German insurers respond to ZZR reserve squeeze

Rising interest rates are melting German life insurers’ hidden reserves and piling pressure on firms to rethink strategies to finance the ZZR, a ballooning regulatory reserve they have to hold against products offering high guarantees. Hugo Coelho reports

burden

By German standards, zinszusatzreserve (ZZR) is not a long word, but the burden it imposes on insurers is great. Since it was first introduced in 2011, the ZZR – the reserves that German life insurers are required to hold against products offering high guarantees – has increased steadily from €1.5 billion (£1.2 billion) to about €13 billion. In 2013 alone, firms are expected to put aside a record €6 billion to build up the buffer.

And with interest rates still at low levels, the burden of the

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The future of life insurance

As the world constantly evolves and changes, so too does the life insurance industry, which is preparing for a multitude of challenges, particularly in three areas: interest rates, regulatory mandates and technology (software, underwriting tools and…

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