(1) The purpose and intent of this rule is to
implement the national standards governing reserve financing arrangements
pertaining to life insurance policies containing guaranteed nonlevel gross
premiums, guaranteed nonlevel benefits and universal life insurance policies
with secondary guarantees; and to ensure that, with respect to each such
financing arrangement, funds consisting of primary security and other security,
as defined in subsection (3) of this rule, are held by or on behalf of ceding
insurers in the forms and amounts required herein. In general, reinsurance
ceded for reserve financing purposes has one or more of the following
characteristics: some or all of the assets used to secure the reinsurance
treaty or to capitalize the reinsurer:
(a)
Are issued by the ceding insurer or its affiliates; or
(b) Are not unconditionally available to
satisfy the general account obligations of the ceding insurer; or
(c) Create a reimbursement, indemnification
or other similar obligation on the part of the ceding insurer or any if its
affiliates (other than a payment obligation under a derivative contract
acquired in the normal course and used to support and hedge liabilities
pertaining to the actual risks in the policies ceded pursuant to the
reinsurance treaty).
(2)
This rule shall apply to reinsurance treaties that cede liabilities pertaining
to covered policies, as that term is defined in paragraph (3)(b) of this rule,
issued by any life insurance company domiciled in this state.
(3) Definitions.
(a) "Actuarial method" means the methodology
used to determine the required level of primary security, as described in
subsection (5) of this rule.
(b)
"Covered policies" means policies, other than grandfathered policies and the
exemptions described in subsection (4) of this rule, of the following policy
types:
1. Life insurance policies with
guaranteed nonlevel gross premiums and/or guaranteed nonlevel benefits, except
for flexible premium universal life insurance policies; or
2. Flexible premium universal life insurance
policies with provisions resulting in the ability of a policyholder to keep a
policy in force over a secondary guarantee period.
(c) "Grandfathered policies" means policies
of the types described in subparagraphs (b)1. and (b)2. of this rule that were:
1. Issued prior to January 1, 2015;
and
2. Ceded, as of December 31,
2014, as part of a reinsurance treaty that would not have met one of the
exemptions set forth in subsection (4) of this rule, had the rule then been in
effect.
(d) "NAIC" means
the National Association of Insurance Commissioners.
(e) "Non-covered policies" means any policy
that does not meet the definition of covered policies, including grandfathered
policies.
(f) "Required level of
primary security" means the dollar amount determined by applying the actuarial
method to the risks ceded with respect to covered policies, but not more than
the total reserve ceded.
(g)
"Primary security" means the following forms of security:
1. Cash meeting the requirements of Section
624.610(5)(a),
F.S.;
2. Securities listed by the
NAIC Securities Valuation Office meeting the requirements of Section
624.610(5)(b),
F.S., but excluding any synthetic letter of credit, contingent note,
credit-linked note or other similar security that operates in a manner similar
to a letter of credit, and excluding any securities issued by the ceding
insurer or any of its affiliates; and
3. For security held in connection with
funds-withheld and modified coinsurance reinsurance treaties:
a. Commercial loans in good standing of CM3
quality and higher as defined and calculated pursuant to Section
624.4085(1)(m),
F.S.;
b. Policy loans;
and
c. Derivatives acquired in the
normal course and used to support and hedge liabilities pertaining to the
actual risks in the policies ceded pursuant to the reinsurance
treaty.
(h)
"Other security" means any security acceptable to the office pursuant to
Section 625.151, F.S., other than
security meeting the definition of primary security.
(i) "Valuation Manual" means the valuation
manual adopted by the NAIC as defined in Section
625.1212(2)(k),
F.S., with all amendments adopted by the NAIC that are effective for the
financial statement date on which credit for reinsurance is claimed.
(j) "VM-20" means "Requirements for
Principle-Based Reserves for Life Products," including all relevant
definitions, from the Valuation Manual defined in Section
625.1212(2)(k),
F.S.
(4) This rule does
not apply to the following situations:
(a)
Reinsurance of:
1. Policies that satisfy the
criteria for exemption set forth in paragraph
69O-164.020(6)(f) or
(g), F.A.C.; and which are issued before the
later of:
a. The effective date of this rule,
and
b. The date on which the ceding
insurer begins to apply the provisions of VM-20 (as defined in subsection (3)
of this rule) to establish the ceded policies' statutory reserves, but in no
event later than January 1, 2020;
2. Portions of policies that satisfy the
criteria for exemption set forth in paragraph
69O-164.020(6)(e),
F.A.C., and which are issued before the later of:
a. The effective date of this rule,
and
b. The date on which the ceding
insurer begins to apply the provisions of VM-20 to establish the ceded
policies' statutory reserves, but in no event later than January 1,
2020;
3. Any universal
life policy that meets all of the following requirements:
a. Secondary guarantee period, if any, is
five (5) years or less;
b.
Specified premium for the secondary guarantee period is not less than the net
level reserve premium for the secondary guarantee period based on the
Commissioners Standard Ordinary (CSO) valuation tables and valuation interest
rate applicable to the issue year of the policy as provided in Section
625.121(5),
F.S.; and
c. The initial surrender
charge is not less than 100 percent of the first year annualized specified
premium for the secondary guarantee period;
4. Credit life insurance;
5. Any variable life insurance policy that
provides for life insurance, the amount or duration of which varies according
to the investment experience of any separate account or accounts; nor
6. Any group life insurance certificate
unless the certificate provides for a stated or implied schedule of maximum
gross premiums required in order to continue coverage in force for a period in
excess of one year.
(b)
Reinsurance ceded to an assuming insurer that meets the applicable requirements
of Section 624.610(3)(c),
F.S.;
(c) Reinsurance ceded to an
assuming insurer that meets the applicable requirements of Section
624.610(3)(a) or
(3)(b), F.S., and that, in addition:
1. Prepares statutory financial statements in
compliance with the NAIC Accounting Practices and Procedures Manual, which are
incorporated by reference in Rule
69O-137.001, F.A.C., without any
departures from NAIC statutory accounting practices and procedures pertaining
to the admissibility or valuation of assets or liabilities that increase the
assuming insurer's reported surplus and are material enough that they need to
be disclosed in the financial statement of the assuming insurer pursuant to
Statement of Statutory Accounting Principles No. 1 ("SSAP 1"); and
2. Is not in a company action level event,
regulatory action level event, authorized control level event, or mandatory
control level event (as those terms are defined in Section
624.4085, F.S.), when its
risk-based capital ("RBC") is calculated in accordance with the life RBC report
including overview and instructions for companies, as the same may be amended
by the NAIC from time to time, without deviation;
(d) Reinsurance ceded to an assuming insurer
that meets the applicable requirements of Section
624.610(3)(a) or
(3)(b), F.S., and that, in addition:
1. Is not an affiliate, as that term is
defined in Section
624.10(1),
F.S., of:
a. The insurer ceding the business
to the assuming insurer; or
b. Any
insurer that directly or indirectly ceded the business to that ceding
insurer;
2. Prepares
statutory financial statements in compliance with the NAIC Accounting Practices
and Procedures Manual;
3. Is both:
a. Licensed or accredited in at least 10
states (including its state of domicile), and
b. Not licensed in any state as a captive,
special purpose vehicle, special purpose financial captive, special purpose
life reinsurance company, limited purpose subsidiary, or any other similar
licensing regime; and
4.
Is not, or would not be, below 500 percent of the authorized control level RBC
(as that term is defined in Section
624.4085, F.S.) when its RBC is
calculated in accordance with the life RBC report including overview and
instructions for companies, as the same may be amended by the NAIC from time to
time, without deviation, and without recognition of any departures from NAIC
statutory accounting practices and procedures pertaining to the admission or
valuation of assets or liabilities that increase the assuming insurer's
reported surplus;
(e)
Reinsurance ceded to an assuming insurer that:
1. Meets this state's conditions for
reciprocal jurisdiction reinsurers, as set forth in Section
624.610(4),
F.S., and Rule
69O-144.011, F.A.C.;
or
2. Is certified as a reinsurer
in this state, in accordance with Rule
69O-144.007, F.A.C.;
or
3. Maintains at least $250
million in capital and surplus when determined in accordance with the NAIC
Accounting Practices and Procedures Manual, including all amendments thereto
adopted by the NAIC, excluding the impact of any permitted or prescribed
practices; and is:
a. Licensed in at least 26
states; or
b. Licensed in at least
10 states, and licensed or accredited in a total of at least 35
states;
(f) If
a person submits a petition under Section
120.542, F.S., to the office,
reinsurance not otherwise exempt under paragraphs (a) through (e) if the
office, after consulting with the NAIC Financial Analysis Working Group (FAWG)
or other group of regulators designated by the NAIC, as applicable, determines
under all the facts and circumstances that all of the following apply:
1. The risks are clearly outside of the
intent and purpose of this rule (as described in subsection (1) of this
rule);
2. The risks are included
within the scope of this rule only as a technicality; and
3. The application of this rule to those
risks is not necessary to provide appropriate protection to policyholders. The
office shall publicly disclose any decision made pursuant to this paragraph to
exempt a reinsurance treaty from this rule, as well as the general basis
therefor (including a summary description of the
treaty).
(5)
The actuarial method.
(a) Actuarial Method.
The actuarial method to establish the required level of
primary security for each reinsurance treaty subject to this rule shall be
VM-20, applied on a treaty-by-treaty basis, including all relevant definitions,
from the Valuation Manual as then in effect, applied as follows:
1. For covered policies described in
subparagraph (3)(b)1. of this rule, the actuarial method is the greater of the
deterministic reserve or the net premium reserve (NPR) regardless of whether
the criteria for exemption testing can be met. However, if the covered policies
do not meet the requirements of the stochastic reserve exclusion test in the
Valuation Manual, then the actuarial method is the greatest of the
deterministic reserve, the stochastic reserve, or the NPR. In addition, if such
covered policies are reinsured in a reinsurance treaty that also contains
covered policies described in subparagraph (3)(b)2. of this rule, the ceding
insurer may elect to instead use subparagraph 2. of this paragraph as the
actuarial method for the entire reinsurance agreement. Whether subparagraph 1.
or 2. is used, the actuarial method must comply with any requirements or
restrictions that the Valuation Manual imposes when aggregating these policy
types for purposes of principle-based reserve calculations.
2. For covered policies described in
subparagraph (3)(b)2. of this rule, the actuarial method is the greatest of the
deterministic reserve, the stochastic reserve, or the NPR regardless of whether
the criteria for exemption testing can be met.
3. Except as provided in subparagraph 4., the
actuarial method is to be applied on a gross basis to all risks with respect to
the covered policies as originally issued or assumed by the ceding
insurer.
4. If the reinsurance
treaty cedes less than 100 percent of the risk with respect to the covered
policies then the required level of primary security may be reduced as follows:
a. If a reinsurance treaty cedes only a quota
share of some or all of the risks pertaining to the covered policies, the
required level of primary security, as well as any adjustment under
sub-subparagraph c. below, may be reduced to a pro rata portion in accordance
with the percentage of the risk ceded;
b. If the reinsurance treaty in a non-exempt
arrangement cedes only the risks pertaining to a secondary guarantee, the
required level of primary security may be reduced by an amount determined by
applying the actuarial method on a gross basis to all risks, other than risks
related to the secondary guarantee, pertaining to the covered policies, except
that for covered policies for which the ceding insurer did not elect to apply
the provisions of VM-20 to establish statutory reserves, the required level of
primary security may be reduced by the statutory reserve retained by the ceding
insurer on those covered policies, where the retained reserve of those covered
policies should be reflective of any reduction pursuant to the cession of
mortality risk on a yearly renewable term basis in an exempt
arrangement;
c. If a portion of the
covered policy risk is ceded to another reinsurer on a yearly renewable term
basis in an exempt arrangement, the required level of primary security may be
reduced by the amount resulting by applying the actuarial method including the
reinsurance section of VM-20 to the portion of the covered policy risks ceded
in the exempt arrangement, except that for covered policies issued prior to
January 1, 2017, this adjustment is not to exceed [cx/ (2 * number of
reinsurance premiums per year)] where cx is calculated using the same mortality
table used in calculating the NPR; and
d. For any other treaty ceding a portion of
risk to a different reinsurer, including but not limited to stop loss, excess
of loss and other non-proportional reinsurance treaties, there will be no
reduction in the required level of primary security.
It is possible for any combination of sub-subparagraphs a.,
b., c., and/or d. to apply. Such adjustments to the required level of primary
security will be done in the sequence that accurately reflects the portion of
the risk ceded via the treaty. The ceding insurer should document the rationale
and steps taken to accomplish the adjustments to the required level of primary
security due to the cession of less than 100 percent of the risk.
The adjustments for other reinsurance will be made only with
respect to reinsurance treaties entered into directly by the ceding insurer.
The ceding insurer will make no adjustment as a result of a retrocession treaty
entered into by the assuming insurers.
5. In no event will the required level of
primary security resulting from application of the actuarial method exceed the
amount of statutory reserves ceded.
6. If the ceding insurer cedes risks with
respect to covered policies, including any riders, in more than one reinsurance
treaty subject to this rule, in no event will the aggregate required level of
primary security for those reinsurance treaties be less than the required level
of primary security calculated using the actuarial method as if all risks ceded
in those treaties were ceded in a single treaty subject to this rule;
7. If a reinsurance treaty subject to this
rule cedes risk on both covered and non-covered policies, credit for the ceded
reserves shall be determined as follows:
a.
The actuarial method shall be used to determine the required level of primary
security for the covered policies, and subsection (6) of this rule shall be
used to determine the reinsurance credit for the covered policy reserves;
and
b. Credit for the non-covered
policy reserves shall be granted only to the extent that security, in addition
to the security held to satisfy the requirements of sub-subparagraph a., is
held by or on behalf of the ceding insurer in accordance with Sections
624.610(3) through
(5), F.S. Any primary security used to meet
the requirements of this sub-subparagraph may not be used to satisfy the
required level of primary security for the covered
policies.
(b)
Valuation used for Purposes of Calculations
For the purposes of both calculating the required level of
primary security pursuant to the actuarial method and determining the amount of
primary security and other security, as applicable, held by or on behalf of the
ceding insurer, the following shall apply:
1. For assets, including any such assets held
in trust, that would be admitted under the NAIC Accounting Practices and
Procedures Manual if they were held by the ceding insurer, the valuations are
to be determined according to statutory accounting procedures as if such assets
were held in the ceding insurer's general account and without taking into
consideration the effect of any prescribed or permitted practices;
and
2. For all other assets, the
valuations are to be those that were assigned to the assets for the purpose of
determining the amount of reserve credit taken in compliance with the valuation
manual defined in Section
625.1212(2)(k),
F.S.
(6)
Requirements Applicable to covered policies to Obtain Credit for Reinsurance;
Opportunity for Remediation
(a) Requirements.
Subject to the exemptions described in subsection (4) of this
rule and the provisions of paragraph (6)(b) of this rule, credit for
reinsurance shall be allowed with respect to ceded liabilities pertaining to
covered policies pursuant to Sections
624.610(2) through
(5), F.S., if, and only if, in addition to
all other requirements imposed by law or regulation, the following requirements
are met on a treaty-by-treaty basis:
1. The ceding insurer's statutory policy
reserves with respect to the covered policies are established in full and in
accordance with the applicable requirements of Section
625.121, F.S., and related
regulations and actuarial guidelines, and credit claimed for any reinsurance
treaty subject to this rule does not exceed the proportionate share of those
reserves ceded under the contract; and
2. The ceding insurer determines the required
level of primary security with respect to each reinsurance treaty subject to
this rule and provides support for its calculation as determined to be
acceptable to the office; and
3.
Funds consisting of primary security, in an amount at least equal to the
required level of primary security, are held by or on behalf of the ceding
insurer, as security under the reinsurance treaty within the meaning of Section
624.610(5),
F.S., on a funds withheld, trust, or modified coinsurance basis; and
4. Funds consisting of other security, in an
amount at least equal to any portion of the statutory reserves as to which
primary security is not held pursuant to subparagraph 3. above, are held by or
on behalf of the ceding insurer as security under the reinsurance treaty within
the meaning of Section
624.610(5),
F.S.; and
5. Any trust used to
satisfy the requirements of this subsection shall comply with all of the
conditions and qualifications of Section
624.610(5),
F.S., except that:
a. Funds consisting of
primary security or other security held in trust, shall for the purposes
identified in paragraph (5)(b) of this rule, be valued according to the
valuation rules set forth in that paragraph, as applicable; and
b. There are no affiliate investment
limitations with respect to any security held in such trust if such security is
not needed to satisfy the requirements of subparagraph (a)3.; and
c. The reinsurance treaty must prohibit
withdrawals or substitutions of trust assets that would leave the fair market
value of the primary security within the trust (when aggregated with primary
security outside the trust that is held by or on behalf of the ceding insurer
in the manner required by subparagraph (a)3.) below 102 percent of the level
required by subparagraph (a)3. at the time of the withdrawal or substitution;
and
d. The determination of reserve
credit under paragraph
69O-144.009(3)(e),
F.A.C, shall be determined according to the valuation rules set forth in
paragraph (5)(b) of this rule, as applicable; and
6. The reinsurance treaty has been approved
by the office.
(b)
Requirements at Inception Date and on an Ongoing Basis; Remediation
1. The requirements of paragraph (6)(a) must
be satisfied as of the date that risks under covered policies are ceded (if
such date is on or after the effective date of this rule) and on an ongoing
basis thereafter. Under no circumstances shall a ceding insurer take or consent
to any action or series of actions that would result in a deficiency under
subparagraph (6)(a)3. or 4. with respect to any reinsurance treaty under which
covered policies have been ceded, and in the event that a ceding insurer
becomes aware at any time that such a deficiency exists, it shall use its best
efforts to arrange for the deficiency to be eliminated as expeditiously as
possible.
2. Prior to the due date
of each Quarterly or Annual Statement required by Rule
69O-137.001, F.A.C., each life
insurance company that has ceded reinsurance within the scope of subsection (2)
shall perform an analysis, on a treaty-by-treaty basis, to determine, as to
each reinsurance treaty under which covered policies have been ceded, whether
as of the end of the immediately preceding calendar quarter (the valuation
date) the requirements of subparagraph (6)(a)3. or 4. were satisfied. The
ceding insurer shall establish a liability equal to the excess of the credit
for reinsurance taken over the amount of primary security actually held
pursuant to subparagraph (6)(a)3., unless either:
a. The requirements of subparagraph (6)(a)3.
or 4. were fully satisfied as of the valuation date as to such reinsurance
treaty; or
b. Any deficiency has
been eliminated before the due date of the Quarterly or Annual Statement to
which the valuation date relates through the addition of primary security
and/or other security, as the case may be, in such amount and in such form as
would have caused the requirements of subparagraph (6)(a)3. or 4. to be fully
satisfied as of the valuation date.
3. Nothing in subparagraph (6)(b)2. shall be
construed to allow a ceding company to maintain any deficiency under
subparagraphs (6)(a)3. or 4. for any period of time longer than is reasonably
necessary to eliminate it.
(7) No insurer that has covered policies as
to which this rule applies (as set forth in subsection (3) of this rule) shall
take any action or series of actions, or enter into any transaction or
arrangement or series of transactions or arrangements if the purpose of such
action, transaction or arrangement or series thereof is to avoid the
requirements of this rule, or to circumvent its purpose and intent, as set
forth in subsection (1) of this rule.