Companion Sites  |  Help  |  Site Map  |  Contact Us Print Friendly Version
Quick Search
  
About Us  
Institutional Clients  
Institutional Products  
Medium Term  Notes Program  
News and Events  
Retirees  


 
Get Quotes
Symbol:   
 Home > Help >  Stable Value Glossary
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z


12-month put Contractholder option to surrender at contract value with a maximum 12 months' notice that is provided to customers of federally chartered GIC pool collective trusts. The put option constitutes an arbitrage risk for GIC and wrap issuers but is necessary for banking liquidity requirements.
> Back to Top

404(c) The ERISA regulation which creates standards for prudent plan construction and operation to assure adequate investment selection and participant information in participant-directed plans. The minimum 404(c) standard is three funds which are internally diversified and diversified from each other, with quarterly reporting frequency.
> Back to Top

A
AICPA Statement 94-4 The statement issued by the American Institute of Certified Public Accounting which specifies the conditions under which a defined contribution pension plan may report investment contracts at book or contract value. Each individual contract must be fully benefit responsive, with no meaningful restrictions on participant benefits or transfers imposed by the contract or the plan.
> Back to Top

Alpha GIC A structured synthetic or separate account GIC designed to credit an interest rate plus the alpha, or excess return earned by the investment manager above a performance benchmark.
> Back to Top

Alternative GIC A synthetic GIC or "walled off "separate account GIC issued as a diversification alternative to a traditional GIC.
> Back to Top

Asset-backed GIC A participating separate account or synthetic GIC in which the plan looks primarily to the credit risk of the underlying assets rather than to the rating of the issuer or manager as with a traditional GIC. Most alternative GICs are asset-backed more than issuer-backed.
> Back to Top

Average Life Average time that a dollar of principal is outstanding. This measure tells an investor how long a security will remain outstanding on average. For bonds that amortize principal (make periodic principal payment) this is an important measure.
> Back to Top

B
Benefit Responsive The capability of an investment contract to provide participant benefit payments and investment transfers at book or contract value. This is a necessary attribute for each investment in a stable value fund to qualify for contract value accounting. Plan sponsor surrenders or sponsor-initiated withdrawals are typically not paid at book.
> Back to Top

Benefits Funds paid at book or contract value from a stable value fund to participants upon withdrawal from the plan at retirement, termination, death or financial hardship. Sometimes the term is used broadly to include investment transfers as well.
> Back to Top

BIC Bank Investment Contract, technically a bank deposit agreement between the bank and the plan sponsor with features analogous to GICs. BICs which are benefit responsive do not receive FDIC insurance coverage except in 457 plans. BICs which are not benefit responsive are not eligible for book value accounting treatment.
> Back to Top

Bid Specs Bid specifications, the data provided with the contract bid request from the customer to the GIC issuer or wrap provider showing plan data such as other investment options in the plan, transfer restrictions, participant cash flows, etc. The bid specs would also typically indicate the type of bid requested by the plan sponsor.
> Back to Top

Blended Rate The rate credited on the stable value fund for the reporting period, calculated as a "blend" of the crediting rates on the investment contracts and other assets in the fund.
> Back to Top

Buffer A layer of liquidity protection in a stable value fund to pay withdrawals before they must be paid from an investment contract under the fund’s withdrawal protocol. Typically the buffer is a STIF, but the term may refer to plan cash flow or some other protective dollar cushion.
> Back to Top

Bullet GIC A GIC which has only one deposit (and therefore no contribution risk) and, most typically, one payout at maturity (no withdrawal risk). These contracts no longer receive book value accounting treatment in defined contribution plans.
> Back to Top

C
Callable GIC A GIC with a call feature that enables the issuer to call, the contract at a pre-specified date earlier than the scheduled maturity date. The crediting rate is typically higher than a similar maturity contract due to the call feature.
> Back to Top

Class Year A stable value fund accounting and withdrawal method in which participants are assigned specific ownership shares of each contract based on the proportion that they contributed to the contract. The withdrawal method is also called pro-rata or LIFO by participant.
> Back to Top

Competing fund An interest-rate denominated fund with a reasonable degree of principal safety which poses anti-selection risk to the book value guarantees in a stable value product. Money market and short-term bond funds are always considered competing funds; medium-term bond funds and asset allocation funds may be.
> Back to Top

Comptroller of the Currency, Office of (OCC) A key regulator of bank collective trusts. The OCC determines reporting standards for bank trusts, as well as liquidity standards.
> Back to Top

Corridor A restriction on the amount of withdrawals that may be taken from any one contract, usually expressed as a percentage of the contract value, i.e., a "corridor" of 15% would mean that the issuer would only pay book value on withdrawals up to 15% of the contract's current value and any excess could be assessed a market value penalty. Contracts with generalized withdrawal corridors are not considered fully benefit responsive under the AICPA 94-4 statement.
> Back to Top

D
Duration A measure of the price sensitivity of a financial instrument to changes in interest rates; The greater the duration of a bond, the greater its price volatility with respect to interest rate changes; Average time to receipt of Present Value of cashflows
> Back to Top

E
EMTN Medium term notes are issued to investors outside the United States through an offshore special purpose vehicle (SPV) and backed by insurance company funding agreements.
> Back to Top

Evergreen An investment fund managed to a fixed duration and bought as an investment without a maturity.
> Back to Top

Experience-rated Investment contracts whose rates are adjusted to reflect the experience on the underlying assets and liabilities. (In some instances, the term is defined narrowly to refer only to participation in gain and loss experience on participant transactions.) Unlike traditional general account experience-rated products, experience-rated synthetics and separate account GICs typically guarantee expense charges and do not assess negative interest rates.
> Back to Top

F
Fixed Maturity A strategy in which the portfolio is managed to a target maturity date rather than a target duration.
> Back to Top

Funding Agreement Insurance company general and separate account guaranteed contracts issued to institutional investors other than tax-qualified pension plans. These contracts offer a guarantee of principal, accumulated interest, and future interest for a specified period of time, but do not contain benefit-responsive features. Many are floating-rate instruments with a 30-day put at book issued to money-market and other short-term investment funds or corporate STIF funds. Some are medium-term fixed or floating rate instruments issued to foreign investors. The category also includes "muni-GICs" issued to state or local municipalities to enhance their credit or as short-term investment vehicles for project funds.
> Back to Top

G
GIC Guaranteed Interest (or Income or Insurance or Investment) group annuity contract issued by an insurance company to a tax-qualified pension plan. The contract typically guarantees principal and a zero-coupon interest rate. GICs are issued to both defined benefit and defined contribution plans, but defined contribution sales predominate in a low interest rate environment.
> Back to Top

GIC (stable value) consultant The broker for GIC and other stable value bid placements, who screens quotes and recommends placements for a fee. No fiduciary asset management responsibility is assumed.
> Back to Top

GIC (stable value) manager An investment manager who places and manages the stable value assets in a defined contribution plan and assumes the fiduciary responsibility for this management.
> Back to Top

GIC (stable value) pool A commingled portfolio invested in stable value assets that operates like an open end mutual fund with fixed unit share values. Most pools are bank collective trusts, although separate account and mutual fund pools exist. All pool transactions are at contract value. Defined contribution participants have liquidity at book value as in all defined contribution stable value funds. Contract holders in bank collective trust pools are generally offered book value liquidity with notice of up to one year. Mutual fund contract holders have liquidity at book subject to a fixed penalty.
> Back to Top

GMTN Medium term notes are issued to investors outside the United States through an offshore special purpose vehicle (SPV) and backed by insurance company funding agreements.
> Back to Top

Guaranty fund State insurance funds that provide protection in case of issuer bankruptcy for some life insurance customers. The funds are supported by insurance companies based on the volume of the particular type of business that they have issued in the state. Coverage varies by state. GICs are typically not covered or covered to a maximum of $5 million per contract holder.
> Back to Top

H
There are no glossary words under this letter.
> Back to Top

I
Insulated Separate Account A separate account which has been insulated contractually and/or by insurance regulation from any liabilities of the general account which might exceed assets at insolvency. The purpose is to protect the separate account investor from the credit risk of the issuer.
> Back to Top

J
There are no glossary words under this letter.
> Back to Top

K
There are no glossary words under this letter.
> Back to Top

L
LIFO A stable value fund withdrawal method in which participant withdrawals for benefits and investment transfers are taken from the most recent contract until its fund balance is exhausted, then the next most recent, etc. Contributions to a LIFO contract are made net of participant withdrawals.
> Back to Top

Lump sum drop A non-recurring deposit of a predictable amount which is made into a GIC or other stable value investment. Usually the source is a maturing contract, but it may be an employer contribution or other amount known in advance.
> Back to Top

M
There are no glossary words under this letter.
> Back to Top

N
NAIC National Association of Insurance Commissioners, the organization that establishes general standards for state insurance regulations. The NAIC established risk capital standards for insurers and maintains statutory accounting standards.
> Back to Top

Net dollar window The time period for which a precise dollar amount of contributions or deposits are accepted at the guaranteed rate on a GIC or other stable value product. Amounts in excess of this are returned to the plan at the end of the window period; shortfalls must be made up by the plan from subsequent period cash flows.
> Back to Top

Non-Participating GIC See GIC
> Back to Top

O
There are no glossary words under this letter.
> Back to Top

P
Participating GIC A GIC which guarantees an interest rate only for a short period of the contract and thereafter adjusts the credited rate for asset and plan experience. On current day separate account versions, expense fees are guaranteed and experience is typically amortized to the contract’s maturity or duration. No negative interest may be assessed if the contact is to receive book value accounting.
> Back to Top

Pay down Specification of a stable value asset requiring that principal net of withdrawals be paid down to a specific amount at each withdrawal period. The concept is used with plans with high withdrawal risk. The idea is to reduce risk charges by creating a predictable pattern of principal reduction that is consistent with or greater than the expected withdrawal pattern of participants. If the withdrawals don't occur, the funds are paid back to the plan sponsor in any event, allowing the insurer to immunize funds with certainty and still accommodate a large volume of anticipated withdrawals.
> Back to Top

Pro-rata A stable value withdrawal method under which participant withdrawals and benefit payments are taken proportionately from all benefit-responsive investment contracts in the fund in relation to their relative size at the time of the withdrawal.
> Back to Top

Pro-rata after cash flow A GIC withdrawal method in which withdrawals are taken proportionately from each asset in the fund only after net plan cash flow for the period has been exhausted. The period involved may be monthly, quarterly or longer.
> Back to Top

Q
There are no glossary words under this letter.
> Back to Top

R
Regulation 126 An annual NY state annuity certification regulation requiring that issuers certify that assets are adequate to pay all outstanding liabilities under 7 interest rate scenarios without assuming any new sales and without the use of surplus assets. Failure to certify requires establishing additional reserves. The regulation applies primarily to General Account products.
> Back to Top

Regulation 128 An annual NY state certification requirement for participating separate account guaranteed annuities The separate account certification requires demonstrating that the market value of assets (less required "haircuts" for risk capital) is adequate to meet the market value of liabilities at all times.
> Back to Top

S
Separate Account GIC In typical stable market usage, a book value GIC issued from a "walled off" separate account of an insurance company, which insulates its owners from any liabilities of the general account at insolvency of the issuer. The most typical version provides book value protection to participants at the time of the withdrawal but passes all investment and plan cash flow risk back to the plan via interest rate adjustments. Expenses are guaranteed.
> Back to Top

Simple Interest Interest paid to the plan on a regularly scheduled periodic basis, as contrasted with the more typical interest compounded to maturity on a GIC.
> Back to Top

Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) a special-purpose, bankruptcy-remote vehicle whose sole purpose is to issue notes to investors and then use the proceeds to purchase funding agreements.
> Back to Top

STIF A short term investment fund maintained as part of the stable value fund to be the first source of benefit and withdrawal payments. The STIF must usually be maintained at a specified percentage of the fund (i.e., 5-10%). They are most common in pro-rata plans.
> Back to Top

Structured GIC A synthetic or alternative GIC backed by an actively managed portfolio designed to replicate or outperform a specific market index or other measurable investment target. Most involve interest rate swaps or derivative structures.
> Back to Top

Synthetic GIC A stable value investment in a defined contribution plan consisting of two components: 1) an asset or investment fund share owned directly by the plan and 2) a wrap agreement (often provided by someone other than the investment manager) that maintains all participant withdrawals at book value and may provide other risk protections as well. The two pieces must be contained in one asset agreement to receive contract value accounting.
> Back to Top

T
Transfer Restriction A plan rule limiting participants' ability to withdraw money from one or more fund options of the plan. The plan may restrict the frequency of a participant's withdrawals or movements between particular funds.
> Back to Top

U
There are no glossary words under this letter.
> Back to Top

V
There are no glossary words under this letter.
> Back to Top

W
Walled-off A separate account which has been insulated contractually and/or by insurance regulation from any liabilities of the general account which might exceed assets at insolvency. The purpose is to protect the separate account investor from the credit risk of the issuer.
> Back to Top

Wash A requirement that a participant transfer to or from a competing fund to a GIC not be made directly but be "washed " through an equity fund for a period that is typically three months or longer.
> Back to Top

Window The time period for which an unknown volume of deposits is accepted at the guaranteed rate on a GIC or other stable value product.
> Back to Top

Wrap In a stable value fund, a contractual agreement to maintain principal and benefit payments and participant investment transfers on a specified asset or group of assets at book or contract value. The form of a wrap may be a swap agreement, asset purchase agreement, asset management agreement, guaranteed annuity contract, or other agreement. Most wraps are participating agreements that guarantee the participant liquidity at book while smoothing gains and losses on assets and participant withdrawals into amortized adjustments of the future crediting rate.
> Back to Top

Wrap Provider (Non-Par) The synthetic GIC issuer providing the guarantee that the liquidation value of the assets equals the book value in the event of a benefit payment or contract maturity.
> Back to Top

X
There are no glossary words under this letter.
> Back to Top

Y
There are no glossary words under this letter.
> Back to Top

Z
There are no glossary words under this letter.
> Back to Top


Privacy Policy | About New York Life | Customer Identification Notice
© 2009 New York Life Investment Management LLC.  All rights reserved.  Legal Notice