Haw. Code R. § 16-170-2 - Acquisitions and dispositions of assets
(a) Materiality. No
acquisitions or dispositions of assets need be reported pursuant to section
16-170-1 if the acquisitions or dispositions are not material. For purposes of
this chapter, a material acquisition (or the aggregate of any series of related
acquisitions during any thirty-day period) or disposition (or the aggregate of
any series of related dispositions during any thirty-day period) is one that is
non-recurring and not in the ordinary course of business and involves more than
five per cent of the reporting insurer's total admitted assets as reported in
its most recent statutory statement filed with the insurance department of the
insurer's state of domicile.
(b)
Scope.
(1) Asset acquisitions subject to this
chapter include every purchase, lease, exchange, merger, consolidation,
succession, or other acquisition other than the construction or development of
real property by or for the reporting insurer or the acquisition of materials
for such purpose.
(2) Asset
dispositions subject to this chapter include every sale, lease, exchange,
merger, consolidation, mortgage, hypothecation, assignment (whether for the
benefit of creditors or otherwise), abandonment, destruction, or other
disposition.
(c)
Information to be reported.
(1) The following
information is required to be disclosed in any report of a material acquisition
or disposition of assets:
(A) Date of the
transaction;
(B) Manner of
acquisition or disposition;
(C)
Description of the assets involved;
(D) Nature and amount of the consideration
given or received;
(E) Purpose of,
or reason for, the transaction;
(F)
Manner by which the amount of consideration was determined;
(G) Gain or loss recognized or realized as a
result of the transaction; and
(H)
Names of all persons from whom the assets were acquired or to whom they were
disposed.
(2) Insurers
are required to report material acquisitions and dispositions on a
non-consolidated basis unless the insurer is part of a consolidated group of
insurers which utilizes a pooling arrangement or one hundred per cent
reinsurance agreement that affects the solvency and integrity of the insurer's
reserves and the insurer ceded substantially all of its direct and assumed
business to the pool.
An insurer is deemed to have ceded substantially all of its direct and assumed business to a pool if the insurer has less than $1,000,000 total direct plus assumed written premiums during a calendar year that are not subject to a pooling arrangement and the net income of the business not subject to the pooling arrangement represents less than five per cent of the insurer's capital and surplus.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.