set to a multiple of local statutory Risk Based Capital (RBC) and further restrictions on the surplus contribution to the group. The US regulatory regime is considered to be equivalent to Solvency II by the European Commission. The contribution to group SCR is 150% of the local RBC Capital Adequacy Level (CAL).The contribution to group's Own Funds is the SCR together with any surplus capital in excess of 250% of RBC CAL.
All non-insurance regulated firms are included using their current regulatory surplus.
Allowance is made within the Solvency II balance sheet for the group's defined benefit pension schemes using results on an IFRS basis. Within the SCR an allowance is made by stressing the IFRS result position using the same Internal Model basis as for the insurance firms.
(c) Assumptions
The calculation of the Solvency II balance sheet and associated capital requirements requires a number of assumptions, including:
(i) assumptions required to derive the present value of best estimate liability cash flows. Non-market assumptions are consistent with those underlying the group's IFRS disclosures, but with the removal of any prudence margins. Future investment returns and discount rates are those defined by EIOPA, which means that the risk free rates used to discount liabilities are market swap rates, with a 16 basis points (FY 16: 17 basis points) deduction to allow for a credit risk adjustment for sterling denominated liabilities. For annuities that are eligible, the liability discount rate includes a Matching Adjustment. This Matching Adjustment varies between the Society and LGRe and by the currency of the relevant liabilities.
At 30 June 2017 the Matching Adjustment for UK GBP was 115 basis points (31 December 2016: 124 basis points) after deducting an allowance for the EIOPA fundamental spread equivalent to 54 basis points (31 December 2016: 58 basis points).
(ii) assumptions regarding management actions and policyholder behaviour across the full range of scenarios. The only management actions allowed for are those that have been approved by the Board and are in place at the balance sheet date;
(iii) assumptions regarding the volatility of the risks to which the group is exposed. Assumptions have been set using a combination of historic market, demographic and operating experience data. In areas where data is not considered robust, expert judgement has been used; and
(iv) assumptions on the dependencies between risks, which are calibrated using a combination of historic data and expert judgement.
Capital and Investments Page 75
4.01 Group regulatory capital - Solvency II Directive (continued)
(d) Analysis of change
The table below shows the movement (net of tax) during the financial year in the group's Solvency II surplus.
30.06.17
31.12.16
surplus
surplus
bn
bn
Surplus arising from back-book (including release of SCR)
0.6
1.2
Release of Risk Margin1
0.2
0.3
Amortisation of TMTP2
(0.2)
(0.3)
Operational Surplus Generation3
0.6
1.2
New Business Strain
(0.1)
(0.1)
Net Surplus Generation
0.5
1.1
Dividends paid4
(0.6)
(0.8)
Operating variances5
0.4
0.2
M&A6
0.1
-
Market movements7
0.1
(0.3)
Subordinated debt8
0.5
-
Total Surplus movement (after dividends paid in the period)
1.0
0.2
1. Based on the risk margin in force at end 2016 and does not include the release of any risk margin added by new business written in 2017.
2. TMTP amortisation based on a linear run down of the end-2016 TMTP of 5.9bn (net of tax, 7bn before tax) which was management's estimate of the TMTP on end-2016 market conditions.
3. Release of surplus generated by in-force business and includes management actions which at the start of the year could have been reasonably expected to take place. For H1 17 these are to deliver further eligible assets and liabilities into the Matching Adjustment portfolio in respect of a small amount of pension risk transfer business, an increase in direct investments allocation to the annuity back-book and amendments of certain FX hedging activities in the LGR portfolio.
4. Dividends paid are the amounts from the 2016 final dividend declaration paid in H1 17 (FY 16: 2015 final and 2016 interim dividend declarations).
5. Operating variances include the impact of experience variances, changes to valuation and capital calibration assumptions, changes to planned volumes of new business, tax rate changes, PRA approval of changes to the Internal Model and Matching Adjustment and other management actions including changes in asset mix, hedging strategies, Matching Adjustment optimisation and update to the longevity assumptions.
6. M&A reflects sale of Cofunds and LGN.
7. Market Movements is the impact of changes in investment market conditions over the period and changes to future economic assumptions. It also includes the capital impact of investment portfolio changes implemented by LGC. Market movements for June 2017 include a reduction to the Risk Margin of 0.2bn (net of tax), offset by management's estimate of a decrease in the Estimated TMTP of 0.2bn (net of tax). FY 16 included an increase to the risk margin of 1.1bn (net of tax) offset by an increase in the Estimated TMTP of 1.0bn (net of tax).
8. Movement in subordinated debt includes $1.35bn US Dollar subordinated notes issued and 0.6bn of sub-debt redeemed.
Operational Surplus Generation is the expected surplus generated from the assets and liabilities in-force at the start of the year. It is based on real world assumed returns and best estimate non-market assumptions. It includes the impact of management actions to the extent that, at the start of the year, these were reasonably expected to be implemented over the year.
New Business Strain/Surplus is the cost of acquiring, and setting up Technical Provisions and SCR capital, on actual new business written over the year. It is based on economic conditions at the point of sale.
Capital and Investments Page 76
4.01 Group regulatory capital - Solvency II Directive (continued)
(e) Reconciliation of IFRS Net Release from Operations to Solvency II Net Surplus Generation
Reconciliation of the group's IFRS Release from Operations to Solvency II Operational Surplus Generation.
30.06.17
31.12.16
bn
bn
IFRS Release from Operations
0.7
1.3
Expected release of IFRS prudential margins
(0.3)
(0.5)
Releases of IFRS specific reserves1
-
(0.1)
Solvency II investment margin2,3
0.1
0.2
Release of Solvency II Capital Requirement and Risk Margin less TMTP amortisation4
0.2
0.4
Other Solvency II items and presentational differences
(0.1)
(0.1)
Solvency II Operational Surplus Generation
0.6
1.2
1. Release of prudence from IFRS specific reserves which are not included in Solvency II (e.g. long term expense margin or new business closure reserves).
2. Release of prudence related to differences between the EIOPA-defined Fundamental Spread and Legal & General's best estimate default assumption.
3. Expected market returns earned on LGR's free assets in excess of risk free rates over the period.
4. Solvency II Operational Surplus Generation includes management actions which at the start of 2017 were expected to take place within the group plan. These were limited to actions by LGR to deliver further eligible assets into the Matching Adjustment portfolio and other asset based management actions.
(ii) Reconciliation of the group's IFRS New Business Surplus to Solvency II New Business Strain.
30.06.17
31.12.16
bn
bn
IFRS New Business Surplus
-
0.2
Removal of requirement to set up prudential margins above best estimate on New Business
0.2
0.5
Set up of Solvency II Capital Requirement on New Business
(0.2)
(0.7)
Set up of Risk Margin on New Business
(0.1)
(0.1)
Solvency II New Business Strain
(0.1)
(0.1)
(f) Reconciliation of IFRS shareholders' equity to Solvency II Own Funds
30.06.17
31.12.16
bn
bn
IFRS shareholders' equity
7.2
6.9
Remove DAC, goodwill and other intangible assets and liabilities
(1.9)
(2.1)
Add subordinated debt treated as available capital1
2.9
2.5
Insurance contract valuation differences2
7.1
7.9
Difference in value of net deferred tax liabilities
(0.3)
(0.5)
SCR for with-profits fund and final salary pension schemes
(0.7)
(0.7)
Other3
0.4
(0.3)
Eligibility restrictions4
(0.2)
(0.1)
Own Funds5
14.5
13.6
1. Treated as available capital on the Solvency II balance sheet as the liabilities are subordinate to policyholder claims.
2. Differences in the measurement of liabilities between IFRS and Solvency II. This includes value of shareholder transfers of 0.3bn at H1 17 (FY 16: 0.2bn).
3. Reflects valuation differences on other assets and liabilities, predominately in respect of borrowings measured at fair value under Solvency II.
4. Relating to the surplus of with-profits fund and Own Funds of non-insurance regulated entities, subject to local regulatory rules.
5. Own Funds do not include an accrual for the dividend of 256m (FY 16: 616m) declared after the balance sheet date.
Capital and Investments Page 77
4.01 Group regulatory capital - Solvency II Directive (continued)
(g) Sensitivity analysis
The following sensitivities are provided to give an indication of how the group's Solvency II surplus as at 30 June 2017 would have changed in a variety of adverse events. These are all independent stresses to a single risk. In practice, the balance sheet is impacted by combinations of stresses and the combined impact can be larger than adding together the impacts of the same stresses in isolation. It is expected that, particularly for market risks, adverse stresses will happen together.
Impact on
Impact on
Impact on
Impact on
net of tax
net of tax
net of tax
net of tax
Solvency II
Solvency II
Solvency II
Solvency II
capital
coverage
capital
coverage
surplus
ratio
surplus
ratio
30.06.17
30.06.17
31.12.16
31.12.16
bn
%
bn
%
Credit spreads widen by 100bps assuming an escalating addition to ratings1,2
0.3
8
0.2
7
Credit migration3
(0.6)
(8)
(0.6)
(8)
15% fall in property markets
(0.3)
(3)
(0.2)
(3)
100bps increase in risk free rates
1.0
24
1.0
22
50bps fall in risk free rates4
(0.5)
(11)
(0.5)
(10)
1. The spread sensitivity applies to Legal & General's corporate bond (and similar) holdings, with no change in the firm's long term default expectations.
2. The stress for AA bonds is twice that for AAA bonds, for A bonds it is three times, for BBB four times and so on, such that the weighted average spread stress for the portfolio is 100 basis points.
3. Credit migration stress covers the cost of an immediate big letter downgrade on c.20% of annuity portfolio bonds, or 3 times level expected in the next 12 months.
4. In the interest rate down stress negative rates are allowed, i.e. there is no floor at zero rates.
The above sensitivity analysis does not reflect all management actions which could be taken to reduce the impacts. In practice, the group actively manages its asset and liability positions to respond to market movements. These results all allow (on an approximate basis) for the recalculation of Estimated TMTP as at 30 June 2017 where the impact of the stress would cause this to change materially.
The impacts of these stresses are not linear therefore these results should not be used to interpolate or extrapolate the impact of a smaller or larger stress. The results of these tests are indicative of the market conditions prevailing at the balance sheet date. The results would be different if performed at an alternative reporting date.
Capital and Investments Page 78
4.02 Estimated Solvency II new business contribution
(a) New business by product1
Contri-
bution
from new
PVNBP
business2
Margin3
For the six months ended 30 June 2017
m
m
%
LGR - UK annuity business
1,859
166
8.9
UK Protection Total
754
69
9.1
- Retail protection
632
61
9.6
- Group protection
122
8
6.5
US Protection4
376
48
12.8
1. Selected lines of business only.
2. The contribution from new business is defined as the present value at the point of sale of expected future Solvency II surplus emerging from new business written in the period using the risk discount rate applicable at the end of the reporting period.
3. Margin uses unrounded inputs.
4. In local currency, US Protection reflects PVNBP of $489m and a contribution from new business of $62m.
Contri-
bution
from new
PVNBP
business2
Margin
For the year ended 31 December 20161
m
m
%
LGR - UK annuity business
6,661
693
10.4
UK Protection Total
1,466
153
10.4
- Retail protection
1,255
139
11.1
- Group protection
211
14
6.6
US Protection3
631
78
12.4
1. Selected lines of business only.
2. The contribution from new business is defined as the present value at the point of sale of expected future Solvency II surplus emerging from new business written in the period using the risk discount rate applicable at the end of the reporting period.
3. In local currency, US Protection reflects PVNBP of $855m and a contribution from new business of $106m.
Capital and Investments Page 79
4.02 Estimated Solvency II new business contribution (continued)
(b) Assumptions
The key economic assumptions as at 30 June 2017 are as follows:
%
Risk Margin
3.1
Risk free rate
- UK
1.7
- US
2.1
Risk discount rate (net of tax)
- UK
4.8
- US
5.2
Long-term rate of return on non-profit annuities in LGR
3.1
The cashflows are discounted using duration-based discount rates, which is the sum of a duration-based risk free rate and a flat Risk Margin. The risk free rates have been based on a swap curve net of the EIOPA-specified Credit Risk Adjustment. The risk free rate shown above is a weighted average based on the projected cash flows.
All other economic and non-economic assumptions and methodologies that would have a material impact on the margin for these contracts are unchanged from those used for the European Embedded Value reporting at end 2015 other than the cost of currency hedging which has been updated to reflect current market conditions and hedging activity in light of Solvency II. In particular:
The assumed future pre-tax returns on fixed interest and RPI linked securities are set by reference to the portfolio yield on the relevant backing assets held at market value at the end of the reporting period. The calculated return takes account of derivatives and other credit instruments in the investment portfolio. The returns on fixed and index-linked assets are calculated net of an allowance for default risk which takes account of the credit rating and the outstanding term of the assets. The allowance for corporate and other unapproved credit asset defaults within the new business contribution is based on a level rate deduction from the expected returns for the overall annuities portfolio of 18 basis points.
Non-economic assumptions have been set at levels commensurate with recent operating experience, including those for mortality, morbidity, persistency and maintenance expenses (excluding development costs). An allowance is made for future mortality improvement. For new business, mortality assumptions may be modified to take certain scheme specific features into account. These are normally reviewed annually.
Tax
The profits on the new business are calculated on an after tax basis and are grossed up by the notional attributed tax rate. For the UK, the after tax basis assumes the annualised current rate of 19.25% and subsequent enacted future reductions in corporation tax to 19% from 1 April 2017 and 17% from 1 April 2020 onwards. The tax rate used for grossing up is the long term corporate tax rate in the territory concerned, which for the UK is 17%.
US covered business profits are also grossed up using the long term corporate tax rate of 35%.
Capital and Investments Page 80
4.02 Estimated Solvency II new business contribution (continued)
(c) Methodology
Basis of preparation
The group is required to comply with the requirements established by the EU Solvency II Directive. Consequently, a Solvency II value reporting framework, which incorporates a best estimate of cash flows in relation to insurance assets and liabilities, has replaced EEV reporting in the management information used internally to measure and monitor capital resources. Solvency II new business contribution reflects the portion of Solvency II value added by new business written in the period, recognising that the statutory solvency in the UK is now on a Solvency II basis. It has been calculated in a manner consistent with European Embedded Value (EEV) principles.
Solvency II new business contribution has been calculated for the group's most material insurance-related businesses, namely, LGR, UK Insurance and LGI US.
Description of methodology
The objective of the Solvency II new business contribution is to provide shareholders with information on the long term contribution of new business written in H1 17.
With the exception of the discount rate, cost of currency hedging and the statutory solvency basis, new business contribution arising from the new business premiums written during the reporting period has been calculated on the same economic and operating assumptions as would have been used under the EEV methodology.
The PVNBP is equivalent to total single premiums plus the discounted value of annual premiums expected to be received over the term of the contracts using the same economic and operating assumptions used for the calculation of the new business contribution for the financial period.
The new business margin is defined as new business contribution divided by the PVNBP. The premium volumes used to calculate the PVNBP are the same as those used to calculate new business contribution.
LGI US is consolidated into the group solvency balance sheet on a US Statutory solvency basis. Intra-group reinsurance arrangements are in place between the US and UK businesses, and it is expected that these arrangements will be periodically extended to cover recent new business. LGI US new business premiums and contribution reflect the groupwide expected impact of LGI US directly-written business (i.e. looks through any intra-group reinsurance arrangements).
Comparison to EEV new business contribution
The key difference between Solvency II and EEV new business contribution is the Statutory solvency basis used for UK business. Due to the different reserving and capital bases under Solvency II compared to Solvency I, the timing of profit emergence changes. The impact on new business contribution therefore largely reflects the cost of capital effect of this change in profit timing. The impact on new business contribution of moving to a Solvency II basis will differ by type of business. Products which are more capital consumptive under Solvency II will have a lower new business value and vice versa for less capital consumptive products.
Projection assumptions
Cash flow projections are determined using best estimate assumptions for each component of cash flow for each line of business. Future economic and investment return assumptions are based on conditions at the end of the financial period.
Detailed projection assumptions including mortality, morbidity, persistency and expenses reflect recent operating experience and are normally reviewed annually. Allowance is made for future improvements in annuitant mortality based on experience and externally published data. Favourable changes in operating experience are not anticipated until the improvement in experience has been observed.
All costs relating to new business, even if incurred elsewhere in the group, are allocated to the new business. The expense assumptions used for the cash flow projections therefore include the full cost of servicing this business.
Tax
The projections take into account all tax which is expected to be paid, based on best estimate assumptions, applying current legislation and practice together with substantively enacted future changes.
Risk discount rate
The risk discount rate (RDR) is duration-based and is a combination of the risk free curve and a flat Risk Margin, which reflects the residual risks inherent in the group's businesses, after taking account of margins in the statutory technical provisions, the required capital and the specific allowance for financial options and guarantees.
The risk free rates have been based on a swap curve net of the EIOPA-specified Credit Risk Adjustment 16 basis points for UK and 15basis points for US (FY 16: 17 basis points for UK and 15 basis points for US).
The Risk Margin has been determined based on an assessment of the group's weighted average cost of capital (WACC). This assessment incorporates a beta for the group, which measures the correlation of movements in the group's share price to movements in a relevant index. Beta values therefore allow for the market's assessment of the risks inherent in the business relative to other companies in the chosen index.
The WACC is derived from the group's cost of equity and debt, and the proportion of equity to debt in the group's capital structure measured using market values. Each of these three parameters is forward looking, although informed by historic information and appropriate judgements where necessary. The cost of equity is calculated as the risk free rate plus the equity risk premium for the chosen index multiplied by the company's beta.
Capital and Investments Page 81
4.02 Estimated Solvency II new business contribution (continued)
(c) Methodology (continued)
The cost of debt used in the WACC calculations takes account of the actual locked-in rates for our senior and subordinated long term debt. All debt interest attracts tax relief at a time adjusted rate of 17.5% (FY 16: 17.7%).
Whilst the WACC approach is a relatively simple and transparent calculation to apply, subjectivity remains within a number of the assumptions. Management believes that the chosen margin, together with the levels of required capital, the inherent strength of the group's regulatory reserves and the explicit deduction for the cost of options and guarantees, is appropriate to reflect the risks within the covered business.
(d) PVNBP to gross written premiums reconciliation
30.06.17
31.12.16
Notes
bn
bn
PVNBP
4.02(a)
3.0
8.8
Effect of capitalisation factor
(1.0)
(1.8)
New business premiums from selected lines
2.0
7.0
Other1
1.3
1.9
Total LGR, Insurance and LGI US new business
3.07/3.08
3.3
8.9
Annualisation impact of regular premium long-term business
(0.1)
(0.1)
IFRS gross written premiums from existing long-term insurance business
1.4
2.5
IFRS gross written premiums from Savings business
0.1
0.2
Deposit accounting for lifetime mortgage advances
(0.4)
(0.6)
General Insurance gross written premiums
3.09
0.2
0.3
Future premiums on longevity swap new business
(0.8)
(0.9)
Total gross written premiums
3.7
10.3
1. Other principally includes annuity sales in the US, lifetime mortgage advances and discounted future cash flows on longevity swap new business.
Capital and Investments Page 82
4.03 Group Economic Capital
Legal & General defines Economic Capital to be the amount of capital that the Board believes the group needs to hold, over and above its liabilities, in order to meet its strategic objectives. This is not the same as regulatory capital which reflects regulatory rules and constraints. The group's objectives include being able to meet its liabilities as they fall due whilst maintaining the confidence of our investors, rating agencies, customers and intermediaries.
The Economic Capital results are estimated.
The table below shows the estimated group Own Funds, Economic Capital Requirement and Surplus Own Funds based on group's Economic Capital model.
(a) Capital position
As at 30 June 2017, the group had an estimated Economic Capital surplus of 9.2bn (FY 16: 8.3bn), corresponding to an Economic Capital coverage ratio of 247% (31 December 2016: 230%). The Economic Capital position is as follows:
30.06.17
31.12.16
bn
bn
Core tier 1 Own Funds
12.2
11.9
Tier 1 subordinated liabilities1
-
0.6
Tier 2 subordinated liabilities2
3.2
2.1
Own Funds3
15.4
14.6
Economic Capital Requirement (ECR)4
(6.2)
(6.3)
Surplus Own Funds
9.2
8.3
ECR coverage ratio5
247%
230%
1. Tier 1 subordinated liabilities of 0.6bn were repaid on 2 May 2017.
2. Tier 2 subordinated liabilities include $1.35bn of USD subordinated notes issued in 2017.
3. Economic Capital Own Funds do not include an accrual for the dividend of 256m (FY 16: 616m) declared after the balance sheet date.
4. The EC balance sheet and ECR are not subject to audit.
5. Coverage ratio uses unrounded inputs.
The Economic Capital position does not exclude the ECR for with-profits fund and the final salary pension schemes for both Own Funds and ECR.
(b) Methodology
Own Funds are defined to be the excess of the value of assets over the liabilities. Subordinated debt issued by the group is considered to be part of available capital, rather than a liability, as it is subordinate to policyholder claims.
Assets are valued at IFRS fair value with adjustments to remove intangibles and deferred acquisition costs, and to value reassurers' share of technical provisions on a basis consistent with the liabilities on the Economic Capital balance sheet.
Liabilities are valued on a best estimate market consistent basis, with the application of an Economic Matching Adjustment for valuing annuity liabilities.
The Economic Capital Requirement is the amount of capital required to cover the 1-in-200 worst projected future outcome in the year following the valuation, allowing for realistic management and policyholder actions and the impact of the stress on the tax position of the group. This allows for diversification between the different firms within the group and between the risks that they are exposed to.
The liabilities include a Recapitalisation Cost to allow for the cost of recapitalising the balance sheet following the 1-in-200 stress in order to maintain confidence that our future liabilities will be met. This is calculated using a cost of capital that reflects the long term average rates at which it is expected that the group could raise debt and allowing for diversification between all group entities.
All material insurance firms, including Legal & General Assurance Society Limited, Legal & General Insurance Limited and Legal & General Assurance (Pensions Management) Limited (LGIM's insurance subsidiary) are incorporated into the group's Economic Capital model assessment of required capital, assuming diversification of the risks between the different firms within the group and between the risks to which they are exposed. These firms, as well as the non-EEA insurance firms (Legal & General America (LGI US) and Legal & General Reinsurance Company Limited based in Bermuda) contribute over 98% of the group's ECR.
Firms for which the capital requirements are less material, are valued on the Solvency II Standard Formula basis. Non-insurance firms are included using their current regulatory surplus, without allowing for any diversification with the rest of the group.
Allowance is made within the Economic Capital balance sheet for the group's defined benefit pension schemes based upon the scheme's funding basis, and allowance is made within the capital requirement by stressing the funding position, using the same Economic Capital basis as for the insurance firms.
Capital and Investments Page 83
4.04 Investment portfolio
Market
Market1
Market1
value
value
value
30.06.17
30.06.16
31.12.16
m
m
m
Worldwide total assets
952,100
846,140
903,886
Client and policyholder assets1
(864,740)
(766,397)
(821,978)
Non-unit linked with-profits assets
(11,551)
(12,478)
(11,924)
Investments to which shareholders are directly exposed
75,809
67,265
69,984
Analysed by investment class:
Other
non profit
Other
LGR
insurance
LGC
shareholder
investments
investments
investments
investments
Total
Total1
Total1
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.16
31.12.16
Notes
m
m
m
m
m
m
m
Equities2
268
-
2,473
135
2,876
2,594
2,558
Bonds
4.06
51,536
1,717
2,347
493
56,093
53,436
54,852
Derivative assets3
3,773
-
47
3
3,823
5,723
4,693
Property
4.07
2,687
-
175
25
2,887
2,457
2,604
Cash, cash equivalents, loans & receivables
1,823
458
1,286
326
3,893
2,545
3,362
Financial investments
60,087
2,175
6,328
982
69,572
66,755
68,069
Other assets4
5,859
-
364
14
6,237
510
1,915
Total investments
65,946
2,175
6,692
996
75,809
67,265
69,984
1. H1 16 and FY 16 Cash Equivalents and Financial Investments values have been restated. Refer to footnote 1 in the Consolidated Cash Flow Statement.
2. Equity investments include a total of 256m in respect of CALA Group Limited, Peel Media Holdings Limited (MediaCityUK), NTR Wind Management Ltd and Access Development Partnership (H1 16: 207m; FY 16: 237m).
3. Derivative assets are shown gross of derivative liabilities of 2.4bn (H1 16: 5.0bn; FY 16: 2.9bn). Exposures arise from the use of derivatives for efficient portfolio management, especially the use of interest rate swaps, inflation swaps, credit default swaps and foreign exchange forward contracts for asset and liability management.
4. Other assets include reverse repurchase agreements of 6,202m (H1 16: 464m; FY 16: 1,883m).
Capital and Investments Page 84
4.05 Direct Investments
(a) Analysed by asset class
Direct1
Traded2
Direct1
Traded2,3
Direct1
Traded2,3
Investments
securities
Total
Investments
securities
Total3
Investments
securities
Total3
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
m
m
m
m
m
m
m
m
m
Equities
650
2,226
2,876
508
2,086
2,594
595
1,963
2,558
Bonds4
7,722
48,371
56,093
4,914
48,522
53,436
6,256
48,596
54,852
Derivative assets
-
3,823
3,823
-
5,723
5,723
-
4,693
4,693
Property5
2,887
-
2,887
2,457
-
2,457
2,604
-
2,604
Cash, cash equivalents, loans & receivables
496
3,397
3,893
466
2,079
2,545
518
2,844
3,362
Other assets
35
6,202
6,237
46
464
510
32
1,883
1,915
11,790
64,019
75,809
8,391
58,874
67,265
10,005
59,979
69,984
1. Direct Investments, which generally constitute an agreement with another party, represent an exposure to untraded and often less volatile asset classes. Direct Investments also include physical assets, bilateral loans and private equity, but exclude hedge funds.
2. Traded securities are defined by exclusion. If an instrument is not a Direct Investment, then it is classed as a traded security.
3. H1 16 and FY 16 Cash Equivalents and Financial Investments values have been restated. Refer to footnote 1 in the Consolidated Cash Flow Statement.
4. Direct Investment bonds include lifetime mortgages of 1,433m (H1 16: 440m; FY 16: 852m).
5. A further breakdown of property is provided in note 4.07.
(b) Analysed by segment
LGI
LGI
(UK and
LGR
LGC
(US)
Other)
Total
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
m
m
m
m
m
-
Equities
-
650
-
-
650
Bonds1
7,094
267
361
-
7,722
Property2
2,687
2003
-
-
2,887
Cash, cash equivalents, loans & receivables4
31
123
342
-
496
Other assets
-
35
-
-
35
9,812
1,275
703
-
11,790
1. Direct Investment bonds include lifetime mortgages of 1,433m (H1 16: 440m; FY 16: 852m).
2. A further breakdown of property is provided in note 4.07.
3. Included in LGC property is 25m of shareholder investment property as noted in note 4.04.
4. Cash, cash equivalents, loans & receivables only include loans and receivables.
LGI
LGI
(UK and
LGR
LGC
(US)
Other)
Total
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
m
m
m
m
m
Equities
-
508
-
-
508
Bonds1
4,372
197
345
-
4,914
Property2
2,257
196
-
4
2,457
Cash, cash equivalents, loans & receivables3
20
117
329
-
466
Other assets
-
46
-
-
46
6,649
1,064
674
4
8,391
1. Direct Investments bonds include lifetime mortgages of 440m.
2. A further breakdown of property is provided in note 4.07.
3. Cash, cash equivalents, loans & receivables only include loans and receivables.
Capital and Investments Page 85
4.05 Direct Investments (continued)
(b) Analysed by segment (continued)
LGI
LGI
(UK and
LGR
LGC
(US)
Other)
Total
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
m
m
m
m
m
Equities
-
595
-
-
595
Bonds1
5,655
228
373
-
6,256
Property2
2,442
162
-
-
2,604
Cash, cash equivalents, loans & receivables3
33
120
365
-
518
Other assets
-
32
-
-
32
8,130
1,137
738
-
10,005
1. Direct Investments bonds include lifetime mortgages of 852m.
2. A further breakdown of property is provided in note 4.07.
3. Cash, cash equivalents, loans & receivables only include loans and receivables.
(c) Movement in the period
Carrying
Change in
Carrying
value
market
value
01.01.17
Additions
Disposals
value
30.06.17
m
m
m
m
m
Equities
595
35
-
20
650
Bonds1
6,256
1,345
(15)
136
7,722
Property
2,604
377
(198)
104
2,887
Cash, cash equivalents, loans & receivables2
518
-
(6)
(16)
496
Other assets
32
2
-
1
35
10,005
1,759
(219)
245
11,790
1. Direct Investment bonds include lifetime mortgages of 1,433m (H1 16: 440m; FY 16: 852m).
2. Cash, cash equivalents, loans & receivables only include loans and receivables.
Capital and Investments Page 86
4.06 Bond portfolio summary
(a) LGR analysed by sector
Sectors analysed by credit rating
BB or
AAA
AA
A
BBB
below
LGR
LGR
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
m
m
m
m
m
m
%
Sovereigns, Supras and Sub-Sovereigns
1,058
9,718
297
230
31
11,334
23
Banks:
- Tier 1
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Tier 2 and other subordinated
211
49
58
35
-
353
1
- Senior
3
363
1,227
34
-
1,627
3
- Covered
254
-
-
-
-
254
-
Financial Services:
- Tier 1
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Tier 2 and other subordinated
-
129
109
58
-
296
1
- Senior
-
580
66
114
-
760
1
Insurance:
- Tier 1
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Tier 2 and other subordinated
-
110
-
52
-
162
-
- Senior
-
55
487
76
-
618
1
Consumer Services and Goods:
- Cyclical
-
335
1,071
1,676
160
3,242
6
- Non-cyclical
177
558
1,329
2,050
97
4,211
8
- Health care
3
32
195
155
-
385
1
Infrastructure:
- Social
86
841
3,380
1,005
20
5,332
10
- Economic
-
29
913
1,402
43
2,387
5
Technology and Telecoms
56
139
724
2,014
86
3,019
6
Industrials
-
148
705
381
12
1,246
2
Utilities
-
80
4,867
3,370
16
8,333
16
Energy
-
-
102
482
16
600
1
Commodities
-
-
302
523
20
845
2
Oil and Gas
-
278
481
670
163
1,592
3
Property
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Real estate
-
369
482
1,199
53
2,103
4
Structured finance ABS / RMBS / CMBS / Other
134
588
485
47
55
1,309
3
Lifetime mortgage loans1
721
522
99
91
-
1,433
3
CDOs
-
21
60
14
-
95
-
Total m
2,703
14,944
17,439
15,678
772
51,536
100
Total %
5
30
34
30
1
100
1. The credit ratings attributed to lifetime mortgages are allocated in accordance with the internal matching adjustment structuring.
Capital and Investments Page 87
4.06 Bond portfolio summary (continued)
(a) LGR analysed by sector (continued)
Sectors analysed by credit rating (continued)
BB or
AAA1
AA1
A1
BBB1
below1
LGR1
LGR1
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
m
m
m
m
m
m
%
Sovereigns, Supras and Sub-Sovereigns
1,032
8,618
329
233
29
10,241
21
Banks:
- Tier 1
-
-
-
-
6
6
-
- Tier 2 and other subordinated
-
-
159
242
15
416
1
- Senior
2
496
1,155
82
-
1,735
4
- Covered
250
2
-
16
-
268
1
Financial Services:
- Tier 1
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Tier 2 and other subordinated
-
86
49
64
3
202
-
- Senior
6
363
144
128
11
652
1
Insurance:
- Tier 1
-
-
-
1
-
1
-
- Tier 2 and other subordinated
-
32
136
78
26
272
1
- Senior
8
44
538
136
-
726
2
Consumer Services and Goods
- Cyclical
-
337
912
1,788
148
3,185
7
- Non-cyclical
149
423
1,371
1,069
101
3,113
6
- Health care
3
-
175
138
-
316
1
Infrastructure:
- Social
96
971
3,102
679
240
5,088
11
- Economic
-
28
806
1,037
30
1,901
4
Technology and Telecoms
46
156
535
2,269
92
3,098
6
Industrials
-
94
685
373
53
1,205
3
Utilities
-
99
4,746
2,957
24
7,826
15
Energy
-
-
107
544
31
682
1
Commodities
-
-
294
454
91
839
2
Oil and Gas
-
169
578
612
261
1,620
3
Property
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Real estate
-
436
349
689
435
1,909
4
Structured finance ABS / RMBS / CMBS / Other
135
761
271
89
48
1,304
3
Lifetime mortgage loans2
-
-
-
440
-
440
1
CDOs3
-
722
366
14
-
1,102
2
Total m1
1,727
13,837
16,807
14,132
1,644
48,147
100
Total %
4
29
35
29
3
100
1. H1 16 and FY 16 Cash Equivalents and Financial Investments values have been restated. Refer to footnote 1 in the Consolidated Cash Flow Statement.
2. Lifetime mortgage loans have increased in value since inception predominantly due to the accrual of interest on the loans.
3. The underlying reference portfolio has had no reference entity defaults during the period. The CDOs are termed as super senior since default losses on the reference portfolio have to exceed 27.5%, on average across the reference portfolio, before the CDOs incur any default losses. Assuming an average recovery rate of 30%, then over 39% of the reference names would have to default before the CDOs incur any default losses. The CDOs are valued using an external valuation which is based on observable market inputs. This is then validated against the market valuation.
Capital and Investments Page 88
4.06 Bond portfolio summary (continued)
(a) LGR analysed by sector (continued)
Sectors analysed by credit rating (continued)
BB or
AAA1
AA1
A1
BBB1
below1
LGR1
LGR1
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
m
m
m
m
m
m
%
Sovereigns, Supras and Sub-Sovereigns
912
9,961
285
229
34
11,421
24
Banks:
- Tier 1
-
-
-
-
12
12
-
- Tier 2 and other subordinated
211
49
62
41
-
363
1
- Senior
8
436
1,201
59
-
1,704
3
- Covered
259
-
16
-
-
275
1
Financial Services:
- Tier 1
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Tier 2 and other subordinated
-
87
59
56
-
202
-
- Senior
-
371
125
110
-
606
1
Insurance:
- Tier 1
-
-
-
1
-
1
-
- Tier 2 and other subordinated
-
45
3
68
-
116
-
- Senior
8
88
485
76
-
657
1
Consumer Services and Goods:
- Cyclical
-
389
1,088
1,755
165
3,397
7
- Non-cyclical
260
647
1,380
1,373
115
3,775
8
- Health care
3
13
15
10
1
42
-
Infrastructure:
- Social
-
624
3,259
926
148
4,957
10
- Economic
-
-
873
1,313
44
2,230
4
Technology and Telecoms
57
203
610
2,104
84
3,058
6
Industrials
-
142
741
362
37
1,282
3
Utilities
-
101
4,903
3,142
12
8,158
16
Energy
-
-
106
554
31
691
1
Commodities
-
-
304
475
77
856
2
Oil and Gas
-
281
544
633
180
1,638
3
Property
-
-
1
6
-
7
-
Real estate
-
305
628
1,063
48
2,044
4
Structured finance ABS / RMBS / CMBS / Other
121
671
572
46
49
1,459
3
Lifetime mortgage loans2
388
322
91
51
-
852
2
CDOs
-
-
59
14
-
73
-
Total m
2,227
14,735
17,410
14,467
1,037
49,876
100
Total %
4
30
35
29
2
100
1. H1 16 and FY 16 Cash Equivalents and Financial Investments values have been restated. Refer to footnote 1 in the Consolidated Cash Flow Statement.
2. The credit ratings attributed to lifetime mortgages are allocated in accordance with the internal matching adjustment structuring.
Capital and Investments Page 89
4.06 Bond portfolio summary (continued)
(a) LGR analysed by sector (continued)
Sectors analysed by domicile
EU
Rest of
UK
US
excluding UK
the World
LGR
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
m
m
m
m
m
Sovereigns, Supras and Sub-Sovereigns
9,024
704
1,105
501
11,334
Banks
931
688
497
118
2,234
Financial Services
383
68
605
-
1,056
Insurance
154
555
16
55
780
Consumer Services and Goods:
- Cyclical
772
2,049
290
131
3,242
- Non-cyclical
1,359
2,564
279
9
4,211
- Health care
1
384
-
-
385
Infrastructure:
- Social
5,012
284
-
36
5,332
- Economic
1,917
205
29
236
2,387
Technology and Telecoms
591
1,356
659
413
3,019
Industrials
204
568
335
139
1,246
Utilities
3,862
1,237
2,322
912
8,333
Energy
-
498
6
96
600
Commodities
8
290
22
525
845
Oil and Gas
187
396
465
544
1,592
Property
-
-
-
-
-
Real estate
1,686
379
10
28
2,103
Structured finance ABS / RMBS / CMBS / Other
947
42
302
18
1,309
Lifetime mortgages
1,433
-
-
-
1,433
CDOs
-
21
-
74
95
Total
28,471
12,288
6,942
3,835
51,536
Capital and Investments Page 90
4.06 Bond portfolio summary (continued)
(a) LGR analysed by sector (continued)
EU
Rest of
Sectors analysed by domicile (continued)
UK1
US1
excluding UK1
the World1
LGR1
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
m
m
m
m
m
Sovereigns, Supras and Sub-Sovereigns
7,909
680
982
670
10,241
Banks
1,050
752
420
203
2,425
Financial Services
419
109
315
11
854
Insurance
276
597
46
80
999
Consumer Services and Goods:
- Cyclical
604
2,207
216
158
3,185
- Non-cyclical
1,131
1,735
177
70
3,113
- Health care
37
270
9
-
316
Infrastructure:
- Social
4,800
251
-
37
5,088
- Economic
1,688
71
28
114
1,901
Technology and Telecoms
553
1,282
869
394
3,098
Industrials
171
583
281
170
1,205
Utilities
3,437
1,181
2,348
860
7,826
Energy
-
571
10
101
682
Commodities
19
282
24
514
839
Oil and Gas
183
520
338
579
1,620
Property
-
-
-
-
-
Real estate
1,448
391
12
58
1,909
Structured finance ABS / RMBS / CMBS / Other
1,051
33
201
19
1,304
Lifetime mortgages
440
-
-
-
440
CDOs2
-
-
1,031
71
1,102
Total
25,216
11,515
7,307
4,109
48,147
1. H1 16 and FY 16 Cash Equivalents and Financial Investments values have been restated. Refer to footnote 1 in the Consolidated Cash Flow Statement.
2. The underlying reference portfolio has had no reference entity defaults during the period. The CDOs are termed as super senior since default losses on the reference portfolio have to exceed 27.5%, on average across the reference portfolio, before the CDOs incur any default losses. Assuming an average recovery rate of 30%, then over 39% of the reference names would have to default before the CDOs incur any default losses. The CDOs are valued using an external valuation which is based on observable market inputs. This is then validated against the counterparty valuation.
Capital and Investments Page 91
4.06 Bond portfolio summary (continued)
(a) LGR analysed by sector (continued)
Sectors analysed by domicile (continued)
EU
Rest of
UK1
US1
excluding UK1
the World1
LGR1
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
m
m
m
m
m
Sovereigns, Supras and Sub-Sovereigns
9,128
782
1,003
508
11,421
Banks
948
680
537
189
2,354
Financial Services
389
76
342
1
808
Insurance
176
528
15
55
774
Consumer Services and Goods:
- Cyclical
783
2,229
255
130
3,397
- Non-cyclical
1,142
2,419
201
13
3,775
- Health care
4
37
1
-
42
Infrastructure:
- Social
4,785
137
-
35
4,957
- Economic
1,934
74
-
222
2,230
Technology and Telecoms
582
1,305
746
425
3,058
Industrials
148
656
301
177
1,282
Utilities
3,673
1,191
2,387
907
8,158
Energy
-
589
6
96
691
Commodities
16
290
27
523
856
Oil and Gas
183
485
417
553
1,638
Property
-
7
-
-
7
Real estates
1,629
340
17
58
2,044
Structured finance ABS / RMBS / CMBS / Other
1,016
50
375
18
1,459
Lifetime mortgages2
852
-
-
-
852
CDOs
-
-
-
73
73
Total
27,388
11,875
6,630
3,983
49,876
1. H1 16 and FY 16 Cash Equivalents and Financial Investments values have been restated. Refer to footnote 1 in the Consolidated Cash Flow Statement.
2. The credit ratings attributed to lifetime mortgages are allocated in accordance with the internal matching adjustment structuring.
Capital and Investments Page 92
4.06 Bond portfolio summary (continued)
(b) Total group analysed by sector
Sectors analysed by credit rating
BB or
AAA
AA
A
BBB
below
Other
Total
Total
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
m
m
m
m
m
m
m
%
Sovereigns, Supras and Sub-Sovereigns
1,334
10,381
322
314
81
-
12,432
22
Banks:
- Tier 1
-
-
-
1
1
-
2
-
- Tier 2 and other subordinated
211
49
70
46
4
-
380
1
- Senior
11
992
2,233
51
1
-
3,288
6
- Covered
310
-
-
-
-
-
310
-
Financial Services:
- Tier 1
2
-
-
-
-
-
2
-
- Tier 2 and other subordinated
-
129
109
64
-
-
302
1
- Senior
-
591
100
132
11
-
834
1
Insurance:
- Tier 1
-
-
-
1
-
-
1
-
- Tier 2 and other subordinated
-
113
4
56
-
-
173
-
- Senior
-
71
493
80
-
-
644
1
Consumer Services and Goods:
- Cyclical
-
358
1,124
1,698
230
-
3,410
6
- Non-cyclical
191
591
1,398
2,143
134
-
4,457
7
- Health Care
3
31
222
172
6
-
434
1
Infrastructure:
- Social
86
841
3,383
1,005
20
-
5,335
10
- Economic
-
29
940
1,405
43
-
2,417
4
Technology and Telecoms
71
158
779
2,062
122
-
3,192
6
Industrials
-
151
786
482
68
-
1,487
3
Utilities
-
87
4,931
3,428
34
-
8,480
15
Energy
-
-
102
515
31
-
648
1
Commodities
-
-
312
537
41
-
890
2
Oil and Gas
-
287
514
695
204
-
1,700
3
Property
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Real estate
-
369
491
1,254
63
-
2,177
4
Structured finance ABS / RMBS / CMBS / Other
305
620
531
59
55
-
1,570
3
Lifetime mortgage loans1
721
522
99
91
-
-
1,433
3
CDOs
-
21
60
14
-
-
95
-
Total m
3,245
16,391
19,003
16,305
1,149
-
56,093
100
Total %
6
29
34
29
2
-
100
1. The credit ratings attributed to lifetime mortgages are allocated in accordance with the internal matching adjustment structuring.
Capital and Investments Page 93
4.06 Bond portfolio summary (continued)
(b) Total Group analysed by sector (continued)
BB or
AAA1
AA1
A1
BBB1
below1
Other1
Total1
Total1
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
m
m
m
m
m
m
m
%
Sovereigns, Supras and Sub-Sovereigns
1,747
9,427
405
458
83
1
12,121
22
Banks:
- Tier 1
-
-
-
1
6
-
7
-
- Tier 2 and other subordinated
-
-
172
256
15
1
444
1
- Senior
6
1,000
1,635
104
1
1
2,747
5
- Covered
303
2
-
16
-
-
321
1
Financial Services:
- Tier 1
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Tier 2 and other subordinated
-
86
50
70
3
3
212
-
- Senior
6
381
169
157
22
163
898
2
Insurance:
- Tier 1
-
-
1
1
-
-
2
-
- Tier 2 and other subordinated
-
35
140
89
26
1
291
1
- Senior
23
46
547
143
-
-
759
1
Consumer Services and Goods & Health Care
- Cyclical
-
350
1,018
1,922
204
9
3,503
7
- Non-cyclical
159
439
1,439
1,162
123
-
3,322
6
- Health Care
3
8
208
161
8
1
389
1
Infrastructure:
- Social
122
971
3,105
679
240
-
5,117
10
- Economic
-
28
807
1,041
30
37
1,943
4
Technology and Telecoms
58
185
599
2,391
119
3
3,355
6
Industrials
-
106
779
505
98
5
1,493
2
Utilities
-
108
4,813
3,056
36
3
8,016
15
Energy
-
-
107
576
42
-
725
1
Commodities
-
-
314
472
104
-
890
2
Oil and Gas
-
197
631
676
301
2
1,807
3
Property
-
-
3
7
2
3
15
-
Real estate
-
436
358
739
442
-
1,975
4
Structured finance ABS / RMBS / CMBS / Other
337
785
282
90
48
-
1,542
3
Lifetime mortgage loans2
-
-
-
440
-
-
440
1
CDOs3
-
722
366
14
-
-
1,102
2
Total m
2,764
15,312
17,948
15,226
1,953
233
53,436
100
Total %
5
29
34
28
4
-
100
1. H1 16 and FY 16 Cash Equivalents and Bond values have been restated. Refer to footnote 1 in the Consolidated Cash Flow Statement.
2. Lifetime mortgage loans have increased in value since inception predominantly due to the accrual of interest on the loans.
3. The underlying reference portfolio has had no reference entity defaults during the period. The CDOs are termed as super senior since default losses on the reference portfolio have to exceed 27.5%, on average across the reference portfolio, before the CDOs incur any default losses. Assuming an average recovery rate of 30%, then over 39% of the reference names would have to default before the CDOs incur any default losses. The CDOs are valued using an external valuation which is based on observable market inputs. This is then validated against the market valuation.
Capital and Investments Page 94
4.06 Bond portfolio summary (continued)
(b) Total group analysed by sector (continued)
Sectors analysed by credit rating (continued)
BB or
AAA1
AA1
A1
BBB1
below1
Other1
Total1
Total1
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
m
m
m
m
m
m
m
%
Sovereigns, Supras and Sub-Sovereigns
1,206
10,535
370
387
102
-
12,600
24
Banks:
- Tier 1
-
-
-
1
12
-
13
-
- Tier 2 and other subordinated
211
49
73
54
-
-
387
1
- Senior
16
1,076
2,067
133
12
-
3,304
6
- Covered
259
-
16
-
-
-
275
1
Financial Services:
- Tier 1
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Tier 2 and other subordinated
-
87
59
63
-
-
209
-
- Senior
-
381
147
129
3
112
772
1
Insurance:
- Tier 1
-
-
2
4
-
-
6
-
- Tier 2 and other subordinated
-
48
8
72
1
-
129
-
- Senior
29
88
495
80
-
-
692
1
Consumer Services and Goods:
- Cyclical
-
409
1,167
1,809
244
-
3,629
7
- Non-cyclical
300
665
1,454
1,474
148
-
4,041
7
- Health care
3
30
45
44
8
-
130
-
Infrastructure:
- Social
-
624
3,262
926
148
-
4,960
9
- Economic
-
-
903
1,318
44
-
2,265
4
Technology and Telecoms
73
238
662
2,162
123
-
3,258
6
Industrials
-
146
840
487
107
-
1,580
3
Utilities
-
108
4,967
3,193
28
-
8,296
15
Energy
-
5
106
575
44
-
730
1
Commodities
-
-
313
478
98
-
889
2
Oil and Gas
-
290
582
692
236
-
1,800
3
Property
-
-
12
60
6
-
78
-
Real estate
-
305
629
1,067
53
-
2,054
4
Structured finance ABS / RMBS / CMBS / Other
341
729
617
90
53
-
1,830
3
Lifetime mortgage loans2
388
322
91
51
-
-
852
2
CDOs
-
-
59
14
-
-
73
-
Total m
2,826
16,135
18,946
15,363
1,470
112
54,852
100
Total %
5
29
35
28
3
-
100
1. H1 16 and FY 16 Cash Equivalents and Financial Investments values have been restated. Refer to footnote 1 in the Consolidated Cash Flow Statement.
2. The credit ratings attributed to lifetime mortgages are allocated in accordance with the internal matching adjustment structuring.
Capital and Investments Page 95
4.06 Bond portfolio summary (continued)
(b) Total group analysed by sector (continued)
Sectors analysed by domicile
EU
excluding
Rest of
UK
US
UK
the World
Total
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
m
m
m
m
m
Sovereigns, Supras and Sub-Sovereigns
9,600
965
1,236
631
12,432
Banks
1,858
793
920
409
3,980
Financial Services
384
124
630
-
1,138
Insurance
161
583
19
55
818
Consumer Services and Goods:
- Cyclical
782
2,153
336
139
3,410
- Non-cyclical
1,374
2,769
291
23
4,457
- Health care
10
424
-
-
434
Infrastructure:
- Social
5,015
283
-
37
5,335
- Economic
1,920
232
29
236
2,417
Technology and Telecoms
597
1,499
668
428
3,192
Industrials
218
775
345
149
1,487
Utilities
3,874
1,344
2,341
921
8,480
Energy
-
546
6
96
648
Commodities
10
313
27
540
890
Oil and Gas
193
436
496
575
1,700
Property
-
-
-
-
-
Real estate
1,687
444
14
32
2,177
Structured Finance ABS / RMBS / CMBS / Other
950
246
349
25
1,570
Lifetime mortgages
1,433
-
-
-
1,433
CDOs
-
21
-
74
95
Total
30,066
13,950
7,707
4,370
56,093
Capital and Investments Page 96
4.06 Bond portfolio summary (continued)
EU
(b) Total group analysed by sector (continued)
excluding
Rest of
Sectors analysed by domicile (continued)
UK1
US1
UK1
the World1
Total1
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
m
m
m
m
m
Sovereigns, Supras and Sub-Sovereigns
8,421
991
1,862
847
12,121
Banks
1,408
876
737
498
3,519
Financial Services
588
162
349
11
1,110
Insurance
286
629
57
80
1,052
Consumer Services and Goods:
- Cyclical
638
2,402
284
179
3,503
- Non-cyclical
1,141
1,917
181
83
3,322
- Health care
47
332
10
-
389
Infrastructure:
- Social
4,802
277
1
37
5,117
- Economic
1,730
70
29
114
1,943
Technology and Telecoms
566
1,435
932
422
3,355
Industrials
195
787
329
182
1,493
Utilities
3,450
1,268
2,432
866
8,016
Energy
-
613
10
102
725
Commodities
21
302
26
541
890
Oil and Gas
209
571
396
631
1,807
Property
5
3
6
1
15
Real estate
1,449
449
17
60
1,975
Structured Finance ABS / RMBS / CMBS / Other
1,055
267
201
19
1,542
Lifetime mortgages
440
-
-
-
440
CDOs
-
-
1,031
71
1,102
Total
26,451
13,351
8,890
4,744
53,436
1. H1 16 and FY 16 Cash Equivalents and Financial Investments values have been restated. Refer to footnote 1 in the Consolidated Cash Flow Statement.
Capital and Investments Page 97
4.06 Bond portfolio summary (continued)
(b) Total group analysed by sector (continued)
Sectors analysed by domicile (continued)
EU
excluding
Rest of
UK1
US1
UK1
the World1
Total1
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
m
m
m
m
m
Sovereigns, Supras and Sub-Sovereigns
9,569
1,038
1,264
729
12,600
Banks
1,625
803
1,005
546
3,979
Financial Services
500
124
355
2
981
Insurance
189
566
17
55
827
Consumer Services and Goods
- Cyclical
794
2,410
272
153
3,629
- Non-cyclical
1,155
2,650
208
28
4,041
- Health care
18
106
6
-
130
Infrastructure
- Social
4,788
137
-
35
4,960
- Economic
1,937
102
1
225
2,265
Technology and Telecoms
589
1,467
753
449
3,258
Industrials
166
904
312
198
1,580
Utilities
3,687
1,293
2,401
915
8,296
Energy
1
598
14
117
730
Commodities
16
292
33
548
889
Oil and Gas
190
574
450
586
1,800
Property
-
71
4
3
78
Real estate
1,631
345
17
61
2,054
Structured finance ABS / RMBS / CMBS / Other
1,020
323
469
18
1,830
Lifetime mortgage loans
852
-
-
-
852
CDOs
-
-
-
73
73
Total
28,727
13,803
7,581
4,741
54,852
1. H1 16 and FY 16 Cash Equivalents and Financial Investments values have been restated. Refer to footnote 1 in the Consolidated Cash Flow Statement.
Capital and Investments Page 98
4.06 Bond portfolio summary (continued)
(c) LGR and total group analysed by credit rating
Externally
Internally
Externally
Internally
Total
rated
rated2
LGR
rated
rated2
Group
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
m
m
m
m
m
m
AAA
1,573
1,130
2,703
2,115
1,130
3,245
AA
13,205
1,739
14,944
14,579
1,812
16,391
A
14,511
2,928
17,439
15,971
3,032
19,003
BBB
13,103
2,575
15,678
13,516
2,789
16,305
BB or below
691
81
772
989
160
1,149
Other
-
-
-
-
-
-
43,083
8,453
51,536
47,170
8,923
56,093
Externally
Internally
Externally
Internally
rated1
rated1, 2
LGR1
rated1
rated1, 2
Total1
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
m
m
m
m
m
m
AAA
1,719
8
1,727
2,756
8
2,764
AA
12,136
1,701
13,837
13,606
1,706
15,312
A
14,506
2,301
16,807
15,570
2,378
17,948
BBB
12,497
1,635
14,132
13,375
1,851
15,226
BB or below
1,102
542
1,644
1,348
605
1,953
Other
-
-
-
233
-
233
41,960
6,187
48,147
46,888
6,548
53,436
Externally
Internally
Externally
Internally
Total
rated1
rated1, 2
LGR1
rated1
rated1, 2
Group 1
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
m
m
m
m
m
m
AAA
1,839
388
2,227
2,438
388
2,826
AA
13,499
1,236
14,735
14,632
1,503
16,135
A
14,637
2,773
17,410
16,063
2,883
18,946
BBB
12,405
2,062
14,467
13,068
2,295
15,363
BB or below
960
77
1,037
1,322
148
1,470
Other
-
-
-
-
112
112
43,340
6,536
49,876
47,523
7,329
54,852
1. H1 16 and FY 16 Cash Equivalents and Financial Investments values have been restated. Refer to footnote 1 in the Consolidated Cash Flow Statement
2. Where external ratings are not available an internal rating has been used where it is practicable to do so.
Capital and Investments Page 99
4.07 Property analysis
(a) Property exposure within Direct Investments
(i) Group property Direct Investments by status
LGI
(UK and
LGR1
LGC
Other)
Total
At
At
At
At
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
30.06.17
m
m
m
m
%
Fully let
2,687
8
-
2,695
93
Development
-
1442
-
144
5
Land
-
48
-
48
2
2,687
200
-
2,887
100
1. The fully let LGR property includes 2.3bn let to investment grade tenants.
2. Included in LGC Development is 25m of Other shareholder investment property as noted in note 4.04.
LGI
(UK and
LGR1
LGC
Other)
Total
At
At
At
At
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
30.06.16
m
m
m
m
%
Fully let
2,257
58
4
2,319
94
Development
-
95
-
95
4
Land
-
43
-
43
2
2,257
196
4
2,457
100
1. The fully let LGR property includes 1.9bn let to investment grade tenants.
LGI
(UK and
LGR1
LGC
Other)
Total
At
At
At
At
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
31.12.16
m
m
m
m
%
Fully let
2,442
16
-
2,458
94
Development
-
101
-
101
4
Land
-
45
-
45
2
2,442
162
-
2,604
100
1. The fully let LGR property includes 2.1bn let to investment grade tenants.
Capital and Investments Page 100
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Glossary Page 101
* These items represent an alternative performance measure.
Adjusted earnings per share*
Calculated by dividing profit after tax from continuing operations, attributable to equity holders of the company, excluding recognised gains and losses associated with held for sale and completed business disposals, by the weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue during the period, excluding employee scheme treasury shares. Excluding the impact of anticipated and completed disposals provides an indication of the earnings per share from on-going operations.
Ad valorem fees
On-going Management fees earned on assets under management, overly assets and advisory assets as defined below
Adjusted return on equity*
ROE measures the return earned by shareholders on shareholder capital retained within the business. Adjusted ROE is calculated as IFRS prot after tax divided by average IFRS shareholders' funds excluding recognised gains and losses associated with held for sale and completed business disposals. Excluding the impact of anticipated and completed disposals provides an indication of the return on equity from on-going operations.
Adjusted operating profit*
Operating prot measures the pre-tax result excluding the impact of investment volatility, economic assumption changes and exceptional items. Adjusted operating profit further removes exceptional restructuring costs to demonstrate the profitability before these costs which are non-recurring in nature.
Advisory assets
These are assets on which Global Index Advisors (GIA) provide advisory services. Advisory assets are benecially owned by GIA's clients and all investment decisions pertaining to these assets are also made by the clients. These are different from Assets under Management (AUM) dened below.
Alternative performance measures (APMs)
An alternative performance measure is a financial measure of historic or future financial performance, financial position, or cash flows, other than a financial measure defined under IFRS or the regulations of Solvency II. The group uses a range of these metrics to provide a better understanding of the underlying performance of the group. Where appropriate, reconciliations of alternative performance measures to IFRS measures are provided. All APMs defined within this glossary are marked with an asterisk.
Annuity
Regular payments from an insurance company made for an agreed period of time (usually up to the depth of the recipient) in return for either cash lump sum or a series of premiums which the policyholder has paid to the insurance company during their working lifetime.
Annual premium
Premiums that are paid regularly over the duration of the contract such as protection policies.
Assets under administration (AUA)*
Assets administered by Legal & General which are benecially owned by clients. Services provided in respect of assets under administration are of an administrative nature, including safekeeping, collecting investment income, settling purchase and sales transactions and record keeping.
Assets under management (AUM)*
The total amount of money investors have trusted to our fund managers to invest across our investment products i.e. these are funds which are managed by our fund managers on behalf of investors.
Back book acquisition
New business transacted with an insurance company which allows the business to continue to utilise solvency II transitional measures associated with the business.
Bundled DC solution
Where investment and administration services are provided to a scheme by the same service provider. Typically, all investment and administration costs are passed onto the scheme members.
Glossary Page 102
Bundled pension schemes
Where the fund manager bundles together the investment provider role and third-party administrator role, together with the role of selecting funds and providing investment education, into one proposition.
Deduction and aggregation (D&A)
A method of calculating group solvency on a Solvency II basis, whereby the assets and liabilities of certain entities are excluded from the group consolidation. The net contribution from those entities to group own funds is included as an asset on the group's Solvency II balance sheet. Regulatory approval has been provided to recognise the (re)insurance subsidiaries of LGI US on this basis.
Direct investments
Direct investments, which generally constitute an agreement with another party and represent an exposure to untraded and often less volatile asset classes. Direct investments also include physical assets, bilateral loans and private equity, but exclude hedge funds.
Earnings per share (EPS)
EPS is a common nancial metric which can be used to measure the protability and strength of a company over time. It is the total shareholder prot after tax divided by the number of shares outstanding. EPS uses a weighted average number of shares outstanding during the year.
Economic capital*
Economic capital is the capital that an insurer holds internally as a result of its own assessment of risk. It differs from regulatory capital, which is determined by regulators. It represents an estimate of the amount of economic losses an insurer could withstand and still remain solvent with a target level of condence over a specied time horizon.
Economic Capital Requirement (ECR)
The amount of Economic Capital required to cover the losses occurring in a 1-in-200 year risk event.
Economic Capital Surplus*
The excess of Eligible Own Funds on an economic basis over the Economic Capital Requirement. This represents the amount of capital available to the company in excess of that required to sustain it in a 1-in-200 year risk event.
ECR coverage ratio*
The Eligible Own Funds on an economic basis divided by the Economic Capital Requirement (ECR). This represents the number of times that the ECR is covered by Eligible Own Funds.
Eligible Own Funds
Eligible Own Funds represents the capital available to cover the group's Economic or Solvency II Capital Requirement. Eligible Own Funds comprise the excess of the value of assets over liabilities, as valued on an Economic Capital or Solvency II basis, plus high quality hybrid capital instruments, which are freely available (fungible and transferable) to absorb losses wherever they occur across the group. Eligible own funds (shareholder view basis) excludes the contribution to the groups solvency capital requirement of with-profits fund and final salary pension schemes.
Escape of Water
Escape of water is a type of home insurance claim relating to leakage from fixed water tanks, apparatus (e.g. washing machine) or pipes.
Euro Commercial paper
Short term borrowings with maturities of up to 1 year typically issued for working capital purposes.
General insurance combined operating ratio
The combined ratio is calculated as the sum of incurred losses and expenses divided by earned premium.
Gross written premiums (GWP)
GWP is an industry measure of the life insurance premiums due and the general insurance premiums underwritten in the reporting period, before any deductions for reinsurance.
Index tracker
Index tracker funds invest in most or all of the same shares, and in a similar proportion, as the index they are tracking, for example the FTSE 100 index. Index tracker funds aim to produce a return in line with a particular market sector, for example, Europe or technology. They are also sometimes known as 'tracker funds'.
Glossary Page 103
ICAV - Irish Collective Asset-Management Vehicle
A legal structure investment funds, based in Ireland and aimed at European investment funds looking for a simple, tax-efficient investment vehicle.
IFRS prot before tax (PBT)
PBT measures prot attributable to shareholders incorporating actual investment returns experienced during the year but before the payment of tax.
Key performance indicators (KPIs)
These are measures by which the development, performance or position of the business can be measured effectively. The group Board reviews the KPIs annually and updates them where appropriate.
Lifetime mortgages
An equity release product aimed at people aged 60 years and over. It is a mortgage loan secured against the customer's house. Customers do not make any monthly payments and continue to own and live in their house until they move into long term care or on death. A no negative equity guarantee exists such that if the house value on repayment is insufficient to cover the outstanding loan, any shortfall is borne by the lender.
Long dated debt
Debt issued in either subordinated or senior format which forms part of the Group's core borrowings.
Matching adjustment
An adjustment to the discount rate used for annuity liabilities in Economic Capital and Solvency II balance sheets. This adjustment reflects the fact that the profile of assets held is sufficiently well-matched to the profile of the liabilities, that those assets can be held to maturity, and that any excess return over risk-free (that is not related to defaults) can be earned regardless of asset value fluctuations after purchase.
Net release from operations*
Net release from operations is dened as release from operations plus new business surplus/(strain).Net release from operations was previously referred to as Net Cash and provides information on the underlying release of prudent margins from the back book.
New business surplus/(strain)*
The net impact of writing new business on the IFRS position, including the benefit/cost of acquiring new business and the setting up of reserves, for UK non profit annuities, workplace savings, protection and savings, net of tax.This metric provides an understanding of the impact of new contracts on the IFRS profit for the year.
Operating prot*
Operating prot measures the pre-tax result excluding the impact of investment volatility, economic assumption changes and exceptional items. Operating prot therefore reects longer-term economic assumptions and changes in insurance risks such as mortality and longevity for the group's insurance business and shareholder funds, except for LGI US which excludes unrealised investment returns to align with the liability measurement under US GAAP. Variances between actual and smoothed assumptions are reported below operating prot. Exceptional income and expenses which arise outside the normal course of business in the period, such as merger and acquisition and start-up costs are excluded from operating prot.
Overlay assets
Overlay assets are derivative assets that are managed alongside the physical assets held by LGIM. These instruments include interest rate swaps, ination swaps, equity futures and options. These are typically used to hedge risks associated with pension scheme assets during the derisking stage of the pension life cycle.
Platform
Online Services used by intermediaries and consumers to view and administer their investment portfolios. Platforms usually provide facilities for buying and selling investments (including, in the UK products such as Individual Savings Accounts(ISAs), Self-Invested Personal Pensions (SIPPs) and life insurance) and for viewing and individual's entire portfolio to assess asset allocation and risk exposure.
Pension risk transfer (PRT)
PRT represents bulk annuities bought by entities that run nal salary pension schemes to reduce their responsibilities by closing the schemes to new members and passing the assets and obligations to insurance providers.
Glossary Page 104
Present value of future new business premiums (PVNBP)*
PVNBP is equivalent to total single premiums plus the discounted value of annual premiums expected to be received over the term of the contracts using the same economic and operating assumptions used for the new business value at the end of the financial period. The discounted value of longevity insurance regular premiums and quota share reinsurance single premiums are calculated on a net of reinsurance basis to enable a more representative margin figure. PVNBP therefore provides an estimate of the present value of the premiums associated with new business written in the year.
Recapitalisation Cost*
An additional liability required in the L&G Economic Capital balance sheet, to allow for the cost of recapitalising the balance sheet following a 1-in-200 year risk event, in order to maintain confidence that our future liabilities will be met. This is calculated using a cost of capital that reflects the long term average rates at which it is expected that the group could raise debt and allows for diversification between all group entities.
Real assets
Real assets encompass a wide variety of tangible debt and equity investments, primarily real estate, infrastructure and energy. They have the ability to serve as stable sources of long term income in weak markets, while also providing capital appreciation opportunities in strong markets.
Release from operations*
The expected release of IFRS surplus from in-force business for the UK non-profit Insurance and Savings and LGR businesses, the shareholder's share of bonuses on with-profits business, the post-tax operating profit on other UK businesses, including the medium term expected investment return on LGC invested assets, and dividends remitted from LGI US and Legal & General Netherlands. 2015 included dividends remitted from Legal & General France, which was disposed of on 31 December 2015. Release from operations was previously referred to as operational cash generation.
Return on equity (ROE)*
ROE measures the return earned by shareholders on shareholder capital retained within the business. ROE is calculated as IFRS prot after tax divided by average IFRS shareholders' funds.
Single premiums*
Single premiums arise on the sale of new contracts where the terms of the policy do not anticipate more than one premium being paid over its lifetime, such as in individual and bulk annuity deals.
Solvency II
Taking effect from 1 January 2016, the Solvency II regulatory regime is a harmonised prudential framework for insurance rms in the EEA. This single market approach is based on economic principles that measure assets and liabilities to appropriately align insurers' risk with the capital they hold to safeguard policyholder.
Solvency II new business contribution
Reflects present value at the point of sale of expected future Solvency II surplus emerging from new business written in the period using the risk discount rate applicable at the end of the reporting period.
Solvency II Risk Margin
An additional liability required in the Solvency II balance sheet, to ensure the total value of technical provisions is equal to the current amount a (re)insurer would have to pay if it were to transfer its insurance and reinsurance obligations immediately to another (re)insurer. The value of the risk margin represents the cost of providing an amount of Eligible Own Funds equal to the Solvency Capital Requirement (relating to non-market risks) necessary to support the insurance and reinsurance obligations over the lifetime thereof.
Solvency II Surplus
The excess of Eligible Own Funds on a regulatory basis over the Solvency Capital Requirement. This represents the amount of capital available to the company in excess of that required to sustain it in a 1-in-200 year risk event.
Solvency Capital Requirement (SCR)
The amount of Solvency II capital required to cover the losses occurring in a 1-in-200 year risk event.
SCR (shareholder view basis)
In order to present a shareholder view of group SCR the Solvency capital requirement of the Society's with-profits fund and defined benefit final salary pension scheme is excluded from SCR.
Glossary Page 105
SCR coverage ratio
The Eligible Own Funds on a regulatory basis divided by the Solvency Capital Requirement (SCR). This represents the number of times that the SCR is covered by Eligible Own Funds.
SCR coverage ratio (proforma basis)*
The proforma basis solvency II coverage incorporates the estimated impacts of a recalculation of the Transitional Measures for Technical Provisions recalculated based on end of period economic conditions, changes to the Internal Model and Matching Adjustment and management's updated Solvency I basis. This includes the solvency capital requirement in relation to the Society's ring-fenced with-profits fund and our defined benefit pension schemes in both Eligible Own Funds and the SCR in the calculation of the SCR coverage ratio.
SCR coverage ratio (shareholder view basis)*
In order to represent a shareholder view of group solvency position, the solvency capital requirement in relation to the Society's ring-fenced with-profits fund and our defined benefit pension schemes is excluded from both Eligible Own Funds and the SCR in the calculation of the SCR coverage ratio. This incorporates the estimated impacts of a recalculation of the Transitional Measures for Technical Provisions based on end of period economic conditions.
Total shareholder return (TSR)
TSR is a measure used to compare the performance of different companies' stocks and shares over time. It combines the share price appreciation and dividends paid to show the total return to the shareholder.
Transitional Measures on Technical Provisions (TMTP)
This is an adjustment to Solvency II technical provisions to bring them into line with the pre-Solvency II equivalent as at 1 January 2016 when the regulatory basis switched over, to smooth the introduction of the new regime. This will decrease linearly over the 16 years following Solvency II implementation but may be recalculated to allow for changes impacting the relevant business, subject to agreement with the PRA.
Unbundled DC solution
When investment services and administration services are supplied by separate providers. Typically the sponsoring employer will cover administration costs and scheme members the investment costs.
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