19 Miss. Code. R. 1-22.09 - Credit for Reinsurance - Reciprocal Jurisdictions
A. Pursuant to Miss. Code
Ann. §
83-19-151(f),
the commissioner shall allow credit for reinsurance ceded by a domestic insurer
to an assuming insurer that is licensed to write reinsurance by and has its
head office or is domiciled in a Reciprocal Jurisdiction, and which meets the
other requirements of this regulation.
B. A "Reciprocal Jurisdiction" is a
jurisdiction, as designated by the commissioner pursuant to Subsection D, that
meets one of the following:
(1) A non-U.S.
jurisdiction that is subject to an in-force covered agreement with the United
States, each within its legal authority, or, in the case of a covered agreement
between the United States and the European Union, is a member state of the
European Union. For purposes of this subsection, a "covered agreement" is an
agreement entered into pursuant to the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act,
31 U.S.C. §§
313 and
314, that is
currently in effect or in a period of provisional application and addresses the
elimination, under specified conditions, of collateral requirements as a
condition for entering into any reinsurance agreement with a ceding insurer
domiciled in this state or for allowing the ceding insurer to recognize credit
for reinsurance;
(2) A U.S.
jurisdiction that meets the requirements for accreditation under the NAIC
financial standards and accreditation program; or
(3) A qualified jurisdiction, as determined
by the commissioner pursuant to Miss. Code Ann. §
83-19-151(e)(iii)
and Rule
22.08(c) of this
Regulation, which is not otherwise described in paragraph (1) or (2) above and
which the commissioner determines meets all of the following additional
requirements:
(a) Provides that an insurer
which has its head office or is domiciled in such qualified jurisdiction shall
receive credit for reinsurance ceded to a U.S.-domiciled assuming insurer in
the same manner as credit for reinsurance is received for reinsurance assumed
by insurers domiciled in such qualified jurisdiction;
(b) Does not require a U.S.-domiciled
assuming insurer to establish or maintain a local presence as a condition for
entering into a reinsurance agreement with any ceding insurer subject to
regulation by the non-U.S. jurisdiction or as a condition to allow the ceding
insurer to recognize credit for such reinsurance;
(c) Recognizes the U.S. state regulatory
approach to group supervision and group capital, by providing written
confirmation by a competent regulatory authority, in such qualified
jurisdiction, that insurers and insurance groups that are domiciled or maintain
their headquarters in this state or another jurisdiction accredited by the NAIC
shall be subject only to worldwide prudential insurance group supervision
including worldwide group governance, solvency and capital, and reporting, as
applicable, by the commissioner or the commissioner of the domiciliary state
and will not be subject to group supervision at the level of the worldwide
parent undertaking of the insurance or reinsurance group by the qualified
jurisdiction; and
(d) Provides
written confirmation by a competent regulatory authority, in such qualified
jurisdiction that information regarding insurers and their parent, subsidiary,
or affiliated entities, if applicable, shall be provided to the commissioner in
accordance with a memorandum of understanding or similar document between the
commissioner and such qualified jurisdiction, including but not limited to the
International Association of Insurance Supervisors Multilateral Memorandum of
Understanding or other multilateral memoranda of understanding coordinated by
the NAIC.
C.
Credit shall be allowed when the reinsurance is ceded from an insurer domiciled
in this state to an assuming insurer meeting each of the conditions set forth
below.
(1) The assuming insurer must be
licensed to transact reinsurance by, and have its head office or be domiciled
in, a Reciprocal Jurisdiction.
(2)
The assuming insurer must have and maintain on an ongoing basis minimum capital
and surplus, or its equivalent, calculated on at least an annual basis as of
the preceding December 31 or at the annual date otherwise statutorily reported
to the Reciprocal Jurisdiction, and confirmed as set forth in Subsection (C)(7)
according to the methodology of its domiciliary jurisdiction, in the following
amounts:
(a) No less than $250,000,000;
or
(b) If the assuming insurer is
an association, including incorporated and individual unincorporated
underwriters:
(i) Minimum capital and surplus
equivalents (net of liabilities) or own funds of the equivalent of at least
$250,000,000; and
(ii) A central
fund containing a balance of the equivalent of at least $250,000,000.
(3) The
assuming insurer must have and maintain on an ongoing basis a minimum solvency
or capital ratio, as applicable, as follows:
(a) If the assuming insurer has its head
office or is domiciled in a Reciprocal Jurisdiction as defined in Section
(B)(1) of this section, the ratio specified in the applicable covered
agreement;
(b) If the assuming
insurer is domiciled in a Reciprocal Jurisdiction as defined in Section (B)(2)
of this section, a risk-based capital (RBC) ratio of three hundred percent
(300%) of the authorized control level, calculated in accordance with the
formula developed by the NAIC; or
(c) If the assuming insurer is domiciled in a
Reciprocal Jurisdiction as defined in Section (B)(3) of this section, after
consultation with the Reciprocal Jurisdiction and considering any
recommendations published through the NAIC Committee Process, such solvency or
capital ratio as the commissioner determines to be an effective measure of
solvency.
(4) The
assuming insurer must agree to and provide adequate assurance, in the form of a
properly executed Form RJ-1 (attached as an exhibit to this regulation), of its
agreement to the following:
(a) The assuming
insurer must agree to provide prompt written notice and explanation to the
commissioner if it falls below the minimum requirements set forth in paragraphs
(2) or (3) of this subsection, or if any regulatory action is taken against it
for serious noncompliance with applicable law.
(b) The assuming insurer must consent in
writing to the jurisdiction of the courts of this state and to the appointment
of the commissioner as agent for service of process.
(i) The commissioner may also require that
such consent be provided and included in each reinsurance agreement under the
commissioner's jurisdiction.
(ii)
Nothing in this provision shall limit or in any way alter the capacity of
parties to a reinsurance agreement to agree to alternative dispute resolution
mechanisms, except to the extent such agreements are unenforceable under
applicable insolvency or delinquency laws.
(c) The assuming insurer must consent in
writing to pay all final judgments, wherever enforcement is sought, obtained by
a ceding insurer, that have been declared enforceable in the territory where
the judgment was obtained.
(d) Each
reinsurance agreement must include a provision requiring the assuming insurer
to provide security in an amount equal to one hundred percent (100%) of the
assuming insurer's liabilities attributable to reinsurance ceded pursuant to
that agreement if the assuming insurer resists enforcement of a final judgment
that is enforceable under the law of the jurisdiction in which it was obtained
or a properly enforceable arbitration award, whether obtained by the ceding
insurer or by its legal successor on behalf of its estate, if
applicable.
(e) The assuming
insurer must confirm that it is not presently participating in any solvent
scheme of arrangement, which involves this state's ceding insurers, and agrees
to notify the ceding insurer and the commissioner and to provide one hundred
percent (100%) security to the ceding insurer consistent with the terms of the
scheme should the assuming insurer enter into such a solvent scheme of
arrangement. Such security shall be in a form consistent with the provisions of
Miss. Code Ann. §§
83-19-151(e)
and
83-19-153,
and Rules
22.12,
22.13 or
22.14 of this Regulation. For
purposes of this Regulation, the term "solvent scheme of arrangement" means a
foreign or alien statutory or regulatory compromise procedure subject to
requisite majority creditor approval and judicial sanction in the assuming
insurer's home jurisdiction either to finally commute liabilities of duly
noticed classed members or creditors of a solvent debtor, or to reorganize or
restructure the debts and obligations of a solvent debtor on a final basis, and
which may be subject to judicial recognition and enforcement of the arrangement
by a governing authority outside the ceding insurer's home
jurisdiction.
(f) The assuming
insurer must agree in writing to meet the applicable information filing
requirements as set forth in Paragraph (5) of this subsection.
(5) The assuming insurer or its
legal successor must provide, if requested by the commissioner, on behalf of
itself and any legal predecessors, the following documentation to the
commissioner:
(a) For the two years preceding
entry into the reinsurance agreement and on an annual basis thereafter, the
assuming insurer's annual audited financial statements, in accordance with the
applicable law of the jurisdiction of its head office or domiciliary
jurisdiction, as applicable, including the external audit report;
(b) For the two years preceding entry into
the reinsurance agreement, the solvency and financial condition report or
actuarial opinion, if filed with the assuming insurer's supervisor;
(c) Prior to entry into the reinsurance
agreement and not more than semi-annually thereafter, an updated list of all
disputed and overdue reinsurance claims outstanding for 90 days or more,
regarding reinsurance assumed from ceding insurers domiciled in the United
States; and
(d) Prior to entry into
the reinsurance agreement and not more than semi-annually thereafter,
information regarding the assuming insurer's assumed reinsurance by ceding
insurer, ceded reinsurance by the assuming insurer, and reinsurance recoverable
on paid and unpaid losses by the assuming insurer to allow for the evaluation
of the criteria set forth in Paragraph (6) of this subsection.
(6) The assuming insurer must
maintain a practice of prompt payment of claims under reinsurance agreements.
The lack of prompt payment will be evidenced if any of the following criteria
is met:
(a) More than fifteen percent (15%) of
the reinsurance recoverables from the assuming insurer are overdue and in
dispute as reported to the commissioner;
(b) More than fifteen percent (15%) of the
assuming insurer's ceding insurers or reinsurers have overdue reinsurance
recoverable on paid losses of 90 days or more which are not in dispute and
which exceed for each ceding insurer $100,000, or as otherwise specified in a
covered agreement; or
(c) The
aggregate amount of reinsurance recoverable on paid losses which are not in
dispute, but are overdue by 90 days or more, exceeds $50,000,000, or as
otherwise specified in a covered agreement.
(7) The assuming insurer's supervisory
authority must confirm to the commissioner on an annual basis that the assuming
insurer complies with the requirements set forth in Paragraphs (2) and (3) of
this subsection.
(8) Nothing in
this provision precludes an assuming insurer from providing the commissioner
with information on a voluntary basis.
D. The commissioner shall timely create and
publish a list of Reciprocal Jurisdictions.
(1) A list of Reciprocal Jurisdictions is
published through the NAIC Committee Process. The commissioner's list shall
include any Reciprocal Jurisdiction as defined under Section (B)(1) and (2),
and shall consider any other Reciprocal Jurisdiction included on the NAIC list.
The commissioner may approve a jurisdiction that does not appear on the NAIC
list of Reciprocal Jurisdictions as provided by applicable law, regulation, or
in accordance with criteria published through the NAIC Committee Process.
(2) The commissioner may remove a
jurisdiction from the list of Reciprocal Jurisdictions upon a determination
that the jurisdiction no longer meets one or more of the requirements of a
Reciprocal Jurisdiction, as provided by applicable law, regulation, or in
accordance with a process published through the NAIC Committee Process, except
that the commissioner shall not remove from the list a Reciprocal Jurisdiction
as defined under Section (B)(1) and (2). Upon removal of a Reciprocal
Jurisdiction from this list credit for reinsurance ceded to an assuming insurer
domiciled in that jurisdiction shall be allowed, if otherwise allowed pursuant
to Miss. Code Ann. §§
83-19-151
through
83-19-157
or this regulation
E.
The commissioner shall timely create and publish a list of assuming insurers
that have satisfied the conditions set forth in this section and to which
cessions shall be granted credit in accordance with this section.
(1) If an NAIC accredited jurisdiction has
determined that the conditions set forth in Subsection C have been met, the
commissioner has the discretion to defer to that jurisdiction's determination,
and add such assuming insurer to the list of assuming insurers to which
cessions shall be granted credit in accordance with this subsection. The
commissioner may accept financial documentation filed with another NAIC
accredited jurisdiction or with the NAIC in satisfaction of the requirements of
Subsection C.
(2) When requesting
that the commissioner defer to another NAIC accredited jurisdiction's
determination, an assuming insurer must submit a properly executed Form RJ-1
and additional information as the commissioner may require. A state that has
received such a request will notify other states through the NAIC Committee
Process and provide relevant information with respect to the determination of
eligibility.
F. If the
commissioner determines that an assuming insurer no longer meets one or more of
the requirements under this section, the commissioner may revoke or suspend the
eligibility of the assuming insurer for recognition under this section.
(1) While an assuming insurer's eligibility
is suspended, no reinsurance agreement issued, amended or renewed after the
effective date of the suspension qualifies for credit except to the extent that
the assuming insurer's obligations under the contract are secured in accordance
with Rule
22.11.
(2) If an assuming insurer's eligibility is
revoked, no credit for reinsurance may be granted after the effective date of
the revocation with respect to any reinsurance agreements entered into by the
assuming insurer, including reinsurance agreements entered into prior to the
date of revocation, except to the extent that the assuming insurer's
obligations under the contract are secured in a form acceptable to the
commissioner and consistent with the provisions of Rule
22.11.
G. Before denying statement credit or
imposing a requirement to post security with respect to Section F of this
section or adopting any similar requirement that will have substantially the
same regulatory impact as security, the commissioner shall:
(1) Communicate with the ceding insurer, the
assuming insurer, and the assuming insurer's supervisory authority that the
assuming insurer no longer satisfies one of the conditions listed in Subsection
C of this section;
(2) Provide the
assuming insurer with 30 days from the initial communication to submit a plan
to remedy the defect, and 90 days from the initial communication to remedy the
defect, except in exceptional circumstances in which a shorter period is
necessary for policyholder and other consumer protection;
(3) After the expiration of 90 days or less,
as set out in (2), if the commissioner determines that no or insufficient
action was taken by the assuming insurer, the commissioner may impose any of
the requirements as set out in this Subsection; and
(4) Provide a written explanation to the
assuming insurer of any of the requirements set out in this
Subsection.
H. If
subject to a legal process of rehabilitation, liquidation or conservation, as
applicable, the ceding insurer, or its representative, may seek and, if
determined appropriate by the court in which the proceedings are pending, may
obtain an order requiring that the assuming insurer post security for all
outstanding liabilities.
Notes
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