Internal:Training/IFRS17/The general model: initial recognition

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🔗 Recall. In the previous page, you learned how to group insurance contracts into portfolios, profitability groups, and annual cohorts so that each group can be measured separately. Now we put that knowledge to work: for each group, you need to measure the liability on day one. This page shows you exactly how.

🎯 Objective. In this page, you will learn:

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Day one: measuring the four building blocks

📅 The moment of truth. Initial recognition is the first time an insurance contract group appears on the insurer's balance sheet. Under the general model of IFRS 17, this happens at the earliest of three dates: when the coverage period begins, when the first premium payment from the policyholder is due, or, for an onerous group, the moment the insurer determines the group is onerous. Think of it like a stopwatch: once any of these triggers fires, the clock starts and the insurer must record the group on its books.

🧱 Building the measurement, piece by piece. At that trigger date, the insurer calculates each of the four building blocks you have already studied. First, it estimates all future fulfilment cash flows, which are the probability-weighted cash inflows (mainly premiums) and cash outflows (mainly claims and expenses) expected over the life of the contracts. Second, it discounts those cash flows to present value using an appropriate discount rate. Third, it adds a risk adjustment for non-financial risk to reflect the compensation the insurer requires for bearing the uncertainty in those cash flows. These three pieces together form the fulfilment cash flows in the broad sense: the amount the insurer believes it will need to fulfil its promises.

🔢 Putting numbers to the idea. Imagine AXA writes a group of 10,000 one-year home insurance contracts in Belgium, each charging a premium of €300. The total expected premium inflow is €3,000,000. After estimating expected claims, acquisition costs, and maintenance expenses, suppose the present value of all future outflows is €2,600,000 and the risk adjustment is €120,000. The sum of fulfilment cash flows (outflows minus inflows, adjusted for discounting) plus the risk adjustment gives a net figure. The fourth and final building block, the contractual service margin, is then set to exactly offset that net figure, so that no profit or loss appears in the income statement on day one. In this example, the CSM would be €280,000, representing the unearned profit the insurer expects to make.

⚠️ Common misconception. Many learners assume that initial recognition always happens when the policyholder signs the contract. In reality, the trigger can come earlier: if premiums are due before coverage starts, or if the group is identified as onerous before either of those dates, recognition kicks in at that earlier point. The signature date matters for legal purposes, but IFRS 17 cares about economic substance, not paperwork.

🤔 Think about it. If the four building blocks are designed so that the balance sheet shows no profit on day one, what happens when the numbers suggest the group will actually be profitable? Where does that future profit go?

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Profitable contracts: CSM is positive

💰 Locking away the profit. When the present value of expected inflows exceeds the present value of expected outflows plus the risk adjustment, the group is considered profitable. In that case, the contractual service margin is set to a positive amount that exactly offsets the day-one gain. The logic is simple: the insurer has not yet done anything for the policyholders; it has not settled a single claim or provided a single day of coverage. Recognising profit before delivering the service would be misleading, so IFRS 17 requires the insurer to store that expected profit in the CSM and release it gradually as service is provided.

🏠 Seeing it in action. Return to the Belgian home insurance example. The present value of premium inflows is €3,000,000. The present value of outflows is €2,600,000, and the risk adjustment is €120,000. The net fulfilment cash flows (outflows minus inflows) equal negative €400,000, meaning the group expects to receive €400,000 more than it expects to pay out in present-value terms. After adding the risk adjustment of €120,000, the remaining expected gain is €280,000. The CSM is set at exactly €280,000, making the total liability on the balance sheet equal to the present value of outflows plus the risk adjustment minus the present value of inflows, all netted to zero initial profit.

📊 The balance sheet on day one. At initial recognition, the insurance contract liability for this group equals the sum of three components: the net fulfilment cash flows, the risk adjustment, and the CSM. For the Belgian example, that total is €2,600,000 (outflows) + €120,000 (RA) − €3,000,000 (inflows) + €280,000 (CSM) = €0 net. In practice, the liability is not literally zero because the insurer typically records the premiums received as a cash asset on the other side. The point is that no profit or loss hits the income statement. The CSM acts like a reservoir: it holds the expected profit until the insurer earns it by delivering coverage over time.

⚠️ Common misconception. It is tempting to think that a larger CSM is always better. While a large CSM signals high expected profitability, it also means the insurer cannot recognise that profit immediately. The CSM must be released over the coverage period through coverage units, so a very large CSM on a long-duration contract means profit appears slowly. Profitability on the income statement depends on the pattern of release, not just the size of the pool.

🤔 Think about it. We have seen what happens when the numbers work in the insurer's favour. But what if the expected outflows and risk adjustment exceed the expected inflows? Can the CSM go negative?

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Onerous contracts: CSM is zero, loss recognized immediately

🚨 When the maths turns negative. Sometimes the expected outflows plus the risk adjustment exceed the expected inflows, even before the insurer provides any coverage. In this situation, there is no expected profit to store; instead, the group is expected to make a loss. Under IFRS 17, the CSM cannot be negative. It is floored at zero because the CSM represents unearned profit, and you cannot have negative unearned profit. The shortfall, the amount by which outflows and risk adjustment exceed inflows, must be recognised as a loss in the income statement immediately at initial recognition.

🌊 A concrete scenario. Suppose an insurer like AXA launches a property insurance product for 5,000 homes along the Atlantic coast in Brittany, France. Each policyholder pays a premium of €250, giving total expected inflows of €1,250,000 in present value terms. However, updated climate models forecast a severe storm season, pushing the present value of expected claims and expenses to €1,300,000. The risk adjustment adds another €80,000, reflecting the high uncertainty around coastal storm damage. The net position is €1,300,000 + €80,000 − €1,250,000 = €130,000 of expected loss. Since the CSM cannot go below zero, the insurer sets the CSM at zero and recognises the €130,000 as a loss on day one. This loss appears in the income statement as part of insurance service expenses.

⚠️ Common misconception. Some learners believe that identifying a group as onerous means the insurer made a pricing mistake. That is not necessarily true. A group may become onerous because of a change in conditions after pricing, such as new weather data or an unexpected regulatory cost. Additionally, remember that grouping rules require separating contracts expected to be onerous from those expected to be profitable. Even if the portfolio as a whole is profitable, the onerous subgroup must reveal its losses separately, preventing profitable contracts from masking problems.

🔍 Why immediate recognition matters. The rationale behind this asymmetry, where gains are deferred but losses are recognised immediately, is rooted in the accounting principle of prudence. Investors and regulators want early warning when an insurer faces expected losses. If the insurer could hide the shortfall inside a negative CSM and spread it over years, the financial statements would paint a misleadingly rosy picture. By forcing immediate loss recognition, IFRS 17 ensures that bad news reaches stakeholders as soon as the insurer itself knows about it. This makes the balance sheet a more honest snapshot of the insurer's obligations and helps maintain trust in financial reporting.

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Takeaways

📌 Key takeaways.

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Quiz