An Optimal Life Insurance Policy in the Continuous-Time Investment-Consumption Problem

Abstract

This paper considers an optimal life insurance for a household subject to mortality risk. The household receives wage income continuously, which could be terminated by unexpected premature loss of earning power. In order to hedge the risk of losing income stream, the household enters a life insurance contract. The household may also invest their wealth into a financial market. Therefore, the problem is to determine an optimal insurance/investment/consumption strategy. To reflect a real-life situation better, we consider an incomplete market where the household cannot trade insurance contracts continuously. We provide explicit solutions in a fairly general setup.

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H. Iwaki and Y. Osaki, "An Optimal Life Insurance Policy in the Continuous-Time Investment-Consumption Problem," Journal of Mathematical Finance, Vol. 3 No. 2, 2013, pp. 291-306. doi: 10.4236/jmf.2013.32029.

1. Introduction

In the management of pension funds, a long term portfolio strategy taking into account a liability is one of the most significant issues. The main reason is the demographic changes in the developed countries: if the working-age population is enough to provide for old age, the liability is a minor issue in the portfolio management of pension funds. Since the life expectancy have increased in recent decades, it becomes insufficient to provide for old age. Furthermore the low birth rate continues and drives up this problem for decades. Thus pension funds face a challenging phase to construct long term portfolio strategies which hedge their liabilities.

A lot of pension funds except a few ones [1] determine their portfolio strategies by the traditional single time period mean variance approach which excludes an evaluation of a liability. Its intuitive criterion attracts managers of pension funds. However the single time period approach is unsuitable for a long term portfolio management in the sense that it is unable to change the strategy excepting the initial time. The multi time period approach which arrows the change of the strategy has a problem that the computational complexity grows exponentially. Hence if we employ this approach, we are usually unable to obtain the optimal portfolio strategy in realistic time.

Therefore the aim of this paper is to propose a long term portfolio strategy which 1) involves an evaluation of a liability, 2) admits changes of the strategy at any time, and 3) is obtained in realistic time. To tackle this problem, we employ the LQG (Linear, Quadratic cost, Gaussian) control problem (see, e.g., Fleming and Rishel [2]). The LQG control problem is a class of stochastic control problem and is able to provide the control minimizing the mean square error of a benchmark process and a controlled process. Roughly speaking our tactic is that we compute the optimal portfolio strategy with the benchmark process which represents the liability. Then we can track the liability by using our optimal portfolio strategy. Although it is difficult to obtain the solution of stochastic control problem in general, the LQG control problem has the analytical solution which assures that we are able to obtain the solution in realistic time and thus it meets our purpose.

A continuous time stochastic control approach is one of the most popular method to obtain the suitable long term portfolio strategy. The literature about this approach is quite rich. The papers treating the management of pension funds are, for instance, as follows: Deelstra et al. [3] and Giacinto et al. [4] discuss the portfolio management for pension funds with a minimum guarantee; Menoncin and Scaillet [5] and Gerrard et al. [6] deal with the pension scheme including the de-cumulation phase. Our study is on the cutting edge in the sense that deal with tracking liabilities directly and constructing a suitable long term portfolio at the same time.

The organization of the present paper is as follows. We introduce continuous time models of assets and a benchmark in Section 2. To fit in the LQG control problem, they are defined by the linear stochastic differential equations (SDEs). We mention that our portfolio strategy is represented by the amounts of assets. In Section 3, we define a criterion of the investment performance and provide the optimal portfolio strategy explicitly. Several numerical results are served in Section 4 Throughout the section the parameters related to the assets are determined by an empirical data provided by the Government Pension Investment Fund in Japan. The simulation using an artificial data are discussed in Section 4.1 and this result gives conditions that our optimal portfolio strategy works well. Section 4.2 provides a case study using an empirical estimations published by the Japanese Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare. It demonstrates that our strategy is able to hedge the liability well.

2. Continuous Time Models of Assets and a Benchmark

In this section, we present mathematical models of assets and a benchmark. The market which we are considering consists of only one risk-free asset and -risky assets and we have -benchmark component processes.

Let be a filtered probability space be a -dimensional Brownian motion where and be a space of stochastic processes which satisfy

We denote price process of the risk-free asset, those of the risky assets and the benchmark component processes by, and respectively, where the asterisk means transposition. To fit in the LQG control problem, we assume that, and are governed by the following SDEs:

(1)

(2)

(3)

where, , ,

, and

are deterministic continuous functions and represents the maturity. Coefficients, and stand for the risk-free rate and the expected return rate of the -th asset and the volatility.

Let a class of portfolio strategy be the collection of -valued -adapted process which satisfies

be the amount of the risky asset held by an investor at time, and be the value of our portfolio at time. Then the amount of the risk-free asset held by the investor is represented by. Hence, is governed by

(4)

where. To emphasize the initial wealth and the control variable, we may write.

The solution of the SDE (4) is given as follow:

Moreover since, , and are continuous functions on and, is in:

where, and are constants.

3. Optimal Investment Strategy

We define the criterion of investment performance by

(5)

where and are constants, is a constant vector, and is a deterministic continuous function. Hence our investment problem is to find the control s.t.,. Since the performance criterion is represented by quadratic functions, our investment problem becomes the LQG control problem. We determine, and the parameters of to be able to regard and as a liability.

The optimal portfolio strategy is represented in the following form:

Theorem 1 We define the portfolio strategy as follows:

(6)

where and are solutions of following ordinary differential equations (ODEs):

(7)

(8)

(9)

Here we have written.

Then satisfies and,.

The proof of Theorem 1 is given in the appendix.

We note that has feedback terms of and. This implies that our optimal strategy has delays to catch up the the benchmark process. Hence the preferable situation applying our strategy is the case that does not fluctuate violently.

4. Numerical Results

We apply our method to an empirical data provided by the Japanese organizations. This section is divided to two subsections according to the type of liabilities: an artificial liability and the liability constructed by the estimations published by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan. The former one suggests the situation that our optimal strategy works well and the latter one demonstrates that our portfolio strategy is able to hedge the liability.

Before we move on the each subsection, we determine the common parameters in following subsections. The first task is to determine the parameters relating to the benchmark component processes. They consist of the income of a pension fund and his or her expense and thus and. We set the parameters constructing the benchmark process as follows:

Hence, the benchmark process is which represents a shortfall of the income and then we regard this shortfall as the liability. To discuss the performance of the strategy, we introduce a hedging error function of the -th sample path and its average as follows:

where is the -th sample path of and is the number of the sample paths. We set except as otherwise noted.

The next task is to determine the risk-free rate and the expected return rates and volatilities of risky assets. We invest the following four assets: indices of the domestic bond, the domestic stock, the foreign bond and the foreign stock; we number them sequentially. According to the estimations of return rate and volatilities by the Government Pension Investment Fund in Japan [7], we construct and as follows:, , and;

(10)

where the Cholesky decomposition of, a variance-covariance matrix of the assets:

We choose a money market account as the risk-free asset and we set.

4.1. Simulation with an Artificial Liability

In this subsection, we consider the following an artificial deterministic liability model:

(11)

(12)

i.e., we set and. We assume that our wealth coincides with the benchmark at the initial time:. We construct the optimal portfolio strategy over three decades, i.e.,. Then we determine the functions, and by solving the ODEs (7)-(9) numerically. and simulate paths of on according to Equations (1)-(3) using a standard Euler-Maruyama scheme with time-step. Figure 1 describes an investment result of a sample path. The black and red lines in Figure 1 represent and respectively.

The most significant issue it indicates is that the performance of the strategy is quite poor near the maturity. Figure 2 describing implies that this poor performance does not depend on the sample path. Figure 3 suggests a key factor of this phenomenon: values of functions, and change drastically between and; this time period coincides with the term the hedging error becomes large rapidly. Figure 3 also implies that the existence of the stationary solutions of the ODEs (7)-(9). As described in Figure 2, the strategy relatively works well on the time period when the functions, and reach the stationary state. Hence the strategy will be improved by using the stationary solutions of the ODEs (7)-(9) on entire region.

Figure 1. A sample path of and. The black and red lines represent and respectively.

Figure 2. Averaged hedging error.

Figure 3. The time evolution of, and. The black, red, green and blue lines represent, , and respectively.

To obtain the stationary solutions of the ODEs (7)-(9), we replace to a value large enough. We denote it by and set. Figure 4 shows values of, and obtained by solving the ODEs (7)-(9) with parameter. We can find that the functions, and take the stationary solutions on.

Results of simulations using the improved strategy are described as follows.

Figures 5 and 6 indicate that the performance near the maturity is improved and it does not depend on the sample paths. This result leads us to the conclusion that we should construct the strategy with the stationary solutions of the functions, and if they exists.

At the end of this subsection, we mention about our portfolio composition. Figure 7 displays the asset allocation on the sample path described in Figure 5. The money market account, the domestic bond and the foreign stock indicated by light blue, black and blue lines respectively dominate our portfolio. The optimal strategy is that we keep the most part of the wealth as the money market account and compensate for the increment of the benchmark by the investment for the domestic bond, low risk and low return asset, and the foreign stock, high risk

Figure 4. The time evolution of, and (improved case). The black, red, green and blue lines represent, , and respectively.

Figure 5. A sample path of and (improved version). The black and red lines represent and respectively.

Figure 6. Averaged hedging error (improved version).

and high return asset. If is deficient in, the strategy increases the proportion of the domestic bond and the foreign stock.

4.2. Simulation with an Empirical Liability

According to the Japanese actuarial valuation published in 2009 [8], the estimated income and expense of the welfare pension are showed in the Figure 8.

We regard these estimations as and and simulate the three decades investments using our optimal strategy from 2040 when the shortfall of the pension fund starts to expand drastically. The following reasons support that this situation is a valid case study: 1) a phase expanding, the shortfall of the pension fund, is the most typical one expressing the demographic changes; 2) the behaviour of in this term meets the condition to apply our optimal strategy: is increasing in the entire region. Throughout this subsection we set the start point as the year 2040, i.e., and represent the year 2040 and the year 2055 respectively.

To construct the optimal strategy, we first calibrate, and to fit the estimations. Setting and as a numerical differentiation of the estimations is a simple method to accomplish the purpose. Since we are discussing the three decades portfolio, we determine. As suggested in Section

Figure 7. An amount of each asset on the sample path described in Figure 5. The black, red, green, blue and light blue lines represent the amount of a domestic bond, a domestic stock, a foreign bond, a foreign stock and money market account respectively.

Figure 8. Estimations of the income and the expense of the Japanese welfare pensions. The black and red lines represent estimations of their income and the expense respectively.

4.1, we set to obtain the stationary and. We are unable to expect the stationary because explicitly depends on. We assume that our wealth coincide with the benchmark at the initial time:. Then we simulate paths of on according to Equations (1)-(3) using a standard Euler-Maruyama scheme with time-step which means that we can rearrange our portfolio every quarter. Results of the simulations are as follows.

We are able to argue that our strategy hedges the shortfall well since Figure 9 suggests that, the averaged hedging error, is approximately 3% of, the shortfall, in every quarter.

Figure 10 displays the asset allocation on the sample path described in Figure 11. In the same manner as in the case of the artificial liabilities discussed in Section 4.1, our optimal portfolio is dominated by the money market account, the domestic bond and the foreign stock. However the proportion of the domestic bond and the foreign stock is much higher. We can understand this phenomenon intuitively: since the shortfall increases more rapid than that discussed in Section 4.1, the hedging portfolio is rearranged to become more profitable. The practical suggestion from this fact is that we have to take a risk to track the increasing liability and this is

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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