Virginia Administrative Code
Title 14 - INSURANCE
Agency 5 - STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION, BUREAU OF INSURANCE
Chapter 320 - RULES ESTABLISHING MINIMUM RESERVE STANDARDS FOR INDIVIDUAL AND GROUP ACCIDENT AND SICKNESS INSURANCE CONTRACTS
Section 14VAC5-320-50 - Contract reserves

Universal Citation: 4 VA Admin Code 5-320-50

Current through Register Vol. 41, No. 3, September 23, 2024

A. General.

1. Contract reserves are required, unless otherwise specified in subdivision 2, for:
a. All individual and group contracts with which level premiums are used; or

b. All individual and group contracts with respect to which, due to the gross premium pricing structure at issue, the value of the future benefits at any time exceeds the value of any appropriate future valuation net premiums at that time. The values specified in this subdivision shall be determined on the basis specified in subsection B of this section.

2. Contracts not requiring a contract reserve are:
a. Contracts which cannot be continued after one year from issue; or

b. Contracts already in force before the effective date of these standards for which no contract reserve was required under the immediately preceding standards.

3. The contract reserve is in addition to claim reserves and premium reserves.

4. The methods and procedures for contract reserves should be consistent with those claim reserves for any contract, or else appropriate adjustment must be made when necessary to assure provision for the aggregate liability. The definition of the date of incurral must be the same in both determinations.

B. Minimum standards for contract reserves; basis.

1. Morbidity or other contingency. Minimum standards with respect to morbidity are those set forth in Appendix A. Valuation net premiums used under each contract must have a structure consistent with the gross premium structure at issue of the contract as this relates to advancing age of the insured, contract duration and period for which gross premiums have been calculated.

Contracts for which tabular morbidity standards are not specified in Appendix A shall be valued using tables established for reserve purposes by a qualified actuary and acceptable to the Commission.

2. Interest. The maximum interest rate is specified in Appendix A.

3. Termination rates. Termination rates used in the computation of reserves shall be on the basis of a mortality table as specified in Appendix A except as noted in the following paragraph.

Under contracts for which premium rates are not guaranteed, and where the effects of company underwriting are specifically used by policy duration in the valuation morbidity standard or for return of premium or other deferred cash benefits, total termination rates may be used at ages and durations where these exceed specified mortality table rates, but not in excess of the lesser of:

a. Eighty percent of the total termination rate used in the calculation of the gross premiums, or

b. Eight percent. Where a morbidity standard specified in Appendix A is on an aggregate basis, such morbidity standard may be adjusted to reflect the effect of company underwriting by policy duration. The adjustments must be appropriate to the underwriting and be acceptable to the Commission.

4. Reserve method.
a. For insurance except long-term care and return of premium or other deferred cash benefits, the minimum reserve is the reserve calculated on the two-year full preliminary term method; that is under which the terminal reserve is zero at the first and also the second contract anniversary.

b. For long-term care insurance, the minimum reserve is the reserve calculated on the one-year full preliminary term method.

c. For return of premium or other deferred cash benefits, the minimum reserve is the reserve calculated as follows:

-On the one year preliminary term method if such benefits are provided at any time before the twentieth anniversary;

-On the two year preliminary term method if such benefits are only provided on or after the twentieth anniversary.

The preliminary term method may be applied only in relation to the date of issue of a contract. Reserve adjustments introduced later, as a result of rate increases, revisions in assumptions (e.g., projected inflation rates) or for other reasons, are to be applied immediately as of the effective date of adoption of the adjusted basis.

5. Negative reserves. Negative reserves on any benefit may be offset against positive reserves for other benefits in the same contract, but the total contract reserve with respect to all benefits combined may not be less than zero.

C. Alternative methods and assumptions generally. Provided the contract reserve on all contracts to which an alternative method or basis is applied is not less in the aggregate than the amount determined according to the applicable standards specified above, a company may use any reasonable assumptions as to interest rates, termination and/or mortality rates, and rates of morbidity or other contingency. Also, subject to the preceding condition, the company may employ methods other than the methods stated above in determining a sound value of its liabilities under such contracts, including, but not limited to the following: the net level premium method; the one-year full preliminary term method; prospective valuation on the basis of actual gross premiums with reasonable allowance for future expenses; the use of approximations such as those involving age groupings, groupings of several years of issue, average amounts of indemnity, grouping of similar contract forms; the computation of the reserve for one contract benefit as a percentage of, or by other relation to, the aggregate contract reserves exclusive of the benefit or benefits so valued; and the use of a composite annual claim cost for all or any combination of the benefits included in the contracts valued.

D. Tests for adequacy and reasonableness of contract reserves. Annually, an appropriate review shall be made of the company's prospective contract liabilities on contracts valued by tabular reserves, to determine the continuing adequacy and reasonableness of the tabular reserves giving consideration to future gross premiums. The company shall make appropriate increments to such tabular reserves if such tests indicate that the basis of such reserves is no longer adequate; subject, however, to the minimum standards of subsection B of this section.

In the event a company has a contract or a group of related similar contracts, for which future gross premiums will be restricted by contract, Commission regulation, or for other reasons, such that the future gross premiums reduced by expenses for administration, commissions, and taxes will be insufficient to cover future claims, the company shall establish contract reserves for such shortfall in the aggregate.

Statutory Authority

§§ 12.1-13, 38.2-223, 38.2-1311 and 38.2-1314 of the Code of Virginia.

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