Mich. Admin. Code R. 500.849a - Variable life nonforfeiture values
Rule 9a.
(1) Minimum
cash surrender values for variable life insurance policies shall be determined
separately for the basic policy and any benefits and riders for which premiums
are paid separately. The methods pertain to a basic policy and any benefits and
riders for which premiums are not paid separately.
(2) The method of computation of minimum cash
surrender values for variable life policies shall be determined using the
retrospective method, the prospective method, or the maximum charge method.
(a) When variable life policy funds are
solely in 1 or more separate accounts, the retrospective method or the maximum
charge method may be used to compute minimum cash surrender values.
(b) In case of a combination general account
and separate account product providing for 1 basic amount of insurance but with
the policy value allocated among the general account and 1 or more separate
accounts and with mortality charges applicable to the difference between the
death benefit and the policy value, the applicable cash surrender value
procedures used may be either the maximum charge method or the retrospective
method. The method used shall be applicable to both the general account and the
separate account portions and all of the following provisions shall apply:
(i) The policy shall specify a guaranteed
rate of interest for the portion of the fund accumulated in the general
account.
(ii) Additions or amounts
derived from more favorable interest, mortality, and expense than those
guaranteed in the policy on the general account fund and credited within 12
months before surrender may be subject to forfeiture upon surrender.
(iii) At least once each year the insured has
the option to transfer all separate account funds to the general account and
apply his or her cash surrender value to purchase a guaranteed fixed paid-up
benefit.
(iv) Any amount of paid-up
whole life insurance provided under paragraph (iii) of this subdivision shall
be at least as great as that computed using the mortality table on which the
maximum mortality charges have been calculated and the interest rate guaranteed
in the policy. Any period of extended term insurance provided under paragraph
(iii) of this subdivision shall be at least as long as that using an extended
term insurance mortality table appropriate to the mortality table for the
maximum mortality charges and the interest rate guaranteed in the
policy.
(v) The annual report shall
note the availability of the option under paragraph (iii) of this
subdivision.
(3) As used in this rule:
(a) "Accumulation rate" means the net
investment return or any interest credits applied towards the policy
value.
(b) "Cash surrender value"
means the net cash surrender value plus any amounts outstanding as policy
loans.
(c) "Net cash surrender
value" means the maximum amount payable to the policy owner upon
surrender.
(d) "Policy value" means
the amount to which separately identified interest credits or investment return
and mortality, expense, or other charges are made under a variable life
insurance policy.
(e) "Valuation
rate" means the higher of the assumed investment rate (AIR) or guaranteed
interest included in the policy, if any, otherwise the highest valuation
interest rate allowed under the standard nonforfeiture law.
(4) All of the following
provisions apply to use of the retrospective method:
(a) The minimum cash surrender value before
adjustment for indebtedness and dividend credits, available on a valuation date
shall be equal to the value using the accumulation rate through that date of
the premiums paid minus the accumulation through that date of all of the
following:
(i) The benefit charges.
(ii) The averaged administrative expense
charges for the first policy year and any insurance increase years.
(iii) Actual administrative expense charges
for other years.
(iv) Initial and
additional acquisition expense charges not exceeding the initial or additional
expense allowances respectively.
(v) Any service charges actually made,
excluding charges for cash surrender or election of a paid-up nonforfeiture
benefit.
(vi) Any deductions made
for partial withdrawals.
(vii) All
accumulations being at the accumulation rate at which changes in policy values
have been made unconditionally to the policy or have been made conditionally,
but for which the conditions have since been met, and minus any unamortized,
unused initial and additional expense allowance.
(b) Accumulation for the premiums and for all
charges referred to in subdivision (a)(i) to (vi) of this subrule shall be
based on the accumulation rate for the applicable account or accounts from and
to such dates as are consistent with the manner in which such accumulation rate
is credited in determining the policy value.
(c) The benefit charges shall include the
charges made for mortality and any charges made for riders or supplementary
benefits for which premiums are not paid separately. If benefit charges are
substantially level by duration and develop low or no cash values, then the
commissioner shall have the right to require higher cash values unless the
insurer provides adequate justification that the cash values are appropriate in
relation to the policy's other characteristics.
(d) The administrative expense charges shall
include all of the following:
(i) Charges per
premium payment.
(ii) Charges per
dollar of premium paid.
(iii)
Periodic charges per thousand dollars of insurance.
(iv) Periodic per policy charges.
(v) Any other charges permitted by the policy
to be imposed without regard to the policyowner's request for
services.
(e) The
averaged administrative expense charges for any year shall be those which would
have been imposed in the year if the charge rate or rates for each transaction
or period within the year had been equal to the arithmetic average of the
corresponding charge rates which the policy states will be imposed in policy
years 2 through 20 in determining the policy value.
(f) The initial acquisition expense charges
shall be the excess of the expense charges, other than service charges,
actually made in the first policy year over the averaged administrative expense
charges for that year. Additional acquisition expense charges shall be the
excess of the expense charges, other than service charges, actually made in an
insurance increase year over the averaged administrative expense charges for
that year. An insurance increase year shall be the year beginning on the date
of increase in the amount of insurance by policyowner request or by the terms
of the policy.
(g) Service charges
shall include charges permitted by the policy to be imposed as a result of a
policyowner's request for a service by the insurer, such as the furnishing of
future benefit illustrations or of special transactions.
(h) The initial expense allowance shall be
the allowance provided by items (ii), (iii), and (iv) of paragraph 1 of
subsection (5), or by items (ii) and (iii) of paragraph 9 of subsection (5), as
applicable, of section 4060 of Act No. 218 of the Public Acts of 1956, as
amended, being S500.4060(5)(1)(ii),(iii), and (iv) or (5)(9)(ii) and (iii) of
the Michigan Compiled Laws, for a fixed premium, fixed benefit endowment policy
with a face amount equal to the initial face amount of the variable life
insurance policy, with level premiums paid annually until the highest attained
age at which a premium may be paid under the variable life insurance policy and
maturing on the latest maturity date permitted under the policy, if any,
otherwise at the highest age in the valuation mortality table. The unused
initial expense allowance shall be the excess, if any, of the initial allowance
over the initial acquisition expense charge as defined in this
subrule.
(i) If the amount of
insurance is subsequently increased upon request of the policyowner or by the
terms of the policy, an additional expense allowance and an unused additional
expense allowance shall be determined on a basis consistent with subdivision
(h) of this subrule and with paragraph 13 of subsection (5) of section 4060 of
Act No. 218 of the Public Acts of 1956, as amended, being S500.4060(5)(13) of
the Michigan Compiled Laws, using the face amount and the latest maturity date
permitted at that time under the policy.
(j) The unamortized, unused initial expense
allowance during the policy year beginning on the policy anniversary at age
x+t, where "x" is the issue age, shall be the unused initial expense allowance
multiplied by x+t/ x where " x+t" and " x " are present value of an annuity of
1 per year payable on policy anniversaries beginning at ages x+t and x,
respectively, and continuing until the highest attained age at which a premium
may be paid under the policy, both on the mortality guaranteed in the policy
and the valuation rate for the policy. An unamortized, unused additional
expense allowance shall be the unused additional expense allowance multiplied
by a similar ratio of annuities, with x replaced by an annuity beginning on the
date as of which the additional expense allowance was determined.
(5) All of the following
provisions apply to the use of the prospective method:
(a) The minimum cash surrender value before
adjustment for indebtedness and dividend credits which is available on a date
as of which interest is credited to the policy shall be equal to
(A)-(B)-(C)-(D). "A" means the present value of all future benefits. "B" means
the present value of future adjusted premiums. The adjusted premiums are
calculated as described in paragraphs 1 to 6 and 9 of subsection (5), as
applicable, of section 4060 of Act No. 218 of the Public Acts of 1956, as
amended, being S500.4060(5)(1) to (6) and (9) of the Michigan Compiled Laws. If
paragraph 9 of subsection (5) is applicable, the nonforfeiture net level
premium is equal to the quantity PVFB/ x , where "PVFB" is the present value of
all benefits at issue assuming future premiums are paid by the policy owner,
assuming all guarantees contained in the policy or declared by the insurer, and
using the valuation rate. x is the present value of an annuity of 1 per year
payable on policy anniversaries beginning at age x and continuing until the
highest attained age at which a premium may be paid under the policy. "C" means
the present value of any quantities analogous to the nonforfeiture net level
premium which arise because of guarantees declared by the insurer after the
issue date of the policy. x shall be replaced by an annuity beginning on the
date the declaration became effective and payable until the end of the period
covered by the declaration. The types of quantities included are increased
current interest rate credits guaranteed for a future period, decreased current
mortality rate charges guaranteed for a future period, or decreased current
expense charges guaranteed for a future period. "D" means the sum of any
quantities analogous to "B" which arise because of structural changes in the
policy. Structural changes are those changes which are separate from the
automatic workings of the policy. Such structural changes usually would be
initiated by the policy owner and include changes in the guaranteed benefits,
changes in latest maturity date, or changes in allowable premium payment
period.
(b) Future benefits are
determined by both of the following:
(i)
Projecting the policy value, taking into account future premiums, if any, and
using the guaranteed interest rate, if any; otherwise, the lesser of the air,
if any, or the highest state-approved nonforfeiture interest rate, and using
the mortality, expense deductions, and other provisions contained in the policy
or declared by the insurer.
(ii)
Taking into account any benefits guaranteed in the policy or by declaration
which do not depend on the policy value.
(c) All present values shall be determined
using an interest rate or rates specified by section 4060 of Act No. 218 of the
Public Acts of 1956, as amended, being S500. 4060 of the Michigan Compiled
Laws, for policies issued in the same year, and the mortality rates specified
by section 4060 of Act No. 218 of the Public Acts of 1956, as amended, for
policies issued in the same year or contained in such other table as may be
approved by the commissioner for this purpose.
(6) All of the following provisions apply to
the maximum charge method:
(a) As used in this
subrule:
(i) "Acquisition and other charges"
means charges deducted from gross premiums before they are credited to policy
value or made to the policy value. They may be expressed as a percentage of
premium or a dollar amount per $1,000.00 of insurance or a dollar amount per
premium payment or a per policy charge other than the administrative charge.
They do not include charges made as a reduction in investment return. These
charges may vary by premium size, policy size, and policy year.
(ii) "Administrative charge" means a per
policy charge made regularly to the policy value or deducted from premiums on
scheduled premium policies for the cost of administration. This charge shall
not be more than $5.00 per month in 1986. In subsequent years, the limit for
any new or in-force policy shall be the product of $5.00 and the ratio, not to
be more than 2.00 of the consumer price index for all urban households for the
September preceding the year for which the determination is being made to the
consumer price index for September, 1985. The commissioner may allow a higher
charge upon an insurer demonstrating justification.
(iii) "Benefit charges made to the policy
value" means the mortality charges made for life insurance on the insured
person or persons and any charge made for riders and supplementary
benefits.
(iv) "Cash surrender
value" means the policy value, less any surrender charge, before reduction for
outstanding loans or other amounts due under the policy.
(v) "Deferred acquisition and other charges"
means acquisition and other charges deducted from the policy value after the
first policy year.
(vi) "Excess
acquisition and other charges for a face amount increase" means the maximum
excess of "A" over "B" based on the assumption that the net level whole life
annual premium for the increase as defined in paragraph (x) of this subdivision
applies throughout the remaining premium paying period. "A" is the acquisition
and other charge for the increase and "B" is the arithmetic average of the
corresponding charges which the policy states would be made in the 19 policy
years following the increase.
(vii)
"Excess first-year acquisition and other charges" means the maximum excess of
"A" over "B" based on the assumption that any premium, other than a single
premium, payable in the first policy year is also payable during the entire
premium paying period. "A" is the acquisition and other charge made in the
first policy year and "B" is the arithmetic average of the corresponding
charges which the policy states would be made in policy years 2 through
20.
(viii) "Net investment return"
means the actual amount credited to policy value net of investment expenses or
other charges made as a reduction in investment return.
(ix) "Net level whole life annual premium at
issue" is based on the assumption of level insurance and level annual premium
for life, the mortality table rate used to calculate the maximum mortality
charges, and an interest rate based on the higher of 4% or that specified in
the policy.
(x) "Net level whole
life annual premium for an increase in the face amount of insurance" shall be
determined as of the date of the increase as though such increase were a
separate policy under paragraph (ix) of this subdivision. Only increases in the
face amount requested by the policy owner and increases in the face amount
pursuant to the terms of the policy, such as an option to purchase or a
cost-of-living increase, shall give rise to such a premium and the associated
excess acquisition and other charges for a face amount increase. Increases for
this purpose shall not include increases in face amount resulting from a change
in the death benefit option or changes in the death benefit pursuant to policy
terms that do not affect the face amount. Increases for this purpose shall be
reduced by the amounts of any earlier decreases that have not been offset
against an earlier increase. Such decreases shall include a decrease by reason
of a partial withdrawal, but not a decrease resulting from a change in the
death benefit option.
(xi) "Policy
value" means gross premiums paid, excluding separate identified premiums for
riders or supplementary benefits which are not credited to policy value, plus
net investment income, which may be positive or negative and may vary based on
policy loans, less the following as specified in the policy:
(A) Administrative charges, which may be
taken in part from premiums and in part from policy value.
(B) Acquisition and other charges.
(C) Deferred acquisition and other
charges.
(D) Benefit
charges.
(E) Service
charges.
(F) Partial
withdrawals.
(G) Partial surrender
charges.
(xii) "Service
charges made to the policy value" are charges for transactional costs, such as
partial withdrawals, reallocations of policy values, and benefit illustrations.
Transactional charges shall not be assessed unless specifically permitted by law or regulation for transactions made under mandatory policy provisions.
(xiii) "Surrender charge" is a deferred
charge made to the policy value in the event of a full or partial surrender of
the policy, reduction in the face amount of insurance or premium, or a
lapse.
(b) If cash
surrender values are determined in accordance with this subrule, then such cash
surrender values shall be considered to have satisfied the requirements for
minimum cash surrender values as provided in section 4060 of Act No. 218 of the
Public Acts of 1956, as amended, being S500.4060 of the Michigan Compiled Laws.
(i) Acquisition and other charges shall not
exceed the sum of all of the following:
(A)
90% of premiums received up to the net level whole life annual premium at
issue, regardless of when received.
(B) 10% of all other premiums
received.
(C) 90% of the net level
whole life annual premium for increases in the face amount of insurance as
defined in subdivision (a)(x).
(D)
$10.00 per $1,000.00 of initial face amount in the first policy year.
(E) $1.00 per $1,000.00 of face amount in
subsequent policy years.
(F) $10.00
per $1,000.00 of any increase in the face amount of insurance other than an
increase resulting from a change in the death benefit option. Increases up to
the amount of earlier decreases are included here but not in subparagraph (c)
of this paragraph.
(G) $200.00 per
policy in the first year.
(ii) A surrender charge may be established if
the initial surrender charge and the actual acquisition and other charges made
in the first policy year, and the actual acquisition and other charges on
premiums up to the net level whole life annual premium if received after the
first year, do not exceed the sum of subparagraph (A), subparagraph (B) in the
first year, subparagraph (D), and subparagraph (G) of paragraph (i) of this
subdivision. Additional surrender charges may be established after issue in
connection with an increase in the face amount if any such additional surrender
charge and any acquisition and other charges made in connection with such
increase do not exceed the sum of subparagraphs (C) and (F) of paragraph (i) of
this subdivision.
(iii) A deferred
acquisition and other charge may be charged against the policy value in any
policy after the first such that the total of all such charges imposed to date
plus the surrender charge for that year does not exceed the maximum initial
surrender charge. The deferred acquisition and other charge in any 1 year shall
not exceed the maximum allowable surrender charge for that year. Similar
deferred acquisition and other charges may be imposed with respect to an
increase in the face amount.
(iv)
The maximum allowable surrender charge for any year shall be the maximum
initial surrender charge multiplied by x+t/ x, where "x" is the issue age and
"t" is the number of years since issue. Similar maximums shall be determined
with respect to any additional surrender charges, with x and t based on the
date of increase.
(7) All of the following provisions apply to
minimum paid-up nonforfeiture benefits:
(a) If
a variable life insurance policy provides for the optional election of a
paid-up nonforfeiture benefit, it shall be such that its present value shall be
at least equal to the cash surrender value provided by the policy on the
effective date of the election. The present value shall be based on mortality
and interest standards at least as favorable to the policy owner as the
mortality and interest basis, if any, specified in the policy for determining
the policy value or the mortality and interest standards permitted for paid-up
nonforfeiture benefits by section 4060 of Act No. 218 of the Public Acts of
1956, as amended, being S500.4060 of the Michigan Compiled Laws. In place of
the paid-up nonforfeiture benefit, the insurer may substitute, upon a proper
request made not later than 60 days after the due date of the premium in
default, an actuarially equivalent alternative paid-up nonforfeiture benefit
which provides a greater amount or longer period of death benefits or, if
applicable, a greater amount or earlier payment of endowment
benefits.
(b) Any secondary
guarantees in a policy shall be taken into consideration when computing minimum
paid-up nonforfeiture benefits.
(c)
A charge may be made at the surrender of the policy if the result after the
deduction of the charge is not less than the minimum cash surrender value
required by this subrule.
(8) An insurer may use different methods to
compute minimum cash surrender values for different variable life policies, but
for any 1 policy form, an insurer shall use the same method for all issue ages.
An insurer may revise its method for new issues.
Notes
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