ARIZONA HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

Fifty-sixth Legislature

First Regular Session

House: COM DP 10-0-0-0


HB 2006: insurance; liquidity; financial assessment

Sponsor: Representative Livingston, LD 28

House Engrossed

Overview

Conforms Insurance Holding Company System statutes to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) Insurance Holding Company System Regulatory Act.

History

The NAIC is the U.S. standard-setting and regulatory support organization governed by the chief insurance regulators from each of the 50 states.  The NAIC provides expertise, data and analysis for insurance commissioners to effectively regulate the industry and protect consumers.

According to the NAIC, The Holding Company Act regulates certain activities of entities that are affiliated with insurance companies that would not otherwise be subject to such regulation as well as the acquisition of control of an insurer.  The Act contains certain reporting requirements, including the requirement that insurance company subsidiaries file information relating to capital structure, ownership, financial condition and general business operations. 

☐ Prop 105 (45 votes)	     ☐ Prop 108 (40 votes)      ☐ Emergency (40 votes)	☐ Fiscal NoteAn insurance holding company system is statutorily defined as two or more affiliated persons, one or more of whom is an insurer.  An insurance holding company system may consist of one company that directly or indirectly controls one or more other companies (A.R.S. § 20-481).

Provisions

1.   Includes additional provisions applicable to enterprise risk filings, including:

a)   requiring the ultimate controlling person to file an annual group capital calculation report and outlines the types of insurance holding companies that are exempt from filing the report;

b)   requiring certain ultimate controlling persons to file the results of a liquidity stress test and provides the provisions applicable to the liquidity stress test framework. (Sec. 3)

2.   Excludes the group capital calculation and the liquidity stress test framework from the exemption for nonmaterial items relating to a registration statement. (Sec. 4)

3.   Prescribes additional standards relating to certain insurance holding company transactions, including:

a)   permitting the Director of DIFI (Director) to require an insurer that is deemed to be in a hazardous financial condition to submit a deposit or a bond to protect the insurer;

b)   asserting that all records and data of the insurer that are held by an affiliate are the property of the insurer;

c)   allowing, at the request of the insurer, the receiver to obtain specified records and access to certain operating systems on which the data is maintained;

d)   specifying the insurer's premiums or other funds that are collected or held by an affiliate are the exclusive property of the insurer. (Sec. 5)

4.   Subjects certain affiliates to the jurisdiction of any supervision, seizure, conservatorship or receivership proceedings against the insurer and to the authority of any appointed supervisor, conservator, rehabilitator or liquidator enforcing or overseeing the affiliate's contractual obligations. (Sec. 5)

5.   Allows the Director to require that an agreement or contract for certain services specify that the insurer consents to the jurisdiction of any supervision, seizure, conservatorship or receivership proceedings. (Sec. 5)

6.   Adds that all insurance holding companies documents and materials that are in the possession or control of DIFI are considered proprietary and contain trade secrets. (Sec. 6)

7.   Directs the Director to maintain the confidentiality of:

a)   the group capital calculation, the group capital ratio and any group capital calculation information received from a supervised insurance holding company system; and

b)   the liquidity stress test results and supporting disclosures and any liquidity stress test framework information received from a supervised insurance holding company system. (Sec. 6)

8.   Permits the Director to share and receive specified documents, materials and information, and enter into agreements with, third-party consultants designated by the Director rather than NAIC's affiliates and subsidiaries. (Sec. 6)

9.   Allows the Director to prohibit NAIC or a third-party consultant from storing shared information in a permanent database after an underly analysis is completed. (Sec. 6)

10.  Allows the Director to provide notification of the identity of any third-party consultant to all applicable insurers. (Sec. 6)

11.  Clarifies documents, materials or other information in the possession or control of a third-party consultant designated by the Director, rather than NAIC's affiliates and subsidiaries, are confidential and privileged. (Sec. 6)

12.  Asserts the group capital calculation and the liquidity stress test are regulatory tools for assessing group risks and capital adequacy and are not a means to rank insurers or insurance holding companies. (Sec. 6)

13.  Specifies publishing or disseminating a statement regarding a group capital calculation or liquidity stress test results in a newspaper or other publication or over radio or any electronic means of communication would be misleading and is prohibited. (Sec. 6)

14.  Stipulates an insurer may publish written announcements with the sole purpose of rebutting a materially false statement. (Sec. 6)

15.  Defines pertinent terms. (Sec. 1)

16.  Makes technical changes. (Sec. 2, 3, 4, 5)

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20.                    HB 2006

21.  Initials PRB           Page 0 House Engrossed

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