The Federal Reserve Board of Governors today released details of a proposal that would affect insurance company regulatory capital frameworks. The proposal includes two approaches to regulatory capital requirements for supervised insurance institutions that would fulfill compliance needs under the Dodd-Frank Act.
The advance notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPR) applies to nonbank financial companies significantly engaged in insurance activities that are supervised by the board, or insurance companies such as AIG and Prudential, which are deemed systemically important financial institutions (SIFI), bank holding companies (BHC), and savings and loan holding companies (SLHC) significantly engaged in insurance activities. Companies with 25 percent or more of total consolidated assets in insurance underwriting subsidiaries other than assets associated with insurance underwriting for credit risk would be included.
The proposed capital standards are less stringent for AIG and Prudential than those imposed on Wall Street banks under a long-awaited Federal Reserve proposal that's meant to limit the chance a major insurer could threaten the financial system. Metropolitan Life previously was tagged with SIFI status but sucessfully sued the government to avoid the designation.
"This proposal is an important step toward capital standards that are both appropriate for our supervised insurance firms and that enhance the resiliency and stability of our financial system," Fed Chair Janet Yellen said in remarks prepared for the Friday board meeting.
A building block approach (BBA) proposes to use as a starting point "existing legal-entity capital requirements for insurance companies, including state and foreign insurance risk-based capital requirements, and the BHC or bank risk-based capital standards for banking, non-insurance and unregulated entities. A firm's aggregate capital requirements generally would be the sum of the capital requirements at each subsidiary, with adjustments to address items such as differences in accounting and to eliminate inter-company transactions, and scalars to reflect cross-jurisdictional differences such as differing supervisory objectives and valuation approaches."
The board said this approach may be appropriate for the 12 insurance depository institution holding companies currently under board supervision, as they are significantly engaged in insurance activities but are not systemically important, engage in less complex and foreign activities, and generally prepare financial reporting only using U.S. statutory accounting principles (SAP) rather than generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP).
A consolidated approach (CA) would "categorize all of a consolidated insurance firm's assets and insurance liabilities into risk segments tailored to account for the liability structure and other unique features of an insurance firm, apply risk factors to the amounts in each segment, and then set a minimum ratio of consolidated capital resources to consolidated capital requirements."
This approach may be suitable for institutions that are large, complex, international and systemically important.
"A consolidated form of capital requirements would better ensure that the risks these firms pose to the financial system are taken into account," said the board in the ANPR.
The objectives behind developing capital standards for supervised insurance instittions were to protect insured depository institutions and to promote financial stability.