28 Tex. Admin. Code § 7.624 - Qualified Jurisdictions
(a) If the
Commissioner determines that the jurisdiction qualifies to be recognized as a
qualified jurisdiction under Insurance Code §
493.1035 and this
section, the Commissioner will publish notice of such recognition on the TDI
website. The Commissioner may suspend recognition of a jurisdiction that is no
longer qualified and will provide notice of the suspension on the TDI
website.
(b) The Commissioner will
evaluate the reinsurance supervisory system of the non-United States
jurisdiction and determine whether the jurisdiction is eligible to be
recognized as a qualified jurisdiction, both initially and on an ongoing basis.
The Commissioner must consider the rights, benefits, and the extent of
reciprocal recognition afforded by the non-United States jurisdiction to
assuming insurers licensed and domiciled in the United States. A qualified
jurisdiction must agree to share information and cooperate with the
Commissioner with respect to all certified assuming insurers domiciled within
that jurisdiction. A jurisdiction may not be considered to be a qualified
jurisdiction if the Commissioner has determined that it does not adequately and
promptly enforce final United States judgments or arbitration awards. The
Commissioner may, in the Commissioner's discretion, consider additional factors
in determining whether to recognize a qualified jurisdiction, including:
(1) the framework under which the assuming
insurer is regulated;
(2) the
structure and authority of the domiciliary regulator with regard to solvency
regulation requirements and financial surveillance;
(3) the substance of financial and operating
standards for assuming insurers in the domiciliary jurisdiction;
(4) the form and substance of financial
reports required to be filed or made publicly available by assuming insurers in
the domiciliary jurisdiction and the accounting principles used;
(5) the domiciliary regulator's willingness
to cooperate with United States regulators in general and the Commissioner in
particular;
(6) the history of
performance by assuming insurers in the domiciliary jurisdiction;
(7) any relevant international standards or
guidance with respect to mutual recognition of reinsurance supervision adopted
by the International Association of Insurance Supervisors or successor
organization; and
(8) any other
matters deemed relevant by the Commissioner.
(c) The Commissioner will consider the list
of qualified jurisdictions published through the NAIC Committee Process in
developing a list of qualified jurisdictions. If the Commissioner includes a
jurisdiction as qualified that does not appear on the NAIC list of qualified
jurisdictions, the Commissioner will provide documented justification for the
approval with respect to the criteria provided under subsection (b) of this
section.
(d) A United States
jurisdiction that meets the requirements for accreditation under the NAIC
financial standards and accreditation program will be deemed to be a qualified
jurisdiction in accordance with Insurance Code §
493.1035(f)
and included on the list.
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.