Title: Risk Transfer for Mortgage Captive Reinsurance Contracts
1Risk Transfer for Mortgage Captive Reinsurance
Contracts
- FASB 113 - Concepts
- March 6, 2002
2Scope
- FASB 113 applies to all insurance enterprises to
which FASB 60 applies - Regardless of its form, any transaction that
indemnifies an insurer against loss or liability
relating to insurance risk shall be accounted for
under FASB 113 - (unless specifically excluded).
3Definition of a Contract
- Determining whether a contract with a reinsurer
provides indemnification against loss or
liability relating to insurance risk requires a
complete understanding of that contract and other
contracts or agreements between the ceding
enterprise and related reinsurers. (FASB 113,
para. 8)
4Definition of a Contract
- Per FASB 113, par. 58
- A contract does not meet the conditions for
reinsurance accounting if features of the
reinsurance contract or other contracts or
agreements directly or indirectly compensate the
reinsurer or related reinsurers for losses. - That compensation may take many forms, and an
understanding of the substance of the contracts
or agreements is required to determine whether
the ceding enterprise has been indemnified
against loss or liability relating to insurance
risk. -
5Contract Amendments
- FASB 113 applies to reinsurance contracts
- entered into, renewed, or amended
- Risk transfer should be reassessed when
contractual terms are amended (EITF D-34, Q 11) - No specific guidance on how to assess risk
transfer after a contract amendment - (EITF D-34, Q 12)
6What is the Underlying Contract?
- For reinsurance accounting, it must first be
determined whether the contract is short or
long-duration before risk transfer can be applied - The determination is based on the underlying
contract - If the underlying contract is determined to be
short-duration, the reinsurance contract is also
short-duration - If the underlying contract is determined to be
long-duration, the reinsurance contract could be
either long or short-duration
7Short-Duration Contracts
- Short-duration contracts provide insurance
protection for a fixed period of short duration
and enables the insurer to cancel the contract or
to adjust the provisions of the contract at the
end of any contract period, such as adjusting the
amount of premiums charged or coverage provided.
(FASB 60, Para 7a) - examples most property and liability insurance
contracts, and credit life insurance
8Long-Duration Contracts
- Long-duration contracts generally are not
subject to unilateral changes in its provisions,
such as ability to cancel or guaranteed renewable
provisions, and requires the performance of
various functions and services (including
insurance protection) for an extended period.
(FASB 60, Para 7b) - examples whole-life contacts, guaranteed
renewable term life contracts, and annuity
contracts
9Short-Duration ContractsRisk Transfer Tests
- To be considered reinsurance, indemnification of
the ceding enterprise against loss or liability
relating to insurance risk in reinsurance of
short-duration contracts, requires both the
paragraph 9a and paragraph 9b tests of FASB
113 have to be met, unless the condition in
paragraph 11 is met.
10Short-Duration Contracts Risk Transfer Tests
-
- In addition to 9a and 9b tests
- a reinsurer shall not be considered to have
assumed significant insurance risk under the
reinsured contracts if the probability of a
significant variation in either the amount or
timing of payments by the reinsurer is remote...
(FASB 113 para 9)
11Short-Duration Contracts Risk Transfer - 9a Test
- Paragraph 9a test
- The reinsurer assumes significant insurance risk
under the reinsured portions of the underlying
insurance contracts - Transfer of insurance risk requires transferring
both - Underwriting risk
- Timing risk
12Short-Duration Contracts Risk Transfer - 9a Test
- Definition of Underwriting Risk
- Underwriting risk is defined as the uncertainty
at the inception of the contract of the ultimate
amount of cash flow from premiums, commissions,
claims and claim settlement expenses. (EITF D-34,
Q 21) - The amount of a reinsurers payments should
depend on and vary directly with the amount of
claims settled under the reinsured contracts. - (FASB 113, Para 62)
13Short-Duration Contracts Risk Transfer - 9a Test
- Definition of Timing Risk
- The timing of the receipt and the payment of cash
flows made to the ceding company from the
reinsurer must be uncertain at the origination of
the contract. - FASB 113 requires both significant variation in
the timing of claim payments and timely
reimbursement. - (EITF D-34, Q 22 and FASB 113, para 9)
- A reinsurers payments should depend on and vary
directly with the timing of the claims settled in
the underlying insurance policies. (EITF D-34, Q
20)
14Short-Duration Contracts Risk Transfer - 9b Test
- Paragraph 9b test
- It is reasonably possible that the reinsurer may
realize a significant loss from the transaction - Frequency and severity of losses associated with
the reinsurance contract are considered
15Short-Duration Contracts Risk Transfer - 9b Test
- Reasonable Possibility of a Significant Loss
- The ceding enterprise's evaluation of whether it
is reasonably possible for a reinsurer to realize
a significant loss from the transaction shall be
based on the present value of all cash flows
between the ceding and assuming enterprises under
reasonably possible outcomes, without regard to
how the individual cash flows are
characterized... - (FASB 113 para. 10)
16Short-Duration Contracts Risk Transfer - 9b Test
- Reasonable Possibility of a Significant Loss
- FASB 113 does not provide definitions of
significant or reasonably possible to be used
in evaluating the results of the test - What is reasonably possible?
- What is a significant loss?
17Short-Duration Contracts Risk Transfer - 9b Test
- Definition of Reasonably Possible
- Per FASB 5, the term reasonably possible is used
to mean that the scenario's probability is more
than remote. - Per EITF D-34, the test is applied to a
particular scenario, not to the individual
assumptions used in the scenario. - a scenario is not reasonably possible unless the
likelihood of the entire set of assumptions used
in the scenario occurring together is reasonably
possible
18Short-Duration Contracts Risk Transfer - 9b Test
- Definition of Significant Loss
- Per EITF D-34, to determine the significance of
the reinsurers loss - PV of all cash flows (related to the contract)
between the ceding and assuming enterprises under
reasonably possible outcome, - divided by
- PV of gross premiums
19Short-Duration ContractsParagraph 11 Exception
- If based on the evaluation of present value of
cash flows between the ceding and assuming
enterprise the reinsurer is not exposed to the
reasonable possibility of significant loss, the
ceding enterprise shall be considered indemnified
against loss or liability relating to insurance
risk only if - substantially all of the insurance risk
relating to the reinsured portions of the
underlying insurance contracts has been assumed
by the reinsurer . - (FASB 113, par. 11)
20Long-Duration Contracts Risk Transfer Tests
- Indemnification of the ceding enterprise against
loss or liability relating to insurance risk in
reinsurance of long-duration contracts requires - the reasonable possibility that the reinsurer
may realize significant loss from assuming
insurance risk
21Long-Duration Contracts Risk Transfer
- Generally, long-duration contracts with mortality
and morbidity risk are deemed to have insurance
risk (term life, whole life) - Other contracts that do not have mortality and
morbidity risk, may have insurance risk (title
insurance)
22Long-Duration Contracts Risk Transfer Tests
- A contract that does not subject the reinsurer to
the reasonable possibility of significant loss
from the events insured by the underlying
insurance contracts does not indemnify the ceding
enterprise against insurance risk (FASB 113 para
12)
23No Transfer of Insurance Risk
- If a reinsurance contract does not transfer
insurance risk, Deposit Accounting (SOP 98-7) is
applied - Task Force is discussing how SOP 98-7 should be
applied