(1) With respect to reinsurance contracts
entered into or renewed on or after January 1, 2011, an insurer may reduce the
amount withheld as required under section
125.6(b) of this
Part for full credit, as an asset or deduction from reserves, for reinsurance
recoverable, including incurred-but-not-reported loss reserves and unearned
premium, from any unauthorized assuming insurer or any alien group of insurers,
provided that the insurer satisfies the requirements set forth in paragraph (7)
of this subdivision and is certified by the superintendent. The reduced amount
withheld will be determined in accordance with paragraphs (2) through (8) of
this subdivision. Any reinsurer qualifying for reduced collateral under the
provisions of this subdivision as in effect on July 1, 2012 will be deemed to
continue to remain in full compliance with this subdivision, provided that it
satisfies the certification procedures of paragraph (7) of this subdivision by
July 1, 2013.
(2) If the
superintendent assigns a rating to an assuming insurer, the minimum reduced
amounts that may be withheld for full credit are as follows:
Rating by Superintendent |
Minimum Amount Withheld for Full
Credit |
Secure-1 |
0 percent |
Secure-2 |
10 percent |
Secure-3 |
20 percent |
Secure-4 |
50 percent |
Secure-5 |
75 percent |
Vulnerable-6 |
100 percent |
(3)
Affiliated reinsurance transactions shall be eligible for reduced security
requirements in the same manner as non-affiliated reinsurance
transactions.
(4) A certified
reinsurer may defer posting security for catastrophe recoverables for a period
of up to one year from the date of the first instance of a liability reserve
entry by the ceding company as a result of a catastrophic occurrence that is
likely to result in significant insured losses as recognized by the
superintendent, provided that the certified reinsurer continues to pay claims
in a timely manner. Deferral of reinsurance recoverables related specifically
to a catastrophic occurrence are permitted only for the following lines of
business, as reported on the NAIC annual financial statement:
(i) Line 1: Fire;
(ii) Line 2: Allied Lines;
(iii) Line 3: Farmowners Multiple
Peril;
(iv) Line 4: Homeowners
Multiple Peril;
(v) Line 5:
Commercial Multiple Peril;
(vi)
Line 9: Inland Marine;
(vii) Line
12: Earthquake;
(viii) Line 21:
Auto Physical Damage.
(5) A ceding insurer may take credit for
reinsurance under this subdivision only with respect to a reinsurance contract
entered into or renewed on or after the effective date that the assuming
insurer is certified pursuant to this subdivision. Any reinsurance contract
entered into before the effective date of such certification that is
subsequently amended after the effective date of the certification, or a new
reinsurance contract, covering any risk for which collateral was provided
previously, will only be subject to this subdivision with respect to losses
incurred and reserves reported from and after the effective date of the
amendment or new contract.
(6)
Nothing in this subdivision shall prohibit the parties to a reinsurance
agreement from agreeing to provisions establishing security requirements that
exceed the minimum security requirements established for certified reinsurers
under this subdivision.
(7)
Certification procedure.
(i) Upon receipt of
an application for certification, the superintendent will post notice on the
Department of Financial Services website that will include instructions on how
members of the public may respond to or comment upon the application. The
notice will remain posted for at least 30 days before the superintendent will
take action upon the application.
(ii) The superintendent will notify the
assuming insurer whether the assuming insurer's application to be a certified
reinsurer has been approved. If the superintendent certifies the assuming
insurer, the superintendent will include in the notification the rating
assigned to the certified reinsurer in accordance with paragraph (2) of this
subdivision. The superintendent will publish and make available to the public a
list of all certified reinsurers and their ratings.
(iii) To be eligible for certification, an
assuming insurer must:
(a) be domiciled and
licensed to transact insurance or reinsurance in a qualified jurisdiction, as
determined by the superintendent pursuant to paragraph (9) of this
subdivision;
(b) maintain capital
and surplus, or its equivalent, of no less than $250 million calculated in
accordance with subparagraph (iv)(h) of this paragraph. In the case of an
association including incorporated and individual unincorporated underwriters,
the association shall have minimum capital and surplus equivalents (net of
liabilities) of at least $250 million and a central fund containing a balance
of at least $250 million;
(c)
maintain financial strength ratings from two or more acceptable rating
agencies. These ratings shall be based on interactive communication between the
rating agency and the assuming insurer and shall not be based solely on
publicly available information. These financial strength ratings will be one
factor used by the superintendent in determining the rating assigned to the
assuming insurer. An acceptable rating agency is:
(1) Standard & Poor's;
(2) Moody's Investors Service;
(3) Fitch Ratings;
(4) A.M. Best Company; or
(5) any other nationally recognized
statistical rating organization acceptable to the
superintendent;
(d) an
assuming insurer applying to be a certified reinsurer shall agree to post 100
percent security upon the entry of an order of rehabilitation, liquidation or
conservation against the ceding insurer for the benefit of the ceding insurer
or its estate; and
(e) comply with
any other conditions that the superintendent requires to ensure
creditworthiness of the reinsurer.
(iv) The superintendent will rate each
certified reinsurer on a legal entity basis with due consideration for the
group rating, except that an association including incorporated and individual
unincorporated underwriters that has been approved to do business as a single
certified reinsurer may be evaluated on the basis of its group rating. In
determining the rating, the superintendent will take into account relevant
factors and review appropriate materials, including:
(a) the certified reinsurer's financial
strength rating from an acceptable rating agency. The maximum rating that a
certified reinsurer may be assigned will correspond to its financial strength
rating as outlined in the table in this clause. The lowest financial strength
rating received from an approved rating agency will be used in establishing the
maximum rating of a certified reinsurer. An insurer that has failed to obtain
or maintain at least two financial strength ratings from acceptable rating
agencies will lose its eligibility for certification;
Ratings |
A.M. Best |
S&P |
Moody"TMs |
Fitch |
Secure-1 |
A++ |
AAA |
Aaa |
AAA |
Secure-2 |
A+ |
AA+, AA, AA- |
Aa1, Aa2, Aa3 |
AA+, AA, AA- |
Secure-3 |
A |
A+, A |
A1, A2 |
A+, A |
Secure-4 |
A- |
A- |
A3 |
A- |
Secure-5 |
B++, B+ |
BBB+, BBB, BBB- |
Baa1, Baa2, Baa3 |
BBB+, BBB, BBB- |
Vulnerable-6 |
B, B-, C++, C+, C, C-, D, E, F |
BB+, BB, BB-, B+, B, B-, CCC, CC, C, D, R, NR |
Ba1, Ba2, Ba3, B1, B2, B3, Caa, Ca, C |
BB+, BB, BB-, B+, B, B-, CCC+, CCC, CCC-, DD |
(b)
the business practices of the certified reinsurer in dealing with its ceding
insurers, including its record of compliance with reinsurance contractual terms
and obligations;
(c) for a
certified reinsurer domiciled in the United States, the most recent applicable
NAIC Annual Statement Blank, either schedule F (for a property/casualty
reinsurer) or schedule S (for a life or health reinsurer);
(d) for a certified reinsurer not domiciled
in the United States, of the most recent form CR-F (for a property/casualty
reinsurer) or form CR-S (for a life or health reinsurer), as such forms shall
be prescribed by the superintendent;
(e) the reputation of the certified reinsurer
for prompt payment of claims under reinsurance agreements, based on an analysis
of ceding insurers' schedule F reporting of overdue reinsurance recoverables,
including the proportion of obligations that are more than 90 days past due or
are in dispute, with specific attention given to obligations payable to
companies that are in administrative supervision or receivership;
(f) regulatory actions against the certified
reinsurer;
(g) the report of the
independent auditor on the financial statements of the certified
reinsurer;
(h) for a certified
reinsurer not domiciled in the United States, audited financial statements,
regulatory financial statement filings, and an actuarial opinion as filed with
the certified reinsurer's domestic regulator, which shall be accompanied by a
translation into the English language as appropriate . Upon the initial
application for certification, the insurer shall provide the superintendent
with audited financial statements filed with its non-United States jurisdiction
regulator for at least the previous two years;
(i) the liquidation priority of obligations
to a ceding insurer in the certified reinsurer's domiciliary jurisdiction in
the context of an insolvency proceeding;
(j) a certified reinsurer's participation in
any solvent scheme of arrangement, or similar procedure, that involves United
States ceding insurers. A certified reinsurer that proposes participation by
the certified reinsurer in a solvent scheme of arrangement shall provide the
superintendent with prior notice of such scheme as early as practicable;
and
(k) any other information the
superintendent deems relevant.
(v) Upon direction by the superintendent, a
certified reinsurer shall adjust, as the superintendent deems appropriate, the
security that it is required to post based on the superintendent's analysis,
pursuant to subparagraph (iv)(e) of this paragraph, of the reinsurer's
reputation for prompt payment of claims. Subject to such additional adjustments
as the superintendent may deem necessary in accordance with this subparagraph,
a certified reinsurer shall, at a minimum, increase the security that it is
required to post by one rating level under subparagraph (iv)(a) of this
subdivision if:
(a) more than 15 percent of
the certified reinsurer's ceding insurance clients have overdue reinsurance
recoverables on paid losses of 90 days or more that are not in dispute and
exceed $100,000 for each cedent; or
(b) the aggregate amount of reinsurance
recoverables on paid losses, which are not in dispute and are overdue by 90
days or more, exceeds $50 million.
(vi)
(a)
The assuming insurer shall submit to the superintendent:
(1) a properly executed form CR-1 on a form
prescribed by the superintendent as evidence of its submission to the
jurisdiction of this State;
(2) an
appointment of the superintendent as an agent for service of process in this
State in accordance with Insurance Law section 1213; and
(3) an agreement to provide security for 100
percent of the assuming insurer's liabilities attributable to reinsurance ceded
by United States ceding insurers if it resists enforcement of a final U.S.
judgment.
(b) The
superintendent will not certify any assuming insurer that is domiciled in a
jurisdiction that the superintendent has determined does not adequately and
promptly enforce final U.S. judgments or arbitration
awards.
(vii) The
certified reinsurer shall agree to meet applicable information filing
requirements both with respect to an initial application for certification and
on an ongoing basis, and indicate in writing those portions of its filings that
it believes are exempt from disclosure pursuant to Public Officers Law section
87(2)(d). The certified reinsurer shall agree to:
(a) notify the superintendent within ten days
of any regulatory actions taken against it, any change in the provisions of its
domiciliary license or any change in rating by an approved rating agency,
including a statement describing the changes and the reasons
therefore;
(b) submit annually on
July 1st, form CR-F or CR-S, as applicable;
(c) submit annually on July 1st, the report
of the independent auditor on the financial statements of the certified
reinsurer, on the basis described in clause (d) of this subparagraph;
(d) submit annually on July 1st, audited
financial statements; regulatory financial statement filings; an actuarial
opinion as filed with the certified reinsurer's domestic regulator, which shall
be accompanied by a translation into the English language as appropriate ; and,
upon the initial certification, audited financial statements for the prior two
years filed with the certified reinsurer's domestic regulator;
(e) submit at least annually by July 1st, an
updated list of all disputed and overdue reinsurance claims regarding
reinsurance assumed from United States domestic ceding insurers;
(f) submit a certification from its domestic
regulator that the certified reinsurer is in good standing and maintains
capital in excess of the jurisdiction's highest regulatory action level;
and
(g) submit such other
information that the superintendent may reasonably require.
(viii) Change in rating or revocation of
certification.
(a) In the case of a downgrade
by a rating agency or other disqualifying circumstance, the superintendent will
upon written notice assign a new rating to the certified reinsurer in
accordance with the requirements of subparagraph (iv)(a) of this
paragraph.
(b) If the
superintendent upgrades the rating of a certified reinsurer, the certified
reinsurer may meet the security requirements applicable to its new rating on a
prospective basis, provided that the certified reinsurer posts security under
the previously applicable security requirements as to all contracts in force on
or before the effective date of the upgraded rating. If the superintendent
downgrades the rating of a certified reinsurer, the certified reinsurer shall
be subject to the security requirements applicable to its new rating for all
business that it has assumed as a certified reinsurer.
(c) The superintendent may suspend, revoke,
or otherwise modify a certified reinsurer's certification at any time if the
certified reinsurer fails to meet its obligations or security requirements
under this section, or if other financial or operating results of the certified
reinsurer, or documented significant delays in payment by the certified
reinsurer, lead the superintendent to reconsider the certified reinsurer's
ability or willingness to meet its contractual obligations.
(d) Upon the superintendent's suspension,
revocation or other termination of the certification of a certified reinsurer,
unless the assuming insurer posts security in accordance with section
125.6(b) of this
Part, the ceding insurer may not continue to take credit for reinsurance ceded
to the assuming insurer. If funds continue to be held in trust in accordance
with Part 126 of this Title (Insurance Regulation 114), the superintendent may
allow additional credit equal to the ceding insurer's pro rata share of such
funds, discounted to reflect the risk of uncollectibility and anticipated
expenses of trust administration. Notwithstanding the change of a certified
reinsurer's rating or suspension, revocation or other termination of its
certification, a domestic insurer that has ceded reinsurance to that certified
reinsurer may take credit for reinsurance for a period of three months for all
reinsurance ceded to that certified reinsurer, unless the superintendent finds
the reinsurance to be at high risk of
uncollectibility.
(8) Qualified jurisdictions.
(i) If, upon conducting an evaluation under
this paragraph with respect to the reinsurance supervisory system of any alien
assuming insurer, the superintendent determines that the jurisdiction qualifies
to be recognized as a qualified jurisdiction, the superintendent will publish
notice and evidence of such recognition in an appropriate manner. The
superintendent may withdraw recognition of a jurisdiction that is no longer
qualified and will provide notice by publication or otherwise.
(ii) In order to determine whether the
domiciliary jurisdiction of an alien assuming insurer is eligible to be
recognized as a qualified jurisdiction, the superintendent will evaluate the
reinsurance supervisory system of the non-U.S. jurisdiction, both initially and
on an ongoing basis, and consider the rights, benefits and the extent of
reciprocal recognition afforded by the non-U.S. jurisdiction to reinsurers
licensed and domiciled in the U.S. The superintendent will create and publish a
list of jurisdictions whose domiciliary reinsurers may be approved by the
superintendent as eligible for certification. No jurisdiction will be deemed to
be qualified unless it agrees to share information in accordance with Insurance
Law section 110 and cooperate with the superintendent with respect to all
certified reinsurers and reciprocal jurisdiction reinsurers domiciled within
that jurisdiction. Additional factors to be considered in determining whether
to recognize a qualified jurisdiction, in the discretion of the superintendent,
include the following:
(a) the framework
under which the assuming insurer is regulated;
(b) the structure and authority of the
domiciliary regulator with regard to solvency regulation requirements and
financial surveillance;
(c) the
substance of financial and operating standards for assuming insurers in the
domiciliary jurisdiction;
(d) the
form and substance of financial reports required to be filed or made publicly
available by reinsurers in the domiciliary jurisdiction and the accounting
principles used;
(e) the
domiciliary regulator's willingness to cooperate with U.S. regulators in
general and the superintendent in particular;
(f) the history of performance by assuming
insurers in the domiciliary jurisdiction;
(g) any documented evidence of substantial
problems with the enforcement of final U.S. judgments in the domiciliary
jurisdiction. A jurisdiction will not be considered to be a qualified
jurisdiction if the superintendent has determined that it does not adequately
and promptly enforce final U.S. judgments or arbitration awards;
(h) any relevant international standards or
guidance with respect to mutual recognition of reinsurance supervision adopted
by the International Association of Insurance Supervisors or successor
organization; and
(i) any other
matters deemed relevant by the superintendent.
(iii) The superintendent will consider the
list published through the relevant NAIC committee in determining qualified
jurisdictions. However, the superintendent may approve a jurisdiction as
qualified that does not appear on the list of qualified jurisdictions. In such
a case, the superintendent will provide notice to the relevant NAIC
committee.
(iv) A U.S. jurisdiction
that is NAIC-accredited will be deemed a qualified
jurisdiction.
(9) Recognition of certification issued by an
NAIC-accredited jurisdiction.
(i) If an
applicant for certification has been certified as a reinsurer in an
NAIC-accredited jurisdiction, the superintendent may accept that jurisdiction's
certification and rating, if the assuming insurer submits a properly executed
form CR-1 and any other additional information the superintendent requires. In
such a case, the assuming insurer will be considered a certified reinsurer in
this State.
(ii) Any change in the
certified reinsurer's status or rating in the other jurisdiction shall apply
automatically in this State as of the date it takes effect in the other
jurisdiction. The certified reinsurer shall notify the superintendent of any
change in its status or rating within 10 days after receiving notice of the
change.
(iii) The superintendent
may withdraw recognition of the other jurisdiction's rating at any time and
assign a new rating in accordance with paragraph (8)(vii)(a) of this
subdivision.
(iv) The
superintendent may withdraw recognition of the other jurisdiction's
certification at any time upon written notice to the certified reinsurer.
Unless the superintendent suspends, revokes or otherwise terminates the
certified reinsurer's certification, the certified reinsurer's certification
shall remain in good standing in this State for a period of three months, which
shall be extended if additional time is necessary to consider the assuming
insurer's application for certification in this State.
(10) Reinsurance contract terms. A ceding
insurer may not enter into a reinsurance contract with a certified assuming
insurer unless the reinsurance contract shall include:
(i) an insolvency clause as provided in
Insurance Law section 1308(a)(2)(A);
(ii) a funding clause requiring the certified
reinsurer to provide and maintain security in an amount sufficient to avoid the
imposition of any financial statement penalty on the ceding insurer under this
section for reinsurance ceded to the certified reinsurer;
(iii) a provision stating that any dispute,
suit, action or proceeding under the contract, or any dispute, suit, action or
proceeding related to or arising out of, directly, indirectly, or incidentally,
the contract, or out of the transactions and actions arising from performance
of the contract, will be subject to the jurisdiction, and resolved in the
courts, of the United States or any state thereof, and that the assuming
insurer submits to the personal jurisdiction of such court, will comply with
the requirements necessary to give that court jurisdiction, will abide by the
final decision of that court or of an appellate court in the event of an
appeal, and will consent to any effort to enforce the final decision of the
court in the home jurisdiction of the alien assuming insurer, including the
granting of full faith and credit or comity in the home jurisdiction of the
assuming insurer or any other jurisdiction where the assuming insurer is
subject to jurisdiction. Such provision shall not override an agreement between
the ceding insurer and the unauthorized alien assuming insurer to submit any
and all disputes to arbitration, in accordance with the laws of the U.S. or any
state thereof; and
(iv) a provision
stating that any dispute, suit, action or proceeding under the contract, or any
dispute, suit, action or proceeding related to or arising out of, directly,
indirectly, or incidentally, the contract, or out of the transactions and
actions arising from performance of the contract, will be governed by and
construed in accordance with either the laws of the State of New York or the
laws of the state in which the ceding insurer is domiciled or the laws of any
state chosen by the ceding insurer. Such provision shall not override an
agreement between the ceding insurer and the unauthorized alien assuming
insurer to submit any and all disputes to arbitration, in accordance with the
laws of the U.S. or any state thereof.
(11) Multibeneficiary Trusts. A certified
reinsurer may secure property/casualty insurance obligations incurred as a
certified reinsurer under this subdivision by the establishment and funding of
a multibeneficiary trust. Such multibeneficiary trust shall maintain a minimum
trusteed surplus of $10 million.
(i)
Alternative credit for cessions to reciprocal jurisdiction assuming insurers.
(1) A domestic ceding insurer may take credit
for reinsurance from an assuming insurer that is authorized to write
reinsurance by, and has its head office or is domiciled in, a reciprocal
jurisdiction, and that meets the other requirements of this
subdivision.
(2) An insurer shall
be allowed to take credit for reinsurance when the reinsurance is ceded from an
insurer domiciled in this state to an assuming insurer meeting the following
conditions:
(i) the assuming insurer is
licensed to transact reinsurance by, and has its head office or is domiciled
in, a reciprocal jurisdiction;
(ii)
the assuming insurer has and maintains on an ongoing basis minimum capital and
surplus, or its equivalent, calculated on at least an annual basis as of the
preceding December 31 or at the annual date otherwise statutorily reported to
the reciprocal jurisdiction, and confirmed as set forth in subparagraph (vii)
of this paragraph according to the methodology of its domiciliary jurisdiction,
in the following amounts:
(a) no less than
$250,000,000; or
(b) if the
assuming insurer is an association, including incorporated and individual
unincorporated underwriters, then:
(1)
minimum capital and surplus equivalents (net of liabilities) or own funds of
the equivalent of at least $250,000,000; and
(2) a central fund containing a balance of
the equivalent of at least $250,000,000;
(iii) the assuming insurer has and maintains
on an ongoing basis a minimum solvency or capital ratio, as applicable, as
follows:
(a) if the assuming insurer has its
head office or is domiciled in a reciprocal jurisdiction as defined in section
125.2(n)(1) of
this Part, then the ratio specified in the applicable covered
agreement;
(b) if the assuming
insurer is domiciled in a reciprocal jurisdiction as defined in section
125.2(n)(2) of
this Part, then a risk-based capital ratio of 300% of the authorized control
level, calculated in accordance with the formula developed by the NAIC;
or
(c) if the assuming insurer is
domiciled in a reciprocal jurisdiction as defined in section
125.2(n)(3) of
this Part, then after consultation with the reciprocal jurisdiction and
considering any applicable recommendations published by the NAIC, such solvency
or capital ratio as the superintendent determines to be an effective measure of
solvency;
(iv) the
assuming insurer agrees to and provides adequate assurance, on a form
prescribed by the superintendent, of its commitment as follows:
(a) the assuming insurer agrees to provide
prompt written notice and explanation to the superintendent if it falls below
the minimum requirements set forth in subparagraphs (ii) or (iii) of this
paragraph, or if any regulatory action is taken against it for material
noncompliance with applicable law;
(b) the assuming insurer consents in writing
to the jurisdiction of the courts of this State and to the appointment of the
superintendent as agent for service of process; provided that:
(1) the superintendent may require that the
assuming insurer provide and include such consent in each reinsurance agreement
under the superintendent's jurisdiction; and
(2) nothing in this subparagraph shall limit
or in any way alter the capacity of parties to a reinsurance agreement to agree
to alternative dispute resolution mechanisms, except to the extent such
agreements are unenforceable under applicable insolvency or delinquency
laws;
(c) the assuming
insurer consents in writing to pay all final judgments, wherever enforcement is
sought, obtained by a ceding insurer, that have been declared enforceable in
the jurisdiction where the judgment was obtained;
(d) each reinsurance agreement shall include
a provision requiring the assuming insurer to provide security in an amount
equal to 100% of the assuming insurer's liabilities attributable to reinsurance
ceded pursuant to that agreement if the assuming insurer resists enforcement of
a final judgment that is enforceable under the law of the jurisdiction in which
it was obtained or a properly enforceable arbitration award, whether obtained
by the ceding insurer or by its legal successor on behalf of its estate, if
applicable;
(e) the assuming
insurer confirms that it is not presently participating in any solvent scheme
of arrangement, which involves this state's ceding insurers, and agrees to
notify the ceding insurer and the superintendent and to provide 100% of the
assuming insurer's liabilities to the ceding insurer, should the assuming
insurer enter into such a solvent scheme of arrangement. Such security shall be
in one of the forms enumerated in section
125.6(b)(1), (2),
or (3) of this Part; and
(f) the
assuming insurer agrees in writing to meet the applicable information filing
requirements as set forth in subparagraph (v) of this
paragraph;
(v) the
assuming insurer or its legal successor provides, if requested by the
superintendent, on behalf of itself and any legal predecessors, the following
documentation to the superintendent:
(a) for
the two years preceding entry into the reinsurance agreement and on an annual
basis thereafter, the assuming insurer's annual audited financial statements,
in accordance with the applicable law of the jurisdiction of its head office or
domiciliary jurisdiction, as applicable, including the external audit
report;
(b) for the two years
preceding entry into the reinsurance agreement, the solvency and financial
condition report or actuarial opinion, if filed with the assuming insurer's
domestic regulator;
(c) prior to
entry into the reinsurance agreement and not more than semi-annually
thereafter, an updated list of all disputed and overdue reinsurance claims
outstanding for 90 days or more, regarding reinsurance assumed from ceding
insurers domiciled in the United States; and
(d) prior to entry into the reinsurance
agreement and not more than semi-annually thereafter, information regarding the
assuming insurer's assumed reinsurance by the ceding insurer, ceded reinsurance
by the assuming insurer, and reinsurance recoverable on paid and unpaid losses
by the assuming insurer to allow for the evaluation of the criteria set forth
in subparagraph (vi) of this paragraph;
(vi) the assuming insurer maintains a
practice of prompt payment of claims under reinsurance agreements; provided
that the lack of prompt payment will be evidenced if:
(a) more than 15% of the reinsurance
recoverables from the assuming insurer are overdue and in dispute, as reported
to the superintendent;
(b) more
than 15% of the assuming insurer's ceding insurers or reinsurers have overdue
reinsurance recoverable on paid losses of 90 days or more that are not in
dispute and that exceed for each ceding insurer $100,000, or as otherwise
specified in a covered agreement; or
(c) the aggregate amount of reinsurance
recoverable on paid losses which are not in dispute, but are overdue by 90 days
or more, exceeds $50,000,000, or as otherwise specified in a covered agreement;
and
(vii) the assuming
insurer's domestic regulator confirms to the superintendent in writing annually
that the assuming insurer complies with the requirements set forth in
subparagraphs (ii) and (iii) of this paragraph.
(3) Nothing in paragraph (2) of this
subdivision precludes an assuming insurer from providing the superintendent
with information on a voluntary basis.
(4) If the superintendent determines that an
assuming insurer no longer meets one or more of the requirements under this
subdivision, then the superintendent may revoke or suspend the eligibility of
the assuming insurer for recognition as a reciprocal jurisdiction assuming
insurer under this subdivision.
(i) While an
assuming insurer's eligibility is suspended, no reinsurance agreement issued,
amended or renewed on or after the effective date of the suspension qualifies
for credit except to the extent that the assuming insurer's obligations under
the contract are secured by one of the alternative methods enumerated in
section 125.6(b)(1), (2),
or (3) of this Part.
(ii) If an
assuming insurer's eligibility is revoked, then no credit for reinsurance may
be granted on or after the effective date of the revocation with respect to any
reinsurance agreements entered into by the assuming insurer, including
reinsurance agreements entered into prior to the date of revocation, except to
the extent that the assuming insurer's obligations under the contract are
secured by one of the alternative methods enumerated in section
125.6(b)(1), (2),
or (3) of this Part.
(5)
Before denying statement credit or imposing a requirement to post security in
accordance with paragraph (4) of this subdivision or adopting any similar
requirement that will have substantially the same regulatory impact as
security, the superintendent shall:
(i)
communicate with the ceding insurer, the assuming insurer, and the assuming
insurer's domestic regulator that the assuming insurer no longer satisfies one
of the conditions listed in paragraph (2) of this subdivision;
(ii) provide the assuming insurer with 30
days from the initial communication to submit to the superintendent a plan to
remedy the defect, and provide 90 days from the initial communication to remedy
the defect, except in exceptional circumstances in which a shorter period is
necessary to protect the interests of policyholders, contract holders, or the
people of this State and other consumer protection;
(iii) after the expiration of 90 days or
less, as set forth in subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph, if the
superintendent determines that the assuming insurer took no action or
insufficient action, then the superintendent may deny a statement credit or
impose a requirement to post security in accordance with paragraph (2) of this
subdivision; and
(iv) provide a
written explanation to the assuming insurer of this
paragraph.
(6) If the
assuming insurer is subject to a legal process of rehabilitation, liquidation,
or conservation then the ceding insurer, or its representative, may seek and,
if determined appropriate by the court in which the proceedings are pending,
may obtain an order requiring that the assuming insurer post security for all
outstanding liabilities.
(7)
Nothing in this subdivision shall limit or in any way alter the capacity of a
ceding insurer and an assuming insurer to agree on requirements for security,
or any other terms in a reinsurance agreement except as may be expressly
prohibited by this Part or other applicable provisions of the Insurance Law or
the regulations promulgated thereunder.
(8) A ceding insurer may take credit under
this subdivision for reinsurance agreements entered into, amended, or renewed
on or after the effective date of this subdivision with respect to losses
incurred and reserves reported on or after the later of the date on which the
assuming insurer has met the eligibility requirements of section
125.4(i)(2) of
this Part and the effective date of the new, amended, or renewed reinsurance
agreement. This paragraph does not alter or impair the ability of a ceding
insurer, to the extent that credit for reinsurance is not available under this
subdivision, to take credit for reinsurance under any other applicable
provision of this Part.
(9) Nothing
in this subdivision authorizes an assuming insurer to withdraw or reduce the
security provided under any reinsurance agreement, except as permitted by the
terms of the agreement.
(10)
Nothing in this subdivision shall limit or alter the capacity of a ceding
insurer and an assuming insurer to renegotiate the terms of a reinsurance
agreement.