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Financially Distressed Companies and Regulatory Options

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Title: Financially Distressed Companies and Regulatory Options


1
Financially Distressed Companies and Regulatory
Options
Midwestern Actuarial Forum Frederick O.
Kist March 22, 2005
2
Agenda
  • Changes Affecting Insolvencies
  • Insolvency Trends
  • Options
  • Priorities
  • Guaranty Funds and Their Role
  • Rising Cost of Insolvencies to Industry and
    Policyholders
  • Observations

3
Changes Affecting Insolvencies
  • Prior to RBC, regulators had limited tools to
    achieve control of the company before it fell
    below minimum capital and surplus requirements,
    resulting in insolvencies with fewer assets
  • Rating agencies were reluctant to downgrade
    companies to levels resulting in their collapse
    prior to any regulatory intervention
  • Introduction of RBC has focused regulatory
    oversight earlier on troubled companies
  • Entering mandatory control level the company will
    still have significant assets and positive
    surplus
  • Using risk-based tools, rating agencies are less
    reluctant to downgrade companies to commercially
    unacceptable levels - sealing the fate of a
    commercial lines carrier
  • In prior periods the company might have remained
    at a commercially acceptable level and over time
    resurrected itself
  • Results of these changes have produced a new
    group of troubled companies
  • Companies with significant assets, but
    insufficient surplus to assure full payment of
    claims

4
Insolvencies Trending Upward
  • Contributing Factors
  • Inadequate pricing combined with attempts to
    build market share in period of severe
    under-pricing
  • Acceleration of asbestos losses since 1999
  • Reduced investment income record low rates
  • Inability to replace funds from capital markets
  • Excessive leverage through use of reinsurance
  • Regulatory or rating agency action
  • Recent insolvencies dominated by commercial lines
    carriers
  • Reliance largest insolvency to date
  • 5.9 billion - assets
  • 8.7 billion liabilities
  • 144,000 claims

Includes companies that have triggered
regulatory action
5
Options
  • Commercial Run-off
  • Solvent Run-off
  • Commercial Run-off Leading to Judicial Proceeding
  • Receivership
  • Conservation
  • Rehabilitation
  • Liquidation

6
Commercial Run-off
  • Company decides to suspend underwriting and place
    business/operation into run-off
  • Company has the support of a parent or sufficient
    resources within its balance sheet to discharge
    remaining liabilities
  • Depending on RBC, run-off can either be
  • Free of reporting to the regulator,
  • Under informal oversight of the regulator, or
  • Under a formal administrative supervision
  • Company continues to collect premium receivables
  • Company continues to process claims for all
    policyholders and all other obligations
  • Company processes and recovers reinsurance
  • Company is in a substantial expense reduction
    mode working to eliminate costs staff,
    locations, and other overhead
  • Successful run-off will be able to discharge all
    claims at 100
  • Judicial proceeding (receivership) is unnecessary

7
Run-off leading to proceeding
  • Company has a high probability of entering a
    judicial proceeding before completely discharging
    claims
  • Under the supervision of the state, the company
    ceases writing policies and remains an operating
    company outside of a judicial proceeding
  • Company must maintain a positive surplus and can
    demonstrate it has liquid assets to meet
    obligations
  • Favorable settlement of liabilities generate
    surplus
  • Cash must be generated from the investment
    income, collection of receivables and conversion
    of other non-liquid assets
  • Minimal new cash from premiums
  • Contracts and obligations of the company remain
    in force subject to limits of corrective order
  • Company continues to process, in normal course,
    claims for all policyholders and all other
    obligations
  • Company processes and recovers reinsurance
  • Company is in a substantial expense reduction
    mode working to eliminate costs staff,
    locations, and other overhead
  • Company transitions into receivership at time
    when a surplus or liquidity event occurs

8
Options
  • Commercial Run-off
  • Solvent Run-off
  • Commercial Run-off Leading to Judicial Proceeding
  • Receivership
  • Conservation
  • Rehabilitation
  • Liquidation

9
Receivership - Conservation
  • Regulator has concluded that grounds requiring
    rehabilitation/liquidation exist and the interest
    of policyholders/creditors will be endangered by
    delay
  • Regulator seeks the protection of a judicial
    proceeding to provide a legal protection in the
    continued operation of the company
  • Contracts and obligations of the company remain
    in force subject to limits of corrective order
  • Certain transactions may require court approval
  • Under state and court supervision the company
    continues to operate
  • Paying claims in normal course and all other
    obligations
  • Converting receivables and non-liquid assets to
    cash
  • Reducing expenses
  • Conservation is a protective action which may be
    a precursor to rehabilitation/liquidation
  • Rehabilitation/liquidation action usually
    initiated shortly thereafter

10
Receivership - Rehabilitation
  • Regulator has concluded that grounds requiring
    rehabilitation exist and seeks a court order
  • Illinois code describes fifteen triggers
  • Regulator seeks an order of rehabilitation to
    provide a legal protection during this period
  • Commissioner is usually appointed receiver
  • The receiver takes over the operation of the
    company
  • Certain transactions may require court approval
  • If cash flow is insufficient to meet claims the
    rehabilitator will place a moratorium on claim
    payments
  • Claim payments are resumed after a plan of
    rehabilitation has been put in place
  • Guaranty funds do not respond to claims until
    liquidation and as such payments to claimants are
    delayed
  • Under rehabilitation court approval must be
    obtained on transactions over a threshold
    resulting in increased legal expense

11
Receivership - Liquidation
  • Regulator has concluded that grounds requiring
    liquidation exist and seeks a court order
  • Illinois code describes fifteen triggers
  • Under liquidation the liquidator marshals the
    assets and determines the estates liabilities
    subject to judicial oversight
  • All contracts are terminated any outstanding
    non-policy obligations will be treated as general
    creditor in any future distribution
  • All claim payments are halted and future payments
    from the estate are based on liquidation
    priorities
  • The companys duty to defend is terminated
  • Certain transactions may require court approval
  • An order of liquidation will generally trigger
    coverage by the guaranty funds resuming claim
    payments for those that are covered by the
    guaranty fund
  • Guaranty funds may get early access to the
    estates assets
  • Final distributions from the estate will take
    many years
  • Distribution of assets based on liquidation
    priorities

12
Liquidation Priorities
  • Receiver and guaranty fund administrative
    expenses
  • Includes ULAE and ALAE claims expenses
  • Perfected secured claims
  • Collateralized claims
  • Pre-filing employee obligations (capped)
  • Known claims
  • IBNR (estimated claims)
  • All claims owed to the U.S.
  • General creditors (assumed reinsurance)
  • Surplus notes holders
  • Equity interest of shareholders, members or other
    owners

13
Guaranty Funds and Their Role
  • Over 50 state guaranty associations across the US
  • Over 9 billion paid by funds in last 25 years
  • Have the capacity to assess the industry up to 4
    billion annually
  • Responsible for
  • Continuing timely claim payments upon triggering
    event
  • Allocating of the cost of insolvencies across
    companies writing within the state, and
  • Minimize financial loss to policyholders and
    claimants

14
Insolvency Cost - Industry
  • Assessments result due to a delay of recovery
    from estate or Inability of estate to fully
    reimburse guaranty funds
  • Current assessment capacity of funds is estimated
    at 4 billion, but may be limited by caps
  • In some cases funds have sought acceleration of
    alternative funding methods
  • CA WC Fund was authorized to issue bonds to cover
    750 million shortfall
  • Funds have proposed increasing the assessments or
    expansion of the base for assessment
  • Alternatively, funds could restrict coverage to
    fewer policyholders

15
Insolvency Cost - Policyholder
  • Policyholders must meet net worth test for
    guaranty fund to accept claim
  • Varies by state (10 50 million)
  • Policyholder with net worth in excess are not
    covered by guaranty funds
  • If eligible, guaranty fund will cover claim
    subject to fund limit
  • Varies by state 100,000 500,000
  • Defense cost is included in limit if claim
    covered by the guaranty fund
  • Judgments/settlements in excess of guaranty fund
    cap are the responsibility of the policyholder
  • Guaranty funds do not cover surety, assumed
    reinsurance, surplus lines policies, financial
    reinsurance, etc.
  • Policyholder can make claim on receiver, but
    amount and timing of recovery uncertain
  • Subject to liquidation priorities
  • Reimbursement subject to funds remaining in the
    estate
  • A separate and significant issue relates to the
    treatment of collateral and asset balances held
    by the company for the benefit of the
    policyholder
  • Receiver and guaranty funds have fought for
    control of collateral assets resulting in a lost
    benefit to the estate in receivership but
    enhances the ability of guaranty funds to pay out
    allowed funds
  • IL law has clarified collateral treatment, but
    has allowed for a 3 fee for collateral held

16
Insolvency Cost - Policyholder
  • Commercial policyholders receive less protection
    in current system
  • Potentially excluded from recovery through
    guaranty funds due to eligibility restrictions
  • Bifurcation of assets and liabilities under
    receivership eliminates the direct connection
    between claim payment and recovery from
    supporting asset (captive, collateral, specific
    program reinsurance)
  • Collateral pledged to cover their losses put to
    other use by receivers
  • Insurance companies ceding to an insolvent
    carrier are treated as general creditors and will
    likely recover little due to their low priority

17
Observations
  • Difficult to out-run a B downgrade
  • Agents may love you their EO carriers dont
  • Cash is king
  • Surplus is less meaningful
  • Encumbrances can threaten a successful runoff
  • Collateral triggers need to be identified before
    event
  • Modeling becomes very important
  • ULAE is a significant, but should not be
    considered a sufficient provision to assure a
    successful runoff
  • ULAE is the only accrued expense of many
    continuing non-accrued operating expenses
  • RBC should be reviewed for
  • Charge relating to run-off company expense burn
    or upward modification of the mandatory control
    level.
  • Some evaluation of encumbrances and collateral
    triggers should also be incorporated.
  • To run a company a CEO should have gone through a
    run-off experience
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