14.5. Risk profile

UNIQA’s risk profile is very heavily influenced by the life and health insurance portfolios of UNIQA Österreich Versicherungen AG. This situation means that market risk plays a central role in UNIQA’s risk profile.

The Group companies in Central Europe operate in the property and casualty business lines as well as in the life and health insurance business lines. In the CEE region, the property and casualty sectors are the most dominant.

This structure is important to UNIQA, because it offers a high level of diversification from the life and health insurance lines that dominate in the Austrian companies.

The distinctive risk features of the regions are also reflected in the risk profiles determined by using the internal measurement approach.

Market and credit risks

The strength of the market and credit risks depends on the structure of the capital investment and its allocation to the different asset categories. The table below shows investments classified by asset category.

Asset allocation

In € thousand

31/12/2024

31/12/2023

Fixed-income securities

13,480,828

13,296,476

Real estate assets

2,382,317

2,411,947

Pension fund

1,824,492

1,808,177

Equity investments and other stocks

1,105,420

1,022,366

Shares and equity funds

1,447,745

1,276,852

Time deposits

404,415

520,399

Other investments

80,299

95,660

Total

20,725,515

20,431,878

However, the market and credit risks not only have an impact on the value of investments, but also influence the level of technical liabilities. Thus, there is – particularly in life insurance – a dependence between the (price) growth of assets and liabilities from insurance contracts. UNIQA manages earnings expectations and the risks of assets and liabilities from insurance contracts as part of the ALM process. The objective is to ensure sufficient liquidity while retaining the greatest possible security and balanced risk in order to achieve a return on capital that is sustainably higher than the guaranteed performance of the technical liabilities. To do this, assets and liabilities are allocated to different accounting groups.

The following two tables show the main accounting groups generated by the various product categories.

Assets

In € thousand

31/12/2024

31/12/2023

Long-term life insurance contracts with guaranteed interest and profit participation

10,266,088

10,515,489

Long-term unit-linked and index-linked life insurance contracts

4,354,843

4,291,320

Long-term health insurance contracts

5,383,823

5,046,235

Short-term property and casualty insurance contracts

6,005,756

5,884,178

Total

26,010,509

25,737,221

These values refer to the following items:

  • Land and buildings for own use
  • Investment property
  • Investments accounted for using the equity method
  • Other investments
  • Unit-linked and index-linked life insurance investments
  • Cash
Net liabilities of insurance and reinsurance contracts

In € thousand

31/12/2024

31/12/2023

Long-term life insurance contracts with guaranteed interest and profit participation

9,640,489

9,865,889

Long-term unit-linked and index-linked life insurance contracts

3,927,167

3,919,669

Long-term health insurance contracts

3,933,883

3,644,153

Short-term property and casualty insurance contracts

4,039,677

3,915,834

Total

21,541,217

21,345,545

These values refer to the following items:

  • Liabilities arising from insurance contracts
  • Assets arising from insurance contracts
  • Liabilities arising from reinsurance contracts
  • Assets arising from reinsurance contracts

Furthermore, the net liabilities from insurance and reinsurance contracts are shown in the following two tables, broken down by region and, for property and casualty insurance, by business line.

Net liabilities of insurance and reinsurance contracts (by region)

In € thousand

31/12/2024

31/12/2023

Austria (AT)

18,093,036

17,993,912

Central Europe (CE)

2,900,492

2,691,031

Eastern Europe (EE)

142,574

133,674

Southeastern Europe (SEE)

656,020

725,709

Western Europe (WE)

–250,906

–198,782

Total

21,541,217

21,345,545

Net liabilities from insurance and reinsurance contracts in property and casualty insurance (by business line)

In € thousand

31/12/2024

31/12/2023

Property insurance (fire and household insurance)

596,739

604,160

Liability insurance

872,510

910,313

Motor TPL insurance

1,444,771

1,363,982

Other motor insurance

318,089

305,368

Credit insurance

37,224

26,813

Legal expense insurance

149,397

145,994

Technology insurance

88,107

87,971

Transport insurance

69,806

61,073

Casualty insurance

375,831

346,721

Other forms of insurance

87,203

63,438

Total

4,039,677

3,915,834

The market and credit risk is broken down into interest rate, credit spread, equity, currency and market concentration risk.

The interest rate risk arises on all asset and liability items of the statement of financial position whose value fluctuates as a result of changes in risk-free yield curves or associated volatility. Given the high proportion of interest-bearing securities in the assets, interest rate risk forms an important part of market risk. The interest rate risk is actively managed as part of the ALM-based investment strategy.

The following table shows the maturity structure of fixed-income securities.

Exposure by term

In € thousand

31/12/2024

31/12/2023

Up to 1 year

824,118

598,058

More than 1 year up to 3 years

1,576,842

1,612,605

More than 3 years up to 5 years

1,834,590

1,906,495

More than 5 years up to 7 years

1,353,903

1,750,013

More than 7 years up to 10 years

2,153,269

2,219,369

More than 10 years up to 15 years

1,583,269

1,645,037

More than 15 years

4,154,838

3,564,899

Total

13,480,828

13,296,476

Since the interest rate risk is particularly relevant in life insurance as a result of the long-term liabilities, the focus below is placed on this business line.

The difference between the change in assets and the change in technical provisions resulting from a change in interest rates is used as the basis for managing the interest rate risk and/or the duration gap. During the annual ALM process, it is determined from a strategic point of view which budgets for interest rate risk can be accepted at the operating company level.

The discount rate that may be used in the costing when new business is written in most UNIQA companies takes into account a maximum discount rate imposed by the relevant local supervisory authority. In all those countries where this is not the case, appropriate prudent, market-based assumptions are made by the actuaries responsible for the calculation. In our core market of Austria, the maximum interest rate since 1 July 2022 is 0 per cent per annum. However, the portfolio also includes older contracts with different discount rates. In the relevant markets of the UNIQA Group, these rates amount to as much as 4.0 per cent per annum. The following table provides an overview of the average technical discount rates by region and currency.

Average technical discount rates, core business by region and currency

In per cent

EUR

USD

Local
currency

Austria (AT)

2.0

 

 

Central Europe (CE)

2.8

 

3.1

Eastern Europe (EE)

3.0

3.1

2.7

Southeastern Europe (SEE)

2.7

3.1

1.3

As these interest rates are guaranteed by the insurance company, the financial risk lies in not being able to generate these returns. Since classic life insurance business predominantly invests in interest-bearing securities, the unpredictability of long-term interest rate trends is the most significant financial risk for a life insurance company. The investment and reinvestment risk comes from the fact that premiums received in the future must be invested at an interest rate guaranteed at the time of conclusion. However, it is entirely possible that no appropriate securities will be available at the time that the premium is received. Future income must also be reinvested at the discount rate at a minimum. For this reason, UNIQA has already decided to only offer products in its key markets that are based on a low or zero discount rate. One example of this in Austria is the sale of deferred pension products with a discount rate of 0 per cent.

The credit spread risk refers to the risk of changes in the price of asset or liability items in the statement of financial position, as a consequence of changes in credit risk premiums or associated volatility, and is ascertained for individual securities in accordance with their rating and duration. When investing in securities, UNIQA chooses securities with a wide variety of ratings, taking into consideration the potential risks and returns.

The following table shows the credit quality of those fixed-income securities that are neither overdue nor written down, based on their ratings.

Exposure by rating

In € thousand

31/12/2024

31/12/2023

AAA

2,219,777

2,877,848

AA

3,842,957

3,050,482

A

4,281,830

3,950,222

BBB

1,868,284

2,080,646

BB

327,226

326,587

B

111,799

146,374

≤ CCC

106,639

97,577

Not rated

722,317

766,739

Total

13,480,828

13,296,476

Equity risk arises from movements in the value of equities and similar investments as a result of fluctuations in international stock markets, and therefore, stems in particular from the asset categories “Equity investments and other stocks” and “Equities”. The effective equity weighting is controlled by hedging with the selective use of derivative financial instruments.

Equities index

In index points

EUR (EURO STOXX 50)

CZK (PX)

31/12/2024

31/12/2023

31/12/2024

31/12/2023

 

4,895.98

4,521.65

9.22

14.29

Equities volatility

In per cent

 

EUR

31/12/2024

31/12/2023

1 year

15.90%

15.97%

5 years

20.35%

21.13%

10 years

22.99%

24.52%

Foreign currency risk is caused by fluctuations in exchange rates and associated volatility. Given the international nature of the insurance business, UNIQA invests in securities denominated in different currencies, thus following the principle of ensuring matching liabilities with assets in the same currency to cover liabilities at the coverage fund or company level. Despite the selective use of derivative financial instruments for hedging purposes, it is not always possible on cost grounds or from an investment point of view to achieve complete and targeted currency matching between the assets and liabilities. The following tables show a breakdown of assets and liabilities by currency.

Currency risk

In € thousand

 

31/12/2024

Assets

Provisions and liabilities

EUR

21,932,132

20,587,100

USD

529,746

191,805

CZK

1,742,473

1,112,075

HUF

310,891

557,014

PLN

2,965,838

2,380,856

RON

294,645

166,802

Other

756,380

595,026

Total

28,532,105

25,590,677

Currency risk

In € thousand

 

31/12/2023

Assets

Provisions and liabilities

EUR

21,724,086

20,411,232

USD

381,305

105,642

CZK

1,591,706

1,560,529

HUF

387,532

348,028

PLN

2,932,817

2,193,485

RON

284,354

159,770

Other

849,159

642,154

Total

28,150,959

25,420,840

In addition to figures from the established market and credit risk models (MCEV, SCR, etc.), stress tests and sensitivity analyses are used to measure and manage market and credit risk and their components.

The following tables show the most important market risks in the form of key sensitivity figures, along with their impact on equity and profit/(loss) for the period. Depending on the measurement principle to be applied, any future losses from the measurement at fair value may result in different fluctuations in profit/(loss) for the period or in other comprehensive income. The key figures are calculated theoretically on the basis of actuarial principles and do not take into consideration any diversification effects between the individual market risks or countermeasures taken in the various market scenarios.

Sensitivities for other investments are determined by simulating each scenario for each individual item, keeping all other parameters constant in each case.

Financial assets
Sensitivity analysis – market risks

In € thousand

 

 

 

31/12/2024

 

 

 

31/12/2023

Income statement

Equity

Income statement

Equity

Interest rate change

+50 bp

–50 bp

+50 bp

–50 bp

+50 bp

–50 bp

+50 bp

–50 bp

 

–39,739

41,644

–558,321

619,269

–42,244

43,712

–532,142

588,781

Change in share price

+25%

–25%

+25%

–25%

+25%

–25%

+25%

–25%

 

375,048

–375,048

20,488

–20,488

299,929

–299,929

44,490

–44,490

Movements in exchange rates – PLN

+10%

–10%

+10%

–10%

+10%

–10%

+10%

–10%

 

184,582

–185,452

133

–133

166,002

–166,002

37,262

–37,262

Movements in exchange rates – CZK

+10%

–10%

+10%

–10%

+10%

–10%

+10%

–10%

 

71,616

–71,616

3,754

–3,754

66,266

–66,266

3,827

–3,827

Movements in exchange rates – USD

+10%

–10%

 

 

+10%

–10%

 

 

 

22,956

–56,577

 

 

17,664

–40,511

 

 

Movements in exchange rates – HUF

+10%

–10%

+10%

–10%

+10%

–10%

+10%

–10%

 

13,333

–13,333

102

–102

16,309

–16,309

8,570

–8,570

Credit spread risk government bonds

+50 bp

–50 bp

+50 bp

–50 bp

+50 bp

–50 bp

+50 bp

–50 bp

 

–2,531

2,562

–444,707

499,937

–997

3,439

–408,959

497,103

Credit spread risk corporate bonds

+50 bp

–50 bp

+50 bp

–50 bp

+50 bp

–50 bp

+50 bp

–50 bp

 

–38,512

40,962

–120,303

126,772

–37,468

54,982

–131,000

126,054

Reference interest rates incl. illiquidity adjustment

In per cent

EUR (AT)

CZK (CZ)

HUF (HU)

PLN (PL)

31/12/2024

31/12/2023

31/12/2024

31/12/2023

31/12/2024

31/12/2023

31/12/2024

31/12/2023

1 year

2.40%

3.45%

3.90%

5.34%

5.69%

6.33%

5.33%

5.28%

5 years

2.30%

2.41%

3.79%

3.56%

6.37%

5.75%

5.86%

5.18%

10 years

2.43%

2.48%

3.96%

3.53%

6.53%

5.81%

6.14%

5.43%

15 years

2.49%

2.56%

4.06%

3.57%

6.90%

6.03%

5.96%

5.40%

20 years

2.42%

2.50%

4.04%

3.58%

7.00%

6.03%

5.64%

5.20%

25 years

2.45%

2.53%

3.98%

3.58%

6.79%

5.89%

5.32%

4.98%

Interest rate risk

In € thousand

31/12/2024

31/12/2023

Fixed-income

Variable-rate

Total

Fixed-income

Variable-rate

Total

Financial Instruments

 

 

 

 

 

 

Assets

13,964,437

1,824,492

15,788,929

13,816,955

1,808,177

15,625,133

Total

13,964,437

1,824,492

15,788,929

13,816,955

1,808,177

15,625,133

Swaption volatilities are a measure of the volatility of interest rate movements that are relevant for the measurement of non-current liabilities and are shown in the table below.

Swaption volatility

In basis points

EUR

CZK

31/12/2024

31/12/2023

31/12/2024

31/12/2023

Expiry 5/term 5

77.66

89.83

124.37

122.79

Expiry 5/term 10

75.42

87.22

121.94

110.41

Expiry 10/term 5

73.92

81.08

118.49

64.46

Expiry 10/term 10

71.53

75.49

114.05

66.94

In life insurance the interest rate assumptions are the crucial influencing factor on the liability adequacy test and deferred acquisition costs. For this reason, the effects of the implicit new money assumption (including reinvestments) are shown below.

In non-life insurance, the provision for unsettled claims is formed based on reported claims and applying accepted statistical methods. One crucial assumption here is that the pattern of claims observed from the past can be sensibly extrapolated for the future. Additional adjustments need to be made in cases where this assumption is not possible.

The calculation of claim provisions is associated with uncertainty based on the time required to process claims. In addition to the normal chance risk, there are also other factors that may influence the future processing of the claims that have already occurred. In particular, the reserving process for court damages in property and casualty insurance should be mentioned here. A reserve estimate is prepared here for these damages based on expert assessment, although this estimate can be exposed to high levels of volatility specifically with major damage at the start of the process for collecting court costs.

The partial internal model in property and casualty insurance is a suitable instrument for quantifying the volatility involved in processing. Following analysis of these model results, the determination was made that a deviation of 5 per cent from the basic provision calculated could represent a realistic scenario. Based on the current liability for incurred claims of €4,348.5 million (excluding additional provisions such as provisions for unsettled claims) in the Group on a gross basis, this would mean an increase in loss expenses by €2,174.3 million.

In health insurance (similar to life technique), only tariffs with a discount rate of 0.5 per cent have been sold since 1 July 2021. Together with measures to reduce the assumed interest rate in the portfolio, an average discount rate of approx. 2.4 per cent was achieved as at 31 December 2023. A reduction in the capital earnings by 100 bp (based on 2024 investment results) would reduce the earnings before taxes by €52.8 million.

Liquidity risk

Ongoing liquidity planning takes place in order to ensure that UNIQA is able to meet its payment obligations over the next twelve months.

Obligations with a term of more than twelve months are covered by investments with matching maturities as far as possible within the framework of the ALM process and the strategic guidelines. In addition, a majority of the securities portfolio is listed in liquid markets and can be sold quickly and without significant markdowns if cash is required.

Financial liabilities at 31 December 2024

In € thousand

Bond liabilities

Derivative financial instruments

Lease liabilities

Total

Notional amount

Coupon payments

Total

Contractual maturities

 

2025

0

8,250

8,250

12,721

15,483

36,455

2026

0

8,250

8,250

0

14,546

22,796

2027

0

8,250

8,250

0

13,133

21,383

2028

0

8,250

8,250

0

11,693

19,943

2029

0

8,250

8,250

0

11,737

19,987

> 2030

600,000

8,250

608,250

0

16,195

624,445

Financial liabilities at 31 December 2023

In € thousand

Bond liabilities

Derivative financial instruments

Lease liabilities

Total

Notional amount

Coupon payments

Total

Contractual maturities

 

2024

0

8,250

8,250

124

13,350

21,724

2025

0

8,250

8,250

0

11,991

20,241

2026

0

8,250

8,250

0

9,816

18,066

2027

0

8,250

8,250

0

8,400

16,650

2028

0

8,250

8,250

0

7,606

15,856

> 2029

600,000

16,500

616,500

6,549

33,822

656,871

Subordinated liabilities – Contractual maturities at 31 December 2024

In € thousand

Notional amount1)

Coupon payments

Total

2025

200,000

34,984

234,984

2026

326,300

28,484

354,784

2027

0

8,906

8,906

2028

0

8,906

8,906

2029

0

8,906

8,906

> 2030

375,000

17,813

392,813

1)

Contractual maturities based on the first possible termination date

Subordinated liabilities – Contractual maturities at 31 December 2023

In € thousand

Notional amount1)

Coupon payments

Total

2024

0

34,984

34,984

2025

200,000

34,984

234,984

2026

326,300

28,484

354,784

2027

0

8,906

8,906

2028

0

8,906

8,906

> 2029

375,000

26,719

401,719

1)

Contractual maturities based on the first possible termination date

Concentration risks

UNIQA strives to keep concentration risks as low as possible.

These could arise, for example, from the transfer of insurance business to individual reinsurance companies to an inappropriate extent. This can have a material impact on UNIQA’s results if an individual reinsurance company is in arrears (or in default). UNIQA controls this risk with an internal reinsurance company that is responsible for selecting external reinsurance parties, taking into account strict guidelines for avoiding material concentration risks.

However, concentration risk can also arise among other things from the composition of balance sheet items reported in the assets. Throughout the investment period, the company continuously checks to ensure that the investment volumes in securities of individual issuers do not exceed certain limits in relation to the total investment volume, defined according to the respective credit rating.

Underwriting risks

The underwriting risks are subdivided into non-life insurance, health insurance and life insurance.

The underwriting risk in non-life insurance is broken down into the three risk categories of premium, reserve and catastrophe risk.

Premium risk is defined as the risk that future benefits and expenses in connection with insurance operations will exceed the premiums collected for the insurance concerned. Such a loss may also be caused in insurance operations by exceptionally significant, but rare loss events, known as major claims or shock losses. Natural disasters represent another threat from events with low frequency but high losses. This risk includes financial losses caused by natural hazards, such as floods, storms, hail or earthquakes. In contrast to major individual claims, insurance companies in this case refer to cumulative losses.

The reserve risk describes the risk that the technical provisions recognised for claims that have already occurred are insufficient. This is referred to as a run-off loss. The claim reserve is calculated using actuarial methods. External factors, such as changes in the amount or frequency of claims, legal decisions, repair and/or handling costs, can lead to differences compared with the estimate.

To counter and actively manage these risks, UNIQA runs a number of processes integrated into its insurance operations. For example, a Group policy specifies that new products may only be launched if they satisfy certain profitability criteria. Major claims and losses from natural catastrophes are appropriately managed by means of special risk management in the underwriting process (primarily in corporate activities) and by the provision of suitable reinsurance capacity.

In connection with claim reserves, guidelines also specify the procedures to be followed by local units when recognising such reserves in accordance with IFRSs. A quarterly monitoring system and an internal review process safeguard the quality of the reserves recognised in the whole of the Group.

An essential element in risk assessment and subsequently risk management is the use of the non-life partial model. This risk model uses stochastic simulations to quantify the risk capital requirement per risk category at company and Group level.

The health insurance business is operated primarily in Austria. As a result, risk management in this line focuses mainly on Austria.

Health insurance is a loss insurance which is calculated under consideration of biometric risks and is operated in Austria similar to life technique.

The main techniques for risk mitigation in health insurance are the adjustment of future profit participations and the premium adjustment, which is carried out in compliance with legal and contractual framework conditions. These measures are crucial for the underlying risk models and contain detailed information and regulations, particularly with regard to profit participation. In practice, conventional risk-mitigation techniques are also relevant here.

For health insurance they include:

  • prudent setting of the discount rate at a level that is expected to be earned in the long term;
  • risk selection and thereby targeted pre-selection of prospective customers for insurance products, for example through health checks;
  • careful selection of the termination rate probabilities (death and lapse) in order to calculate adequate premiums for the benefits to be expected;
  • the consideration of premium adjustment clauses in various health insurance products in order to be able to adjust premiums in line with changes in the calculation principles in case of changes in the expected values; and
  • reinsurance solutions are applied to partial portfolios where necessary.

In addition to these conventional risk mitigation techniques, an ongoing process for managing portfolios has been established. This process is carried out annually by determining and evaluating the need for rate adjustments. The effectiveness of the risk mitigation techniques described for the health business is assessed by comparing invoices and actual benefits as well as by calculating contribution margin calculations.

In life insurance, the underwriting risk is generally defined as the risk of loss or adverse developments affecting the value of insurance liabilities. It is divided into the categories of mortality, longevity, disability-morbidity, lapse, expense, revision and catastrophe risk.

The mortality risk depends on possible fluctuations in mortality rates due to an increase in deaths which would have an adverse effect on the expected benefits to pay on risk insurance policies.

Longevity risk refers to the adverse effects of random fluctuations in mortality rates that are attributable to a decline in the mortality rate. The insurer is thereby exposed to the risk that the anticipated life expectancy in the calculation of the premium will be exceeded in real terms and that the expenditure for pension payments will be higher than planned.

The disability-morbidity risk is caused by possible adverse fluctuations in disability, sickness and morbidity rates compared to what they were at the time the premium was calculated.

The lapse risk arises from the fluctuations in policy cancellation, termination, renewal, capital selection and surrender rates of insurance policies. Overall, it represents the uncertainty regarding customer behaviour.

The expense risk refers to adverse effects due to fluctuations in the administrative costs of insurance and reinsurance contracts.

The revision risk results from fluctuations in the revision rates for annuities due to changes in the legal environment.

The catastrophe risk results from significant uncertainty in relation to pricing and the assumptions made in the creation of provisions for extreme/exceptional events. The most relevant risk in this context is an immediate drastic increase in mortality rates: in this case, death benefits in the risk portfolio could not be fully financed by the risk premium collected.

In the context of life insurance, the main techniques for risk mitigation are the adjustment of future profit participations or a corresponding premium adjustment as well as additional reinsurance policies, which are carried out in compliance with legal and contractual framework conditions. These measures are crucial for the underlying risk models and contain detailed information and regulations, particularly with regard to profit participation. In practice, profitable new business supports the risk-bearing capacity of the existing portfolio, whereby careful risk selection (e.g. health checks) and cautiously chosen calculation principles for premiums are essential cornerstones when designing products. By including premium adjustment clauses, the potential to reduce risk can be improved, especially in the risk and occupational disability portfolio.

Operational risk

Operational risk includes losses that are caused by insufficient or failed internal processes, as well as losses caused by systems, human resources or external events.

The operational risk includes legal risk, but not reputation or strategic risk. Legal risk is the risk of uncertainty due to lawsuits or uncertainty in the applicability or interpretation of contracts, laws or other legal requirements. At UNIQA, legal risks are monitored on an ongoing basis, and reports are made to the Group Management Board. UNIQA’s risk management process also defined the risk process for operational risks in terms of methodology, workflow and responsibilities. A risk manager is responsible for compliance in all Group companies.

A distinctive feature of operational risk is that it can surface in all processes and departments. This is why operational risk is identified and evaluated in every operational company at a very broad level within UNIQA. Risks are identified with the help of a standardised risk catalogue that is regularly checked for completeness.

According to international standards, UNIQA – as a financial service provider – forms part of the critical infrastructure of key importance to the national community. If this infrastructure were to fail or become impaired, it would cause considerable disruption to public safety and security or lead to other drastic consequences.

As a rule, emergencies, crises and disasters are unexpected events for which it is impossible to plan, although systems and processes can be put in place to deal with such events. The systems and processes must then be treated as a special responsibility of management and must be dealt with professionally, efficiently and as quickly as possible.

UNIQA has implemented a business continuity management system covering the issues of crisis prevention, crisis management and business recovery (including business emergency plans). The UNIQA BCM model is based on international rules and standards and is developed on a continuous basis.

Emerging risk

Emerging risk refers to newly arising or changing risks that are difficult to quantify and can have a significant impact on an organisation. Among the main drivers of the changing risk landscape are new economic, technological, socio-political and ecological developments and the increasing interdependencies between them, which may lead to a growing concentration of risk. In addition, a changing business environment – the further development of regulatory rules, the increased expectations of stakeholders and the shift in risk perception – must be taken into account.

Reputational risk

Reputational risk describes the risk of loss that arises because of possible damage to the company’s reputation, because of a deterioration in prestige, or because of a negative overall impression caused by negative perception by customers, business partners, shareholders or supervisory agencies. Reputational risks that occur in the course of core processes such as claim processing or advising and service quality are identified, evaluated and managed as operational risks in the Group companies.

Contagion risk

Group risk management analyses whether the reputation risk observed in the Group or in another unit may occur, and whether the danger of “contagion” within the Group is possible. The analyses performed guard against contagion risk.

Strategic risk

Strategic risk refers to the risk that results from management decisions or insufficient implementation of management decisions that may influence current or future income or solvency. This includes the risk that arises from management decisions that are inadequate because they ignore a changed business environment. Like operational and reputational risks, strategic risks are evaluated on an ongoing basis.

The following table shows a sensitivity analysis of changes in the most significant underwriting risks and market risks with their impact on assets and technical provisions in accordance with Solvency II. UNIQA has aligned its management processes with the requirements under Solvency II and uses these for control purposes.

The differences between the calculations of insurance contracts under Solvency II and IFRS 17 are primarily due to differences in the scope of the costs taken into account, different contractual limits and the different discount rates applied.

  • In accordance with IFRS 17, only costs that can be directly allocated to an insurance contract can be recognised. Under Solvency II on the other hand, the full cost approach is used for the measurement of technical obligations.
  • Both sets of rules include contract boundaries in the modelling of future cash flows. Solvency II is primarily based around the risk perspective, while IFRS 17 focuses on the insurance contract itself. These different approaches also have an impact on supplementary insurance policies: In accordance with IFRS 17, these are based on the main insurance cover, while Solvency II sets different standards in this regard. A further difference can be seen in outwards reinsurance contracts. Under Solvency II, the term of the contract is based on the primary insurance contract, while IFRS 17 takes into account the contract terms under the reinsurance contract.
  • Strict regulatory definitions apply under Solvency II with regard to the discounting of the cash flows calculated for the term. By contrast, the derivation of the interest rate and the determination of the risk margin in accordance with IFRS 17 is based on principle and is at the company’s discretion.

Despite these differences, UNIQA considers the risk sensitivities determined in accordance with Solvency II to be a suitable basis for the measurements in accordance with IFRS 17.

The technical provisions in accordance with Solvency II amount to €4,188 thousand (2023: €3,890 thousand) in property and casualty insurance and to €14,358 thousand (2023: €14,524 thousand) in life insurance.

The changes in the base value shown must be considered in isolation in each case. This means that different sensitivities cannot be added together to derive a cumulative change in the base value.

Sensitivity analysis

In € thousand

31/12/2024

31/12/2023

Impact on assets

Impact on liabilities

Impact on assets

Impact on liabilities

Underwriting risks

 

 

 

 

Property and casualty insurance

 

 

 

 

Ultimate losses (+1%)

 

42,633

 

28,613

Ultimate losses (–1%)

 

–42,681

 

–48,866

Life insurance

 

 

 

 

Mortality (–5%)

 

–50,952

 

–74,410

Costs (+10%)

 

153,793

 

128,829

Lapse rates (+10%)

 

108,266

 

121,944

Lapse rates (–10%)

 

–67,930

 

–102,951

Market risks

 

 

 

 

Interest rate change (+50 bp)

–625,097

–677,529

–569,508

–652,077

Interest rate change (–50 bp)

689,327

809,091

598,120

768,084

Share price change (–25%)

–1,351,340

–673,055

–1,205,798

–712,628

Exchange rate change (€–10%)

–432,997

–174,041

–411,845

–174,352

Credit spread risk corporate bonds (+50 bp)

–170,310

–112,872

–187,450

7,172

Credit spread risk government bonds (+50 bp)

–461,568

–235,533

–428,726

–99,652

(Partial) internal model
Internally generated model developed by the insurance or reinsurance entity concerned and at the instruction of the FMA to calculate the solvency capital requirement or relevant risk modules (on a partial basis).
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Acquisition costs
The amount paid to acquire an asset in cash or cash equivalents of another form of compensation at the time of acquisition, plus costs directly attributable to the purchase.
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Equity method
Investment in associates is accounted for using this method. The value carried corresponds to the Group’s proportional equity in these companies. In the case of shares in companies that prepare their own consolidated financial statements, their Group equity is assessed accordingly in each case. Within the scope of ongoing measurement, this value must be updated to incorporate proportional changes in equity with the share of net income/(loss) being allocated to consolidated profit/(loss).
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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.
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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).
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Profit participation
Policyholders have a reasonable right under statutory and contractual regulations to the company’s surplus profits generated in life and health insurance. The level of this profit participation is determined again each year.
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Solvency II
European Union Directive on publication obligations and solvency rules for the equity base of an insurance company.
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Solvency capital requirement (SCR)
The solvency capital requirement refers to the eligible own funds that insurers or reinsurers must hold to enable them to absorb significant losses and give reasonable assurance to policyholders and beneficiaries that payments will be made as they fall due. It is calculated to ensure that all quantifiable risks (such as market risk, credit risk, life underwriting risk) are reliably taken into account. It covers both current operating activities and the new business expected in the subsequent twelve months.
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