Current through Register Vol. 50, No. 9, September 20, 2024
A. Pursuant to
R.S.
22:651(D), the commissioner
shall allow credit for reinsurance ceded by a domestic insurer to an assuming
insurer which, as of any date on which statutory financial statement credit for
reinsurance is claimed, and thereafter for so long as credit for reinsurance is
claimed, maintains a trust fund in an amount prescribed below in a qualified
United States financial institution as defined in
R.S.
22:653(B), for the payment
of the valid claims of its United States domiciled ceding insurers, their
assigns and successors in interest. The assuming insurer shall report annually
to the commissioner substantially the same information as that required to be
reported on the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) annual
statement form by authorized insurers, to enable the commissioner to determine
the sufficiency of the trust fund.
B. The following requirements apply to the
following categories of assuming insurer.
1.
The trust fund for a single assuming insurer shall consist of funds in trust in
an amount not less than the assuming insurer's liabilities attributable to
reinsurance ceded by United States domiciled insurers, and in addition, the
assuming insurer shall maintain a trusteed surplus of not less than
$20,000,000, except as provided in
§3509. B.2
2. At any time after the assuming insurer has
permanently discontinued underwriting new business secured by the trust for at
least three full years, the commissioner with principal regulatory oversight of
the trust may authorize a reduction in the required trusteed surplus, but only
after a finding, based on an assessment of the risk, that the new required
surplus level is adequate for the protection of United States ceding insurers,
policyholders and claimants in light of reasonably foreseeable adverse loss
development. The risk assessment may involve an actuarial review, including an
independent analysis of reserves and cash flows, and shall consider all
material risk factors, including when applicable the lines of business
involved, the stability of the incurred loss estimates and the effect of the
surplus requirements on the assuming insurer's liquidity or solvency. The
minimum required trusteed surplus may not be reduced to an amount less than 30
percent of the assuming insurer's liabilities attributable to reinsurance ceded
by United States ceding insurers covered by the trust.
3. In the case of a group including
incorporated and individual unincorporated underwriters:
a. the trust fund shall consist of:
i. for reinsurance ceded under reinsurance
agreements with an inception, amendment or renewal date on or after January 1,
1993, funds in trust in an amount not less than the respective underwriters'
several liabilities attributable to business ceded by United States domiciled
ceding insurers to any underwriter of the group;
ii. for reinsurance ceded under reinsurance
agreements with an inception date on or before December 31, 1992, and not
amended or renewed after that date, notwithstanding the other provisions of
this regulation, funds in trust in an amount not less than the respective
underwriters' several insurance and reinsurance liabilities attributable to
business written in the United States; and
iii. in addition to these trusts, the group
shall maintain a trusteed surplus of which $100,000,000 shall be held jointly
for the benefit of the United States domiciled ceding insurers of any member of
the group for all the years of account;
b. the incorporated members of the group
shall not be engaged in any business other than underwriting as a member of the
group and shall be subject to the same level of regulation and solvency control
by the group's domiciliary regulator as are the unincorporated members. The
group shall, within 90 days after its financial statements are due to be filed
with the group's domiciliary regulator, provide to the commissioner:
i. an annual certification by the group's
domiciliary regulator of the solvency of each underwriter member of the group;
or
ii. if a certification is
unavailable, a financial statement, prepared by independent public accountants,
of each underwriter member of the group.
4. In the case of a group of incorporated
insurers under common administration, whose members possess aggregate
policyholders surplus of $10,000,000,000 (calculated and reported in
substantially the same manner as prescribed by the annual statement
instructions and
Accounting Practices and Procedures Manual of
the NAIC) and which has continuously transacted an insurance business outside
the United States for at least three years immediately prior to making
application for accreditation.
a. The trust
fund shall:
i. consist of funds in trust in
an amount not less than the assuming insurers' several liabilities attributable
to business ceded by United States domiciled ceding insurers to any members of
the group pursuant to reinsurance contracts issued in the name of such
group;
ii. maintain a joint
trusteed surplus of which $100,000,000 shall be held jointly for the benefit of
United States domiciled ceding insurers of any member of the group;
and
iii. file a properly executed
Form AR-1 (§3527.B) as evidence
of the submission to the authority of the commissioner to examine the books and
records of any of its members and shall certify that any member examined will
bear the expense of any such examination.
b. Within 90 days after the statements are
due to be filed with the group's domiciliary regulator, the group shall file
with the commissioner an annual certification of each underwriter member's
solvency by the member's domiciliary regulators, and financial statements,
prepared by independent public accountants, of each underwriter member of the
group.
C.
Credit for reinsurance shall not be granted unless the form of the trust and
any amendments to the trust have been approved by either the commissioner of
the state where the trust is domiciled or the commissioner of another state
who, pursuant to the terms of the trust instrument, has accepted responsibility
for regulatory oversight of the trust. The form of the trust and any trust
amendments also shall be filed with the commissioner of every state in which
the ceding insurer beneficiaries of the trust are domiciled.
1. The trust instrument shall provide that:
a. contested claims shall be valid and
enforceable out of funds in trust to the extent remaining unsatisfied 30 days
after entry of the final order of any court of competent jurisdiction in the
United States;
b. legal title to
the assets of the trust shall be vested in the trustee for the benefit of the
grantor's United States ceding insurers, their assigns and successors in
interest;
c. the trust shall be
subject to examination as determined by the commissioner;
d. the trust shall remain in effect for as
long as the assuming insurer, or any member or former member of a group of
insurers, shall have outstanding obligations under reinsurance agreements
subject to the trust; and
e. no
later than February 28 of each year the trustee of the trust shall report to
the commissioner in writing setting forth the balance in the trust and listing
the trust's investments at the preceding year-end, and shall certify the date
of termination of the trust, if so planned, or certify that the trust shall not
expire prior to the following December 31.
2. Notwithstanding any other provisions in
the trust instrument, if the trust fund is inadequate because it contains an
amount less than the amount required by
§3509. C or if the
grantor of the trust has been declared insolvent or placed into receivership,
rehabilitation, liquidation or similar proceedings under the laws of its state
or country of domicile, the trustee shall comply with an order of the
commissioner with regulatory oversight over the trust or with an order of a
court of competent jurisdiction directing the trustee to transfer to the
commissioner with regulatory oversight over the trust or other designated
receiver all of the assets of the trust fund.
a. The assets shall be distributed by and
claims shall be filed with and valued by the commissioner with regulatory
oversight over the trust in accordance with the laws of the state in which the
trust is domiciled applicable to the liquidation of domestic insurance
companies.
b. If the commissioner
with regulatory oversight over the trust determines that the assets of the
trust fund or any part thereof are not necessary to satisfy the claims of the
United States beneficiaries of the trust, the commissioner with regulatory
oversight over the trust shall return the assets, or any part thereof, to the
trustee for distribution in accordance with the trust agreement.
c. The grantor shall waive any right
otherwise available to it under United States law that is inconsistent with
this provision.
D. For purposes of this section, the term
liabilities shall mean the assuming insurer's gross
liabilities attributable to reinsurance ceded by United States domiciled
insurers excluding liabilities that are otherwise secured by acceptable means,
and, shall include:
1. for business ceded by
domestic insurers authorized to write accident and health, and property and
casualty insurance:
a. losses and allocated
loss expenses paid by the ceding insurer, recoverable from the assuming
insurer;
b. reserves for losses
reported and outstanding;
c.
reserves for losses incurred but not reported;
d. reserves for allocated loss expenses;
and
e. unearned premiums;
2. for business ceded by domestic
insurers authorized to write life, health and annuity insurance:
a. aggregate reserves for life policies and
contracts net of policy loans and net due and deferred premiums;
b. aggregate reserves for accident and health
policies;
c. deposit funds and
other liabilities without life or disability contingencies; and
d. liabilities for policy and contract
claims.
E.
Assets deposited in trusts established pursuant to
R.S.
22:651 and
§3509 of this regulation shall be
valued according to their current fair market value and shall consist only of
cash in United States dollars, certificates of deposit issued by a United
States financial institution as defined in
R.S.
22:653(A), clean,
irrevocable, unconditional and "evergreen" letters of credit issued or
confirmed by a qualified United States financial institution, as defined in
R.S.
22:653(A), and investments
of the type specified in §3509. E of this regulation, but investments in or
issued by an entity controlling, controlled by or under common control with
either the grantor or beneficiary of the trust shall not exceed 5 percent of
total investments. No more than 20 percent of the total of the investments in
the trust may be foreign investments authorized under
§3509. E.1 e, E.3,
E.6.b or E.7, and no more than 10 percent of the total of the investments in
the trust may be securities denominated in foreign currencies. For purposes of
applying the preceding sentence, a depository receipt denominated in United
States dollars and representing rights conferred by a foreign security shall be
classified as a foreign investment denominated in a foreign currency. The
assets of a trust established to satisfy the requirements of
R.S.
22:651 shall be invested only as follows.
1. Government obligations that are not in
default as to principal or interest, that are valid and legally authorized and
that are issued, assumed or guaranteed by:
a.
the United States or by any agency or instrumentality of the United
States;
b. a state of the United
States;
c. a territory, possession
or other governmental unit of the United States;
d. an agency or instrumentality of a
governmental unit referred to in
§3509. E.1 b-c if the
obligations shall be by law (statutory of otherwise) payable, as to both
principal and interest, from taxes levied or by law required to be levied or
from adequate special revenues pledged or otherwise appropriated or by law
required to be provided for making these payments, but shall not be obligations
eligible for investment under this paragraph if payable solely out of special
assessments on properties benefited by local improvements; or
e. the government of any other country that
is a member of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and
whose government obligations are rated A or higher, or the equivalent, by a
rating agency recognized by the Securities Valuation Office of the
NAIC.
2. Obligations
that are issued in the United States, or that are dollar denominated and issued
in a non-United States market, by a solvent United States institution (other
than an insurance company) or that are assumed or guaranteed by a solvent
United States institution (other than an insurance company) and that are not in
default as to principal or interest if the obligations:
a. are rated A or higher (or the equivalent)
by a securities rating agency recognized by the Securities Valuation Office of
the NAIC, or if not so rated, are similar in structure and other material
respects to other obligations of the same institution that are so
rated;
b. are insured by at least
one authorized insurer (other than the investing insurer or a parent,
subsidiary or affiliate of the investing insurer) licensed to insure
obligations in this state and, after considering the insurance, are rated AAA
(or the equivalent) by a securities rating agency recognized by the Securities
Valuation Office of the NAIC; or
c.
have been designated as class one or class two by the Securities Valuation
Office of the NAIC.
3.
Obligations issued, assumed or guaranteed by a solvent non-United States
institution chartered in a country that is a member of the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development or obligations of United States
corporations issued in a non-United States currency, provided that in either
case the obligations are rated A or higher, or the equivalent, by a rating
agency recognized by the Securities Valuation Office of the NAIC.
4. An investment made pursuant to the
provisions of
§3509. E 1-3 shall be
subject to the following additional limitations:
a. an investment in or loan upon the
obligations of an institution other than an institution that issues
mortgage-related securities shall not exceed 5 percent of the assets of the
trust;
b. an investment in any one
mortgage-related security shall not exceed 5 percent of the assets of the
trust;
c. the aggregate total
investment in mortgage-related securities shall not exceed 25 percent of the
assets of the trust; and
d.
preferred or guaranteed shares issued or guaranteed by a solvent United States
institution are permissible investments if all of the institution's obligations
are eligible as investments under
§3509. E.2.a and
E.2.c, but shall not exceed 2 percent of the assets of the trust.
5. As used in this regulation:
Mortgage-Related Security-an obligation that
is rated AA or higher (or the equivalent) by a securities rating agency
recognized by the Securities Valuation Office of the NAIC and that
either:
i. represents ownership of one
or more promissory notes or certificates of interest or participation in the
notes (including any rights designed to assure servicing of, or the receipt or
timeliness of receipt by the holders of the notes, certificates, or
participation of amounts payable under, the notes, certificates or
participation), that:
(a). are directly
secured by a first lien on a single parcel of real estate, including stock
allocated to a dwelling unit in a residential cooperative housing corporation,
upon which is located a dwelling or mixed residential and commercial structure,
or on a residential manufactured home as defined in
42 U.S.C. §
5402 (6), whether the
manufactured home is considered real or personal property under the laws of the
state in which it is located; and
(b). were originated by a savings and loan
association, savings bank, commercial bank, credit union, insurance company, or
similar institution that is supervised and examined by a federal or state
housing authority, or by a mortgagee approved by the secretary of Housing and
Urban Development pursuant to
12 U.S.C.§
1709 -b, or, where the notes involve a lien
on the manufactured home, by an institution or by a financial institution
approved for insurance by the secretary of Housing and Urban Development
pursuant to 12 U.S.C. §
1703; or
ii. is secured by one or more promissory
notes or certificates of deposit or participations in the notes (with or
without recourse to the insurer of the notes) and, by its terms, provides for
payments of principal in relation to payments, or reasonable projections of
payments, or notes meeting the requirements of
§3509. E.5.a.i
(a)-(b);
Promissory Note-when used in connection with
a manufactured home, shall also include a loan, advance or credit sale as
evidenced by a retail installment sales contract or other instrument.
6. Equity Interests
a. Investments in common shares or
partnership interests of a solvent United States institution are permissible
if:
i. its obligations and preferred shares,
if any, are eligible as investments under §3509. E; and
ii. the equity interests of the institution
(except an insurance company) are registered on a national securities exchange
as provided in the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. §78 a to 78kk, or
otherwise registered pursuant to that Act, and if otherwise registered, price
quotations for them are furnished through a nationwide automated quotations
system approved by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, or successor
organization. A trust shall not invest in equity interests under this Paragraph
an amount exceeding 1 percent of the assets of the trust even though the equity
interests are not so registered and are not issued by an insurance
company;
b. investments
in common shares of a solvent institution organized under the laws of a country
that is a member of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development,
if:
i. all its obligations are rated A or
higher, or the equivalent, by a rating agency recognized by the Securities
Valuation Office of the NAIC; and
ii. the equity interests of the institution
are registered on a securities exchange regulated by the government of a
country that is a member of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development;
c. an
investment in or loan upon any one institution's outstanding equity interests
shall not exceed 1 percent of the assets of the trust. The cost of an
investment in equity interests made pursuant to this paragraph, when added to
the aggregate cost of other investments in equity interests then held pursuant
to this Paragraph, shall not exceed 10 percent of the assets in the
trust;
7. Obligations
issued, assumed or guaranteed by a multinational development bank, provided the
obligations are rated A or higher, or the equivalent, by a rating agency
recognized by the Securities Valuation Office of the NAIC.
8. Investment Companies
a. Securities of an investment company
registered pursuant to the Investment Company Act of 1940, 15 U.S.C. §80 a, are
permissible investments if the investment company:
i. Invests at least 90 percent of its assets
in the types of securities that qualify as an investment under
§3509. E 1-3 or
invests in securities that are determined by the commissioner to be
substantively similar to the types of securities set forth in
§3509. E 1-3;
or
ii. Invests at least 90 percent
of its assets in the types of equity interests that qualify as an investment
under §3509.
E.6.a
b. Investments made by a trust in investment
companies under this Paragraph shall not exceed the following limitations:
i. an investment in an investment company
qualifying under
§3509. E.8.a.i shall
not exceed 10 percent of the assets in the trust and the aggregate amount of
investment in qualifying investment companies shall not exceed 25 percent of
the assets in the trust; and
ii.
investments in an investment company qualifying under
§3509. E.8.a ii shall
not exceed 5 percent of the assets in the trust and the aggregate amount of
investment in qualifying investment companies shall be included when
calculating the permissible aggregate value of equity interests pursuant to
§3509. E.6.a
9. Letters
of Credit
a. In order for a letter of credit
to qualify as an asset of the trust, the trustee shall have the right and the
obligation pursuant to the deed of trust or some other binding agreement (as
duly approved by the commissioner), to immediately draw down the full amount of
the letter of credit and hold the proceeds in trust for the beneficiaries of
the trust if the letter of credit will otherwise expire without being renewed
or replaced.
b. The trust agreement
shall provide that the trustee shall be liable for its negligence, willful
misconduct or lack of good faith. The failure of the trustee to draw against
the letter of credit in circumstances where such draw would be required shall
be deemed to be negligence and/or willful misconduct.
F. A specific security
provided to a ceding insurer by an assuming insurer pursuant to
§3513 shall be applied, until
exhausted, to the payment of liabilities of the assuming insurer to the ceding
insurer holding the specific security prior to, and as a condition precedent
for, presentation of a claim by the ceding insurer for payment by a trustee of
a trust established by the assuming insurer pursuant to this
Section.
AUTHORITY NOTE:
Promulgated in accordance with R.S. 22, Sections 2(E) and
661.