Australia's prudential regulator has begun applying reforms to the capital treatment of longevity products such as annuities, aiming to free up insurers to offer more competitively priced retirement income products while keeping strong safeguards.
Reforms to the way Australia's prudential regulator treats the capital backing longevity products, including annuities, have taken effect, in a move designed to strengthen the market for retirement income. The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority finalised amendments to its prudential standards that better align capital settings with the long-term nature of longevity liabilities, introducing an option for insurers to use an advanced illiquidity premium when determining capital requirements for these products. The regulator said the change enhances capital efficiency and creates a more proportionate, risk-sensitive framework, while additional controls on governance, reporting and asset composition preserve prudential safeguards. Officials framed the reforms as backing innovation in retirement income safely, freeing insurers to invest in sustainable, competitively priced products that help Australians convert their savings into reliable lifetime income. Insurers active in the retirement space welcomed the changes, saying they move the Australian capital regime closer to international norms and support better guaranteed outcomes for retirees. The reforms come as Australia's ageing population increases demand for products that provide certainty of income in retirement, a growing policy priority as more people move from the savings phase into drawing down their superannuation.
Key Points
- 1APRA's reforms to the capital treatment of longevity products, including annuities, have taken effect.
- 2Insurers can use an advanced illiquidity premium in setting capital for these products.
- 3The change aims to improve capital efficiency while keeping prudential safeguards.
- 4The reforms target better, more competitively priced retirement income options.
Why This Matters
As Australia's population ages, more retirees need reliable lifetime income, so freeing insurers to offer competitively priced annuities can improve retirement security while maintaining consumer protections.
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