Mich. Admin. Code R. 500.996 - Description of actuarial memorandum including asset adequacy analysis and regulatory asset adequacy issues summary
Rule 6.
(1) All of
the following apply:
(a) In accordance with
Section 830a of the Standard Valuation Law, the appointed actuary shall prepare
a memorandum to the company describing the analysis done in support of his or
her opinion regarding the reserves. The memorandum shall be made available for
examination by the commissioner upon his or her request but shall be returned
to the company after examination and shall not be considered a record of the
insurance department or subject to automatic filing with the
commissioner.
(b) In preparing the
memorandum, the appointed actuary may rely on, and include as a part of his or
her own memorandum, memoranda prepared and signed by other actuaries who are
qualified within the meaning of
R
500.994(2) with respect to the areas
covered in such memoranda, and so stated in their memoranda.
(c) If the commissioner requests a memorandum
and no such memorandum exists or if the commissioner finds that the analysis
described in the memorandum fails to meet the standards of the Actuarial
Standards Board or the standards and requirements of this rule, the
commissioner may designate a qualified actuary to review the opinion and
prepare such supporting memorandum as is required for review. The reasonable
and necessary expense of the independent review shall be paid by the company
but shall be directed and controlled by the commissioner.
(d) The reviewing actuary shall have the same
status as an examiner for purposes of obtaining data from the company and the
work papers and documentation of the reviewing actuary shall be retained by the
commissioner; provided, however, that any information provided by the company
to the reviewing actuary and included in the work papers shall be considered as
material provided by the company to the commissioner and shall be kept
confidential to the same extent as is prescribed by law with respect to other
material provided by the company to the commissioner pursuant to the statute
governing this rule. The reviewing actuary shall not be an employee of a
consulting firm involved with the preparation of any prior memorandum or
opinion for the insurer pursuant to this rule for any 1 of the current year or
the preceding 3 years.
(e) In
accordance with Section 830a of the Standard Valuation Law, the appointed
actuary shall prepare a regulatory asset adequacy issues summary, the contents
of which are specified in R 500.996(3). The regulatory asset adequacy issues
summary shall be submitted not later than March 15 of the year following the
year for which a statement of actuarial opinion based on asset adequacy is
required. The regulatory asset adequacy issues summary shall be confidential to
the same extent and under the same conditions as the actuarial
memorandum.
(2) Details
of the memorandum section documenting asset adequacy analysis. When an
actuarial opinion is provided, the memorandum shall demonstrate that the
analysis has been done in accordance with the standards for asset adequacy
referred to in
R
500.994(4) and any additional
standards under this rule. It shall specify the following:
(a) For reserves:
(i) Product descriptions including market
description, underwriting, and other aspects of a risk profile and the specific
risks the appointed actuary deems significant.
(ii) Source of liability in force.
(iii) Reserve method and basis.
(iv) Investment reserves.
(v) Reinsurance arrangements.
(vi) Identification of any explicit or
implied guarantees made by the general account in support of benefits provided
through a separate account or under a separate account policy or contract and
the methods used by the appointed actuary to provide for the guarantees in the
asset adequacy analysis.
(vii)
Documentation of assumptions to test reserves for the following:
(A) Lapse rates, both base and
excess.
(B) Interest crediting rate
strategy.
(C) Mortality.
(D) Policyholder dividend strategy.
(E) Competitor or market interest
rate.
(F) Annuitization
rates.
(G) Commissions and
expenses.
(H) Morbidity. The
documentation of the assumptions shall be such that an actuary reviewing the
actuarial memorandum could form a conclusion as to the reasonableness of the
assumptions.
(b) The following apply to assets:
(i) Portfolio descriptions, including a risk
profile disclosing the quality, distribution, and types of assets.
(ii) Investment and disinvestment
assumptions.
(iii) Source of asset
data.
(iv) Asset valuation
bases.
(v) Documentation of
assumptions made for the following:
(A)
Default costs.
(B) Bond call
function.
(C) Mortgage prepayment
function.
(D) Determining market
value for assets sold due to disinvestment strategy.
(E) Determining yield on assets acquired
through the investment strategy.
(c) For the analysis basis, the documentation
of the assumptions shall be such that an actuary reviewing the actuarial
memorandum could form a conclusion as to the reasonableness of the assumptions.
The following apply:
(i)
Methodology.
(ii) Rationale for
inclusion or exclusion of different blocks of business and how pertinent risks
were analyzed.
(iii) Rationale for
degree of rigor in analyzing different blocks of business, include in the
rationale the level of "materiality" that was used in determining how
rigorously to analyze different blocks of business.
(iv) Criteria for determining asset adequacy,
include in the criteria the precise basis for determining if assets are
adequate to cover reserves under "moderately adverse conditions" or other
conditions as specified in relevant actuarial standards of practice.
(v) Whether the impact of federal income
taxes was considered and the method of treating reinsurance in the asset
adequacy analysis.
(d)
Summary of material changes in methods, procedures, or assumptions from prior
year's asset adequacy analysis.
(e)
Summary of results.
(f)
Conclusions.
(3)
(a) The regulatory asset adequacy issues
summary shall include the following:
(i)
Descriptions of the scenarios tested, including whether those scenarios are
stochastic or deterministic, and the sensitivity testing done relative to those
scenarios. If negative ending surplus results under certain tests in the
aggregate, the actuary should describe those tests and the amount of additional
reserve as of the valuation date which, if held, would eliminate the negative
aggregate surplus values. Ending surplus values shall be determined by either
extending the projection period until the in force and associated assets and
liabilities at the end of the projection period are immaterial or by adjusting
the surplus amount at the end of the projection period by an amount that
appropriately estimates the value that can reasonably be expected to arise from
the assets and liabilities remaining in force.
(ii) The extent to which the appointed
actuary uses assumptions in the asset adequacy analysis that are materially
different than the assumptions used in the previous asset adequacy
analysis.
(iii) The amount of
reserves and the identity of the product lines that had been subjected to asset
adequacy analysis in the prior opinion but were not subject to analysis for the
current opinion.
(iv) Comments on
any interim results that may be of significant concern to the appointed
actuary.
(v) The methods used by
the actuary to recognize the impact of reinsurance on the company's cash flows,
including both assets and liabilities, under each of the scenarios
tested.
(vi) Whether the actuary
has been satisfied that all options whether explicit or embedded, in any asset
or liability, including but not limited to those affecting cash flows embedded
in fixed income securities, and equity-like features in any investments have
been appropriately considered in the asset adequacy analysis.
(b) The regulatory asset adequacy
issues summary shall contain the name of the company for which the regulatory
asset adequacy issues summary is being supplied and shall be signed and dated
by the appointed actuary rendering the actuarial opinion.
(4) Conformity to Standards of Practice. The
memorandum shall include a statement: "Actuarial methods, considerations, and
analyses used in the preparation of this memorandum conform to the appropriate
Standards of Practice as promulgated by the Actuarial Standards Board, which
standards form the basis for this memorandum."
(5) Use of assets supporting the interest
maintenance reserve and the asset valuation reserve. An appropriate allocation
of assets in the amount of the interest maintenance reserve (IMR), whether
positive or negative, shall be used in any asset adequacy analysis. Analysis of
risks regarding asset default may include an appropriate allocation of assets
supporting the asset valuation reserve (AVR); these AVR assets may not be
applied for any other risks with respect to reserve adequacy. Analysis of these
and other risks may include assets supporting other mandatory or voluntary
reserves available to the extent not used for risk analysis and reserve
support. The amount of the assets used for the AVR shall be disclosed in the
table of reserves and liabilities of the opinion and in the memorandum. The
method used for selecting particular assets or allocated portions of assets
shall be disclosed in the memorandum.
(6) The appointed actuary shall retain on
file, for at least 7 years, sufficient documentation so that it will be
possible to determine the procedures followed, the analyses performed, the
bases for assumptions, and the results obtained.
Notes
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