Title: FINANCIAL REPORTING IN INSURANCE INDUSRTY Lessons From The Future
1FINANCIAL REPORTING IN INSURANCE INDUSRTY
Lessons From The Future
- A presentation at the Chartered Insurers
Professional forum held at Abeokuta - on 11 13 September, 2014
- By
- GEORGE ONEKHENA
- DEPUTY COMMISSIONER FINANCE AND ADMINISTRATION
- (NAICOM)
2OPENING SHOT
- Confronting Reality Doing what matters to get
things right - But the established methodologies for defining
the purpose of a business and planning its future
have drifted steadily away from realism. Many
people in business today are boxed in by
dysfunctional practices and habits that more
often than not obscure reality, rather than
expose it. Many have succeeded anyway in the
past. Fewer will in the future, because.the
business environment is becoming far less
forgiving of mistakes - Larry Bossidy and Ram Charan (2004) in
Confronting Reality Doing what matters to get
things right
3THOUGHT FOR FOOD
- Where
- will you be
- 11 September, 2084?
4OUTLINE
- Introduction
- Clarification of Terms
- Current Reporting Context Framework, Practices
and Evaluations - Emerging issues and related strategies
- Recommendation
- Conclusion
5INTRODUCTION
- I thank CIIN for a recognition implicit in the
opportunity to present this paper - Theme of this years forum is well chosen in
the era of rapid, unrelenting and pitiless
change that we live in today, we need knowledge
of the trends and how to manage them otherwise
failure is evitable .. - The insurance industry has gone through a lots
changes in the last 7 years more will come
because we need to address impact of inevitable
changes on our lives and business. - History is replete negative stories of people
and societies that resisted change. We cannot
afford not to be on good side of History.
6CLARIFICATION OF TERMS
- Financial reporting
- Financial statements
- Financial reporting supply chain
- Insurance industry
7CLARIFICATION OF TERMSFinancial reporting
- Financial reporting can simply be described as
the art of presenting of data on an entitys
financial position, performance and changes in
financial position for an accounting period. - The output of financial reporting process are
general purpose financial statements which are
distinguished by their target audience of
existing and potential investors, lenders and
other creditors - General purpose financial statements are
different from Statutory financial reporting
targeted at Regulators - This presentation will focus on general purpose
financial statements as impacted by regulatory
requirements
8CLARIFICATION OF TERMSFinancial Statements
- Financial Statements
- Financial statements includes
- a statement of financial position as at the end
of the period - a statement of comprehensive income for the
period - a statement of changes in equity for the period
- a statement of cash flows for the period
- notes, comprising a summary of significant
accounting policies and other explanatory
information - An entity may use titles for the statements other
than those used in this Standard. - Financial reporting framework
- Financial Reporting Framework is a set of
criteria used to determine recognition,
measurement, presentation, and disclosure of all
material items appearing in the financial
statements.
9CLARIFICATION OF TERMSFinancial Reporting Supply
Chain
- The financial reporting supply chain refers to
the people and processes involved in the
preparation, approval, audit, analysis and use of
financial reports.
10CLARIFICATION OF TERMSInsurance Industry
- All participants in the insurance value chain
and Includes - Intermediaries
- Insurance companies
- Reinsurers
- Facilitators
- Loss Adjusters
- Engineers
- Values
- Accountants
- Actuaries
- Arbitrators
11CURRENT FINANCIAL REPORTING CONTEXTInsurance
Financial Reporting Framework
12CURRENT FINANCIAL REPORTING CONTEXTFinancial
Reporting Framework
- FRC Act 2011
- Several innovation and demanding provisions,
enforcement yet to commence. Please note - Superiority of FRC Act on financial reporting
issues - Submission of annual reports and financial
statements to FRC. - Management assessment of internal controls with
independent attestation - Real time disclosures on material changes in
financial conditions or operations - Forfeiture of certain bonuses where the company
is required to prepare an accounting restatement - Submit all qualified reports
- Auditors to report separately on corporate
governance. - Auditors to notify any material irregularity
- Notification of conflict of interest to CEO of
reporting entity and FRC
13CURRENT FINANCIAL REPORTING CONTEXTFinancial
Reporting Framework
- Insurance Act
- Obstruction of Public officers.( S87)
- Offence by insurers in relation to investments.(S
88) - Misrepresentation by public officers ( S 89)
- Offence by body corporate ( S 90)
- Powers as to production of books, etc.( s 91)
14CURRENT FINANCIAL REPORTING CONTEXTFinancial
Reporting Practice
- Insurance Companies
- Transited to IFRS in 2012, with outstanding
issues - Weakness in Accounting systems
- Attitude to timelines and quality of financial
reporting need improvement - Insurance Brokers
- Transited to IFRS in 2013, training and
evaluation still on - NCRIB made commendable effort with the shared
service concept - Brokers in need of Accountants who will sign
Financial Statements - Challenges of competence deficits will need to be
addressed - Loss Adjuster
- Will transit to IFRS for SMEs in 2014.
- This should not be a major problem
15CURRENT FINANCIAL REPORTING CONTEXTEvaluation of
Financial Reporting Practice
- IMF/ World Bank FSAP report
- Poor accounting and auditing practices results
in supervisors spending too much time in
verifying the accuracy of financial data.
Supervisors spend more time verifying data than
analyzing them. This not only hinders effective
supervision, but also timely disclosure of
information to policyholders and the market in
general. NAICOM should collaborate with the FRC
to improve the reliability of the audited
financial statements, so that supervisors are
able to focus more on both quantitative analysis
and qualitative aspects of supervision. To
promote proper governance, NAICOM should take
insurers and directors to task for submitting
inaccurate information
16CURRENT FINANCIAL REPORTING CONTEXTEvaluation of
Financial Reporting Practice
- GIZ Report on regulation and Nigerian Market
- There is lack of transparency in commissions
paid and low reliability of financial data. In
addition, the financial statements are not very
transparent. Underlying reasons are not entirely
clear (e.g. low quality of audit, reporting
standards not being followed, etc.),but these
characteristics might be impacting competition
and perpetuating inaction in the market.
17CURRENT FINANCIAL REPORTING CONTEXTEvaluation of
Financial Reporting Practice
- Standards Poor Assessment of Insurance Industry
- Institutional framework (Weak--6) .We base our
view of Nigeria's institutional framework as weak
(6) on our assessment of two factors--regulatory
framework and track record, and governance and
transparency--as weak. Improvements in these
factors have come only slowly and both started
from a low base. Regulatory oversight will
improve as the regulator puts risk-based
supervision into operation and implements the
policies outlined above. However, we still have
concerns about the speed and comprehensiveness of
implementation and the availability of
technically skilled staff. We base our view of
the weak governance and transparency in the
sector on the poor quality and timeliness of
accounting and disclosure. That said, we expect
implementing International Financial Reporting
Standards to cause this to improve gradually.
18CURRENT FINANCIAL REPORTING CONTEXTLiving in an
age of Discontinuous Change
- A characterization of Change by Gary Hamel
- ...What confronts every company, large or small,
today and in the years ahead, is not merely the
challenge of harnessing the power of e but of
learning to thrive in a world where change is
discontinuous, unrelenting and pitiless. What
distinguishes the future from the past is not e
not electronic commerce, but t-profound and
inescapable environmental turbulence. Many
industrial-age paragons-from AT T to Motorola to
Coca-Cola to British Telecom to DaimlerChrysler
to Merrill Lynch- are right now struggling to
adapt to a world where change jumps and spins,
tumbles and careens - ....... Gary Hamel ,Leading the Revolution (
2002)
19EMERGING ISSUES STRATEGIESParade of Issues
- Change in NAICOM approval methodology
- Extracting Accountability for Financial report
- Embedding IFRS
- IFRS 4 phase II- Insurance Contracts
- Extensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL)
- Upgrade of Solvency Margin Regime
- Harmonization of accounting practices
- Implementation and enforcement of FRC Act 2011
- Concerns about Information Overload
20EMERGING ISSUES STRATEGIESChange in NAICOM
approval methodology
- Issues
- NAICOM change approval Methodology
- Limited Validation, more Analysis
- Management to be assessed by quality and
timelines of financial reports - NAICOM to pay more attention to Financial
Analysis using the CARAMELS framework C- Capital
, A- Asset Quality, R- Reinsurance , A- Actuarial
, M- Management, E- Earnings ,L- Liquidity and S-
subsidiaries - Strategies
- Improve internal control over financial
reporting - Companies to do internal CARAMELS analysis
21EMERGING ISSUES STRATEGIESExtracting
Accountability for Financial report
- Issues
- Board to be held accountable and required to
ensure deficiencies are corrected. - Shareholders will not bear cost of penalties.
- Auditor to be backlisted for acts of omission and
commission - Strategies
- Learn the legal implications of delays in or
failure to render financial reports Read NAICOM
Act 1997 and Insurance Act 2003 - All parties in the reporting supply chain should
be alive to their responsibility - Periodic financial statements should be analyzed
to detect errors - Make staff accountable for errors
22EMERGING ISSUES STRATEGIESEmbedding IFRS
- Issues
- Financial reporting practices to be IFRS
compliant - Significant improvement in IFRS competence
required - Embedding of Risk Management
- Deficiencies in current IT applications in
Financial reporting - Strategies
- Conduct honest assessment of state of IFRS
reporting practices - Improve internal control of financial reporting
- Improve learning and development
- Upgrade of change IT application( Industry shared
services concept?)
23EMERGING ISSUES STRATEGIESNew Standards with
prospective application
- The standard - IFRS 9
- FRS 9 (2014) was issued as a complete standard
to replace IAS 39 on financial instrument. - Effective with effect from 1 January 2018 ,
early adoption permitted - New classification for financial instruments
- Basis of impairment now expected-Loss in place
of incurred loss model - Issues
- Need exploit time available to prepare for
change - Strategies
- Companies to determine impact of IFRS 9 and
ensure need full done - Accountant should study IFRS 9 and ensure
financial report for 2018 reflects proper
treatment of items. - Remember comparatives for 2017 will be required
24EMERGING ISSUES STRATEGIESIFRS 4 phase II-
Insurance Contracts
- Major Issues
- The proposed standard, if adopted will replace
IFRS 4 Insurance Contracts phase 1, - Possible effective date 1 January 2018
- Will establish a single consistent recognition,
measurement, presentation and disclosure model - New approaches to financial position and income
statement presentation - Basis of Valuation of liabilities the change
especially with use of present value techniques - Unbundling contracts into insurance and
investment components - Increased need to assess enterprise risks
- Strategies
- Study and monitor developments in the standard
setting process - Note possible impact and incorporate same in
strategic planning, even if on scenario basis - As Industry, consider involvement in standard
setting process
25EMERGING ISSUES STRATEGIESStandards in
process
IASB Due Process
Rigorous, open , usually webcast process
26EMERGING ISSUES STRATEGIESExtensible Business
Reporting Language- XBRL
- Issues
- XBRL (eXtensible Business Reporting Language) is
a digital 'language' that was developed to
provide a common, electronic format for business
and financial reporting. - Mark-up tags are used to make business
information computer-readable and consumable. - It offers cost savings, greater efficiency and
improved accuracy and reliability to all those
involved in supplying or using business
information - Will come into regulatory reporting in the future
- Capability exist in current software
- Strategies
- Understand XBRL
- Make conscious decision on when to apply
- Expect Regulators Position on it
27EMERGING ISSUES STRATEGIESUpgrading Solvency
Regime
- Issues
- IMF FSAP Evaluation The solvency regime,
valuation and the reserve requirements need to be
upgraded to capture the nature of risk inherent
in each insurer. - NAICOM is transit to Risk based supervision and
the industry will be involved in all effort
leading to the change - Solvency regime has implications for
measurements, presentation and disclosure
practices of insurance companies. - Standards and guidelines on this can be found in
Insurance Core Principles (ICPS) issued by IAIS.
( See Appendix 1) - Solvency II model is an example of a risk based
solvency regime. - Strategy
- Learn implications and keep up to date on
progress in transit to Risk based supervision - Be involved as much as possible
28RECOMMENDATION
- All those with role in the financial reporting
change should be awake to the reality that the
field is going to be continuously subject to
changes both from the standard setting Boards,
Regulators and service providers especially in
the area of information technology - They should therefore keep abreast of development
with attention to details that may be required - Establish a framework for dealing with changes in
a proactive determined way - Establish accountability for identifying and
monitoring change in Financial Reporting - Ensure emerging changes receive appropriate
attention at relevant levels - Take actions considered necessary
- Monitor Results
29RECOMMENDATIONLife Action Map
Determinants of where issues fall for each of us
include natural endowment, gift, knowledge,
orientation, resource controlled...
30CONCLUSION
- There various issues emerging in the financial
reporting framework - IFRS and regulatory requirements will continue to
drive changes in financial reporting - Individual and organizations have critical roles
to play - There is need for appropriate strategies to be
chosen and deployed - Thanks for you attention
31 32EMERGING ISSUES STRATEGIESUpgrading Solvency
RegimeCommon Solvency Structure and Standards
33EMERGING ISSUES STRATEGIESUpgrading Solvency
RegimeRegulatory Financial requirements
- Total balance sheet approach
- Recognise interdependence between assets,
liabilities, regulatory capital requirements and
capital resources - Ensure that determination of available and
required capital is based on consistent
assumptions for the recognition and valuation of
assets and liabilities for solvency purposes (
Economic Valuation) - Determination of prescribed levels of RCRs
- MCRs and PCRs
- relationships between different levels
- Establishment of a range of solvency control
levels - with appropriate supervisory interventions
- Allowance of a range of approaches
- standardised approaches and more advanced
approaches, such as internal models
34EMERGING ISSUES STRATEGIESUpgrading Solvency
RegimeRegulatory Financial requirements
- 14.2.6 Regulatory capital requirements are
determined using a consistent treatment of the
valuation of assets and liabilities. Consistency
in the valuation of assets and liabilities for
solvency purposes does not necessarily mean that
a single valuation basis is used for all assets
and liabilities. The balance sheet, when taken
together with capital requirements, should result
in an appropriate recognition of risks.
35EMERGING ISSUES STRATEGIESUpgrading Solvency
RegimeRegulatory Financial requirements
- Solvency Control Levels and Regulatory Capital
Requirements
35
36EMERGING ISSUES STRATEGIESUpgrading Solvency
RegimeGovernance Requirements
- refers to governance processes and controls in
areas such as - the Board, directors, senior management and other
organisational aspects, - fit and proper testing of directors and
management - administrative, organization and internal
controls, including risk management - compliance with legislative requirements
- shareholder relationships and the governance
risks posed by group structures
37EMERGING ISSUES STRATEGIESUpgrading Solvency
RegimeMarket Conduct Requirements
- this includes areas such as
- dealing with customers in the selling and
handling of insurance policies, - the integrity of conduct by an insurer as an
institutional investor. - disclosure of relevant information both to the
market and to policyholders
38EMERGING ISSUES STRATEGIESUpgrading Solvency
RegimeSupervisory assessment and intervention
Progressive intervention levels to ensure timely
corrective measures an example
- Prescribed capital requirement (PCR) level
- Supervisory intervention not required
190
160
- Submission of business plan to improve capital
buffers - Increased on-site supervision
- Additional stress and scenario testing
Capital Adequacy Ratio Capital Available
Capital Required
130
- Limit shareholder dividends
- Restrict new business acquisition
- Delay approval of new products
100
- Minimum capital requirement (MCR) level
- Winding-up of operation