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Roll forward of accounting liabilities

If the accounting measurement date is later than the valuation date, ProVal rolls the accounting liabilities forward from the valuation date to the measurement date.

Both the valuation date and the measurement date are specified in the Initial Asset Values topic of the Asset & Funding Policy. ProVal will not roll liabilities backward, so the measurement date cannot be specified as prior to the valuation date.

Under accounting standards where the individual spot rate interest cost method is available, users may choose the method used to roll the liability forward on the Accounting Methodology topic of the Asset & Funding Policy.  The choices are liability or pv adjusted benefit payments.  The liability option is always the method used when the individual spot rate interest cost method is not available.  

Below are the details of the roll forward calculations under the two methods.

Liability roll forward method:

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where:

The subscript rf denotes "rolled forward" and the subscript vd denotes "as of the valuation date".

PBO is the projected benefit obligation.

Rate is the accounting (ASC 715, IAS 19 or CICA 3461) liability discount rate. When a yield curve is used as the discount rate assumption, Rate is set equal to the effective discount rate.

T is the fraction of the year from the valuation date to the measurement date, calculated as.

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PBONC is the beginning of year service cost.

PBOEeNC and ABOEeNC are the beginning of the year portion of projected benefit obligation normal cost (a.k.a. service cost) and accrued benefit obligation normal cost, respectively, assumed paid via employee contributions. These employee normal costs, PBOEeNC and ABOEeNC, may have different values. Note that their values are calculated as of the valuation date, whereas Valuation Set and forecast output display values that reflect interest to the middle of the year (when employee contributions are assumed paid.). Thus the PBOEeNC and ABOEeNC values used in the roll-forward calculation will differ from the values displayed in output.

BP is expected cash benefit payments, which are assumed to be paid, on average, in the middle of the year beginning on the valuation date.

NAPBO is the non-active (retired, terminated vested, disabled or survivor) component of the PBO.

NAABO is the non-active component of the ABO and is equal to NAPBO.

EBO is the expected benefit obligation, also known as the accounting present value of all future benefits.

ABO is the accumulated benefit obligation.

VABO is the vested benefit obligation.

V is the assumed vested ratio.

For a Valuation Set, any liability changes resulting from accounting plan changes are calculated based on already rolled-forward liabilities. During a forecast, however, changes in liability attributed to plan changes are calculated as of the valuation date and adjusted, as follows, to roll forward to the measurement date:

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Where:

PC is the change in projected benefit obligation attributable to the plan change.

NCCHG is the change in the beginning of year service cost attributable to the plan change.

Thus, during a forecast, there will be a spurious gain or loss, attributable to the approximation used to roll the change in liability forward to the measurement date.

Benefit payment roll forward method

This method works by rolling forward the benefit payment stream underlying the liability as of the valuation date to the measurement date.  Once the benefit payment stream as of the measurement date is determined, ProVal takes the present value to calculate the liability.

Benefit payments are adjusted to the measurement date as follows:

BPt+z = {(BPt x (1 – z)) + (BPt+1 x z)} + {[(BPNCt x (1-z)) + (BPNCt+1 x z)] x z} 

where:

t is the valuation date 

z is the fraction of the year between the valuation date and the measurement date

BPt is the liability benefit payment at time t

BPNCt is the normal cost benefit payment at time t

Adjust the cash flows for a benefit payment override

If you have defined a benefit payment override for the accounting roll forward on the Benefits and Rounding topic of the Asset & Funding Policy, the benefit payment stream will be further refined.  If you have selected to adjust the first year benefit payment, then the first term of the benefit payment stream will be adjusted by subtracting the following amount:

[Override BP – (BP+  BPNC0 )] x Z

where:

BP0 is the PBO benefit payment at time 0 as of the valuation date

BPNC0 is the PBO normal cost benefit payment at time 0 as of the valuation date

Override BP is the annual benefit payment override from the Asset & Funding Policy (this amount is adjusted by ProVal to the beginning of year with interest)

z is the fraction of the year between the valuation date and the measurement date

If you have selected to spread the override over all future benefit payments (which might be appropriate, for example, if there are significant lump sums), then each term of the benefit payment stream will be adjusted by subtracting an amount determined as follows:


Essentially this method takes the offset determined under the first method and spreads it over the benefit payment stream by taking the ratio of each payment (as of the measurement date) to the sum of all payments. 

where:

BPt is the PBO benefit payment at time t 

BPNCt is the PBO normal cost benefit payment at time t

Override BP is the annual benefit payment override from the Asset & Funding Policy (this amount is adjusted by ProVal to the beginning of year with interest)

z is the fraction of the year between the valuation date and the measurement date

Calculating the PBO

Once the benefit payments have been determined as of the measurement date, the liability is determined as:

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

where:

k is the average benefit timing factor and is assumed to be the same as the average benefit timing factor calculated at the valuation date

Other notes regarding this method:

  1. ABO and EBO, for which projected benefit payments are available, are rolled forward in the same manner as described for PBO above.
  2. For liabilities where there are no projected benefit payments available, the liabilites are determined based on the relationship to the closest proxy. For example,
    • The active fully eligible APBO is determined by first calculating the total APBO at the measurement date, and then  assuming that active fully eligible APBO at the measurement date bears the same ratio to the total APBO at the measurement date as it did at the valuation date.
    • The active participant VBO at the measurement date is assumed to remain in the same proportion to the active participant ABO as it bore to it on the valuation date.
  3. As all calculations are done in total, the split of projected benefit payments between actives and inactives is an estimation. Component pieces of results at the measurement date are assumed to bear the same relationship to their corresponding result at the valuation date as the total. 
  4. Expected benefit payments at the measurement date are assumed to be equal to the first projected benefit payment at the measurement date.
  5. The liabilities associated with plan changes and assumption changes are estimated the same way as for the liability roll forward method described in the section above (in other words, ProVal does not determine the liability change as the difference between the present values of two sets of adjusted benefit payment streams.  The change is determined based on the liability difference as of the valuation date and then rolled forward in aggregate to the measurement date).
  6. Employee contributions are appoximated at the measurement date by assuming they are equal to the value at the valuation date.

Annuity substitution benefit payments​

If you are also using the annuity substitution benefit payment method, the annuity substitution benefit payments are adjusted to the measurement date as follows:

  1. Adjust the annuity substitution benefit payments to the measurement date:                                                                                 BPt+z = {(BPt x (1 – z)) + (BPt+1 x z)} + {[(BPNCt x (1-z)) + (BPNCt+1 x z)] x z} 
  2. Calculate the present value of the benefit payments determined in 1.
  3. Calculate the ratio of the actual PBO (which was determined based on upon the actual benefit payment stream underlying the PBO as of the measurement date) to the present value determined in step 2.
  4. Adjust each cash flow in 1. by the ratio determined in 3.