19 Miss. Code. R. 1-43.05 - Contents of Corporate Governance Annual Disclosure
A. The
insurer or insurance group shall be as descriptive as possible in completing
the CGAD, with inclusion of attachments or example documents that are used in
the governance process, since these may provide a means to demonstrate the
strengths of their governance framework and practices.
B. The CGAD shall describe the insurer's or
insurance group's corporate governance framework and structure including
consideration of the following.
(1) The Board
and various committees thereof ultimately responsible for overseeing the
insurer or insurance group and the level(s) at which that oversight occurs
(e.g., ultimate control level, intermediate holding company, legal entity,
etc.). The insurer or insurance group shall describe and discuss the rationale
for the current Board size and structure; and
(2) The duties of the Board and each of its
significant committees and how they are governed (e.g., bylaws, charters,
informal mandates, etc.), as well as how the Board's leadership is structured,
including a discussion of the roles of Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and
Chairman of the Board within the organization.
C. The insurer or insurance group shall
describe the policies and practices of the most senior governing entity and
significant committees thereof, including a discussion of the following
factors:
(1) How the qualifications,
expertise and experience of each Board member meet the needs of the insurer or
insurance group.
(2) How an
appropriate amount of independence is maintained on the Board and its
significant committees.
(3) The
number of meetings held by the Board and its significant committees over the
past year as well as information on director attendance.
(4) How the insurer or insurance group
identifies, nominates and elects members to the Board and its committees. The
discussion should include, for example:
(a)
Whether a nomination committee is in place to identify and select individuals
for consideration.
(b) Whether
term limits are placed on directors.
(c) How the election and re-election
processes function.
(d) Whether a
Board diversity policy is in place and if so, how it functions.
(5) The processes in place for the
Board to evaluate its performance and the performance of its committees, as
well as any recent measures taken to improve performance (including any Board
or committee training programs that have been put in place).
D. The insurer or insurance group
shall describe the policies and practices for directing Senior Management,
including a description of the following factors:
(1) Any processes or practices (i.e.,
suitability standards) to determine whether officers and key persons in control
functions have the appropriate background, experience and integrity to fulfill
their prospective roles, including:
(a)
Identification of the specific positions for which suitability standards have
been developed and a description of the standards employed.
(b) Any changes in an officer's or key
person's suitability as outlined by the insurer's or insurance group's
standards and procedures to monitor and evaluate such changes.
(2) The insurer's or
insurance group's code of business conduct and ethics, the discussion of which
considers, for example:
(a) Compliance with
laws, rules, and regulations; and
(b) Proactive reporting of any illegal or
unethical behavior.
(3)
The insurer's or insurance group's processes for performance evaluation,
compensation and corrective action to ensure effective senior management
throughout the organization, including a description of the general objectives
of significant compensation programs and what the programs are designed to
reward. The description shall include sufficient detail to allow the
Commissioner to understand how the organization ensures that compensation
programs do not encourage and/or reward excessive risk taking. Elements to be
discussed may include, for example:
(a) The
Board's role in overseeing management compensation programs and practices.
(b) The various elements of
compensation awarded in the insurer's or insurance group's compensation
programs and how the insurer or insurance group determines and calculates the
amount of each element of compensation paid;
(c) How compensation programs are related to
both company and individual performance over time;
(d) Whether compensation programs include
risk adjustments and how those adjustments are incorporated into the programs
for employees at different levels;
(e) Any clawback provisions built into the
programs to recover awards or payments if the performance measures upon which
they are based are restated or otherwise adjusted;
(f) Any other factors relevant in
understanding how the insurer or insurance group monitors its compensation
policies to determine whether its risk management objectives are met by
incentivizing its employees.
(4) The insurer's or insurance group's plans
for CEO and Senior Management succession.
E. The insurer or insurance group shall
describe the processes by which the Board, its committees and Senior Management
ensure an appropriate amount of oversight to the critical risk areas impacting
the insurer's business activities, including a discussion of:
(1) How oversight and management
responsibilities are delegated between the Board, its committees and Senior
Management;
(2) How the Board is
kept informed of the insurer's strategic plans, the associated risks, and steps
that Senior Management is taking to monitor and manage those risks;
(3) How reporting responsibilities are
organized for each critical risk area. The description should allow the
Commissioner to understand the frequency at which information on each critical
risk area is reported to and reviewed by Senior Management and the Board. This
description may include, for example, the following critical risk areas of the
insurer:
(a) Risk management processes (An
ORSA Summary Report filer may refer to its ORSA Summary Report pursuant to the
Risk Management and Own Risk and Solvency Assessment Model Act);
(b) Actuarial function;
(c) Investment decision-making processes;
(d) Reinsurance decision-making
processes;
(e) Business
strategy/finance decision-making processes;
(f) Compliance function;
(g) Financial reporting/internal auditing;
and
(h) Market conduct
decision-making processes.
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.