A
Annuity
A periodic payment made for an agreed period
of time (usually up to the death of the recipient)
in return for a cash sum. The cash sum can be
paid as one amount or as a series of premiums.
If the annuity commences immediately after the
payment of the sum it is termed an immediate
annuity. If it commences at some future date it is
termed a deferred annuity.
Annual premium equivalent (APE)
An industry measure of new business. The
total of new annualised regular premiums plus
10% of single premiums written during the
applicable period.
Assumptions
Variables applied to data used to project
expected outcomes.
Acquisition costs
Expenses related to the procurement and
processing of new business written including a
share of overheads.
B
Back book management
We choose to analyse our EEV operating profit
before tax in the three components which reflect
the focus of our business effort – core, efficiency
and back book management. Back book
management includes all non-expense related
operating variances and assumption changes
for covered business plus those development
costs directly related to back book management
initiatives and, for non-covered business, specific
costs attributed to back book management.
Board
The board of Directors of the Company.
C
CFO Forum
A high-level discussion group formed and
attended by the Chief Financial Officers of
major European listed, and some non-listed,
insurance companies.
Core
We choose to analyse our EEV operating profit
before tax in the three components which reflect
the focus of our business effort – core, efficiency
and back book management. Core includes
new business contribution, expected return
and development costs for covered business
excluding those development costs directly
related to back book management initiatives
and, for non-covered business, IFRS underlying
profit excluding specific costs attributable to
back book management.
Cost income ratio
The ratio of total costs to total income for
the year expressed as a percentage. This KPI
indicates how much of total income is being
employed to meet the cost base and measures
the strategic driver of cost effectiveness in
the banking business within UK financial
services (UKFS).
Covered business
The business covered by the EEV methodology.
This should include any contracts that are
regarded by local insurance supervisors as
long-term or life insurance business and may
cover other long-term life insurance, short‑term
life insurance such as group risk business and
long-term accident and health business. Where
short-term healthcare is regarded as part of
or ancillary to a company’s long-term life
insurance business, then it may be regarded as
long‑term business.
D
Deferred acquisition costs (DAC)
The method of accounting whereby acquisition
costs on long-term business are deferred in the
balance sheet as an asset and amortised over the
life of those contracts. This leads to a smoothed
recognition of up front expenses instead of the
full cost in the year of sale.
Deferred income reserve (DIR)
The method of accounting whereby front end
fees that relate to services to be provided in
future periods are deferred in the balance sheet
as a liability and amortised over the life of those
contracts. This leads to a smoothed recognition
of up front income instead of the full income in
the year of sale.
Demutualisation
The process by which a mutual organisation
owned by its members, such as a building
society or insurance company, converts to a
public limited company owned by its equity
holders. The Standard Life Assurance Company
demutualised and shares of Standard Life plc,
the new holding company for the Standard Life
Group, were listed on the London Stock
Exchange on 10 July 2006.
Development costs
Costs that are considered to be non-recurring
and are reported separately from other expenses
in the EEV movement analysis.
Director
A director of the Company.
Discounted pay back period
A measure of capital efficiency that measures the
time at which the value of expected cash flows
(after tax) is sufficient to recover the capital
invested to support the writing of new business.
Cash flows are discounted at the appropriate risk
discount rate.
Discounting
The reduction to present value at a given date
of a future cash transaction at an assumed rate,
using a discount factor reflecting the time value
of money. The choice of a discount rate will
usually greatly influence the value of insurance
provisions, and may give indications on the
conservatism of provisioning methods.
Dividend cover
This is a measure of how easily a company can
pay its dividend from profit. It is calculated
as IFRS operating profit after tax and minority
interest divided by the total dividend for that
financial year. The dividend for the financial year
is the current year interim dividend plus the
proposed final dividend.
E
Earnings before interest and tax (EBIT)
EBIT is defined as earnings before interest,
taxation, foreign exchange gains and losses,
profit on partial disposal of investment in
associate, divergence on financial guarantee
costs, movement on contract for differences and
restructuring costs. This KPI measures directly
the underlying operating profitability.
EBIT margin
This is an industry measure of performance
for investment management companies. It is
calculated as EBIT divided by total revenue.
Economic assumptions
Assumptions in relation to future interest rates,
investment returns, inflation and tax. These
assumptions and variances in relation to these
assumptions are treated as non-operating
profits/(losses) under EEV.
Efficiency
We choose to analyse our EEV operating profit
before tax in the three components which reflect
the focus of our business effort – core, efficiency
and back book management. Efficiency includes
covered business maintenance expense
variances and assumption changes. European Embedded Value (EEV)
The value to equity shareholders of the net
assets plus the expected future profits on
in-force business from a life assurance and
pensions business. Prepared in accordance
with the EEV Principles and Guidance issued in
May 2004 by the CFO Forum and the Additional
Guidance issued in October 2005. EEV reports
the value of business in-force based on a set
of best estimate assumptions, allowing for
the impact of uncertainty inherent in future
assumptions, the costs of holding required
capital, the value of free surplus and TVOG.
EEV operating profit – covered business
Profit generated from new business sales
and the in-force book of business, based
on closing non-economic and opening
economic assumptions.
EEV operating profit capital and cash generation
This is a measure of the underlying shareholder
capital and cash flow of the Group and is
measured as the EEV operating profit net worth
(free surplus and required capital) on an after
tax basis.
Expected return on EEV
Anticipated results based on applying opening
assumptions to the opening EEV.
Experience variances
Current period differences between the actual
experience incurred over the period and the
assumptions used in the calculation of the
embedded value excluding new business
non-economic experience variances which are
captured in new business contribution.
F
Financial options and guarantees
Terms relating to covered business conferring
potentially valuable guarantees underlying,
or options to change, the level and nature
of policyholder benefits and exercisable at
the discretion of the policyholder, whose
potential value is impacted by the behaviour of
financial variables.
Free surplus
The amount of capital and any surplus allocated
to, but not required to support, the in-force
business covered by the EEV.
G
Group assets under administration (AUA)
A measure of the total assets that the Group
administers on behalf of customers and
institutional clients, it includes those assets
for which the Group provides investment
management services, as well as those assets
that the Group administers where the customer
has made a choice to select an external third
party investment manager. Assets under
administration reflect the value of the IFRS
gross assets of the Group adjusted, where
appropriate, for consolidation adjustments, inter-company assets and intangible assets.
In addition, the definition includes third party
assets administered by the Group which are not
included in the consolidated balance sheet.
Group capital surplus
This is a regulatory measure of our financial
strength and compares the Group’s capital
resources to its capital resource requirements in
accordance with the Financial Groups Directive.
Group, Standard Life Group or Standard Life
Prior to demutualisation on 10 July 2006, SLAC
and its subsidiaries and, from demutualisation
on 10 July 2006, the Company and
its subsidiaries.
H
Heritage With Profits Fund (HWPF)
The Heritage With Profits Fund contains all
existing business – both with profits and non
profit – written before demutualisation in
the UK, Irish or German branches, with the
exception of the classes of business which the
Scheme of Demutualisation allocated to the
Proprietary Business Fund. This HWPF also
contains increments to existing business.
I
Individual Capital Assessment (ICA)
The process by which the Financial Services
Authority (FSA) requires insurance companies to
make an assessment of the regulated company’s
own capital requirements, which is then
reviewed and agreed by the FSA.
In-force
Long-term business which has been written
before the period end and which has not
terminated before the period end.
Interest margin
Net interest income for the year as a percentage
of average total assets during the year disclosed
in basis points (1/100th of 1%). This is a measure
of how much margin the Group is making on
its banking assets and measures the driver of
income generation for this business.
Internal rate of return (IRR)
A measure of rate of return on an investment
and so an indicator of capital efficiency. The
IRR is equivalent to the discount rate at which
the present value of the after tax cash flows
expected to be earned over the lifetime of new
business written is equal to the capital invested
to support the writing of the business.
K
Key Performance Indicator (KPI)
These are measures by reference to which the
development, performance or position of the
business can be measured effectively.
M
Maintenance expenses
Expenses related to the servicing of the in-force
book of business (including investment and
termination expenses and a share of overheads).
Market Consistent Embedded Value (MCEV)
The MCEV Principles were issued by the CFO
Forum on 4 June 2008 to replace the current
EEV Principles and Additional Guidance and
were designed to improve the transparency and
comparability of embedded value reporting.
On 19 December 2008, the CFO Forum
announced that it would be reviewing the
MCEV Principles in light of the current turbulent
economic conditions.
Mutual fund
A collective investment vehicle enabling
investors to pool their money, which is then
invested in a diverse portfolio of stocks or
bonds, enabling investors to achieve a more
diversified portfolio than they otherwise might
have done by making an individual investment.
N
Net flows
Life and pensions net flows represents gross
inflows less redemptions. Gross inflows are
premiums and deposits recognised in the period
on a regulatory basis (excluding any switches
between funds). Redemptions are claims and
annuity payments (excluding any reinsurance
transactions and switches between funds).
Net worth
The market value of equity holders’ funds and
the shareholders’ interest in the surplus held
in the non profit component of the long-term
business funds, determined on a statutory
solvency basis and adjusted to add back any
non-admissible assets per regulatory returns.
New business contribution (NBC)
The expected present value of all future
cash flows attributable to the equity holder
from new business, as included within EEV
operating profit.
New business strain (NBS)
Costs involved in acquiring new business (such
as commission payments to intermediaries,
expenses, reserves) affecting the insurance
company’s financial position at that point and
where all of the income from that new business
(including premiums and investment income)
has not yet been received and will not be
received until a point in the future. To begin
with, therefore, a strain may be created where
cash outflows exceed inflows.
Non-covered business
Mainly includes third party investment
management, banking, healthcare and other
businesses not associated with the life assurance
and pensions business. Non-covered business
is excluded from the EEV methodology and is
included within the Group EEV on an IFRS basis.
Non profit policy
A policy, including a unit linked policy, which is
not a with profits policy.
P
Personal pension plan
An individual pension arrangement with
particular tax advantages whereby individuals
who are self-employed or those who are not
members of employer-sponsored pension
scheme arrangements can make provision
for retirement or provide benefits for their
dependents in a tax efficient manner.
Present value of in-force business (PVIF)
The present value of the projected future
distributable profits after tax attributable to
equity holders from the covered business in
force at the valuation date, adjusted where
appropriate, to take account of TVOG.
Present value of new business premiums (PVNBP)
The industry measure of insurance new business
sales under the EEV methodology. It is calculated
as 100% of single premiums plus the expected
present value of new regular premiums.
Pro forma profit
Pre-demutualisation IFRS and EEV mutual figures
adjusted to calculate a profit figure for the
Group as if the holding company, Standard Life
plc, had been listed at the beginning of that
period. This information, where included,
is unaudited and is prepared for illustrative
purposes only.
Proprietary Business Fund
The Proprietary Business Fund in SLAL contains,
among other things, certain classes of business –
pension contribution insurance policies, income
protection plan policies and a number of SIPP
policies written before demutualisation, as well
as most new insurance business written after
demutualisation in the UK, Ireland and Germany.
PVNBP margin
PVNBP margin is NBC expressed as a percentage
of PVNBP. This measures whether new business
written is adding value or eroding value.
R
Recourse cash flow (RCF)
Certain cash flows arising in the HWPF on
specified blocks of UK and Irish business, which
are transferred out of the fund on a monthly
basis and accrue to the ultimate benefit of
equity holders, as determined by the Scheme
of Demutualisation.
Regular premium
A regular premium contract (as opposed to
a single premium contract), is one where the
policyholder agrees at inception to make regular
payments throughout the term of the contract.
Required capital
The amount of assets, over and above the
value placed on liabilities in respect of covered
business, whose distribution to equity holders
is restricted.
Return on EEV (RoEV)
The annualised post-tax operating profit on an EEV basis expressed as a percentage of the opening embedded value, adjusted for dividends paid to equity holders.
Return on equity (RoE)
Calculated as IFRS underlying profit after tax
divided by opening net assets.
S
Scheme of Demutualisation (the Scheme)
The scheme pursuant to Part VII of, and
Schedule 12 to, the Financial Services and
Markets Act 2000, under which substantially
all of the long-term business of SLAC was
transferred to Standard Life Assurance Limited
on 10 July 2006.
Single premium
A single premium contract (as opposed to a
regular premium contract (see above)), involves
the payment of one premium at inception with
no obligation for the policyholder to make
subsequent additional payments.
SIPP
A self invested personal pension which
provides the policyholder with greater choice
and flexibility as to the range of investments
made, how those investments are managed,
the administration of those assets and how
retirement benefits are taken.
SLAC
The Standard Life Assurance Company (renamed
The Standard Life Assurance Company 2006 on
10 July 2006).
T
Time value of options and guarantees (TVOG)
Represents the potential additional cost to
equity holders where a financial option or
guarantee exists which affects policyholder
benefits and is exercisable at the option of
the policyholder.
Total shareholder return
This is a measure of the overall return to
shareholders and includes the movement
in the share price and any dividends paid
and reinvested.
U
Underlying profit
An IFRS profit measure the Group uses to
provide a more meaningful analysis of the
underlying business performance. Underlying
profit is calculated by adjusting profit
attributable to equity holders before tax for
items such as volatility arising from accounting
mismatches, impairment of intangibles and
certain restructuring expenses.
Unit linked policy
A policy where the benefits are determined by
reference to the investment performance of a
specified pool of assets referred to as the unit
linked fund.
W
With profits policy
A policy where, in addition to guaranteed
benefits specified in the policy, additional
bonuses may be payable from relevant surplus.
The declaration of such bonuses (usually
annually) reflects, amongst other things, the
overall investment performance of the fund of
which the policy forms part. Also known as a
‘participating policy’.
Wrap platform
An investment platform which is essentially a
trading platform enabling investment funds,
pensions, direct equity holdings and some
life assurance contracts to be held in the
same administrative account rather than as
separate holdings.