Tuesday, March 17, 2009

in granting the requests of carriers based in their states for looser reserve and capital requirements

TO BE NOTED: From Bloomberg:

"Regulators Say State Funds Can Handle Insurer Failure (Update1)

By Andrew Frye

March 17 (Bloomberg) -- State insurance regulators said it’s “unlikely” that any U.S. carrier is too big to fail and that guaranty funds are ready to pay claims should companies collapse.

“Even a major insurer failure, while traumatic in terms of job displacement and, perhaps, for shareholders, will generally not impose systemic risk,” Michael McRaith, director of insurance for Illinois, said in prepared testimony to the Senate Banking Committee today on behalf of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners.

Regulators are seeking to reassure policyholders after investment declines reduced the value of assets backing policies at insurers, and falling stock prices and ratings downgrades made it harder for the industry to raise capital. The 24-company KBW Insurance Index has plunged by more than half in the past 12 months.

“Regulation, of course, cannot ensure that insolvencies will not occur in extreme circumstances,” McRaith said. “A wholesale collapse” of stock or bond markets could lead to insurance company failures, McRaith said.

The U.S. government took a majority stake in American International Group Inc., the insurer that almost collapsed from a liquidity crunch in September, to help limit losses at banks that had outstanding derivative contracts with the carrier. Regulators led by New York Insurance Superintendent Eric Dinallo have said AIG’s insurance customers were protected because there were enough assets backing their policies.

McRaith has joined watchdogs Susan Voss of Iowa and Thomas Sullivan of Connecticut in granting the requests of carriers based in their states for looser ( NB DON ) reserve and capital requirements."

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