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The Treasury unveils plans for a new Insurer Resolution Regime in bid to remain at the forefront of international standards
HM Treasury unveiled yesterday its long awaited consultation paper for a new Insurer Resolution Regime (IRR) with the consultation set to run until 20 April 2023.
The management of UK (re)insurers in financial difficulty is currently handled through a mixture of standard corporate and (re)insurer-specific insolvency arrangements. Proposals to amend the existing insolvency arrangements for (re)insurers are under review as part of the Financial Services and Markets Bill. The IRR will sit on top of these arrangements and provide a pre-insolvency set of powers. It will give regulators additional tools to manage the failure of (re)insurers in an orderly manner where such a failure would have a wider impact on the financial system and policyholders.
In recent years there have been few UK insurer failures. This means the current (re)insurer insolvency regime, which is spread over various pieces of legislation, remains largely untested and subject to considerable uncertainty. Developing an understanding of how the IRR aligns with, and complements, this particularly complex area of law and regulation will be particularly important.
(Re)insurers will need to understand how the new regime affects them, ensure they continue to feed into any pre-resolution planning and are able to assist the resolution authority with the development of resolution plans. It is likely, similar to the bank space, that (re)insurers will be required to obtain contractual recognition of bail-in powers and express powers to stay certain contractual rights where contracts are governed by non-UK law, and so are beyond the reach of UK legislation.
The scope of the IRR will be broad, covering all UK-authorised (re)insurers that have a Part 4A FSMA permission to effect and/or carry out contracts of insurance (including branches of overseas insurers). Only smaller non-Solvency II insurers, friendly societies and the Lloyd's market will be excluded. The IRR would also capture mixed financial holding companies, insurance holding companies, mixed activity insurance holding companies and the group entities of a (re)insurer.
Despite this wide scope, in practice it is expected only a small number of larger (re)insurers or those with unique products would be directly affected by the new regime. This is because certain resolution conditions (most importantly, a public interest test) need to be met before the regulators are able to use their new powers. A commitment to proportionality has been embedded in the regime.
The table below illustrates the main features of the IRR.
Proposed features of the IRR | |
---|---|
Resolution Authority | Bank of England (as with bank and FMI resolution rules) |
Resolution Objectives which guide the actions of the authorities and regulators |
|
Resolution Conditions which must be met before the Resolution Tools can be used |
|
Valuation | The valuation of the failing (re)insurer is a key step to enable the BoE to assess which are the appropriate Resolution Tools. |
Resolution Tools |
|
Additional Powers |
|
Safeguards | No Creditor Worse Off (NCWO). The IRR provides for a mechanism to compensate any creditors that end up worse off as a result of the use of the IRR tools than if the normal insolvency process had been followed. |
Resolution Planning and Resolvability Assessments |
|
IRR shares many similarities with the EU proposal for an Insurance Recovery and Resolution Directive (IRRD) but the UK's IRR has been developed separately. It has also been made with particular reliance on, and repeated reference in the Consultation Paper to, the Financial Stability Board's Key attributes of effective resolution regimes for financial institutions and the UK will no longer automatically form part of pan European co-operation.
The IRR also closely follows the UK bank resolution regime, with some differences to cater for the specificities of the insurance sector. In particular, the IRR:
A careful analysis of the proposed regime is needed to fully understand how it is intended to work and its implications for (re)insurers and those connected to the sector.
(Re)insurers should start their thinking early and collaborate within the industry to ensure that the Treasury delivers on its promise for world leading regulation of (re)insurers which is fit for purpose and tailored to the unique features of the UK sector.
The contents of this publication are for reference purposes only and may not be current as at the date of accessing this publication. They do not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Specific legal advice about your specific circumstances should always be sought separately before taking any action based on this publication.
© Herbert Smith Freehills 2024
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