N.H. Code Admin. R. Ins 308.04
(a) No ceding insurer subject to this rule shall reduce any liability or establish any asset in any financial statement whether or not filed with the insurance department if, by the terms of the reinsurance agreement, in substance or effect, any of the following conditions exist:
(6) The treaty does not transfer all of the significant risk inherent in the business being reinsured. The following table identifies a representative sampling of products or type of business, the risks that are considered to be significant. For products not specifically included, the risks determined to be significant shall be consistent with this table:
c. Lapse
This is the risk that a policy will voluntarily terminate prior to the recoupment of a statutory surplus strain experienced at issue of the policy;
d. Credit Quality (C1)
This is the risk that invested assets supporting the reinsured business will decrease in value. The main hazards are that assets will default or that there will be a decrease in earning power. It excludes market value declines due to changes in interest rate;
e. Reinvestment (C3)
This is the risk that interest rates will fall and funds reinvested (coupon payments or monies received upon asset maturity or call) will therefore earn less than expected. If asset durations are less than liability durations, the mismatch will increase;
f. Disintermediation (C3)
This is the risk that interest rates rise and policy loans and surrenders increase or maturing contracts do not renew at anticipated rates of renewal. If asset durations are greater than the liability durations, the mismatch will increase. Policyholders will move their funds into new products offering higher rates. The company may have to sell assets at a loss to provide for these withdrawals;
+ - Significant 0 – Insignificant
a
b
c
d
e
f
Health Insurance – other than LTC/LTD*
+
0
+
0
0
0
Health Insurance – LTC/LTD*
+
0
+
+
+
0
Immediate Annuities
0
+
0
+
+
0
Single Premium Deferred Annuities
0
0
+
+
+
+
Flexible Premium Deferred Annuities
0
0
+
+
+
+
Guaranteed Interest Contracts
0
0
0
+
+
+
Other Annuity Deposit Business
0
0
+
+
+
+
Single Premium Whole Life
0
+
+
+
+
+
Traditional Non-Par Permanent
0
+
+
+
+
+
Traditional Non-Par Term
0
+
+
0
0
0
Traditional Par Permanent
0
+
+
+
+
+
Traditional Par Term
0
+
+
0
0
0
Adjustable Premium Permanent
0
+
+
+
+
+
Indeterminate Premium Permanent
0
+
+
+
+
+
Universal Life Flexible Premium
0
+
+
+
+
+
Universal Life Fixed Premium
0
+
+
+
+
+
Universal Life Fixed Premium
dump-in premiums allowed
0
+
+
+
+
+
*LTC = Long Term Care Insurance
LTD = Long Term Disability Insurance
Table 308.1 Risk Categories
Risk categories:
(7) Assets:
b. Notwithstanding the requirements of paragraph a. above, the assets supporting the reserves for the following classes of business and any classes of business that do not have a significant credit quality, reinvestment or disintermediation risk may be held by the ceding insurer without segregation of such assets:
c. The associated formula for determining the reserve interest rate adjustment shall use a formula that reflects the ceding insurer’s investment earnings and incorporates all realized and unrealized gains and losses reflected in the statutory statement. The following is an acceptable formula:
Rate = 2 (I + CG)
X + Y – I – CG
Where:
I is the net investment income (Exhibit 2, Line 16, Column 7)
CG is the capital gains less capital losses (Exhibit 4, Line 10, Column 6)
X is the current year cash and invested assets (Page 2, Line 10A, Column 1) plus investment income due and accrued (Page 2, Line 16, Column 1) less borrowed money (Page 3, Line 22, Column 1)
Y is the same as X but for the prior year
(c) Agreements.
(2) Any increase in surplus net of federal income tax resulting from arrangements described in (c)(1) shall be identified separately on the insurer's statutory financial statement as a surplus item (aggregate write-ins for gains and losses in surplus in the Capital and Surplus Account, page 4 of the Annual Statement) and recognition of the surplus increase as income shall be reflected on a net of tax basis in the "Reinsurance ceded" line, page 4 of the Annual Statement as earnings emerge from the business reinsured.
For example, on the last day of calendar year N, company XYZ pays a $20 million initial commission and expense allowance to company ABC for reinsuring an existing block of business. Assuming a 34% tax rate, the net increase in surplus at inception is $13.2 million ($20 million - $6.8 million) that is reported on the "Aggregate write-ins for gains and losses in surplus" line in the Capital and Surplus account. $6.8 million (34% of $20 million) is reported as income on the "Commissions and expense allowances on reinsurance ceded" line of the Summary of Operations.
At the end of year N+1 the business has earned $4 million. ABC has paid $.5 million in profit and risk charges in arrears for the year and has received a $1 million experience refund. Company ABC's annual statement would report $1.65 million (66% of ($4 million - $1 million - $.5 million) up to a maximum of $13.2 million) on the "Commissions and expense allowance on reinsurance ceded" line of the Summary of Operations, and -$1.65 million on the "Aggregate write-ins for gains and losses in surplus" line of the Capital and Surplus account. The experience refund would be reported separately as a miscellaneous income item in the Summary of Operations.
Source. #5480, eff 10-1-92; ss by #6522, eff 6-6-97; ss by #8239, eff 1-3-05; ss by #10196, eff 1-3-13 (from Ins 308.03); ss by #13494, eff 11-22-22