ASOP 51 - Are They Prepared?
When I first heard someone mention ASOP 51, I immediately thought that this individual was speaking about Aesop, a slave and storyteller believed to have lived in ancient Greece between 620 and 564 BCE, and one of his many fairy tales. I suspect that many of our regular readers would accuse me of being the "Boy Who Cried Wolff" for my consistent pronouncements regarding the retirement crisis that continues to unfold.In September 2017, the Actuarial Standards Board (ASB) adopted a new Actuarial Standard of Practice (ASOP) No. 51 entitled, Assessment and Disclosure of Risk Associated with Measuring Pension Obligations and Determining Pension Plan Contributions (otherwise known as AaDRAwMPOaDPPC or something to that effect). The new ASOP is effective for actuarial work produced on or after November 1, 2018. It is intended to be used for both private and public pension plans, but not OPEBS.Importantly, the new ASOP is applicable to actuaries performing funding valuations, pricing valuations, or other, where the actuary is retained to perform a risk assessment that is not part of a funding or pricing valuation. Obviously, risk is in the eye of the beholder, but for this purpose, risk is defined as, "the potential of actual future measurements deviating from expected future measurements resulting from actual future experience deviating from actuarially assumed experience". And they claim that actuaries aren't comfortable with small talk at cocktail parties. Phew!ASOP 51 requires the actuary to identify risks that may reasonably be predicted to significantly affect the pension plan's future financial condition. Examples include investment risk, asset/liability mismatch risk, interest rate risk, longevity and other demographic risk, and contribution risk. These are all doozies. In addition to identifying the risk, the actuary is asked (required) to assess the identified risk on the plan's future financial condition. Have you had a conversation with your actuary on how they plan to execute this new requirement?