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Liquidity transformation: an examination of US life insurers

Byeongyong Paul Choi (Department of Finance, Howard University, Washington, D.C. USA)
Jin Park (Indiana State University, Terre Haute, Indiana, USA)
Chia-Ling Ho (Tamkang University, New Taipei, Taiwan)

Managerial Finance

ISSN: 0307-4358

Article publication date: 11 July 2016

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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is twofold: first, this paper measures how much liquidity is transformed by the US life insurance industry for the sample period; and Second, this study tests the “risk absorption” hypothesis and “financial fragility-crowding out” hypothesis to identify the impact of capital on liquidity creation in the US life insurance industry. In addition, a regression model is conducted to explore the relationship between liquidity creation and other firm characteristics.

Design/methodology/approach

In order to construct the liquidity creation measures, all assets and liabilities are classified as liquid, semi-liquid, or illiquid with appropriate weights to these classifications, which will then be combined to measure the amount of liquidity creation. In addition, a regression model is analyzed. The level of insurers’ liquidity creation is regressed on the capital ratio (surplus over total assets) and other financial and organizational variables to test two prevailing hypotheses.

Findings

This paper finds that the US life insurers de-create liquidity. The authors provide that the amount of liquidity de-creation is related to the size of insurers such that liquidity de-creation has increased as assets grow and that large insurers de-create most of liquidity. The US life insurance industry de-created $2.1 trillion in liquidity, i.e., 43 percent of total industry assets, in 2008. The empirical results support the “financial fragility-crowding out” hypothesis. Life insurers’ liquidity de-creation is mainly caused by the large portion of liquid assets, which is required by regulation and capital is not a main factor of liquidity de-creation.

Originality/value

There is no known study on the issue of liquidity creation by life insurers. Thus, the extent of liquidity creation by the life insurance industry, if any, is an empirical matter to investigate, but also an important matter to regulators and the academia since the products and business operations (e.g. asset portfolio and asset and liability management) of life insurers are different from those of property and liability insurers.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Byeongyong Paul Choi gratefully acknowledge financial support from a Summer Research Fund, School of Business at the Howard University. The authors thank Yume Choi for proofreading and editing assistance with the manuscript.

Citation

Choi, B.P., Park, J. and Ho, C.-L. (2016), "Liquidity transformation: an examination of US life insurers", Managerial Finance, Vol. 42 No. 7, pp. 618-634. https://doi.org/10.1108/MF-11-2015-0302

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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