28 Tex. Admin. Code § 8.3 - Hazardous Conditions and Remedy of Hazardous Conditions
(a) An insurer may be found to be in
hazardous condition when one or more of the following conditions are found to
exist by the commissioner:
(1) an insurer
does not file a financial statement within the time required by the Insurance
Code, or as requested by the agency;
(2) an insurer files financial information
which is false or misleading; releases false or misleading financial
information to lending institutions or the general public; or makes a false or
misleading entry or omits an entry of material amount in the insurer's
books;
(3) an insurer fails to
respond to inquiries related to the condition of the insurer or furnishes false
and misleading information concerning an inquiry;
(4) an insurer does not amend its financial
statement when requested by the agency;
(5) an insurer overstates its surplus by 25
percent or more;
(6) an insurer's
unassigned surplus has a deficit which is in excess of 20 percent of
surplus;
(7) an insurer's financial
ratios are outside the acceptable ranges as established by the National
Association of Insurance Commissioners or the insurer's financial condition is
otherwise hazardous as identified in the financial analysis tools and reports
of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners;
(8) adverse findings are reported in
financial condition and market conduct examination reports, audit reports, and
actuarial opinions, reports, or summaries of an insurer;
(9) the net reduction (excluding net income
and change in paid-in capital and change in paid-in or contributed surplus) to
the insurer's surplus is greater than 25 percent of beginning surplus on the
insurer's annual financial statements;
(10) an insurer's operating loss in the last
12-month period or any shorter period of time, including net capital gain or
loss, change in non-admitted assets and cash dividends paid to shareholders, is
greater than 50 percent of the insurer's remaining surplus in excess of the
minimum required;
(11) an insurer's
operating loss in the last 12-month period or any shorter period of time,
excluding net capital gains, is greater than 20 percent of the insurer's
remaining surplus in excess of the minimum required;
(12) a projection by the agency of an
insurer's current financial condition indicates that the sum of its paid-in
capital, paid-in surplus, and contributed surplus will be reduced within the
next 12 months;
(13) an insurer has
grown so rapidly and to such an extent that it lacks adequate financial and
administrative capacity to meet its obligations in a timely manner;
(14) an insurer has experienced, or will
experience in the foreseeable future, cash flow or liquidity
problems;
(15) an insurer's
aggregate net retained risk, direct or assumed, under any one insurance policy
or certificate of insurance under a group policy, is more than 10 percent of
the insurer's surplus, except where otherwise permitted by law;
(16) contingent liabilities, pledges, or
guaranties which, either individually or collectively, involve a total amount
which, in the opinion of the commissioner, may affect the solvency of the
insurer;
(17) an insurer has not
made adequate provision, according to presently accepted actuarial standards of
practice, for the anticipated cash flows required by the contractual
obligations and related expenses of the insurer, when considered in light of
the assets held by the insurer with respect to the reserves and related
actuarial items, including, but not limited to, the investment earnings on such
assets, and the considerations anticipated to be received and retained under
such policies and contracts;
(18)
management establishes reserves that do not comply with minimum standards
established by state insurance laws, regulations, statutory accounting
standards, sound actuarial principles and standards of practice, or
persistently engages in material under-reserving that results in adverse
development;
(19) an insurer's
reserves for losses and loss adjustment expenses are discounted more than 10
percent of surplus without the commissioner's prior written approval;
(20) an insurer has reinsurance reserve
credits, recoverables, or receivables which are disputed by the reinsurer, or
are due and payable and remain unpaid, and such reinsurance credits,
recoverables, and receivables are more than 10 percent of an insurer's surplus;
or a reinsurer does not have the ability to perform and the insurer's
reinsurance program does not provide sufficient protection for the insurer's
remaining surplus, after taking into account the insurer's cash flow, the
classes of business written, and the financial condition of the reinsurer; or
the reinsurer is insolvent or threatened with insolvency or delinquent in
payment of its monetary or other obligations and which, in the opinion of the
commissioner, may affect the solvency of the insurer;
(21) in the opinion of the commissioner, the
age and collectability of the insurer's receivables may affect the solvency of
the insurer;
(22) any entity within
the insurer's insurance holding company system is unable to pay its obligations
as they become due and payable, is insolvent, threatened with insolvency, or
delinquent in payment of its monetary or other obligations and which, in the
opinion of the commissioner, may affect the solvency of the insurer;
(23) an entity conducting business with the
insurer is delinquent in the transmitting or payment of net premiums to the
insurer;
(24) a life, accident, and
health insurer has premium writings which result in surplus being less than 5
percent of the aggregate general account reserves for the life insurance in
force plus 25 percent of the net annualized accident and health premium
writings;
(25) a property and
casualty insurer has net premium writings which, if annualized, would be an
amount more than 300 percent of surplus;
(26) an insurer consistently issues
subordinate premium or surplus debentures to finance its operations;
(27) an insurer does not maintain books and
records sufficient to permit examiners to determine the financial condition of
the insurer, examples of which include, but are not limited to:
(A) books and records of a domestic insurer
maintained outside the state of Texas in violation of the Insurance Code
Chapter 803;
(B) person(s)
responsible for generating or maintaining books of original entry for a
domestic insurer are officed outside the state of Texas; or
(C) an insurer moves, or maintains, the
location of the books and records necessary to conduct an examination without
notifying the agency of such location;
(28) an insurer has reinsurance agreements
affecting 20 percent or more of the insurer's gross written premiums, direct or
assumed, and the assuming insurers are not licensed to do insurance business in
the state of Texas;
(29) an insurer
has reinsurance credits taken or assets claimed on which there is not complete
evidence of reinsurance agreements with insurers, signed by the reinsurer, and
which are more than 10 percent of surplus;
(30) an insurer has transactions among
affiliates, subsidiaries, or controlling persons for which the insurer receives
assets or capital gains that do not provide sufficient value, liquidity, or
diversity to assure the insurer's ability to meet its outstanding obligations
as they mature, or which require all surplus funds which are in excess of an
insurer's statutory minimum capital and surplus, or equivalent, to be
distributed;
(31) an insurer's
management, including officers, directors, or any other person who directly or
indirectly controls the operation of an insurer, does not have the experience,
competence, fitness, reputation, or trustworthiness to operate the insurer in a
safe and sound manner;
(32) an
insurer's management engages in unlawful transactions, including, but not
limited to, failing to meet financial and holding company filing requirements,
in the absence of a reason satisfactory to the commissioner;
(33) an insurer or an affiliate does not
comply with the terms of an agreement entered into between the insurer and
affiliate;
(34) the administration
of an insurer's business is delegated to a person who, directly or indirectly,
produces more than 25 percent of the insurer's gross written premiums, or an
insurer delegates an insurance function necessary to the insurer's survival
without adequate controls or which creates a conflict of interest;
(35) one person, other than a full time,
salaried employee, controls production of more than 10 percent of the gross
written premiums of an insurer;
(36) an insurer has a pattern of not settling
valid claims within a reasonable time after due proofs of loss have been
received;
(37) an insurer does not
follow a policy on rating and underwriting standards appropriate to the
risk;
(38) an insurer violates the
Insurance Code Chapters 422 and 423;
(39) a final administrative or judicial
order, initiated by an insurance regulatory agency of another state, is issued
against an insurer;
(40) an insurer
is in any condition that the commissioner of insurance finds to present a
hazard to policyholders, creditors, or the general public.
(b) For purposes of making a determination of
an insurer's financial condition under this section, the commissioner may take
action, including:
(1) disregard any credit
or amount receivable resulting from transactions with a reinsurer that is
insolvent, impaired, or otherwise subject to a delinquency
proceeding;
(2) make appropriate
adjustments, including disallowance to asset values attributable to investments
or transactions consistent with the NAIC Accounting Policies and Procedures
Manual, state laws and regulations;
(3) refuse to recognize the stated value of
accounts receivable if the ability to collect receivables is highly speculative
in view of the age of the account or the financial condition of the debtor;
or
(4) increase the insurer's
liability in an amount equal to any contingent liability, pledge, or guarantee
not otherwise included if there is a substantial risk that the insurer will be
called on to meet the obligation undertaken within the next 12-month
period.
(c) If the
commissioner determines that the continued operation of the insurer licensed to
transact business in this state may be hazardous to its policyholders,
creditors, or the general public, then the commissioner may take any action the
commissioner considers reasonably necessary to remedy the hazardous condition,
including, but not limited to, those actions set forth in Insurance Code §
404.003(c)
and the following additional actions:
(1)
require the insurer to reduce, suspend, or limit the volume of business being
renewed;
(2) suspend or limit the
declaration and payment of dividends by an insurer to its stockholders or to
its policyholders;
(3) require the
insurer to file reports, in a form acceptable to the commissioner, concerning
the market value of an insurer's assets;
(4) require the insurer to limit or withdraw
from certain investments or discontinue certain investment practices, to the
extent the commissioner deems necessary;
(5) require the insurer to file, in addition
to regular annual statements, interim financial reports on the form adopted by
the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, or in a format acceptable
to the commissioner;
(6) require
the insurer to provide a business plan to the commissioner, in order to
continue to transact business in this state;
(7) adjust rates for any non-life insurance
product written by the insurer that the commissioner considers necessary to
improve the financial condition of the insurer, notwithstanding any other
provision of law limiting the frequency or amount of premium rate
adjustment;
(8) document the
adequacy of premium rates in relation to the risks insured; and
(9) correct corporate governance practice
deficiencies, and adopt and utilize governance practices acceptable to the
commissioner.
Notes
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