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Fair Values of Assets and Liabilities
3 Months Ended
Mar. 31, 2015
Fair Value Disclosures [Abstract]  
Fair values of assets and liabilities [Text Block]
Fair Values of Assets and Liabilities
GAAP defines fair value as the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date; that is, an exit price. The exit price assumes the asset or liability is not exchanged subject to a forced liquidation or distressed sale.
Valuation Hierarchy
The Company categorizes its fair value measurements according to a three-level hierarchy. The hierarchy prioritizes the inputs used by the Company’s valuation techniques. A level is assigned to each fair value measurement based on the lowest level input that is significant to the fair value measurement in its entirety. The three levels of the fair value hierarchy are defined as follows:
Level 1    Unadjusted quoted prices for identical assets or liabilities in active markets that are accessible at the measurement date.
Level 2
Prices or valuations based on observable inputs other than quoted prices in active markets for identical assets and liabilities.
Level 3
Prices or valuations that require inputs that are both significant to the fair value measurement and unobservable.
The following tables present the balances of assets and liabilities of Ameriprise Financial measured at fair value on a recurring basis: 
 
March 31, 2015
  
 
Level 1
 
Level 2
 
Level 3
 
Total
  
 
(in millions)
  
Assets
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

  
Cash equivalents
$
32

 
$
2,238

 
$

 
$
2,270

  
Available-for-Sale securities:
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

  
Corporate debt securities

 
15,692

 
1,526

 
17,218

  
Residential mortgage backed securities

 
5,990

 
280

 
6,270

  
Commercial mortgage backed securities

 
2,674

 
20

 
2,694

  
Asset backed securities

 
1,247

 
158

 
1,405

  
State and municipal obligations

 
2,243

 

 
2,243

  
U.S. government and agencies obligations
21

 
35

 

 
56

  
Foreign government bonds and obligations

 
245

 

 
245

  
Common stocks
5

 
7

 
7

 
19

  
Total Available-for-Sale securities
26

 
28,133

 
1,991

 
30,150

  
Trading securities
53

 
84

 
1

 
138

  
Separate account assets

 
84,243

 

 
84,243

  
Investments segregated for regulatory purposes

 
65

 

 
65

 
Other assets:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Interest rate derivative contracts

 
2,478

 

 
2,478

  
Equity derivative contracts
226

 
2,020

 

 
2,246

  
Foreign exchange derivative contracts
1

 
54

 

 
55

  
Other derivative contracts

 
6

 

 
6

  
Total other assets
227

 
4,558

 

 
4,785

  
Total assets at fair value
$
338

 
$
119,321

 
$
1,992

 
$
121,651

  
Liabilities
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Policyholder account balances, future policy benefits and claims:
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

  
EIA embedded derivatives
$

 
$
6

 
$

 
$
6

  
IUL embedded derivatives

 

 
270

 
270

  
GMWB and GMAB embedded derivatives

 

 
827

 
827

(2) 
Total policyholder account balances, future policy benefits and claims

 
6

 
1,097

 
1,103

(1) 
Customer deposits

 
5

 

 
5

  
Other liabilities:
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

  
Interest rate derivative contracts

 
1,244

 

 
1,244

  
Equity derivative contracts
303

 
2,413

 

 
2,716

  
Foreign exchange derivative contracts
1

 
5

 

 
6

 
Credit derivative contracts

 
3

 

 
3

 
Other derivative contracts

 
106

 

 
106

 
Other

 
14

 

 
14

  
Total other liabilities
304

 
3,785

 

 
4,089

  
Total liabilities at fair value
$
304

 
$
3,796

 
$
1,097

 
$
5,197

  
(1) The Company’s adjustment for nonperformance risk resulted in a $359 million cumulative decrease to the embedded derivatives.
(2) 
The fair value of the GMWB and GMAB embedded derivatives included $979 million of individual contracts in a liability position and $152 million of individual contracts in an asset position.

 
December 31, 2014
  
 
Level 1
 
Level 2
 
Level 3
 
Total
  
 
(in millions)
  
Assets
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

  
Cash equivalents
$
27

 
$
1,930

 
$

 
$
1,957

  
Available-for-Sale securities:
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

  
Corporate debt securities

 
15,647

 
1,518

 
17,165

  
Residential mortgage backed securities

 
6,001

 
206

 
6,207

  
Commercial mortgage backed securities

 
2,539

 
91

 
2,630

  
Asset backed securities

 
1,301

 
169

 
1,470

  
State and municipal obligations

 
2,239

 

 
2,239

  
U.S. government and agencies obligations
12

 
35

 

 
47

  
Foreign government bonds and obligations

 
251

 

 
251

  
Common stocks
5

 
7

 
6

 
18

  
Total Available-for-Sale securities
17

 
28,020

 
1,990

 
30,027

  
Trading securities
54

 
28

 
1

 
83

  
Separate account assets

 
83,256

 

 
83,256

  
Other assets:
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

  
Interest rate derivative contracts

 
2,031

 

 
2,031

  
Equity derivative contracts
282

 
1,757

 

 
2,039

  
Foreign exchange derivative contracts
1

 
29

 

 
30

  
Other derivative contracts

 
1

 

 
1

  
Total other assets
283

 
3,818

 

 
4,101

  
Total assets at fair value
$
381

 
$
117,052

 
$
1,991

 
$
119,424

  
Liabilities
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

  
Policyholder account balances, future policy benefits and claims:
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

  
EIA embedded derivatives
$

 
$
6

 
$

 
$
6

  
IUL embedded derivatives

 

 
242

 
242

  
GMWB and GMAB embedded derivatives

 

 
479

 
479

(2) 
Total policyholder account balances, future policy benefits and claims

 
6

 
721

 
727

(1) 
Customer deposits

 
6

 

 
6

  
Other liabilities:
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

  
Interest rate derivative contracts

 
1,136

 

 
1,136

  
Equity derivative contracts
376

 
2,326

 

 
2,702

  
Foreign exchange derivative contracts
1

 
2

 

 
3

 
Other derivative contracts

 
114

 

 
114

 
Other

 
12

 

 
12

  
Total other liabilities
377

 
3,590

 

 
3,967

  
Total liabilities at fair value
$
377

 
$
3,602

 
$
721

 
$
4,700

  
 
(1) 
The Company’s adjustment for nonperformance risk resulted in a $311 million cumulative decrease to the embedded derivatives.
(2) 
The fair value of the GMWB and GMAB embedded derivatives included $700 million of individual contracts in a liability position and $221 million of individual contracts in an asset position.

The following tables provide a summary of changes in Level 3 assets and liabilities of Ameriprise Financial measured at fair value on a recurring basis:
 
Available-for-Sale Securities
 
 
 
Corporate Debt Securities
 
Residential Mortgage
Backed Securities
 
Commercial Mortgage
Backed Securities
 
Asset Backed Securities
 
Common Stocks
 
Total
 
Trading Securities
 
(in millions)
Balance, January 1, 2015
$
1,518

 
$
206

 
$
91

 
$
169

 
$
6

 
$
1,990

 
$
1

Total gains included in:
    Other comprehensive loss
13

 

 

 

 
1

 
14

 

Purchases
15

 
115

 

 
23

 


 
153

 

Settlements
(20
)
 
(9
)
 
(1
)
 
(2
)
 

 
(32
)
 

Transfers into Level 3

 

 
6

 

 

 
6

 

Transfers out of Level 3

 
(32
)
 
(76
)
 
(32
)
 

 
(140
)
 

Balance, March 31, 2015
$
1,526

 
$
280

 
$
20

 
$
158

 
$
7

 
$
1,991

 
$
1

 
Changes in unrealized gains relating to assets held at March 31, 2015 included in:
Net investment income
$

 
$

 
$

 
$

 
$

 
$

 
$

Benefits, claims, losses and settlement expenses

 

 

 

 

 

 


 
Policyholder Account Balances,
Future Policy Benefits and Claims
 
IUL Embedded Derivatives
 
GMWB and GMAB
Embedded Derivatives
 
Total
 
(in millions)
Balance, January 1, 2015
$
242

 
$
479

 
$
721

Total losses included in:
    Net income
14

(1) 
280

(2) 
294

Issues
19

 
64

 
83

Settlements
(5
)
 
4

 
(1
)
Balance, March 31, 2015
$
270

 
$
827

 
$
1,097

 
Changes in unrealized losses relating to liabilities held at March 31, 2015 included in:
Interest credited to fixed accounts
$
14

 
$

 
$
14

Benefits, claims, losses and settlement expenses

 
278

 
278


(1) Included in interest credited to fixed accounts in the Consolidated Statements of Operations.
(2) Included in benefits, claims, losses and settlement expenses in the Consolidated Statements of Operations.


 
Available-for-Sale Securities
 
 
 
Corporate Debt Securities
 
Residential Mortgage
Backed Securities
 
Commercial Mortgage
Backed Securities
 
Asset Backed Securities
 
Common Stocks
 
Total
 
Trading Securities
 
(in millions)
 
Balance, January 1, 2014
$
1,640

 
$
187

 
$
30

 
$
260

 
$
6

 
$
2,123

 
$
2

Total gains included in:
 
Other comprehensive income
4

 

 

 

 

 
4

 

Purchases
76

 
82

 
60

 
21

 

 
239

 

Sales
(11
)
 

 

 

 

 
(11
)
 
 
Settlements
(143
)
 
(3
)
 

 
(6
)
 

 
(152
)
 

Transfers out of Level 3

 
(179
)
 
(15
)
 
(69
)
 

 
(263
)
 

Balance, March 31, 2014
$
1,566

 
$
87

 
$
75

 
$
206

 
$
6

 
$
1,940

 
$
2

 
Changes in unrealized losses relating to assets held at March 31, 2014 included in:
Net investment income
$
(1
)
 
$

 
$

 
$

 
$

 
$
(1
)
 
$


 
Policyholder Account Balances,
Future Policy Benefits and Claims
 
IUL Embedded Derivatives
 
GMWB and GMAB
Embedded Derivatives
 
Total
 
(in millions)
Balance, January 1, 2014
$
125

 
$
(575
)
 
$
(450
)
Total losses included in:
Net income
6

(1) 
52

(2) 
58

Issues
24

 
59

 
83

Settlements
(1
)
 
(7
)
 
(8
)
Balance, March 31, 2014
$
154

 
$
(471
)
 
$
(317
)
 
Changes in unrealized losses relating to liabilities held at March 31, 2014 included in:
Interest credited to fixed accounts
$
6

 
$

 
$
6

Benefits, claims, losses and settlement expenses

 
52

 
52


(1) Included in interest credited to fixed accounts in the Consolidated Statements of Operations.
(2) Included in benefits, claims, losses and settlement expenses in the Consolidated Statements of Operations.
The increase to pretax income of the Company’s adjustment for nonperformance risk on the fair value of its embedded derivatives was $37 million and $15 million, net of DAC, DSIC, unearned revenue amortization and the reinsurance accrual, for the three months ended March 31, 2015 and 2014, respectively.
Securities transferred from Level 3 primarily represent securities with fair values that are now obtained from a third party pricing service with observable inputs. Securities transferred to Level 3 represent securities with fair values that are now based on a single non-binding broker quote. The Company recognizes transfers between levels of the fair value hierarchy as of the beginning of the quarter in which each transfer occurred. For assets and liabilities held at the end of the reporting periods that are measured at fair value on a recurring basis, there were no transfers between Level 1 and Level 2.
The following tables provide a summary of the significant unobservable inputs used in the fair value measurements developed by the Company or reasonably available to the Company of Level 3 assets and liabilities:
 
March 31, 2015
 
Fair Value
 
Valuation Technique
 
Unobservable Input
 
Range 
 
Weighted Average
 
(in millions)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Corporate debt securities (private placements)
$
1,497

 
Discounted cash flow
 
Yield/spread to U.S. Treasuries
 
1.0
%
3.5%
 
1.4%
IUL embedded derivatives
$
270

 
Discounted cash flow
 
Nonperformance risk (1)
 
63

 
bps
 
 
GMWB and GMAB embedded derivatives
$
827

 
Discounted cash flow
 
Utilization of guaranteed withdrawals (2)
 
0.0
%
51.1%
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Surrender rate
 
0.0
%
59.1%
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
Market volatility (3)
 
5.4
%
21.6%
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Nonperformance risk (1)
 
63

 
bps
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Elective contractholder strategy allocations (4)
 
0.0
%
3.0%
 
 
 
December 31, 2014
 
Fair Value
 
Valuation Technique
 
Unobservable Input
 
Range 
 
Weighted Average
 
(in millions)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Corporate debt securities (private placements)
$
1,476

 
Discounted cash flow
 
Yield/spread to U.S. Treasuries
 
1.0
%
3.9%
 
1.5%
IUL embedded derivatives
$
242

 
Discounted cash flow
 
Nonperformance risk (1)
 
65

 
bps
 
 
GMWB and GMAB embedded derivatives
$
479

 
Discounted cash flow
 
Utilization of guaranteed withdrawals (2)
 
0.0
%
51.1%
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
Surrender rate
 
0.0
%
59.1%
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
Market volatility (3)
 
5.2
%
20.9%
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
Nonperformance risk (1)
 
65

 
bps
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Elective contractholder strategy allocations (4)
 
0.0
%
3.0%
 
 

(1) 
The nonperformance risk is the spread added to the observable interest rates used in the valuation of the embedded derivatives.
(2) 
The utilization of guaranteed withdrawals represents the percentage of contractholders that will begin withdrawing in any given year.
(3) 
Market volatility is implied volatility of fund of funds and managed volatility funds.
(4) 
The elective allocation represents the percentage of contractholders that are assumed to electively switch their investment allocation to a different allocation model.
Level 3 measurements not included in the table above are obtained from non-binding broker quotes where unobservable inputs are not reasonably available to the Company.
Sensitivity of Fair Value Measurements to Changes in Unobservable Inputs
Significant increases (decreases) in the yield/spread to U.S. Treasuries used in the fair value measurement of Level 3 corporate debt securities in isolation would result in a significantly lower (higher) fair value measurement.
Significant increases (decreases) in nonperformance risk used in the fair value measurement of the IUL embedded derivatives in isolation would result in a significantly lower (higher) fair value measurement.
Significant increases (decreases) in utilization and volatility used in the fair value measurement of the GMWB and GMAB embedded derivatives in isolation would result in a significantly higher (lower) liability value. Significant increases (decreases) in nonperformance risk, surrender rate and elective investment allocation model used in the fair value measurement of the GMWB and GMAB embedded derivatives in isolation would result in a significantly lower (higher) liability value. Utilization of guaranteed withdrawals and surrender rates vary with the type of rider, the duration of the policy, the age of the contractholder, the distribution system and whether the value of the guaranteed benefit exceeds the contract accumulation value.
Determination of Fair Value
The Company uses valuation techniques consistent with the market and income approaches to measure the fair value of its assets and liabilities. The Company’s market approach uses prices and other relevant information generated by market transactions involving identical or comparable assets or liabilities. The Company’s income approach uses valuation techniques to convert future projected cash flows to a single discounted present value amount. When applying either approach, the Company maximizes the use of observable inputs and minimizes the use of unobservable inputs.
The following is a description of the valuation techniques used to measure fair value and the general classification of these instruments pursuant to the fair value hierarchy.
Assets
Cash Equivalents
Cash equivalents include highly liquid investments with original maturities of 90 days or less. Actively traded money market funds are measured at their net asset value (“NAV”) and classified as Level 1. The Company’s remaining cash equivalents are classified as Level 2 and measured at amortized cost, which is a reasonable estimate of fair value because of the short time between the purchase of the instrument and its expected realization.
Investments (Available-for-Sale Securities and Trading Securities)
When available, the fair value of securities is based on quoted prices in active markets. If quoted prices are not available, fair values are obtained from third party pricing services, non-binding broker quotes, or other model-based valuation techniques. Level 1 securities primarily include U.S. Treasuries. Level 2 securities primarily include corporate bonds, residential mortgage backed securities, commercial mortgage backed securities, asset backed securities, state and municipal obligations and U.S. agency and foreign government securities. The fair value of these Level 2 securities is based on a market approach with prices obtained from third party pricing services. Observable inputs used to value these securities can include, but are not limited to, reported trades, benchmark yields, issuer spreads and non-binding broker quotes. Level 3 securities primarily include certain corporate bonds, non-agency residential mortgage backed securities, commercial mortgage backed securities and asset backed securities. The fair value of corporate bonds, non-agency residential mortgage backed securities, commercial mortgage backed securities and certain asset backed securities classified as Level 3 is typically based on a single non-binding broker quote. The underlying inputs used for some of the non-binding broker quotes are not readily available to the Company. The Company’s privately placed corporate bonds are typically based on a single non-binding broker quote. In addition to the general pricing controls, the Company reviews the broker prices to ensure that the broker quotes are reasonable and, when available, compares prices of privately issued securities to public issues from the same issuer to ensure that the implicit illiquidity premium applied to the privately placed investment is reasonable considering investment characteristics, maturity, and average life of the investment.
In consideration of the above, management is responsible for the fair values recorded on the financial statements. Prices received from third party pricing services are subjected to exception reporting that identifies investments with significant daily price movements as well as no movements. The Company reviews the exception reporting and resolves the exceptions through reaffirmation of the price or recording an appropriate fair value estimate. The Company also performs subsequent transaction testing. The Company performs annual due diligence of third party pricing services. The Company’s due diligence procedures include assessing the vendor’s valuation qualifications, control environment, analysis of asset-class specific valuation methodologies, and understanding of sources of market observable assumptions and unobservable assumptions, if any, employed in the valuation methodology. The Company also considers the results of its exception reporting controls and any resulting price challenges that arise.
Separate Account Assets
The fair value of assets held by separate accounts is determined by the NAV of the funds in which those separate accounts are invested. The NAV represents the exit price for the separate account. Separate account assets are classified as Level 2 as they are traded in principal-to-principal markets with little publicly released pricing information.
Other Assets
Derivatives that are measured using quoted prices in active markets, such as foreign currency forwards, or derivatives that are exchange-traded are classified as Level 1 measurements. The fair value of derivatives that are traded in less active over-the-counter (“OTC”) markets is generally measured using pricing models with market observable inputs such as interest rates and equity index levels. These measurements are classified as Level 2 within the fair value hierarchy and include swaps and options. Other derivative contracts consist of the Company’s macro hedge program. See Note 12 for further information on the macro hedge program. The counterparties’ nonperformance risk associated with uncollateralized derivative assets was immaterial at March 31, 2015 and December 31, 2014. See Note 11 and Note 12 for further information on the credit risk of derivative instruments and related collateral.
Liabilities
Policyholder Account Balances, Future Policy Benefits and Claims
The Company values the embedded derivatives attributable to the provisions of certain variable annuity riders using internal valuation models. These models calculate fair value by discounting expected cash flows from benefits plus margins for profit, risk and expenses less embedded derivative fees. The projected cash flows used by these models include observable capital market assumptions and incorporate significant unobservable inputs related to contractholder behavior assumptions, implied volatility, and margins for risk, profit and expenses that the Company believes an exit market participant would expect. The fair value also reflects a current estimate of the Company’s nonperformance risk specific to these embedded derivatives. Given the significant unobservable inputs to this valuation, these measurements are classified as Level 3. The embedded derivatives attributable to these provisions are recorded in policyholder account balances, future policy benefits and claims.
The Company uses various Black-Scholes calculations to determine the fair value of the embedded derivatives associated with the provisions of its EIA and IUL products. Significant inputs to the EIA calculation include observable interest rates, volatilities and equity index levels and, therefore, are classified as Level 2. The fair value of the IUL embedded derivatives includes significant observable interest rates, volatilities and equity index levels and the significant unobservable estimate of the Company’s nonperformance risk. Given the significance of the nonperformance risk assumption to the fair value, the IUL embedded derivatives are classified as Level 3. The embedded derivatives attributable to these provisions are recorded in policyholder account balances, future policy benefits and claims.
The Company’s Corporate Actuarial Department calculates the fair value of the embedded derivatives on a monthly basis. During this process, control checks are performed to validate the completeness of the data. Actuarial management approves various components of the valuation along with the final results. The change in the fair value of the embedded derivatives is reviewed monthly with senior management. The Level 3 inputs into the valuation are consistent with the pricing assumptions and updated as experience develops. Significant unobservable inputs that reflect policyholder behavior are reviewed quarterly along with other valuation assumptions.
Customer Deposits
The Company uses various Black-Scholes calculations to determine the fair value of the embedded derivative liability associated with the provisions of its stock market certificates. The inputs to these calculations are primarily market observable and include interest rates, volatilities and equity index levels. As a result, these measurements are classified as Level 2.
Other Liabilities
Derivatives that are measured using quoted prices in active markets, such as foreign currency forwards, or derivatives that are exchange-traded, are classified as Level 1 measurements. The fair value of derivatives that are traded in less active OTC markets are generally measured using pricing models with market observable inputs such as interest rates and equity index levels. These measurements are classified as Level 2 within the fair value hierarchy and include swaps and the majority of options. Other derivative contracts consist of the Company’s macro hedge program. See Note 12 for further information on the macro hedge program. The Company’s nonperformance risk associated with uncollateralized derivative liabilities was immaterial at March 31, 2015 and December 31, 2014. See Note 11 and Note 12 for further information on the credit risk of derivative instruments and related collateral.
Securities sold but not yet purchased include highly liquid investments which are short-term in nature. Securities sold but not yet purchased are measured using amortized cost, which is a reasonable estimate of fair value because of the short time between the purchase of the instrument and its expected realization and are classified as Level 2.
During the reporting periods, there were no material assets or liabilities measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis.
The following tables provide the carrying value and the estimated fair value of financial instruments that are not reported at fair value. All other financial instruments that are reported at fair value have been included above in the tables with balances of assets and liabilities Ameriprise Financial measured at fair value on a recurring basis.
 
March 31, 2015
 
Carrying Value
 
Fair Value
 
 
Level 1
 
Level 2
 
Level 3
 
Total
 
(in millions)
Financial Assets
Mortgage loans, net
$
3,368

 
$

 
$

 
$
3,453

 
$
3,453

Policy and certificate loans
813

 

 
1

 
796

 
797

Receivables
1,485

 
262

 
1,222

 
4

 
1,488

Restricted and segregated cash
2,649

 
2,649

 

 

 
2,649

Other investments and assets
542

 

 
483

 
60

 
543

Financial Liabilities
Policyholder account balances, future policy benefits and claims
$
12,495

 
$

 
$

 
$
13,720

 
$
13,720

Investment certificate reserves
4,303

 

 

 
4,294

 
4,294

Brokerage customer deposits
3,575

 
3,575

 

 

 
3,575

Separate account liabilities
4,408

 

 
4,408

 

 
4,408

Debt and other liabilities
3,664

 
353

 
3,483

 
118

 
3,954

 
December 31, 2014
 
Carrying Value
 
Fair Value
 
 
Level 1
 
Level 2
 
Level 3
 
Total
 
(in millions)
Financial Assets
Mortgage loans, net
$
3,440

 
$

 
$

 
$
3,512

 
$
3,512

Policy and certificate loans
806

 

 
1

 
793

 
794

Receivables
1,418

 
215

 
1,200

 
3

 
1,418

Restricted and segregated cash
2,614

 
2,614

 

 

 
2,614

Other investments and assets
551

 

 
460

 
84

 
544

Financial Liabilities
Policyholder account balances, future policy benefits and claims
$
12,979

 
$

 
$

 
$
13,996

 
$
13,996

Investment certificate reserves
4,201

 

 

 
4,195

 
4,195

Brokerage customer deposits
3,465

 
3,465

 

 

 
3,465

Separate account liabilities
4,478

 

 
4,478

 

 
4,478

Debt and other liabilities
3,576

 
261

 
3,446

 
121

 
3,828


Mortgage Loans, Net
The fair value of commercial mortgage loans, except those with significant credit deterioration, is determined by discounting contractual cash flows using discount rates that reflect current pricing for loans with similar remaining maturities, liquidity and characteristics including LTV, occupancy rate, refinance risk, debt-service coverage, location, and property condition. For commercial mortgage loans with significant credit deterioration, fair value is determined using the same adjustments as above with an additional adjustment for the Company’s estimate of the amount recoverable on the loan. Given the significant unobservable inputs to the valuation of commercial mortgage loans, these measurements are classified as Level 3.
The fair value of consumer loans is determined by discounting estimated cash flows and incorporating adjustments for prepayment, administration expenses, loss severity, liquidity and credit loss estimates, with discount rates based on the Company’s estimate of current market conditions. The fair value of consumer loans is classified as Level 3 as the valuation includes significant unobservable inputs.
Policy and Certificate Loans
Policy loans represent loans made against the cash surrender value of the underlying life insurance or annuity product. These loans and the related interest are usually realized at death of the policyholder or contractholder or at surrender of the contract and are not transferable without the underlying insurance or annuity contract. The fair value of policy loans is determined by estimating expected cash flows discounted at rates based on the U.S. Treasury curve. Policy loans are classified as Level 3 as the discount rate used may be adjusted for the underlying performance of individual policies.
Certificate loans represent loans made against and collateralized by the underlying certificate balance. These loans do not transfer to third parties separate from the underlying certificate. The outstanding balance of these loans is considered a reasonable estimate of fair value and is classified as Level 2.
Receivables
Brokerage margin loans are measured at outstanding balances, which are a reasonable estimate of fair value because of the sufficiency of the collateral and short term nature of these loans. Margin loans that are sufficiently collateralized are classified as Level 2. Margin loans that are not sufficiently collateralized are classified as Level 3.
Securities borrowed require the Company to deposit cash or collateral with the lender. As the market value of the securities borrowed is monitored daily, the carrying value is a reasonable estimate of fair value. The fair value of securities borrowed is classified as Level 1 as the value of the underlying securities is based on unadjusted prices for identical assets.
Restricted and Segregated Cash
Restricted and segregated cash is generally set aside for specific business transactions and restrictions are specific to the Company and do not transfer to third party market participants; therefore, the carrying amount is a reasonable estimate of fair value.
Amounts segregated under federal and other regulations may also reflect resale agreements and are measured at the price at which the securities will be sold. This measurement is a reasonable estimate of fair value because of the short time between entering into the transaction and its expected realization and the reduced risk of credit loss due to pledging U.S. government-backed securities as collateral.
The fair value of restricted and segregated cash is classified as Level 1.
Other Investments and Assets
Other investments and assets primarily consist of syndicated loans. The fair value of syndicated loans is obtained from a third party pricing service or non-binding broker quotes. Syndicated loans that are priced using a market approach with observable inputs are classified as Level 2 and syndicated loans priced using a single non-binding broker quote are classified as Level 3.
Other investments and assets also include the Company’s membership in the Federal Home Loan Bank of Des Moines and investments related to the Community Reinvestment Act. The fair value of these assets is approximated by the carrying value and classified as Level 3 due to restrictions on transfer and lack of liquidity in the primary market for these assets.
Policyholder Account Balances, Future Policy Benefits and Claims
The fair value of fixed annuities, in deferral status, is determined by discounting cash flows using a risk neutral discount rate with adjustments for profit margin, expense margin, early policy surrender behavior, a margin for adverse deviation from estimated early policy surrender behavior and the Company’s nonperformance risk specific to these liabilities. The fair value of non-life contingent fixed annuities in payout status, EIA host contracts and the fixed portion of a small number of variable annuity contracts classified as investment contracts is determined in a similar manner. Given the use of significant unobservable inputs to these valuations, the measurements are classified as Level 3.
Investment Certificate Reserves
The fair value of investment certificate reserves is determined by discounting cash flows using discount rates that reflect current pricing for assets with similar terms and characteristics, with adjustments for early withdrawal behavior, penalty fees, expense margin and the Company’s nonperformance risk specific to these liabilities. Given the use of significant unobservable inputs to this valuation, the measurement is classified as Level 3.
Brokerage Customer Deposits
Brokerage customer deposits are liabilities with no defined maturities and fair value is the amount payable on demand at the reporting date. The fair value of these deposits is classified as Level 1.
Separate Account Liabilities
Certain separate account liabilities are classified as investment contracts and are carried at an amount equal to the related separate account assets. The NAV of the related separate account assets represents the exit price for the separate account liabilities. Separate account liabilities are classified as Level 2 as they are traded in principal-to-principal markets with little publicly released pricing information. A nonperformance adjustment is not included as the related separate account assets act as collateral for these liabilities and minimize nonperformance risk.
Debt and Other Liabilities
The fair value of long-term debt is based on quoted prices in active markets, when available. If quoted prices are not available, fair values are obtained from third party pricing services, broker quotes, or other model-based valuation techniques such as present value of cash flows. The fair value of long-term debt is classified as Level 2.
The fair value of short-term borrowings is obtained from a third party pricing service. A nonperformance adjustment is not included as collateral requirements for these borrowings minimize the nonperformance risk. The fair value of short-term borrowings is classified as Level 2.
The fair value of future funding commitments to affordable housing partnerships is determined by discounting cash flows. The fair value of these commitments includes an adjustment for the Company’s nonperformance risk and is classified as Level 3 due to the use of the significant unobservable input.
Securities loaned require the borrower to deposit cash or collateral with the Company. As the market value of the securities loaned is monitored daily, the carrying value is a reasonable estimate of fair value. Securities loaned are classified as Level 1 as the fair value of the underlying securities is based on unadjusted prices for identical assets.