37. Changes in major accounting policies as well as
new and amended standards

With the exception of the following changes, the outlined accounting policies were consistently applied to all periods presented in these consolidated financial statements.

Amendments and standards to be applied for the first time

The Group applied the following amendments to standards with the initial application date of 1 January 2020. None of the new regulations arising from this have any essential impact on UNIQA’s assets, liabilities, financial position and profit or loss.

Standard

 

Content

First-time application by UNIQA

Impact on UNIQA

Miscellaneous

Updated Framework

1 January 2020

Yes

 3

Definition of a Business – Amendments to IFRS 3

1 January 2020

Yes

 1, IAS 8

Definition of Material – Amendments to  1 and IAS 8

1 January 2020

Yes

 9, IAS 39, IFRS 7

Amendments to IFRS 9, IAS 39 and IFRS 7: Interest Rate Reform

1 January 2020

Yes

New and amended standards to be applied in the future

The IASB has also published a range of new standards that will be applicable in the future. UNIQA does not intend to adopt these standards early.

Standard

 

Content

First-time application by UNIQA

Endorsement by the EU at 31 December 2020

Likely to be relevant for UNIQA

New standards

 

 

 

IFRS 9

Financial Instruments

1 January 20231)

Yes

Yes

IFRS 9

Amendments to IFRS 9 – Prepayment Features with Negative Compensation

1 January 20231)

Yes

Yes

IFRS 17

Insurance Contracts

1 January 20231)

No

Yes

Amended standards

 

 

 

IAS 1

Amendments to IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements: Classification of Liabilities as Current or Non-Current

1 January 2022

No

Yes

IFRS 16

Amendments to IFRS 16 Leases: Covid-19-Related Rent Concessions

1 June 2020

Yes

Yes

IFRS 4, IFRS 9

Amendments to IFRS 4 Insurance Contracts: Extension of the Temporary Exemption from Applying IFRS 9

1 January 2021

No

Yes

1)

Preliminary decision of the IASB to defer the date of IFRS 17 coming into force and to extend the temporary exemption of IFRS 9 by one year

The following standards to be applied in future are expected to have a significant impact on reporting at UNIQA:

IFRS 9 – Financial Instruments

Since UNIQA’s business is predominantly insurance-related and UNIQA has not yet adopted  9 in any other version, a deferral to apply IFRS 9 for the first time is permitted until 1 January 2023 (see Footnote 1 to the table above). The use of UNIQA’s deferral approach requires the publication of additional information in the notes for the period up to the first-time application of  9.

Classification and measurement

The future classification and measurement of financial assets under IFRS 9 is derived from the business model criterion and the SPPI criterion (solely payments of principal and interest). Depending on the principle-based classification rules, IFRS 9 requires that subsequent measurement be carried out at or at .

UNIQA has already completed the technical development and implementation of an IT-system-based assessment of the SPPI criterion for the entire portfolio of relevant assets.

Fixed-income securities make up a large portion of the investment portfolio. Given that these securities tend to follow the principal/interest payment structure in most cases, they largely fulfil the criteria of the SPPI test. If an instrument meets the requirements of the SPPI test, there are two options: it can then be measured at amortised cost, or it can be measured at fair value through other comprehensive income. The portion of the UNIQA portfolio that does not fulfil the SPPI criteria will in future be measured at through profit or loss.

Requirements for SPPI fulfilled based on carrying amounts in per cent1)

 

Variable-income securities

Fixed-income securities

Loans and other investments

Derivative financial instruments

Investments under investment contracts

Financial assets at through profit or loss

0.0

0.1

0.0

0.0

0.0

90.7

Loans and receivables

0.4

99.5

Total

0.0

91.2

99.5

0.0

0.0

1)

Classification according to IAS 39

of other investments

 

At or at fair value through other comprehensive income

At through profit or loss

In € thousand

Carrying amount

Fair value

Change in fair value over the period

Carrying amount

Fair value

Change in fair value over the period

Government bonds

11,639,942

11,541,953

1,559,196

6,780

6,693

–477

Corporate bonds

3,486,221

3,471,831

92,482

130,817

131,564

–81,708

Covered bonds

2,141,159

2,120,240

–550,742

0

0

0

Loans

128,335

127,663

0

1,934

1,850

0

Other

0

0

0

1,546,285

1,545,774

645,790

Total

17,395,657

17,261,688

1,100,936

1,685,817

1,685,881

563,605

In addition, the logic of the business models was created in accordance with IFRS 9. Based on current indications, a large part of UNIQA’s business is classified under the hold-and-sell business model. This may result in changes due to the interactions with IFRS 17 that cannot yet be fully assessed at the time the financial statements are being prepared.

Impairment

The new provisions of IFRS 9 concerning impairment must be applied in future to financial assets measured at or at fair value through other comprehensive income. Under IFRS 9, the impairment calculation to be applied is based on a forward-looking model for the recognition of expected credit losses.

The model logic used to determine expected credit losses has been implemented in the IT systems and will be tested until initial application of IFRS 9. For the purpose of assessing the default risk, recourse was made to the definition in IFRS 9 of financial instruments with a low default risk at the reporting date. An external investment grade rating can therefore be used to assess whether a financial instrument has a low default risk.

Financial instruments by rating

In € thousand

Government bonds

Corporate bonds

Covered bonds

Loans

Other

Total

AAA

2,246,890

72,462

1,369,367

0

0

3,688,718

AA

3,499,527

260,996

577,221

0

0

4,337,744

A

3,460,494

1,387,524

87,343

10,110

0

4,945,472

BBB

1,813,096

1,213,171

0

0

0

3,026,267

BB

248,791

98,985

25,129

0

0

372,904

B

303,048

9,067

0

0

0

312,115

Not rated

68,097

444,016

82,099

118,224

0

712,437

Total

11,639,942

3,486,221

2,141,159

128,335

0

17,395,657

The fair value of the instruments which do not feature a low default risk (non-investment grade) amounts to €685 million.

UNIQA expects effects from the conversion to IFRS 9 both as a result of the new classification and measurement rules and due to the new impairment model. In this regard, possible initial application and subsequent measurement effects are to be expected in the category “Variable-income securities” in particular, as these financial assets will have to be measured at fair value through profit or loss in future. In a holistic view, interactions with IFRS 17 must also be taken into account in this context. For the further course of the project, the focus is on the parallel phase in order to analyse the financial effects of the differences between  39 and IFRS 9 even further.

IFRS 17 – Insurance Contracts

The IASB (International Accounting Standards Board) decided on 17 March 2020 to postpone the date of initial application of IFRS 17 by two years from 1 January 2021 to 1 January 2023. The IASB also decided to align the effective date for IFRS 9 for insurance companies with IFRS 17 to 1 January 2023. At the next stage, the EFRAG (European Financial Reporting Advisory Group) will work on the recommendation to the European Commission regarding the adoption of IFRS 17 into EU law. IFRS 17 establishes principles relating to recognition, measurement, presentation and disclosures of insurance contracts.

An essential element of the standard is a general measurement model, according to which all insurance contracts are to be valued on the basis of a prospective model. This involves combining current values ( cash flows) plus a with a mode for distributing the future profit from the contracts (contractual service margin).

The contractual service margin is the equivalent of the expected future profit from contracts held in the respective portfolio and thus creates a high degree of transparency with regard to UNIQA’s future profitability. This margin is a residual figure and its amount depends significantly on the best estimate of future cash flows, the discount rate and the method used to determine the risk margin.

For short-term insurance contracts, there is an option to use a simplified measurement model. UNIQA will primarily value and account for insurance contracts from the property and casualty insurance area based on the premium allocation approach.

There is a mandatory special model (variable fee approach) for participating contracts and contracts of unit-linked and index-linked life insurance. The variable fee approach is expected to be applied at UNIQA in health insurance and in life insurance.

For both, the general measurement model and the variable fee approach, UNIQA assumes at the time of publication of the Group report that the so-called OCI option will be applied where the respective allocated financial instruments on the asset side are also measured through other comprehensive income. The objective of applying this option is to reduce volatility in the financial position and income statement.

Since IFRS 17 is expected to lead to significant changes in the accounting and measurement of UNIQA’s core business, a separate project team consisting of actuaries, accountants, controllers and IT experts has been appointed, and it reports to a central programme management. This organisation was set up concurrently in all affected UNIQA subsidiaries in order to provide support in defining the requirements of the respective local characteristics and the product features for the entire UNIQA Group.

In order to adequately reflect the complexity of the standard, UNIQA decided to implement an insurance subledger. In the course of its implementation, characteristic sample business transactions, so-called use cases, were developed for all existing product groups in the entire UNIQA portfolio. These sample business transactions reflect the technical interpretation of IFRS 17 from UNIQA’s point of view and illustrate the configuration plan for the insurance subledger. They are the core of the new software solution.

The sample business transactions were created in close cooperation with the actuaries, accountants and the technical implementation team and shared with the UNIQA Group subsidiaries in a two-stage feedback process. In the course of numerous workshops and feedback rounds, specific features of the product landscapes of the individual subsidiaries were updated and integrated in the pool of use cases. The functional and technical design of the core of the reporting and process environment required under IFRS 17 was continued in the 2020 financial year.

In addition to the use cases, various IFRS 17 technical concepts in the actuarial and accounting areas were shared with the subsidiaries in 2020 and expanded to include their features and specifics. The integration and preparation of the data required for the measurement of and accounting for insurance contracts represents a key challenge in implementing IFRS 17. Significant progress was achieved here in the 2020 financial year.

The effects and interaction of IFRS 9 and IFRS 17 on the financial position and income statement of selected UNIQA companies were analysed in the past financial year. This analysis was based on several simplifications and assumptions. For example, in health and life insurance business lines, the future expected cash flows were based on the results of the market consistent embedded value (MCEV). In addition, an approximate cost allocation according to IFRS 17 was applied in the analysis. A simplified approach was also used to derive the risk adjustment.

Despite simplifications and estimates, important lessons have been learned:

  • The comparability of IFRS 4 and IFRS 17 is limited due to the fundamental differences between the two accounting standards.
  • Despite certain similarities with the regulations under , the interpretation of the results according to IFRS 17 is a great challenge due to the significantly increased complexity. In addition, the parameters for measuring the success of the company will change and new indicators such as the contractual service margin or loss component will be added.
  • In order to ensure that the measurement of insurance contracts is in accordance with the provisions of IFRS 17, much larger volumes of data need be processed and validated compared to IFRS 4.

In the course of the impact analysis, all three measurement models described above (general measurement model, variable fee approach and premium allocation approach) were applied specifically to the portfolio of selected UNIQA companies. Due to the continued limited scope of this impact analysis, no conclusions can be drawn regarding the impact of IFRS 17 on the Group as a whole.

IFRSs
International Financial Reporting Standards. Since 2002 the term IFRSs has applied to the overall concept of standards adopted by the International Accounting Standards Board. Standards already adopted beforehand continue to be referred to as International Accounting Standards (IASs).
IASs
International Accounting Standards.
IASs
International Accounting Standards.
IFRSs
International Financial Reporting Standards. Since 2002 the term IFRSs has applied to the overall concept of standards adopted by the International Accounting Standards Board. Standards already adopted beforehand continue to be referred to as International Accounting Standards (IASs).
Benchmark method
An accounting and measurement method preferred within the scope of IFRS accounting.
IFRSs
International Financial Reporting Standards. Since 2002 the term IFRSs has applied to the overall concept of standards adopted by the International Accounting Standards Board. Standards already adopted beforehand continue to be referred to as International Accounting Standards (IASs).
IFRSs
International Financial Reporting Standards. Since 2002 the term IFRSs has applied to the overall concept of standards adopted by the International Accounting Standards Board. Standards already adopted beforehand continue to be referred to as International Accounting Standards (IASs).
Amortised cost
Amortised costs are costs of acquisition less permanent impairment (e.g. ongoing depreciation and amortisation).
Fair value
The fair value is the price that would be collected in an ordinary business transaction between market participants for the sale of an asset or that would be paid for transferring a liability.
Fair value
The fair value is the price that would be collected in an ordinary business transaction between market participants for the sale of an asset or that would be paid for transferring a liability.
Fair value
The fair value is the price that would be collected in an ordinary business transaction between market participants for the sale of an asset or that would be paid for transferring a liability.
Available-for-sale financial assets
The available-for-sale financial assets include financial assets that are neither due to be held to maturity, nor have been acquired for short-term trading purposes. Available-for-sale financial assets are measured at fair value. Fluctuations in value are recognised in other comprehensive income in the consolidated statement of comprehensive income.
Asset allocation
The structure of the investments, i.e. the proportional composition of the overall investments made up of the different types of investment (e.g. equities, fixed-income securities, equity investments, land and buildings, money market instruments).
Amortised cost
Amortised costs are costs of acquisition less permanent impairment (e.g. ongoing depreciation and amortisation).
Fair value
The fair value is the price that would be collected in an ordinary business transaction between market participants for the sale of an asset or that would be paid for transferring a liability.
Amortised cost
Amortised costs are costs of acquisition less permanent impairment (e.g. ongoing depreciation and amortisation).
IASs
International Accounting Standards.
Best estimate
Calculation based on the best estimate. This is the probability-weighted average of future cash flows taking into account the expected present value and using the relevant risk-free yield curve.
Risk margin
Under Section 161 of the Austrian Insurance Supervision Act 2016, the risk margin is an add-on to the best estimate to ensure that the value of technical provisions equates to the amount that insurers and reinsurers would need so that they are able to assume and satisfy their insurance and reinsurance obligations.
Solvency
An insurance company’s equity base.
Solvency II
European Union Directive on publication obligations and solvency rules for the equity base of an insurance company.