HB-5932, As Passed House, December 9, 2014
SUBSTITUTE FOR
HOUSE BILL NO. 5932
A bill to amend 1956 PA 218, entitled
"The insurance code of 1956,"
by amending sections 102, 830, 830a, 834, 836, 838, 3930, 4060,
and 4061 (MCL 500.102, 500.830, 500.830a, 500.834, 500.836,
500.838, 500.3930, 500.4060, and 500.4061), section 102 as
amended by 2000 PA 252, section 830 as amended by 1994 PA 228,
section 830a as added by 1994 PA 226, sections 834 and 4060 as
amended and section 838 as added by 2004 PA 236, section 836 as
amended by 1986 PA 12, section 3930 as added by 1992 PA 84, and
section 4061 as added by 1993 PA 349, and by adding sections 836a
and 836b.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:
1 Sec. 102. (1) "Commissioner" as As used
in this act:
2
(a) "Commissioner" means
the commissioner of the office of
3 financial and insurance services.director.
1 (b) (2) "Department"
as used in this act means the office of
2 financial and insurance services.department of insurance and
3 financial services.
4 (c) "Director" means, unless the context clearly implies a
5 different meaning, the director of the department.
6 (d) "Office of financial and insurance regulation" and
7 "office of financial and insurance services" mean the department.
8 Sec. 830. (1) The commissioner director shall
annually value
9 , or cause to be valued, the
reserve liabilities, hereinafter
10 called reserves, for all outstanding life insurance policies and
11 annuity and pure endowment contracts of every life insurer doing
12 business in this state issued before the operative date of the
13 valuation manual, except that for an alien insurer, the valuation
14 shall be is limited to its United States' business. ,
and may
15 certify the amount of the reserves, specifying the mortality
16 table or tables, rate or rates of interest, and methods, net
17 level premium method or other, used in the calculation of the
18 reserves. In calculating
the reserves, the commissioner director
19 may use group methods and approximate averages for fractions of a
20 year or otherwise. In lieu Instead of the valuation of
the
21 reserves required in this section of any foreign or alien
22 insurer, the commissioner director may accept any
valuation made
23 , or caused to be made, by
the insurance supervisory official of
24 any state or other jurisdiction, if the valuation complies with
25 the minimum standard provided in this section. ,
and if the
26 official of that state or jurisdiction accepts as sufficient and
27 valid for all legal purposes the certificate of valuation of the
1 commissioner, which certificate states the valuation to have been
2 made in a specified manner according to which the aggregate
3 reserves would be at least as large as if they had been computed
4 in the manner prescribed by the law of that state or
5 jurisdiction.
6 (2) The director shall annually value the reserve
7 liabilities hereinafter called reserves for all outstanding life
8 insurance contracts, annuity and pure endowment contracts,
9 accident and health contracts, and deposit-type contracts of
10 every company issued on or after the operative date of the
11 valuation manual. On the election of a company, for a contract
12 acquired by the company through a business acquisition or
13 reinsurance transaction after the effective date of the
14 amendatory act that added section 836a, regardless of when the
15 contract was issued, the director shall annually value the
16 reserves for the contract. Instead of the valuation of the
17 reserves required of a foreign or alien company, the director may
18 accept a valuation made by the insurance supervisory official of
19 any state or other jurisdiction if the valuation complies with
20 the minimum standard provided in this section.
21 (3) (2) Except
as otherwise provided in this subsection, the
22 insurer shall pay to the commissioner, director, as compensation
23 for the valuation, 1 cent for each thousand dollars insured,
24 under policies insuring residents of these the United
States, or
25 issued by an insurer organized under the laws of this state. For
26 annual valuations on or after January 1, 1988, December 31, 1987,
27 the valuation fee imposed under this section shall does not
apply
1 to contracts of reinsurance. A valuation fee under this
2 subsection shall does
not apply to an annual valuation of a
3 domestic insurer on or after January 1, 1988. December 31, 1987.
4 For annual valuations for the 1994 calendar year, the valuation
5 fee imposed under this subsection for alien insurers shall be is
6 .67 cent for each thousand dollars insured. On and after January
7 1, 1995, After
December 31, 1994, the valuation fee
imposed under
8 this subsection shall does
not apply to alien insurers.
9 (4) (3) An
insurer that at any time shall have has adopted
10 any a standard of valuation producing greater aggregate
reserves
11 than those calculated according to the minimum standard provided
12 in this section may, with the approval of the commissioner,
13
director, adopt any a lower
standard of valuation, but not lower
14 than the minimum provided in this section.
15 (5) (4) Every A foreign cooperative or
assessment insurer
16 shall have value its business valued and shall maintain
reserves
17 in accordance with under
the standards currently required
of
18 domestic insurers transacting similar insurance by under this
19 act.section.
20 (6) As used in this section:
21 (a) "Accident and health insurance" means contracts that
22 incorporate morbidity risk and provide protection against
23 economic loss resulting from accident, sickness, or medical
24 conditions and as may be specified in the valuation manual.
25 (b) "Company" means an entity that has written, issued, or
26 reinsured life insurance contracts, accident and health insurance
27 contracts, or deposit-type contracts in this state and has at
1 least 1 life insurance, accident and health insurance, or
2 deposit-type policy in force or on claim, or that has written,
3 issued, or reinsured life insurance contracts, accident and
4 health insurance contracts, or deposit-type contracts in any
5 state and is required to hold a certificate of authority to write
6 life insurance, accident and health insurance, or deposit-type
7 contracts in this state.
8 (c) "Deposit-type contract" means a contract that does not
9 incorporate mortality or morbidity risks and as may be specified
10 in the valuation manual.
11 (d) "Life insurance" means a contract that incorporates
12 mortality risk, including annuity and pure endowment contracts,
13 and as may be specified in the valuation manual.
14 (e) "NAIC" means the national association of insurance
15 commissioners.
16 (f) "Valuation manual" means the manual of valuation
17 instructions adopted by the NAIC as described in section 836b.
18 Sec. 830a. (1) Every A life insurance company
doing business
19 in this state shall annually submit to the commissioner director
20 the opinion of a qualified actuary as to whether the reserves and
21 related actuarial items held in support of the policies and
22 contracts specified by the commissioner director by
rule are
23 computed appropriately, are based on assumptions that satisfy
24 contractual provisions, are consistent with prior reported
25 amounts, and comply with applicable laws of this state. The
26 actuarial opinion required by this section shall must be
27 submitted in a form prescribed by the commissioner director and
1 may include any other items that the commissioner director
2 considers necessary.
3 (2) Every A life insurance company, except as exempted by or
4 pursuant to under rule, shall also annually include in the
5 opinion required by subsection (1) an opinion of the same
6 qualified actuary as to whether the reserves and related
7 actuarial items held in support of the policies and contracts
8 specified by the commissioner director by rule, when
considered
9 in light of the assets held by the company with respect to the
10 reserves and related actuarial items, including, but not limited
11 to, the investment earnings on the assets and the considerations
12 anticipated to be received and retained under the policies and
13 contracts, make adequate provision for the company's obligations
14 under the policies and contracts, including, but not limited to,
15 the benefits under and expenses associated with the policies and
16 contracts. By order, the commissioner director may
provide for a
17 transition period for establishing any higher reserves that the
18 qualified actuary may consider necessary in order to render the
19 opinion required by this subsection.
20 (3) Each All
of the following apply to an opinion
required
21 by subsection (2): shall be governed by the following:
22 (a) A memorandum shall must be prepared to support
each
23 actuarial opinion that shall be is in form and substance
24 acceptable to the commissioner.director.
25 (b) If the insurance company fails to does not provide
a
26 supporting memorandum within the period of time requested by the
27 commissioner director
or the commissioner director determines
1 that the supporting memorandum provided by the insurer fails to
2 does not meet the standards prescribed by applicable laws or
3 rules or is otherwise unacceptable to the commissioner, director,
4 the commissioner director
may engage a qualified actuary at the
5 expense of the company to review the opinion and the basis for
6 the opinion and prepare a supporting memorandum as is required by
7 the commissioner.director.
8 (4) Each All
of the following apply to an opinion
required
9 by this section: shall be governed by the following:
10 (a) The opinion shall must be submitted with the
annual
11 statement reflecting the valuation of the reserve liabilities for
12 each year ending on or after December 31, 1994.
13 (b) The opinion shall apply applies to all business in
force
14 including individual and group disability insurance plans in form
15 and substance acceptable to the commissioner.director.
16 (c) The opinion shall must be based on standards
as the
17 commissioner director
may prescribe by rule.
18 (d) For an opinion required to be submitted by a foreign or
19 alien insurer, the commissioner director may accept the
opinion
20 filed by that the
foreign or alien insurer with the
insurance
21 supervisory official of another state if the commissioner
22 director determines that the opinion reasonably meets the
23 requirements applicable to a company domiciled in this state.
24 (e) Any A memorandum in support of the opinion, and any
25 other material provided by the insurer to the commissioner
26 director in connection with it, shall be kept confidential by the
27 commissioner, director,
shall not be made public, and shall is
1 not be subject to subpoena, other than for the purpose of
2 defending an action seeking damages from any a person
by reason
3 of any an action required by this section or by rules
promulgated
4 under this section. However, the director may release the
5 memorandum or other material may be released by the commissioner
6 in any of the following instances:
7 (i) With the written consent of the insurer.
8 (ii) To the american academy of actuaries if the memorandum
9 or other material is required for the purpose of professional
10 disciplinary proceedings and the request sets forth describes
11 procedures satisfactory to the commissioner director for
12 preserving the confidentiality of the memorandum or other
13 material.
14 (iii) If any portion of the confidential memorandum is cited
15 by the insurer in its marketing or is cited before any
16 governmental agency other than a state insurance regulatory
17 agency or is released by the insurer to the news media. In this
18 event, all portions of the A
confidential memorandum shall no
19 longer be cited as
described under this subparagraph is not
20 confidential.
21 (5) Except in cases of for fraud or willful
misconduct, the
22 qualified actuary shall is
not be liable for damages to any
a
23 person other than the insurance company and the commissioner
24
director for any an act,
error, omission, decision, or conduct
25 with respect to the actuary's opinion. Disciplinary action by the
26 commissioner director
against the insurer or the qualified
27 actuary shall be defined in rules by the commissioner.director.
1 (6) For purposes of this section, "qualified actuary" means
2 a member of either the american academy of actuaries or the
3 society of actuaries who also meets any other criteria
4 established by the commissioner director by rule.
5 (7) The commissioner director shall not accept as
a
6 qualified actuary or accept an actuarial opinion prepared in
7 whole or in part by an individual who has done any of the
8 following:
9 (a) Been convicted of fraud, bribery, a violation of chapter
10 96 of title 18 of the United States Code, 18 U.S.C. 18 USC 1961
11 to 1968, or any dishonest conduct or practices under federal or
12 state law.
13 (b) Been found to have violated Violated the
insurance laws
14 of this state with respect to any previous reports submitted
15 under this section.
16 (c) Has failed to Did
not detect or disclose material
17 information in 1 or more previous reports filed under this
18 section.
19 (8) The commissioner director may hold a public
hearing
20 pursuant to under the administrative procedures act of 1969, Act
21 No. 306 of the Public Acts of 1969, being sections 1969 PA 306,
22
MCL 24.201 to 24.328, of
the Michigan Compiled Laws, to determine
23 whether if an actuary is qualified. After considering the
24 evidence presented, the commissioner director may
find that the
25 actuary is not qualified for purposes of expressing his or her
26 opinion on reserves and related actuarial items as required by
27 this section, and may require the insurer to replace the actuary
1 with another actuary.
2 (9) This section shall take effect December 31, 1994.
3 (9) Every company with outstanding life insurance contracts,
4 accident and health insurance contracts, or deposit-type
5 contracts in this state and subject to regulation by the director
6 shall annually submit the opinion of the appointed actuary as to
7 whether the reserves and related actuarial items held in support
8 of the policies and contracts are computed appropriately, are
9 based on assumptions that satisfy contractual provisions, are
10 consistent with prior reported amounts, and comply with
11 applicable laws of this state. The valuation manual must provide
12 the specifics of this opinion, including any items considered
13 necessary to its scope.
14 (10) Every company with outstanding life insurance
15 contracts, accident and health insurance contracts, or deposit-
16 type contracts in this state and subject to regulation by the
17 director, except as exempted in the valuation manual, shall also
18 annually include in the opinion required by subsection (9) an
19 opinion of the same appointed actuary as to whether the reserves
20 and related actuarial items held in support of the policies and
21 contracts specified in the valuation manual, when considered in
22 light of the assets held by the company with respect to the
23 reserves and related actuarial items, including, but not limited
24 to, the investment earnings on the assets and the considerations
25 anticipated to be received and retained under the policies and
26 contracts, make adequate provisions for the company's obligations
27 under the policies and contracts, including, but not limited to,
1 the benefits under and expenses associated with the policies and
2 contracts.
3 (11) Both of the following apply to an opinion required
4 under subsection (10):
5 (a) A memorandum, in form and substance as specified in the
6 valuation manual, and acceptable to the director, shall be
7 prepared to support each actuarial opinion.
8 (b) If an insurance company does not provide a supporting
9 memorandum at the request of the director within a period
10 specified in the valuation manual or the director determines that
11 the supporting memorandum provided by the insurance company does
12 not meet the standards prescribed by the valuation manual or is
13 otherwise unacceptable to the director, the director may engage a
14 qualified actuary at the expense of the company to review the
15 opinion and the basis for the opinion and prepare the supporting
16 memorandum required by the director.
17 (12) All of the following apply to an opinion required under
18 subsection (9) or (10):
19 (a) The opinion must be in form and substance as specified
20 in the valuation manual and acceptable to the director.
21 (b) The opinion must be submitted with the annual statement
22 reflecting the valuation of the reserve liabilities for each year
23 ending on or after the operative date of the valuation manual.
24 (c) The opinion applies to all policies and contracts
25 described in subsection (10), and to other actuarial liabilities
26 as may be specified in the valuation manual.
27 (d) The opinion must be based on standards adopted from time
1 to time by the actuarial standards board or its successor, and on
2 such additional standards as may be prescribed in the valuation
3 manual.
4 (e) For an opinion required to be submitted by a foreign or
5 alien company, the director may accept the opinion filed by the
6 foreign or alien company with the insurance supervisory official
7 of another state if the director determines that the opinion
8 reasonably meets the requirements applicable to a company
9 domiciled in this state.
10 (f) Except for fraud or willful misconduct, the appointed
11 actuary is not liable for damages to a person other than the
12 insurance company and the director for an act, error, omission,
13 or decision, or conduct, with respect to the appointed actuary's
14 opinion.
15 (g) The director shall determine by regulation disciplinary
16 action against the company or the appointed actuary.
17 (13) As used in this section:
18 (a) "Accident and health insurance" means contracts that
19 incorporate morbidity risk and provide protection against
20 economic loss resulting from accident, sickness, or medical
21 conditions and as may be specified in the valuation manual.
22 (b) "Appointed actuary" means a qualified actuary who is
23 appointed in accordance with the valuation manual to prepare the
24 actuarial opinion required under subsection (9) or (10).
25 (c) "Company" means an entity that has written, issued, or
26 reinsured life insurance contracts, accident and health insurance
27 contracts, or deposit-type contracts in this state and has at
1 least 1 policy in force or on claim or that has written, issued,
2 or reinsured life insurance contracts, accident and health
3 insurance contracts, or deposit-type contracts in any state and
4 is required to hold a certificate of authority to write life
5 insurance, accident and health insurance, or deposit-type
6 contracts in this state.
7 (d) "Deposit-type contract" means contracts that do not
8 incorporate mortality or morbidity risks and as may be specified
9 in the valuation manual.
10 (e) "Life insurance" means contracts that incorporate
11 mortality risk, including annuity and pure endowment contracts,
12 and as may be specified in the valuation manual.
13 (f) "NAIC" means the national association of insurance
14 commissioners.
15 (g) "Qualified actuary" means an individual who is qualified
16 to sign an applicable statement of actuarial opinion in
17 accordance with the American academy of actuaries qualification
18 standards for actuaries signing statements of actuarial opinion
19 and who meets the requirements specified in the valuation manual.
20 (h) "Valuation manual" means the manual of valuation
21 instructions adopted by the NAIC as specified in section 836b.
22 Sec. 834. (1) Except as otherwise provided in sections 835,
23 836, and 837, the minimum standard for the valuation of policies
24 and contracts described in subsection (8) shall be is the
25 commissioner's reserve valuation methods defined in subsections
26 (2), (3), and (6), 5% interest for group annuity and pure
27 endowment contracts , provided that if prior notice of any
1 revaluation of reserves with respect to group annuity and pure
2 endowment contracts is given to the commissioner director in
the
3 same manner as is required before a revaluation of reserves under
4 section 832(2), and 3-1/2% interest for all other of those
5 policies and contracts; or in the case of for policies
and
6 contracts, other than annuity and pure endowment contracts,
7 issued on or after October 21, 20, 1974,
4% interest for those
8 policies issued before October 1, 1980, and 4-1/2% interest for
9 those policies issued on or after October 1, September 30, 1980,
10 or in the case of for
life insurance contracts, other than
11 annuity and pure endowment contracts, issued after December 31,
12 1994, 5-1/2% interest for single premium life insurance policies
13 and 4-1/2% interest for all other policies, and the following
14 tables:
15 (a) (I) For
all ordinary policies of life insurance issued
16 on the standard basis, excluding any disability and accidental
17 death benefits in those policies: the commissioner's 1941
18 standard ordinary mortality table, for policies issued before the
19 operative date of paragraph 5 of section 4060(5); and the
20 commissioner's 1958 standard ordinary mortality table for
21 policies issued on or after that operative date and before the
22 operative date of paragraphs 9 to 19 18 of
section 4060(5). For
23 any category of those policies issued on female risks, all
24 modified net premiums and present values referred to in this
25 section may be calculated according to an age not more than 6
26 years younger than the actual age of the insured; and, for those
27 policies issued on or after the operative date of paragraphs 9 to
1 19 18 of section 4060(5), the commissioner's 1980 standard
2 ordinary mortality table or, at the election of the company for
3 any 1 or more specified plans of life insurance, the
4 commissioner's 1980 standard ordinary mortality table with 10-
5 year select mortality factors or any ordinary mortality table
6 adopted after 1980 by the national association of insurance
7 commissioners that is approved by a rule promulgated by the
8 commissioner director
for use in determining the minimum
standard
9 of valuation for those policies or the 2001 CSO mortality table
10 under section 838.
11 (b) (II) For
all industrial life insurance policies issued
12 on the standard basis, excluding any disability and accidental
13 death benefits in those policies: the 1941 standard industrial
14 mortality table for those policies issued before the operative
15 date of paragraph 7 of section 4060(5); and for those policies
16 issued on or after that operative date, the commissioner's 1961
17 standard industrial mortality table or any industrial mortality
18 table adopted after 1980 by the national association of insurance
19 commissioners that is approved by a rule promulgated by the
20 commissioner director
for use in determining the minimum
standard
21 of valuation for those policies.
22 (c) (III) For
individual annuity and pure endowment
23 contracts, excluding any disability and accidental death benefits
24 in those policies: the 1937 standard annuity mortality table or,
25 at the option of the company, the annuity mortality table for
26 1949, ultimate, or any modification of either of those tables
27 approved by the commissioner.director.
1 (d) (IV) For
group annuity and pure endowment contracts,
2 excluding any disability and accidental death benefits in those
3 policies: the group annuity mortality table for 1951, any
4 modification of that table approved by the commissioner,
5 director, or, at the option of the company, any of the tables or
6 modifications of tables specified for individual annuity and pure
7 endowment contracts.
8 (e) (V) For
total and permanent disability benefits in or
9 supplementary to ordinary policies or contracts: for policies or
10 contracts issued on or after January 1, 1966, December 31, 1965,
11 the tables of period 2 disablement rates and the 1930 to 1950
12 termination rates of the 1952 disability study of the society of
13 actuaries, with due regard to the type of benefit or any tables
14 of disablement rates and termination rates adopted after 1980 by
15 the national association of insurance commissioners that are
16 approved by a rule promulgated by the commissioner director for
17 use in determining the minimum standard of valuation for those
18 policies; for policies or contracts issued on or after January
1,
19 1961, December 31,
1960, and before January 1, 1966,
either those
20 tables or, at the option of the company, the class (3) disability
21 table, 1926; and for policies issued before January 1, 1961, the
22 class (3) disability table, 1926. For active lives, a table shall
23 must be combined with a mortality table permitted for calculating
24 the reserves for life insurance policies.
25 (f) (VI) For
accidental death benefits in or supplementary
26 to policies: for policies issued on or after January 1, 1966,
27 December 31, 1965, the 1959 accidental death benefits table or
1 any accidental death benefits table adopted after 1980 by the
2 national association of insurance commissioners that is approved
3 by a rule promulgated by the commissioner director for
use in
4 determining the minimum standard of valuation for those policies;
5 for policies issued on or after January 1, 1961, December 31,
6 1960, and before January 1, 1966, 1 of the above tables or at the
7 option of the insurer the intercompany double indemnity mortality
8 table. A table shall must
be combined with a mortality table
9 permitted for calculating the reserves for life insurance
10 policies.
11 (g) (VII) For
group life insurance, life insurance issued on
12 the substandard basis, and other special benefits: any table
13 approved by the commissioner.director.
14 (2) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (3) and (6),
15 reserves according to the commissioner's reserve valuation
16 method, for the life insurance and endowment benefits of policies
17 providing for a uniform amount of insurance and requiring the
18 payment of uniform premiums, shall be is the
excess, if any, of
19 the present value, at the date of valuation, of the future
20 guaranteed benefits provided for by those policies over the then
21 present value of any future modified net premiums for the
22 policies. The modified net premiums for the policy shall be is a
23 uniform percentage of the respective contract premiums for the
24 future guaranteed benefits so that the present value of all
25 modified net premiums equals, at the date of issue of the policy,
26 the sum of the then present value of these benefits provided for
27 by the policy and the excess of (g) subdivision (a) over (h),
1 subdivision (b), as follows:
2 (a) (g) A
net level annual premium equal to the present
3 value, at the date of issue, of the future guaranteed benefits
4 provided for after the first policy year divided by the present
5 value, at the date of issue, of an annuity of 1 per annum payable
6 on the first and each subsequent anniversary of the policy on
7 which a premium falls due. However, the net level annual premium
8 shall must not exceed the net level annual premium on the
19-year
9 premium whole life plan for insurance of the same amount at an
10 age 1 year higher than the age at issue of the policy.
11 (b) (h) A
net 1-year term premium for the future guaranteed
12 benefits provided for in the first policy year.
13 However, for any life insurance policy issued on or after
14 January 1, 1986 December
31, 1985 for which the contract premium
15 in the first policy year exceeds that of the second year and for
16 which no comparable additional benefit is provided in the first
17 year for that excess and that provides an endowment benefit or a
18 cash surrender value or a combination of endowment benefit and
19 cash surrender value in an amount greater than the excess
20 premium, the reserve according to the commissioner's reserve
21 valuation method as of any policy anniversary occurring on or
22 before the assumed ending date, defined as the first policy
23 anniversary on which the sum of any endowment benefit and any
24 cash surrender value then available is greater than the excess
25 premium, shall be, is,
except as otherwise provided in
subsection
26 (6), the greater of the reserve as of that policy anniversary
27 calculated as described in paragraph 1 of this subsection and the
1 reserve as of that policy anniversary calculated as described in
2 that paragraph, but with the value defined in (g) subdivision (a)
3 being reduced by 15% of the amount of the excess first year
4 premium; all present values of benefits and premiums being
5 determined without reference to premiums or benefits provided for
6 by the policy after the assumed ending date; the policy being
7 assumed to mature on that date as an endowment; and the cash
8 surrender value provided on that date being considered as an
9 endowment benefit. In making the above comparison, the mortality
10 and interest bases stated in subsection (1) and section 836 shall
11 must be used.
12 Reserves according to the commissioner's reserve valuation
13 method for (I) life insurance policies providing for a varying
14 amount of insurance or requiring the payment of varying premiums;
15 , (II) group annuity and
pure endowment contracts purchased under
16 a retirement plan or plan of deferred compensation, established
17 or maintained by an employer, including a partnership or sole
18 proprietorship, or by an employee organization, or by both, other
19 than a plan providing individual retirement accounts or
20 individual retirement annuities under section 408 of the internal
21 revenue code of 1986, 26 USC 408;
, (III) disability and
22 accidental death benefits in all policies and contracts; ,
and
23 (IV) all other benefits,
except life insurance and endowment
24 benefits in life insurance policies and benefits provided by all
25 other annuity and pure endowment contracts, shall must be
26 calculated by a method consistent with the principles of this
27 subsection.
1 (3) This subsection applies to all annuity and pure
2 endowment contracts other than group annuity and pure endowment
3 contracts purchased under a retirement plan or plan of deferred
4 compensation, established or maintained by an employer, including
5 a partnership or sole proprietorship, or by an employee
6 organization, or by both, other than a plan providing individual
7 retirement accounts or individual retirement annuities under
8 section 408 of the internal revenue code of 1986, 26 USC 408.
9 Without action by the Michigan Legislature to adopt actuarial
10 guideline 35, reserves according to the commissioner's annuity
11 reserve method for benefits under annuity or pure endowment
12 contracts, excluding any disability and accidental death benefits
13 in those contracts, shall must be the greatest of the
respective
14 excesses of the present values, at the date of valuation, of the
15 future guaranteed benefits, including guaranteed nonforfeiture
16 benefits, provided for by those contracts at the end of each
17 respective contract year, over the present value, at the date of
18 valuation, of any future valuation considerations derived from
19 future gross considerations, required by the terms of the
20 contract, that become payable before the end of that respective
21 contract year. The future guaranteed benefits shall must be
22 determined by using the mortality table, if any, and the interest
23 rate specified in those contracts for determining guaranteed
24 benefits. The valuation considerations are the portions of the
25 respective gross considerations applied under the terms of the
26 contracts to determine nonforfeiture values.
27 (4) An insurer's aggregate reserves for all life insurance
1 policies, excluding disability and accidental death benefits,
2 shall not be less than the aggregate reserves calculated in
3 accordance with the methods set forth described in subsections
4 (2), (3), (6), and (7), and the mortality table or tables and
5 rate or rates of interest used in calculating nonforfeiture
6 benefits for the policies. The aggregate reserves for all
7 policies, contracts, and benefits shall not be less than the
8 aggregate reserves determined by the qualified appointed actuary
9 to be necessary to render the opinion required by section 830a.
10 (5) Reserves for all policies and contracts issued prior to
11 before June 27, 1994 may be calculated, at the option of the
12 insurer, according to any standards that produce greater
13 aggregate reserves for all those policies and contracts than the
14 minimum reserves required by the laws in effect immediately
15 before June 27, 1994. Reserves for a category of policies,
16 contracts, or benefits as established by the commissioner,
17
director, issued on or after
June 27, 26, 1994, may be calculated
18 at the option of the insurer according to any standards that
19 produce greater aggregate reserves than those calculated
20 according to the minimum standard provided in this act. However,
21 the rate or rates of interest used for policies and contracts,
22 other than annuity and pure endowment contracts, shall must not
23 be higher greater than the corresponding rate or rates of
24 interest used in calculating any nonforfeiture benefits provided
25 for in those policies and contracts. Any An insurer
that had
26 previously adopted any standard of valuation producing greater
27 aggregate reserves than those calculated according to the minimum
1 standard provided in this section and section 835 may, with the
2 commissioner's director's
approval, adopt any lower standard of
3 valuation, but not lower than the minimum standard provided by
4 this section and section 835. However, for the purposes of this
5 section, the holding of additional reserves previously determined
6 by a qualified an
appointed actuary to be necessary to
render the
7 opinion required by section 830a shall is not
be considered to be
8 the adoption of a higher standard of valuation.
9 (6) If in any contract year the gross premium charged by a
10 life an insurer on a policy or contract is less than the
11 valuation net premium for the policy or contract calculated by
12 the method used in calculating the reserve on the policy or
13 contract, the insurer may use the minimum valuation standards of
14 mortality, either at the time of issue or the time of valuation
15 of the policy or contract and the minimum valuation rate of
16 interest at time of issue or the time of valuation of the policy
17 or contract, so long as if
the minimum reserve required for the
18 policy or contract is the greater of either the reserve
19 calculated according to the mortality table, rate of interest,
20 and method actually used for the policy or contract, or the
21 reserve calculated by the method actually used for the policy or
22 contract using the minimum valuation standards of mortality and
23 rate of interest and replacing the valuation net premium by the
24 actual gross premium in each contract year for which the
25 valuation net premium exceeds the actual gross premium. The
26 minimum valuation standards of mortality and rate of interest
27 referred to in this subsection are those standards stated in
1 subsection (1) and section 836. However, for any life insurance
2 policy issued on or after January 1, 1986 December 31, 1985 for
3 which the gross premium in the first policy year exceeds that of
4 the second year and for which no comparable additional benefit is
5 provided in the first year for that excess and that provides an
6 endowment benefit or a cash surrender value or a combination of
7 endowment benefit and cash surrender value in an amount greater
8 than the excess premium, the provisions of this subsection shall
9 be applied applies as if the method actually used in calculating
10 the reserve for that policy were the method described in
11 subsection (2), ignoring paragraph 2 of that subsection. The
12 minimum reserve at each policy anniversary of that policy shall
13 must be the greater of the minimum reserve calculated in
14 accordance with subsection (2), including paragraph 2 of that
15 subsection, and the minimum reserve calculated in accordance with
16 this subsection.
17 (7) For any plan of life insurance that provides for future
18 premium determination, the amounts of which are to be determined
19 by the insurance company based on then estimates of future
20 experience, or, in the case of for any plan of life
insurance or
21 annuity that is of such a nature that the minimum reserves
cannot
22 be determined by the methods described in subsections (2), (3),
23 and (6), the reserves that are held under those plans must be
24 appropriate in relation to the benefits and the pattern of
25 premiums for that plan and computed by a method that is
26 consistent with the principles of this standard valuation law, as
27 determined by rules promulgated by the commissioner.director.
1 (8) This section applies to only life insurance policies and
2 contracts issued on and after the operative date of section 4060,
3 the standard nonforfeiture law, except as otherwise provided in
4 sections 835 and 836 for group annuity and pure endowment
5 contracts issued on or after the operative date of section 4060
6 and except as otherwise provided in section 837 for universal
7 life contracts.
8 (9) As used in this section:
9 (a) "Appointed actuary" means a qualified actuary who is
10 appointed in accordance with the valuation manual to prepare the
11 actuarial opinion required in section 830a(9).
12 (b) "NAIC" means the national association of insurance
13 commissioners.
14 (c) "Qualified actuary" means an individual who is qualified
15 to sign the applicable statement of actuarial opinion in
16 accordance with the American academy of actuaries qualification
17 standards for actuaries signing statements of actuarial opinions
18 and who meets the requirements specified in the valuation manual.
19 (d) "Valuation manual" means the manual of valuation
20 instructions adopted by the NAIC as specified in section 836b.
21 Sec. 836. (1) The calendar year statutory valuation interest
22 rates as defined in this section shall be are the
interest rates
23 used in determining the minimum standard for the valuation of the
24 following:
25 (a) All life insurance policies issued in a particular
26 calendar year on or after the operative date of paragraphs 9 to
27 19 18 of section 4060(5).
1 (b) All individual annuity and pure endowment contracts
2 issued in a calendar year on or after January 1, 1983.December
3 31, 1982.
4 (c) All annuities and pure endowments purchased in a
5 calendar year on or after January 1, 1983 December 31, 1982 under
6 group annuity and pure endowment contracts.
7 (d) The net increase, if any, in a calendar year after
8 January 1, 1983 in amounts held under guaranteed interest
9 contracts.
10 (2) The calendar year statutory valuation interest rates, I,
11 shall be determined as follows, and the results rounded to the
12 nearer 0.25%:
13 (a) For life insurance,
14 I = .03 + W (R1 - .03) + W (R2 - .09).
15 2
16 where R is the reference interest rate defined in this
17 section, R1 is the lesser of R and .09, R2 is the greater of R and
18 .09, and W is the weighting factor defined in this section.
19 (b) For single premium immediate annuities and for annuity
20 benefits involving life contingencies arising from other
21 annuities with cash settlement options and from guaranteed
22 interest contracts with cash settlement options,
23 I = .03 + W (R - .03)
24 where R is the reference interest rate defined in this
1 section, R1 is the lesser of R and .09, R2 is the greater of R and
2 .09, and W is the weighting factor defined in this section.
3 (c) For other annuities with cash settlement options and
4 guaranteed interest contracts with cash settlement options,
5 valued on an issue year basis, except as stated in subdivision
6 (b), the formula for life insurance stated in subdivision (a)
7 shall apply applies to annuities and guaranteed interest
8 contracts with guaranteed durations in excess of 10 years and the
9 formula for single premium immediate annuities stated in
10 subdivision (b) shall apply applies to annuities and
guaranteed
11 interest contracts with guaranteed duration of 10 years or less.
12 (d) For other annuities with no cash settlement options and
13 for guaranteed interest contracts with no cash settlement
14 options, the formula for single premium immediate annuities
15 stated in subdivision (b) shall apply.applies.
16 (e) For other annuities with cash settlement options and
17 guaranteed interest contracts with cash settlement options,
18 valued on a change in fund basis, the formula for single premium
19 immediate annuities stated in subdivision (b) shall
20 apply.applies.
21 (3) However, if the calendar year statutory valuation
22 interest rate for any life insurance policies issued in any
23 calendar year determined without reference to this sentence
24 differs from the corresponding actual rate for similar policies
25 issued in the immediately preceding calendar year by less than
26 0.5%, the calendar year statutory valuation interest rate for
27 such the life insurance policies shall must be
equal to the
1 corresponding actual rate for the immediately preceding calendar
2 year. For purposes of applying the immediately preceding
3 sentence, the calendar year statutory valuation interest rate for
4 life insurance policies issued in a calendar year shall must be
5 determined for 1980 using the reference interest rate defined for
6 1979 and shall must
be determined for each subsequent
calendar
7 year regardless of when paragraphs 9 to 19 18 of
section 4060(5)
8 become operative.
9 (4) The weighting factors referred to in the formulas in
10 subsection (2) are given in the following tables:
11 (a) The weighting factors for life insurance are:
12 Guaranteed
13 Duration Weighting
14 (Years) Factors
15 10 or less .50
16 more than 10, but not more than 20 .45
17 more than 20 .35
18 For life insurance, the guaranteed duration is the maximum
19 number of years the life insurance can remain in force on a basis
20 guaranteed in the policy or under options to convert to plans of
21 life insurance with premium rates or nonforfeiture values, or
22 both, which that are guaranteed in the original policy.
23 (b) The weighting factor for single premium immediate
24 annuities and for annuity benefits involving life contingencies
25 arising from other annuities with cash settlement options and
26 guaranteed interest contracts with cash settlement options is
1 .80.
2 (c) The weighting factors for other annuities and for
3 guaranteed interest contracts, except as stated in subdivision
4 (b), are specified in subparagraphs (i), (ii), and (iii), according
5 to the rules and definitions in subparagraphs (iv), (v), and (vi)
6 as follows:
7 (i) For annuities and guaranteed interest
8 contracts valued on an issue year basis:
9 Guaranteed Weighting Factor
10 Duration For Plan Type
11 (Years) A B C
12 5 or less: .80 .60 .50
13 more than 5, but not more than 10: .75 .60 .50
14 more than 10, but not more than 20: .65 .50 .45
15 more than 20: .45 .35 .35
16 Plan Type
17 A B C
18 (ii) For annuities and guaranteed
19 interest contracts valued on a change in fund
20 basis, the factors shown in subparagraph (i)
21 increased by: .15 .25 .05
22 Plan Type
23 A B C
24 (iii) For annuities and guaranteed
25 interest contracts valued on an issue year
26 basis, other than those with no cash
27 settlement
options, which that do not guarantee
28 interest on considerations received more than
1 1 year after issue or purchase and for
2 annuities and guaranteed interest contracts
3 valued
on a change in fund basis which that
4 do not guarantee interest rates on
5 considerations received more than 12 months
6 beyond the valuation date, the factors shown
7 in subparagraph (i) or derived in subparagraph
8 (ii) increased by: .05 .05 .05
9 (iv) For other annuities with cash settlement options and
10 guaranteed interest contracts with cash settlement options, the
11 guaranteed duration is the number of years for which the contract
12 guarantees interest rates in excess of the calendar year
13 statutory valuation interest rate for life insurance policies
14 with guaranteed duration in excess of 20 years. For other
15 annuities with no cash settlement options and for guaranteed
16 interest contracts with no cash settlement options, the
17 guaranteed duration is the number of years from the date of issue
18 or date of purchase to the date annuity benefits are scheduled to
19 commence.
20 (v) As used in subparagraphs (i) to (iii):
21 (A) "Plan Type A" means at any time the policyholder may
22 withdraw funds only with an adjustment to reflect changes in
23 interest rates or asset values since receipt of the funds by the
24 insurance company; without such the adjustment but in
25 installments over 5 years or more; as an immediate life annuity;
26 or no withdrawal permitted.
27 (B) "Plan Type B" means before expiration of the interest
1 rate guarantee, the policyholder may withdraw funds only with an
2 adjustment to reflect changes in interest rates or asset values
3 since receipt of the funds by the insurance company; without such
4 the adjustment but in installments over 5 years or more; or no
5 withdrawal permitted. At the end of interest rate guarantee,
6 funds may be withdrawn without such the adjustment
in a single
7 sum or installments over less than 5 years.
8 (C) "Plan Type C" means the policyholder may withdraw funds
9 before expiration of interest rate guarantee in a single sum or
10 installments over less than 5 years either without adjustment to
11 reflect changes in interest rates or asset values since receipt
12 of the funds by the insurance company or subject only to a fixed
13 surrender charge stipulated in the contract as a percentage of
14 the fund.
15 (vi) A company may elect to value guaranteed interest
16 contracts with cash settlement options and annuities with cash
17 settlement options on either an issue year basis or on a change
18 in fund basis. Guaranteed interest contracts with no cash
19 settlement options and other annuities with no cash settlement
20 options must be valued on an issue year basis. As used in this
21 section, an issue year basis of valuation refers to a valuation
22 basis under which the interest rate used to determine the minimum
23 valuation standard for the entire duration of the annuity or
24 guaranteed interest contract is the calendar year valuation
25 interest rate for the year of issue or year of purchase of the
26 annuity or guaranteed interest contract, and the change in fund
27 basis of valuation refers to a valuation basis under which the
1 interest rate used to determine the minimum valuation standard
2 applicable to each change in the fund held under the annuity or
3 guaranteed interest contract is the calendar year valuation
4 interest rate for the year of the change in the fund.
5 (5) As used in subsections (2) and (3), "the reference
6 interest rate" means:
7 (a) For all life insurance, the lesser of the average over a
8 period of 36 months and the average over a period of 12 months,
9 ending on June 30 of the calendar year next preceding the year of
10 issue, of Moody's corporate bond yield average - monthly average
11 corporates, as published by Moody's investors service, inc.
12 (b) For single premium immediate annuities and for annuity
13 benefits involving life contingencies arising from other
14 annuities with cash settlement options and guaranteed interest
15 contracts with cash settlement options, the average over a period
16 of 12 months, ending on June 30 of the calendar year of issue or
17 year of purchase or December 31 of the calendar year preceding
18 the year of issue or year of purchase, of Moody's corporate bond
19 yield average - monthly average corporates, as published by
20 Moody's investors service, inc. An insurer shall use the same
21 method of computing the reference interest rate under this
22 subdivision in all of its contracts. An insurer shall not change
23 its method of computing the reference interest rate under this
24 subdivision unless the insurer has notified and received approval
25 from the commissioner.director.
26 (c) For other annuities with cash settlement options and
27 guaranteed interest contracts with cash settlement options,
1 valued on a year of issue basis, except as stated in subdivision
2 (b), with guaranteed duration in excess of 10 years, the lesser
3 of the average over a period of 36 months and the average over a
4 period of 12 months, ending on June 30 of the calendar year of
5 issue or purchase or December 31 of the calendar year preceding
6 the year of issue or year of purchase, of Moody's corporate bond
7 yield average - monthly average corporates, as published by
8 Moody's investors service, inc. An insurer shall use the same
9 method of computing the reference interest rate under this
10 subdivision in all of its contracts. An insurer shall not change
11 its method of computing the reference interest rate under this
12 subdivision unless the insurer has notified and received approval
13 from the commissioner.director.
14 (d) For other annuities with cash settlement options and
15 guaranteed interest contracts with cash settlement options,
16 valued on a year of issue basis, except as stated in subdivision
17 (b), with guaranteed duration of 10 years or less, the average
18 over a period of 12 months, ending on June 30 of the calendar
19 year of issue or purchase or December 31 of the calendar year
20 preceding the year of issue or year of purchase, of Moody's
21 corporate bond yield average - monthly average corporates, as
22 published by Moody's investors service, inc. An insurer shall use
23 the same method of computing the reference interest rate under
24 this subdivision in all of its contracts. An insurer shall not
25 change its method of computing the reference interest rate under
26 this subdivision unless the insurer has notified and received
27 approval from the commissioner.director.
1 (e) For other annuities with no cash settlement options and
2 for guaranteed interest contracts with no cash settlement
3 options, the average over a period of 12 months, ending on June
4 30 of the calendar year of issue or purchase or December 31 of
5 the calendar year preceding the year of issue or year of
6 purchase, of Moody's corporate bond yield average - monthly
7 average corporates, as published by Moody's investors service,
8 inc. An insurer shall use the same method of computing the
9 reference interest rate under this subdivision in all of its
10 contracts. An insurer shall not change its method of computing
11 the reference interest rate under this subdivision unless the
12 insurer has notified and received approval from the
13 commissioner.director.
14 (f) For other annuities with cash settlement options and
15 guaranteed interest contracts with cash settlement options,
16 valued on a change in fund basis, except as stated in subdivision
17 (b), the average over a period of 12 months, ending on June 30 of
18 the calendar year of the change in the fund or December 31 of the
19 calendar year preceding the year of the change in the fund, of
20 Moody's corporate bond yield average - monthly average
21 corporates, as published by Moody's investors service, inc. An
22 insurer shall use the same method of computing the reference
23 interest rate under this subdivision in all of its contracts. An
24 insurer shall not change its method of computing the reference
25 interest rate under this subdivision unless the insurer has
26 notified and received approval from the commissioner.director.
27 (6) In the event that If Moody's corporate bond
yield
1 average - monthly average corporates is no longer published by
2 Moody's investors service, inc. or in the event that if the
3 national association of insurance commissioners determines that
4 Moody's corporate bond yield average - monthly average corporates
5 as published by Moody's investors service, inc. is no longer
6 appropriate for the determination of the reference interest rate,
7 then an alternative method for determination of the reference
8 interest rate, which is adopted by the national association of
9 insurance commissioners and approved by a rule promulgated by the
10 commissioner, director,
may be substituted.
11 (7) Any changes to policy or contract forms that are needed
12 because of changes in valuation rates shall do not
require
13 refiling with, or approval by, the commissioner.director.
14 (8) An insurer may use December 31, 1985 for purposes of
15 computing the reference interest rate for the calendar year 1986
16 only.
17 Sec. 836a. (1) The director shall promulgate regulations
18 containing the minimum standards applicable to the valuation of
19 disability plans and contracts issued before the date of the
20 valuation manual. For accident and health insurance contracts
21 issued on or after the operative date of the valuation manual,
22 the standard prescribed in the valuation manual is the minimum
23 standard of valuation required under section 830(2).
24 (2) As used in this section, the following definitions apply
25 on and after the operative date of the valuation manual:
26 (a) "Accident and health insurance" means contracts that
27 incorporate morbidity risk and provide protection against
1 economic loss resulting from accident, sickness, or medical
2 conditions and as may be specified in the valuation manual.
3 (b) "NAIC" means the national association of insurance
4 commissioners.
5 (c) "Valuation manual" means the manual of valuation
6 instructions adopted by the NAIC as specified in section 836b.
7 Sec. 836b. (1) All of the following apply to the valuation
8 manual:
9 (a) Except as otherwise provided under subdivision (e) or
10 (g), for policies issued on or after the operative date of the
11 valuation manual and, at a company's option for policies or
12 individual blocks of policies acquired by the company through a
13 business acquisition or reinsurance transaction after the
14 effective date of the amendatory act that added this section,
15 regardless of when the policies were issued, the standard
16 prescribed in the valuation manual is the minimum standard of
17 valuation required under section 830(2).
18 (b) The operative date of the valuation manual is January 1
19 of the first calendar year following the first July 1 as of which
20 all of the following have occurred:
21 (i) The NAIC has adopted the valuation manual by a vote of at
22 least 42 members, or 3/4 of the members voting, whichever is
23 greater.
24 (ii) The standard valuation law, as amended by the NAIC in
25 2009, or legislation including substantially similar terms and
26 provisions, has been enacted by states representing greater than
27 75% of the direct premiums written as reported in the following
1 annual statements submitted for 2008: life, accident, and health
2 annual statements; health annual statements; or fraternal annual
3 statements.
4 (iii) The standard valuation law, as amended by the NAIC in
5 2009, or legislation including substantially similar terms and
6 provisions, has been enacted by at least 42 of the following 55
7 jurisdictions: the 50 states of the United States, American
8 Samoa, the American Virgin Islands, the District of Columbia,
9 Guam, and Puerto Rico.
10 (c) Unless a change in the valuation manual specifies a
11 later effective date, a change to the valuation manual is
12 effective on January 1 after the date the NAIC adopts the change
13 to the valuation manual by a vote representing both of the
14 following:
15 (i) At least 3/4 of the members of the NAIC, but not less
16 than a majority of the total membership.
17 (ii) Members of the NAIC representing jurisdictions that
18 amount to greater than 75% of the direct premiums written as
19 reported in the following annual statements most recently
20 available before the vote in subparagraph (i): life, accident, and
21 health annual statements; health annual statements; or fraternal
22 annual statements.
23 (d) The valuation manual must specify all of the following:
24 (i) Minimum valuation standards for and definitions of the
25 policies or contracts subject to section 830(2). The minimum
26 valuation standards are all of the following:
27 (A) The director's reserve valuation method for life
1 insurance contracts, other than annuity contracts, subject to
2 section 830(2).
3 (B) The director's annuity reserve valuation method for
4 annuity contracts subject to section 830(2).
5 (C) Minimum reserves for all other policies or contracts
6 subject to section 830(2).
7 (ii) The policies or contracts or types of policies or
8 contracts that are subject to the requirements of a principle-
9 based valuation in subsection (2) and the minimum valuation
10 standards consistent with those requirements.
11 (iii) For policies and contracts subject to a principle-based
12 valuation under subsection (2), all of the following apply:
13 (A) Requirements for the format of reports to the director
14 under subsection (3)(c) and that must include information
15 necessary to determine if the valuation is appropriate and in
16 compliance with this section.
17 (B) Assumptions must be prescribed for risks over which the
18 company does not have significant control or influence.
19 (C) Procedures for corporate governance and oversight of the
20 actuarial function, and a process for appropriate waiver or
21 modification of the procedures.
22 (iv) For policies that are not subject to a principle-based
23 valuation under subsections (2), (3), and (4), the minimum
24 valuation standard is 1 of the following:
25 (A) The standard is consistent with the minimum standard of
26 valuation before the operative date of the valuation manual.
27 (B) The standard develops reserves that quantify the
1 benefits and guarantees, and the funding, associated with the
2 contracts and their risks at a level of conservatism that
3 reflects conditions that include unfavorable events that have a
4 reasonable probability of occurring.
5 (v) Other requirements, including, but not limited to, those
6 relating to reserve methods, models for measuring risk,
7 generation of economic scenarios, assumptions, margins, use of
8 company experience, risk measurement, disclosure, certifications,
9 reports, actuarial opinions and memorandums, transition rules,
10 and internal controls.
11 (vi) The data and form of the data required under subsection
12 (5), to whom the data must be submitted, and may specify other
13 requirements including data analyses and reporting of analyses.
14 (e) If there is not a specific valuation requirement or if
15 the director determines that a specific valuation requirement in
16 the valuation manual does not comply with this section, the
17 company shall, with respect to the requirement, comply with
18 minimum valuation standards prescribed by the director by rule.
19 (f) The director may engage a qualified actuary, at the
20 expense of the company, to perform an actuarial examination of
21 the company and opine on the appropriateness of any reserve
22 assumption or method used by the company, or to review and opine
23 on a company's compliance with any requirement of this section.
24 The director may rely upon the opinion, regarding this section,
25 of a qualified actuary engaged by the commissioner of another
26 state, district, or territory of the United States. As used in
27 this subdivision, "engage" includes employment and contracting.
1 (g) The director may require a company to change any
2 assumption or method that the director considers necessary to
3 comply with the requirements of the valuation manual or this
4 section, and the company shall adjust the reserves as required by
5 the director.
6 (2) A company shall establish reserves using a principle-
7 based valuation that meets all of the following conditions for
8 policies or contracts as specified in the valuation manual:
9 (a) Quantify the benefits and guarantees, and the funding,
10 associated with the contracts and their risks at a level of
11 conservatism that reflects conditions that include unfavorable
12 events that have a reasonable probability of occurring during the
13 lifetime of the contracts. For polices or contracts with
14 significant tail risk, reflects conditions appropriately adverse
15 to quantify the tail risk.
16 (b) Incorporate assumptions, risk analysis methods,
17 financial models, and management techniques that are consistent
18 with, but not necessarily identical to, those used within the
19 company's overall risk assessment process, while recognizing
20 potential differences in financial reporting structures and any
21 prescribed assumptions or methods.
22 (c) Incorporate assumptions that are derived in 1 of the
23 following manners:
24 (i) The assumption is prescribed in the valuation manual.
25 (ii) For assumptions that are not prescribed in the valuation
26 manual, the assumptions must do the following, as applicable:
27 (A) Use the company's available experience, to the extent it
1 is relevant and statistically credible.
2 (B) To the extent that company data are not available,
3 relevant, or statistically credible, use other relevant and
4 statistically credible experience.
5 (d) Provide margins for uncertainty, including adverse
6 deviation and estimation error, such that the greater the
7 uncertainty, the larger the margin and resulting reserve.
8 (3) A company that uses principle-based valuation for 1 or
9 more policies or contracts subject to this section as specified
10 in the valuation manual shall do all of the following:
11 (a) Establish procedures for corporate governance and
12 oversight of the actuarial valuation function consistent with
13 those described in the valuation manual.
14 (b) Provide to the director and the board of directors an
15 annual certification of the effectiveness of the internal
16 controls with respect to the principle-based valuation. The
17 internal controls must be designed to assure that all material
18 risks inherent in the liabilities and associated assets subject
19 to the valuation are included in the valuation, and that
20 valuations are made in accordance with the valuation manual. The
21 certification must be based on the controls in place at the end
22 of the preceding calendar year.
23 (c) Develop, and file with the director on request, a
24 principle-based valuation report that complies with standards
25 prescribed in the valuation manual.
26 (4) A principle-based valuation may include a prescribed
27 formulaic reserve component.
1 (5) A company shall submit mortality, morbidity,
2 policyholder behavior, or expense experience and other data as
3 prescribed in the valuation manual.
4 (6) Except as otherwise provided in this section,
5 confidential information is confidential and privileged, is not
6 subject to disclosure under the freedom of information act, 1976
7 PA 442, MCL 15.231 to 15.246, is not subject to subpoena, and is
8 not subject to discovery or admissible in evidence in a private
9 civil action. However, the director may use the confidential
10 information in the furtherance of any regulatory or legal action
11 brought as a part of the director's official duties.
12 (7) The director or any person who received confidential
13 information while acting under the authority of the director
14 shall not testify in a private civil action concerning
15 confidential information.
16 (8) The director may do all of the following:
17 (a) Except as otherwise provided in this subdivision, share
18 confidential information with other state, federal, and
19 international regulatory agencies and with the NAIC and its
20 affiliates and subsidiaries. The director may also share
21 confidential information described in subsection (18)(c)(i) and
22 (iv) only with the actuarial board for counseling and discipline
23 or its successor on request for the purpose of professional
24 disciplinary proceedings and with state, federal, and
25 international law enforcement officials. The director shall not
26 share confidential information unless the recipient agrees in
27 writing to maintain the confidentiality and privileged status of
1 the confidential information and has verified in writing the
2 legal authority to maintain confidentiality.
3 (b) Subject to this subdivision, receive documents,
4 materials, data, or information from regulatory or law
5 enforcement officials of other foreign or domestic jurisdictions,
6 the actuarial board for counseling and discipline or its
7 successor, and the NAIC and its affiliates and subsidiaries. The
8 director shall maintain as confidential or privileged any
9 documents, materials, or information received with notice or the
10 understanding that it is confidential or privileged under the
11 laws of the jurisdiction that is the source of the document,
12 material, or information.
13 (9) The director may enter into written agreements governing
14 sharing and use of information provided under this section.
15 (10) The disclosure or sharing of confidential information
16 to the director under this section is not a waiver of an
17 applicable privilege or claim of confidentiality.
18 (11) A privilege established under the law of any state or
19 jurisdiction that is substantially similar to the privilege
20 established under this section applies in any proceeding in, and
21 in any court of, this state.
22 (12) As used in subsections (6) to (10), "regulatory
23 agency", "law enforcement agency", and "NAIC" include, but are
24 not limited to, their employees, agents, consultants, and
25 contractors.
26 (13) Notwithstanding anything in this section to the
27 contrary, any confidential information described in subsection
1 (18)(c)(i) and (iv) is subject to all of the following:
2 (a) The confidential information is subject to subpoena for
3 the purpose of defending an action seeking damages from the
4 appointed actuary submitting the related memorandum in support of
5 an opinion submitted under section 830a or principle-based
6 valuation report developed under subsection (3)(c) by reason of
7 an action required by section 830a or subsection (3)(c) or by
8 rules promulgated under this section.
9 (b) The director may release the confidential information
10 with the written consent of the company.
11 (c) If any portion of a memorandum in support of an opinion
12 submitted under section 830a or a principle-based valuation
13 report developed under subsection (3)(c) is cited by the company
14 in its marketing, is cited before a governmental agency other
15 than a state insurance department, or is released by the company
16 to the news media, the memorandum or report is not confidential.
17 (14) Except as provided in subsection (15), a domestic
18 company is exempt from the requirements under subsections (1) to
19 (5) if the domestic company meets both of the following
20 requirements:
21 (a) The domestic company has less than $500,000,000.00 of
22 ordinary life premiums and, if the domestic company is a member
23 of a group of life insurers, the group has combined ordinary life
24 premiums of less than $1,000,000,000.00.
25 (b) The domestic company reported total adjusted capital of
26 at least 450% of the authorized control level risk-based capital
27 in the most recent risk-based capital report and the appointed
1 actuary has provided an unqualified opinion on the reserves.
2 (15) A domestic company that meets the requirements under
3 subsection (14)(a) and (b) may elect to be bound by the
4 requirements of subsections (1) to (5) for a calendar year. The
5 election must be in writing and filed with the director by
6 February 1 of the year following the calendar year in which the
7 company makes the election.
8 (16) For purposes of subsection (14), ordinary life premiums
9 are measured as direct plus reinsurance assumed from an
10 unaffiliated company from the prior calendar year annual
11 statement.
12 (17) Except for a domestic company that makes an election
13 under subsection (15), for a domestic company that is exempt from
14 the requirements of subsections (1) to (5) under subsection (14),
15 sections 830a, 832, 834, 835, 836, and 836a are applicable, and a
16 reference to this section in sections 830a, 834, and 836a is not
17 applicable.
18 (18) As used in this section:
19 (a) "Accident and health insurance" means contracts that
20 incorporate morbidity risk and provide protection against
21 economic loss resulting from accident, sickness, or medical
22 conditions and as may be specified in the valuation manual.
23 (b) "Company" means an entity that has written, issued, or
24 reinsured life insurance contracts, accident and health insurance
25 contracts, or deposit-type contracts in this state and has at
26 least 1 policy in force or on claim or that has written, issued,
27 or reinsured life insurance contracts, accident and health
1 insurance contracts, or deposit-type contracts in any state and
2 is required to hold a certificate of authority to write life
3 insurance, accident and health insurance, or deposit-type
4 contracts in this state.
5 (c) "Confidential information" means all of the following:
6 (i) A memorandum in support of an opinion submitted under
7 section 830a and any other documents, materials, and other
8 information, including, but not limited to, all working papers,
9 and copies of working papers, created, produced, or obtained by
10 or disclosed to the director or any other person in connection
11 with the memorandum.
12 (ii) All documents, materials, and other information,
13 including, but not limited to, all working papers, and copies of
14 working papers, created, produced, or obtained by or disclosed to
15 the director or any other person in the course of an examination
16 made under subsection (1)(f) if an examination report or other
17 material prepared in connection with an examination made under
18 section 222 is not held as private and confidential information
19 under section 222, an examination report or other material
20 prepared in connection with an examination made under subsection
21 (1)(f) is not "confidential information" to the same extent as if
22 the examination report or other material had been prepared under
23 section 222.
24 (iii) Any reports, documents, materials, and other information
25 developed by a company in support of, or in connection with, an
26 annual certification by the company under subsection (3)(b)
27 evaluating the effectiveness of the company's internal controls
1 with respect to a principle-based valuation and any other
2 documents, materials, and other information, including, but not
3 limited to, all working papers, and copies of working papers,
4 created, produced, or obtained by or disclosed to the director or
5 any other person in connection with such reports, documents,
6 materials, and other information.
7 (iv) Any principle-based valuation report developed under
8 subsection (3)(c) and any other documents, materials, and other
9 information, including, but not limited to, all working papers,
10 and copies of working papers, created, produced, or obtained by
11 or disclosed to the director or any other person in connection
12 with the report.
13 (v) Any documents, materials, data, and other information
14 submitted by a company under subsection (5), collectively,
15 experience data, and any other documents, materials, data, and
16 other information, including, but not limited to, all working
17 papers, and copies of working papers, created or produced in
18 connection with the experience data, in each case that include
19 any potentially company-identifying or personally identifiable
20 information, that is provided to or obtained by the director,
21 together with any experience data, the experience materials and
22 any other documents, materials, data, and other information,
23 including, but not limited to, all working papers, and copies of
24 working papers, created, produced, or obtained by or disclosed to
25 the director or any other person in connection with the
26 experience materials.
27 (d) "Deposit-type contract" means contracts that do not
1 incorporate mortality or morbidity risks and as may be specified
2 in the valuation manual.
3 (e) "Life insurance" means contracts that incorporate
4 mortality risk, including annuity and pure endowment contracts,
5 and as may be specified in the valuation manual.
6 (f) "NAIC" means the national association of insurance
7 commissioners.
8 (g) "Policyholder behavior" means any action a policyholder,
9 contract holder, or any other person with the right to elect
10 options, such as a certificate holder, may take under a policy or
11 contract subject to this section, including, but not limited to,
12 lapse, withdrawal, transfer, deposit, premium payment, loan,
13 annuitization, or benefit elections prescribed by the policy or
14 contract but excluding events of mortality or morbidity that
15 result in benefits prescribed in their essential aspects by the
16 terms of the policy or contract.
17 (h) "Principle-based valuation" means a reserve valuation
18 that uses 1 or more methods or 1 or more assumptions determined
19 by the insurer and is required to comply with this section as
20 specified in the valuation manual.
21 (i) "Qualified actuary" means an individual who is qualified
22 to sign the applicable statement of actuarial opinion in
23 accordance with the American academy of actuaries qualification
24 standards for actuaries signing such statements and who meets the
25 requirements specified in the valuation manual.
26 (j) "Tail risk" means a risk that occurs either where the
27 frequency of low probability events is higher than expected under
1 a normal probability distribution or where there are observed
2 events of very significant size or magnitude.
3 (k) "Valuation manual" means the manual of valuation
4 instructions adopted by the NAIC as specified in this section.
5 Sec. 838. (1) As used in this section:
6 (a) "2001 CSO mortality table" means that mortality table,
7 consisting of separate rates of mortality for male and female
8 lives, developed by the American academy of actuaries CSO task
9 force from the valuation basic mortality table developed by the
10 society of actuaries individual life insurance valuation
11 mortality task force and adopted by the NAIC in December 2002.
12 Unless the context indicates otherwise, the 2001 CSO mortality
13 table includes both the ultimate form of that table and the
14 select and ultimate form of that table and includes both the
15 smoker and nonsmoker mortality tables and the composite mortality
16 tables. It also includes both the age-nearest-birthday and age-
17 last-birthday bases of the mortality tables.
18 (b) "2001 CSO mortality table (F)" means that mortality
19 table consisting of the rates of mortality for female lives from
20 the 2001 CSO mortality table.
21 (c) "2001 CSO mortality table (M)" means that mortality
22 table consisting of the rates of mortality for male lives from
23 the 2001 CSO mortality table.
24 (d) "Composite mortality tables" means mortality tables with
25 rates of mortality that do not distinguish between smokers and
26 nonsmokers.
27 (e) "NAIC" means the national association of insurance
1 commissioners.
2 (f) "Smoker and nonsmoker mortality tables" means mortality
3 tables with separate rates of mortality for smokers and
4 nonsmokers.
5 (2) In addition to the other requirements of this act, a
6 life insurer shall use appendix A-830 of the NAIC accounting
7 practices and procedures manual for the valuation of life
8 insurance policies. Any supplements, replacements, or changes to
9 appendix A-830 of the NAIC accounting practices and procedures
10 manual that are adopted by the NAIC shall only take effect if
11 adopted by the commissioner director by rules
promulgated
12 pursuant to under the administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969
13 PA 306, MCL 24.201 to 24.328. This section does not expand the
14 applicability of appendix A-830 of the NAIC accounting practices
15 and procedures manual to include life insurance policies
16 otherwise exempt under appendix A-830 of the NAIC accounting
17 practices and procedures manual.
18 (3) At the election of an insurer for each plan of insurance
19 and subject to this section, the 2001 CSO mortality table may be
20 used as the minimum standard for policies issued on or after July
21 1, 2004 and before January 1, 2009 to which sections 834(1)(I)
22 834(1)(a) and 4060(5)(f) and (g) are applicable. If an insurer
23 elects to use the 2001 CSO mortality table, it shall do so for
24 both valuation and nonforfeiture purposes. Subject to this
25 section, the 2001 CSO mortality table shall must be
used in
26 determining minimum standards for policies issued on or after
27 January 1, 2009 to which sections 834(1)(I) 834(1)(a) and
1 4060(5)(f) and (g) are applicable.
2 (4) For plans of insurance without separate rates for
3 smokers and nonsmokers, the composite mortality tables shall must
4 be used. For each plan of insurance with separate rates for
5 smokers and nonsmokers, an insurer may use any of the following:
6 (a) Composite mortality tables to determine minimum reserve
7 liabilities, minimum cash surrender values, and amounts of paid-
8 up nonforfeiture benefits.
9 (b) Smoker and nonsmoker mortality tables to determine the
10 valuation net premiums and additional minimum reserves, if any,
11 required by section 834 and composite mortality tables to
12 determine the basic minimum reserve liabilities, minimum cash
13 surrender values, and amounts of paid-up nonforfeiture benefits.
14 (c) Smoker and nonsmoker mortality tables to determine
15 minimum reserve liabilities, minimum cash surrender values, and
16 amounts of paid-up nonforfeiture benefits.
17 (5) An insurer may, at the option of the insurer for each
18 plan of insurance, use the 2001 CSO mortality table in its
19 ultimate or select and ultimate form for the purpose of
20 determining minimum reserve liabilities, minimum cash surrender
21 values, and amounts of paid-up nonforfeiture benefits for each
22 plan of insurance.
23 (6) If the 2001 CSO mortality table is the minimum reserve
24 standard for any plan for an insurer, the actuarial opinion in
25 the annual statement filed with the commissioner shall director
26
must be completed pursuant to under section
830a. An The director
27 may exempt an insurer that does business in this state and in no
1 other state may be exempted from this subsection. by
the
2 commissioner.
3 (7) In valuing life insurance policies pursuant to appendix
4 A-830 of the NAIC accounting practices and procedures manual, all
5 of the following apply:
6 (a) In determining the applicability to any universal life
7 policy, the net level reserve premium for the secondary guarantee
8 period is based on the ultimate mortality rates in the 2001 CSO
9 mortality table.
10 (b) All calculations under the contract segmentation method
11 are made using the 2001 CSO mortality rate, and, if elected, the
12 optional minimum mortality standard for deficiency reserves. The
13 value of "qx+k+t-1" is the valuation mortality rate for deficiency
14 reserves in policy year k+t, but using the unmodified select
15 mortality rates if modified select mortality rates are used in
16 the computation of deficiency reserves.
17 (c) For purposes of general calculation requirements for
18 basic reserves and premium deficiency reserves, the 2001 CSO
19 mortality table is the minimum standard for basic reserves.
20 (d) For purposes of general calculation requirements for
21 basic reserves and premium deficiency reserves, the 2001 CSO
22 mortality table is the minimum standard for deficiency reserves.
23 If select mortality rates are used, they may be multiplied by X
24 percent for durations in the first segment, subject to the
25 conditions set forth in appendix A-830 of the NAIC accounting
26 practices and procedures manual. In demonstrating compliance with
27 those conditions, the demonstrations may not combine the results
1 of tests that utilize the 1980 CSO mortality table with those
2 tests that utilize the 2001 CSO mortality table, unless the
3 combination is explicitly required by regulation or is necessary
4 to be in compliance with relevant actuarial standards of
5 practice.
6 (e) When determining minimum value for policies with
7 guaranteed nonlevel gross premiums or guaranteed nonlevel
8 benefits, other than universal life policies, the valuation
9 mortality table used in determining the tabular cost of insurance
10 shall be is the ultimate mortality rates in the 2001 CSO
11 mortality table.
12 (f) When determining the optional exemption for yearly
13 renewable term reinsurance for policies with guaranteed nonlevel
14 gross premiums or guaranteed nonlevel benefits, other than
15 universal life policies, the calculations shall must use
the
16 maximum valuation interest rate and the ultimate mortality rates
17 in the 2001 CSO mortality table.
18 (g) When determining the optional exemption for attained-
19 age-based yearly renewable term life insurance policies with
20 guaranteed nonlevel gross premiums or guaranteed nonlevel
21 benefits, other than universal life policies, the calculations
22 shall must use the maximum valuation interest rate and the
23 ultimate mortality rates in the 2001 CSO mortality table.
24 (h) When determining the exemption from unitary reserves for
25 certain n-year renewable term life insurance policies with
26 guaranteed nonlevel gross premiums or guaranteed nonlevel
27 benefits, other than universal life policies, the calculations
1 shall must use the ultimate mortality rates in the 2001 CSO
2 mortality table.
3 (i) For flexible premium and fixed premium universal life
4 insurance policies that contain provisions resulting in the
5 ability of a policyowner to keep a policy in force over a
6 secondary guarantee period, the 1-year valuation premium for
7 purposes of identifying policies with a secondary guarantee shall
8 be is calculated using the ultimate mortality rates in the
2001
9 CSO mortality table.
10 (8) For any ordinary life insurance policy delivered or
11 issued for delivery in this state on or after July 1, 2004 that
12 uses the same premium rates and charges for male and female lives
13 or is issued in circumstances where applicable law does not
14 permit distinctions on the basis of gender, a mortality table
15 that is a blend of the 2001 CSO mortality table (M) and the 2001
16 CSO mortality table (F) may, at the option of the insurer for
17 each plan of insurance, be substituted for the 2001 CSO mortality
18 table for use in determining minimum cash surrender value and
19 amounts of paid-up nonforfeiture benefits. No change in minimum
20 valuation standards is implied by this subsection.
21 (9) In determining minimum reserve liabilities and
22 nonforfeiture benefits, an insurer may choose from among the
23 blended tables developed by the American academy of actuaries CSO
24 task force and adopted by the NAIC in December 2002.
25 (10) It is not, by itself, a violation of chapter 20 for an
26 insurer to issue the same kind of policy of life insurance on
27 both a sex-distinct and sex-neutral basis.
1 Sec. 3930. (1) If long-term care benefits are provided
2 through the acceleration of benefits under group or individual
3 life policies or riders to those policies, policy reserves for
4 the benefits shall must
be determined in accordance with
section
5 834(1)(vii). 834(1)(g). Claim reserves shall must
also be
6 established if the policy or rider is in claim status.
7 (2) Reserves for policies and riders subject to subsection
8 (1) shall must be based on the multiple decrement model utilizing
9 all relevant decrements except for voluntary termination rates.
10 Single decrement approximations may be used if the calculation
11 produces essentially similar reserves, if the reserve is clearly
12 more conservative, or if the reserve is immaterial. The
13 calculations may take into account the reduction in life
14 insurance benefits due to the payment of long-term care benefits.
15 However, in no event shall the reserves for the long-term care
16 benefit and the life insurance benefit must not be less than the
17 reserves for the life insurance benefit assuming no long-term
18 care benefit.
19 (3) In the development and calculation of reserves for
20 policies and riders subject to subsection (1), due regard shall
21 must be given to the applicable policy provisions, marketing
22 methods, administrative procedures, and all other considerations
23 that have an impact on projected claim costs, including, but not
24 limited to, all of the following:
25 (a) Definition of insured events.
26 (b) Covered long-term care facilities.
27 (c) Existence of home convalescence care coverage.
1 (d) Definition of facilities.
2 (e) Existence or absence of barriers to eligibility.
3 (f) Premium waiver provision.
4 (g) Renewability.
5 (h) Ability to raise premiums.
6 (i) Marketing method.
7 (j) underwriting procedures.
8 (k) Claims adjustment procedures.
9 (l) Waiting period.
10 (m) Maximum benefit.
11 (n) Availability of eligible facilities.
12 (o) Margins in claim costs.
13 (p) Optional nature of benefit.
14 (q) Delay in eligibility for benefit.
15 (r) Inflation protection provisions.
16 (s) Guaranteed insurability option.
17 (4) Any applicable valuation morbidity table shall must be
18 certified as appropriate as a statutory valuation table by a
19 member of the American academy of actuaries.
20 Sec. 4060. (1) This section shall be known as the standard
21 nonforfeiture law for life insurance and shall apply applies to
22 life insurance contracts except as otherwise provided in section
23 4061 for universal life insurance contracts.
24 (2) For Subject
to subdivisions (g) and (h), for policies
25 issued on and after the operative date of this section, as
26 defined in subsection (10), a policy of life insurance, except as
27 stated provided in subsection (9), shall may not
be delivered or
1 issued for delivery in this state unless it contains in substance
2 all of the following provisions, or corresponding provisions that
3 in the opinion of the commissioner director are
at least as
4 favorable to the defaulting or surrendering policyholder as are
5 the minimum requirements specified in this subsection and are
6 essentially in compliance with subsection (8):
7 (a) That in the event of If there is a default in a
premium
8 payment, the company will grant, upon on proper
request not later
9 than 60 days after the due date of the premium in default, a
10 paid-up nonforfeiture benefit on a plan stipulated in the policy,
11 effective as of that due date, of an amount as specified in this
12 section. In lieu Instead
of the stipulated paid-up nonforfeiture
13 benefit, the company may substitute, upon on proper
request not
14 later than 60 days after the due date of the premium in default,
15 an actuarially equivalent alternative paid-up nonforfeiture
16 benefit that provides a greater amount or longer period of death
17 benefits or, if applicable, a greater amount or earlier payment
18 of endowment benefits.
19 (b) That upon On
surrender of the policy within 60 days
20 after the due date of a premium payment in default, after
21 premiums have been paid for not less than 3 full years in the
22 case of for ordinary insurance or 5 full years in the case of
for
23 industrial insurance, the company will pay, in place of any paid-
24 up nonforfeiture benefit, a cash surrender value of an amount
25 specified in this section.
26 (c) That a The
specified paid-up nonforfeiture benefit
shall
27 will become effective as specified in the policy unless the
1 person entitled to make the election elects another available
2 option not later than 60 days after the due date of the premium
3 in default.
4 (d) That if If
the policy has become paid up by
completion
5 of all premium payments or if it is continued under any paid-up
6 nonforfeiture benefit which that became effective on or
after the
7 third policy anniversary in the case of for ordinary
insurance or
8 the fifth policy anniversary in the case of for industrial
9 insurance, the company will pay, upon surrender of the policy
10 within 30 days after any policy anniversary, a cash surrender
11 value of an amount specified in this section.
12 (e) That for For
policies that cause on a basis
guaranteed
13 in the policy unscheduled changes in benefits or premiums, or
14 that provide an option for changes in benefits or premiums other
15 than a change to a new policy, a statement of the mortality
16 table, interest rate, and method used in calculating cash
17 surrender values and the paid-up nonforfeiture benefits available
18 under the policy.
19 For all other policies, a statement of the mortality table
20 and interest rate used in calculating the cash surrender values
21 and the paid-up nonforfeiture benefits available under the
22 policy, together with a table showing the cash surrender value,
23 if any, and paid-up nonforfeiture benefit, if any, available
24 under the policy on each policy anniversary either during the
25 first 20 policy years or during the term of the policy, whichever
26 is shorter. The values and benefits shall must be
calculated upon
27 on the assumption that there are no dividends or paid-up
1 additions credited to the policy and that there is no
2 indebtedness to the company on the policy.
3 (f) A statement that the cash surrender values and the paid-
4 up nonforfeiture benefits available under the policy are not less
5 than the minimum values and benefits required by or pursuant to
6 under the insurance law of the state in which the policy is
7 delivered; an explanation of the manner in which the cash
8 surrender values and the paid-up nonforfeiture benefits are
9 altered by the existence of any paid-up additions credited to the
10 policy or any indebtedness to the company on the policy; if a
11 detailed statement of the method of computation of the values and
12 benefits shown in the policy is not stated in the policy, a
13 statement that the method of computation has been filed with the
14 insurance supervisory official of the state in which the policy
15 is delivered; and a statement of the method to be used in
16 calculating calculate
the cash surrender value and paid-up
17 nonforfeiture benefit available under the policy on any policy
18 anniversary beyond the last anniversary for which the values and
19 benefits are consecutively shown in the policy.
20 (g) Subdivisions (a) to (f) or portions of those
21 subdivisions not applicable by reason of the plan of insurance,
22 to the extent inapplicable, may be omitted from the policy.
23 (h) The company shall reserve the right to defer the payment
24 of any cash surrender value for a period of 6 months after demand
25 for the payment with surrender of the policy.
26 (3) Any A cash surrender value available under the a policy
27 in the event of if
there is a default in a premium payment
due on
1 any policy anniversary, whether or not required by subsection
2 (2), shall must be an amount not less than the excess, if any, of
3 the present value, on the anniversary, of the future guaranteed
4 benefits that would have been provided for by the policy,
5 including any existing paid-up additions, if there had been no
6 default, over the sum of the then present value of the adjusted
7 premiums as defined in subsection (5), corresponding to premiums
8 that would have fallen due on and after the anniversary, and the
9 amount of any indebtedness to the company on the policy. However,
10 for any a policy issued on or after the operative date of
11 paragraphs 9 to 19 18
of subsection (5) that provides
12 supplemental life insurance or annuity benefits at the option of
13 the insured and for an identifiable additional premium by rider
14 or supplemental policy provision, the cash surrender value shall
15 must be an amount not less than the sum of the cash surrender
16 value for an otherwise similar policy issued at the same age
17 without the rider or supplemental policy provision and the cash
18 surrender value for a policy that provides only the benefits
19 otherwise provided by the rider or supplemental policy provision.
20 For any a family policy issued on or after the operative
21 date of paragraphs 9 to 19 18 of subsection (5) that
defines a
22 primary insured and provides term insurance on the life of the
23 spouse of the primary insured expiring before the spouse's age
24 71, the cash surrender value shall must be
an amount not less
25 than the sum of the cash surrender value for an otherwise similar
26 policy issued at the same age without the term insurance on the
27 life of the spouse and the cash surrender value for a policy that
1 provides only the benefits otherwise provided by the term
2 insurance on the life of the spouse.
3 Any A cash surrender value available within 30 days after
a
4 policy anniversary under a policy paid up by completion of all
5 premium payments or a policy continued under a paid-up
6 nonforfeiture benefit, whether or not required by subsection (2),
7 shall must be an amount not less than the present value, on the
8 anniversary, of the future guaranteed benefits provided for by
9 the policy, including any existing paid-up additions, decreased
10 by any indebtedness to the company on the policy.
11 (4) Any A paid-up nonforfeiture benefit available under the
12
a policy in the event of if there is a default in a premium
13 payment due on a policy anniversary shall must be
such that its
14 present value as of the anniversary shall must at
least equal the
15 cash surrender value then provided for by the policy or, if none
16 is provided for, the
policy does not provide for a cash surrender
17 value, that cash surrender value that would have been required by
18 this section in the absence of the condition that premiums shall
19 must have been paid for at least a specified period.
20 (5) Paragraphs 1 to 8 of this subsection shall do not
apply
21 to policies issued on or after the operative date of paragraphs 9
22 to 19 18 as defined in paragraph 19. 18. Except
as provided in
23 the third paragraph 3 of
this subsection, the adjusted premiums
24 for a policy shall must
be calculated on an annual basis and
25 shall must be a uniform percentage of the respective premiums
26 specified in the policy for each policy year, excluding any extra
27 premiums charged because of impairments or special hazards, so
1 that the present value, at the date of issue of the policy, of
2 all the adjusted premiums equals the sum of (I) (i) the
then
3 present value of the future guaranteed benefits provided for by
4 the policy; (II) (ii) 2% of the amount of
insurance, if the
5 insurance is uniform in amount, or of the equivalent uniform
6 amount, as hereinafter defined, if the amount of insurance varies
7 with duration of the policy; (III) (iii) 40%
of the adjusted
8 premium for the first policy year; (IV) (iv) 25%
of either the
9 adjusted premium for the first policy year or the adjusted
10 premium for a whole life policy of the same uniform or equivalent
11 uniform amount with uniform premiums for the whole of life issued
12 at the same age for the same amount of insurance, whichever is
13 less. In applying the percentages specified in items (III) (iii)
14 and (IV) (iv) above, an adjusted premium
shall must not be
15 considered to exceed 4% of the amount of insurance or uniform
16 amount equivalent thereto. to the amount of insurance. The
date
17 of issue of a policy for the purpose of this subsection shall be
18
is the date as of which that the
rated age of the insured is
19 determined.
20 In the case of For
a policy providing an amount of
insurance
21 varying with duration of the policy, the equivalent uniform
22 amount of the policy for the purpose of this subsection shall be
23 is considered to be the uniform amount of insurance provided by
24 an otherwise similar policy, containing the same endowment
25 benefit or benefits, if any, issued at the same age and for the
26 same term, the amount of which does not vary with duration and
27 the benefits under which have the same present value at the date
1 of issue as the benefits under the policy. However, in the case
2 of for a policy providing a varying amount of insurance
issued on
3 the life of a child under age 10, the equivalent uniform amount
4 may be computed as though the amount of insurance provided by the
5 policy before the attainment of age 10 were the amount provided
6 by the policy at age 10.
7 The adjusted premiums for a policy providing term insurance
8 benefits by rider or supplemental policy provision shall must be
9 equal to (a) the adjusted premiums for an otherwise similar
10 policy issued at the same age without the term insurance
11 benefits, increased, during the period for which premiums for the
12 term insurance benefits are payable, by (b) the adjusted premiums
13 for that term insurance. Items (a) and (b) shall must be
14 calculated separately and as specified in the first 2 paragraphs
15 of this subsection. However, for the purposes of items (II),
16 (III), and (IV) (ii), (iii), and (iv) of the first paragraph of this
17 subsection, the amount of insurance or equivalent uniform amount
18 of insurance used in the calculation of the adjusted premiums
19 referred to in (b) shall must be equal to the excess
of the
20 corresponding amount determined for the entire policy over the
21 amount used in the calculation of the adjusted premiums in (a).
22 Except as otherwise provided in paragraph 5 of this
23 subsection, for all policies of ordinary insurance, all adjusted
24 premiums and present values referred to in this section shall
25 must be calculated on the basis of the commissioners 1941
26 standard ordinary mortality table. For a category of ordinary
27 insurance issued on female risks, adjusted premiums and present
1 values may be calculated according to an age not more than 3
2 years younger than the actual age of the insured. Except as
3 otherwise provided in paragraph 7 of this subsection, the
4 calculations for all policies of industrial insurance shall must
5 be made on the basis of the 1941 standard industrial mortality
6 table. All calculations shall must be made on the basis of
the
7 rate of interest, not exceeding 3-1/2% per annum, specified in
8 the policy for calculating cash surrender values and paid-up
9 nonforfeiture benefits. In calculating the present value of any
10 paid-up term insurance with accompanying pure endowment, if any,
11 offered as a nonforfeiture benefit, the rates of mortality
12 assumed may be not more than 130% of the rates of mortality
13 according to the applicable table. For insurance issued on a
14 substandard basis, the calculation of adjusted premiums and
15 present values may be based on another table of mortality as
16 specified by the company and approved by the
17 commissioner.director.
18 For ordinary policies issued on or after the operative date
19 of this paragraph, as defined in paragraph 6, all adjusted
20 premiums and present values referred to in this section shall
21 must be calculated on the basis of the commissioners 1958
22 standard ordinary mortality table and the rate of interest
23 specified in the policy for calculating cash surrender values and
24 paid-up nonforfeiture benefits. However, the rate of interest
25 shall may not exceed 3-1/2% per annum, except that a rate of
26 interest not exceeding 4% per annum may be used for policies
27 issued on or after October 21, 1974, and before October 1, 1980,
1 and a rate of interest not exceeding 5-1/2% per annum may be used
2 for policies issued on or after October 1, 1980. For a category
3 of ordinary insurance issued on female risks, adjusted premiums
4 and present values may be calculated according to an age not more
5 than 6 years younger than the actual age of the insured. In
6 calculating the present value of a paid-up term insurance with
7 accompanying pure endowment, if any, offered as a nonforfeiture
8 benefit, the rates of mortality assumed may be not more than
9 those shown in the commissioners 1958 extended term insurance
10 table. For insurance issued on a substandard basis, the
11 calculation of adjusted premiums and present values may be based
12 on another table of mortality as specified by the company and
13 approved by the commissioner.director.
14 After May 23, 1960, any a company may file with the
15 commissioner director
a written notice of its election to
invoke
16 the provisions of paragraph
5 after a specified date before
17 January 1, 1966. After the filing of the notice, then on the
18 specified date, that shall be is the operative date for
the
19 company, paragraph 5 shall become is operative with respect to
20 the ordinary policies issued by the company and bearing a date of
21 issue that is the same as or later than the specified date. If a
22 company does not make an election, the operative date of
23 paragraph 5 for the company shall be is January
1, 1966.
24 For industrial policies issued on or after the operative
25 date of this paragraph, as defined in paragraph 8, all adjusted
26 premiums and present values referred to in this section shall
27 must be calculated on the basis of the commissioners 1961
1 standard industrial mortality table and the rate of interest
2 specified in the policy for calculating cash surrender values and
3 paid-up nonforfeiture benefits. However, the rate of interest
4 shall may not exceed 3-1/2% per annum, except that a rate of
5 interest not exceeding 4% per annum may be used for policies
6 issued on or after October 21, 20, 1974,
and before October 1,
7 1980, and a rate of interest not exceeding 5-1/2% per annum may
8 be used for policies issued on or after October 1, 1980.
9 September 30, 1980. In calculating the present value of paid-up
10 term insurance with accompanying pure endowment, if any, offered
11 as a nonforfeiture benefit, the rates of mortality assumed may be
12 not more than those shown in the commissioners 1961 industrial
13 extended term insurance table. For insurance issued on a
14 substandard basis, the calculation of adjusted premiums and
15 present values may be based on another table of mortality as
16 specified by the company and approved by the
17 commissioner.director.
18 After May 23, 1969, a company may file with the commissioner
19
director a written notice of its
election to invoke the
20 provisions of paragraph 7
after a specified date before January
21 1, 1968. After the filing of the notice, then on the specified
22 date, which shall be is
the operative date for the company,
23 paragraph 7 shall become is operative with respect to
the
24 industrial policies issued by the company and that bear a date of
25 issue the same as or later than the specified date. If a company
26 does not make an election, the operative date of paragraph 7 for
27 the company shall be is
January 1, 1968.
1 Paragraphs 9 to 19 shall 18 apply to all policies
issued on
2 or after the operative date of those paragraphs as defined in
3 paragraph 19. 18. Except as provided in paragraph 15, the
4 adjusted premiums for any policy shall must be
calculated on an
5 annual basis and shall must
be a uniform percentage of the
6 respective premiums specified in the policy for each policy year,
7 excluding amounts payable as extra premiums to cover impairments
8 or special hazards and also excluding any uniform annual contract
9 charge or policy fee specified in the policy in a statement of
10 the method to be used in calculating that is used to calculate
11 the cash surrender values and paid-up nonforfeiture benefits, so
12 that the present value, at the date of issue of the policy, of
13 all adjusted premiums shall be is equal to the sum of (i) the then
14 present value of the future guaranteed benefits provided for by
15 the policy; (ii) 1% of either the amount of insurance, if the
16 insurance be is uniform in amount, or the average amount of
17 insurance at the beginning of each of the first 10 policy years;
18 and (iii) 125% of the nonforfeiture net level premium as defined in
19 this subsection. However, in applying the percentage specified in
20 (iii), the nonforfeiture net level premium shall not be deemed
21 considered to exceed 4% of either the amount of insurance, if the
22 insurance is uniform in amount, or the average amount of
23 insurance at the beginning of each of the first 10 policy years.
24 The date of issue of a policy for the purpose of this subsection
25 shall be is the date as of on which the rated age of
the insured
26 is determined.
27 The nonforfeiture net level premium shall must be
equal to
1 the present value, at the date of issue of the policy, of the
2 guaranteed benefits provided for by the policy divided by the
3 present value, at the date of issue of the policy, of an annuity
4 of 1 per annum payable on the date of issue of the policy and on
5 each anniversary of the policy on which a premium falls due.
6 For policies that cause on a basis guaranteed in the policy
7 unscheduled changes in benefits or premiums, or that provide an
8 option for changes in benefits or premiums other than a change to
9 a new policy, the adjusted premiums and present values initially
10 shall must be calculated on the assumption that future benefits
11 and premiums will not change from those stipulated at the date of
12 issue of the policy. At the time of a change in the benefits or
13 premiums, the future adjusted premiums, nonforfeiture net level
14 premiums, and present values shall must be
recalculated on the
15 assumption that future benefits and premiums will not change from
16 those stipulated by the policy immediately after the change.
17 Except as otherwise provided in paragraph 15 of this
18 subsection, the recalculated future adjusted premiums shall be is
19 a uniform percentage of the respective future premiums specified
20 in the policy for each policy year, excluding amounts payable as
21 extra premiums to cover impairments and special hazards and
22 excluding any uniform annual contract charge or policy fee
23 specified in the policy in a statement of the method to be used
24 in calculating to
calculate the cash surrender values and
paid-up
25 nonforfeiture benefits, so that the present value, at the time of
26 change to the newly defined benefits or premiums, of all such the
27 future adjusted premiums shall be is equal to the excess of
the
1 sum of the then present value of the then future guaranteed
2 benefits provided for by the policy and the additional expense
3 allowance, if any, over the then cash surrender value, if any, or
4 present value of any paid-up nonforfeiture benefit under the
5 policy.
6 The additional expense allowance, at the time of the change
7 to the newly defined benefits or premiums, shall be is the
sum of
8 1% of the excess, if positive, of the average amount of insurance
9 at the beginning of each of the first 10 policy years after the
10 change over the average amount of insurance before the change at
11 the beginning of each of the first 10 policy years after the time
12 of the most recent previous change, or, if there has been no
13 previous change, the date of issue of the policy; and 125% of the
14 increase, if positive, in the nonforfeiture net level premium.
15 The recalculated nonforfeiture net level premium shall be is
16 equal to the result obtained by dividing (a) by (b) where (a)
17 equals the sum of (i) the nonforfeiture net level premium
18 applicable before the change times the present value of an
19 annuity of 1 per annum payable on each anniversary of the policy
20 on or after the date of the change on which a premium would have
21 fallen due had the change not occurred; and (ii) the present value
22 of the increase in future guaranteed benefits provided for by the
23 policy, and (b) equals the present value of an annuity of 1 per
24 annum payable on each anniversary of the policy on or after the
25 date of change on which a premium falls due.
26 Notwithstanding any other provisions of this subsection to
27 the contrary, for a policy issued on a substandard basis that
1 provides reduced graded amounts of insurance so that, in each
2 policy year, the policy has the same tabular mortality cost as an
3 otherwise similar policy issued on the standard basis that
4 provides higher uniform amounts of insurance, adjusted premiums
5 and present values for the substandard policy may be calculated
6 as if it were issued to provide the higher uniform amounts of
7 insurance on the standard basis.
8 All adjusted premiums and present values referred to in this
9 section for all policies of ordinary insurance shall must be
10 calculated on the basis of the commissioners 1980 standard
11 ordinary mortality table or, at the election of the company for
12 any 1 or more specified plans of life insurance, the
13 commissioners 1980 standard ordinary mortality table with 10-year
14 select mortality factors. All adjusted premiums and present
15 values referred to in this section for all policies of industrial
16 insurance shall must
be calculated on the basis of the
17 commissioners 1961 standard industrial mortality table. All
18 adjusted premiums and present values referred to in this section
19 for all policies issued in a particular calendar year shall must
20 be calculated on the basis of a rate of interest not exceeding
21 the nonforfeiture interest rate as defined in this subsection for
22 policies issued in that calendar year. However:
23 (a) At the option of the company, calculations for all
24 policies issued in a particular calendar year may be made on the
25 basis of a rate of interest not exceeding the nonforfeiture
26 interest rate, as defined in this subsection, for policies issued
27 in the immediately preceding calendar year.
1 (b) Under any paid-up nonforfeiture benefit, including any
2 paid-up dividend additions, any cash surrender value available,
3 whether or not required by subsection (2), shall must be
4 calculated on the basis of the mortality table and rate of
5 interest used in determining the amount of that paid-up
6 nonforfeiture benefit and paid-up dividend additions, if any.
7 (c) A company may calculate the amount of any guaranteed
8 paid-up nonforfeiture benefit, including any paid-up additions,
9 under the policy on the basis of an interest rate no lower than
10 that specified in the policy for calculating cash surrender
11 values.
12 (d) In calculating the present value of any paid-up term
13 insurance with accompanying pure endowment, if any, offered as a
14 nonforfeiture benefit, the rates of mortality assumed may be not
15 more than those shown in the commissioners 1980 extended term
16 insurance table for policies of ordinary insurance and not more
17 than the commissioners 1961 industrial extended term insurance
18 table for policies of industrial insurance.
19 (e) For insurance issued on a substandard basis, the
20 calculation of adjusted premiums and present values may be based
21 on appropriate modifications of the tables provided in
22 subdivision (d).
23 (f) Any For
a policy issued before the operative date of the
24 valuation manual, any commissioners standard ordinary mortality
25 tables, adopted after 1980 by the national association of
26 insurance commissioners, that are approved by a rule promulgated
27 by the commissioner director
for use in determining the minimum
1 nonforfeiture standard or as provided under section 838 may be
2 substituted for the commissioners 1980 standard ordinary
3 mortality table with or without 10-year select mortality factors
4 or for the commissioners 1980 extended term insurance table.
5 (g) For policies issued on or after the operative date of
6 the valuation manual, the valuation manual must provide the
7 commissioners standard mortality table for use in determining the
8 minimum nonforfeiture standard that may be substituted for the
9 commissioners 1980 standard ordinary mortality table with or
10 without 10-year select mortality factors or for the commissioners
11 1980 extended term insurance table. If the director approves by
12 regulation any commissioners standard ordinary mortality table
13 adopted by the national association of insurance commissioners
14 for use in determining the minimum nonforfeiture standard for
15 policies issued on or after the operative date of the valuation
16 manual, the minimum nonforfeiture standard supersedes the minimum
17 nonforfeiture standard provided by the valuation manual.
18 (h) (g) Any For
a policy issued before the operative date of
19 the valuation manual, any commissioners standard industrial
20 mortality tables, adopted after 1980 by the national association
21 of insurance commissioners, that are approved by a rule
22 promulgated by the commissioner director for use in
determining
23 the minimum nonforfeiture standard may be substituted for the
24 commissioners 1961 standard industrial mortality table or the
25 commissioners 1961 industrial extended term insurance table.
26 (i) For policies issued on or after the operative date of
27 the valuation manual, the valuation manual must provide the
1 commissioners standard mortality table for use in determining the
2 minimum nonforfeiture standard that may be substituted for the
3 commissioners 1961 standard industrial mortality table or the
4 commissioners 1961 industrial extended term insurance table. If
5 the director approves by regulation any commissioners standard
6 industrial mortality table adopted by the national association of
7 insurance commissioners for use in determining the minimum
8 nonforfeiture standard for policies issued on or after the
9 operative date of the valuation manual, the minimum nonforfeiture
10 standard supersedes the minimum nonforfeiture standard provided
11 by the valuation manual. The following applies to the
12 nonforfeiture interest rate:
13 (i) Subject to this subparagraph, for a policy issued before
14 the operative date of the valuation manual, the nonforfeiture
15 interest rate per annum for any a policy issued in a
particular
16 calendar year shall be is
equal to 125% of the calendar year
17 statutory valuation interest rate for such the policy
as defined
18 in the standard valuation law, rounded to the nearest 0.25%. The
19 nonforfeiture interest rate under this subparagraph may not be
20 less than 4%.
21 (ii) For policies issued on and after the operative date of
22 the valuation manual, the nonforfeiture interest rate per annum
23 for any policy issued in a particular calendar year is provided
24 by the valuation manual.
25 Notwithstanding any other provision in this act to the
26 contrary, any refiling of nonforfeiture values or their methods
27 of computation for any previously approved policy form that
1 involves only a change in the interest rate or mortality table
2 used to compute nonforfeiture values shall may not
require
3 refiling of any other provisions of that policy form.
4 After July 10, 1982, any a company may file with the
5 commissioner director
a written notice of its election to
comply
6 with paragraphs 9 to 19 18
of this subsection at a specified date
7 before January 1, 1989, which shall be that is the
operative date
8 of those paragraphs for that company. If a company makes no does
9
not make an election, the operative
date of paragraphs 9 to 19 18
10 of this subsection for the company shall be is January
1, 1989.
11 (6) For any a
plan of life insurance that provides
for
12 future premium determination, the amounts of which are to be
13 determined by the insurance company based on then estimates of
14 future experience, or for any a plan of life insurance that
is of
15 such a nature that as
to which the minimum values cannot be
16 determined by the methods described in subsections (2) to (5),
17 all of the following apply:
18 (a) The commissioner director must be satisfied
that the
19 benefits provided under the plan are substantially as favorable
20 to policyholders and insureds as the minimum benefits otherwise
21 required by subsections (2) to (5).
22 (b) The commissioner director must be satisfied
that the
23 benefits and the pattern of premiums of that plan are not
24 misleading to prospective policyholders or insureds.
25 (c) The cash surrender values and paid-up nonforfeiture
26 benefits provided by the plan must not be less than the minimum
27 values and benefits required for the plan computed by a method
1 consistent with the principles of this section, as determined by
2 rules promulgated by the commissioner.director.
3 (7) Any A cash surrender value and paid-up nonforfeiture
4 benefit, available under the policy in the event of if there is a
5 default in a premium payment due at a time other than on the
6 policy anniversary, shall must be calculated with
allowance for
7 the lapse of time and the payment of fractional premiums beyond
8 the last preceding policy anniversary. All values referred to in
9 subsections (3), (4), and (5) may be calculated on the assumption
10 that a death benefit is payable at the end of the policy year of
11 death. The net value of any paid-up additions, other than paid-up
12 term additions, shall must
be not less than the amounts used to
13 provide the additions. Notwithstanding subsection (3), additional
14 benefits payable in any of the following ways, and premiums for
15 all these additional benefits, shall must be
disregarded in
16 ascertaining cash surrender values and nonforfeiture benefits
17 required by this section, and the additional benefits shall are
18 not be required to be included in any paid-up nonforfeiture
19 benefits:
20 (a) In the event of death or dismemberment by accident or
21 accidental means.
22 (b) In the event of total and permanent disability.
23 (c) As reversionary annuity or deferred reversionary annuity
24 benefits.
25 (d) As term insurance benefits provided by a rider or
26 supplemental policy provision to which, if issued as a separate
27 policy, this section would not apply.
1 (e) As term insurance on the life of a child or on the lives
2 of children provided in a policy on the life of a parent of the
3 child, if the term insurance expires before the child's age is
4 26, is uniform in amount after the child's age is 1, and has not
5 become paid-up by reason of the death of a parent of the child.
6 (f) As other policy benefits additional to life insurance
7 and endowment benefits.
8 (8) This subsection shall apply applies to
all policies
9 issued on or after January 1, 1986. December 31, 1985. Any cash
10 surrender value available under the policy in the event of if
11 there is a default in a premium payment due on any policy
12 anniversary shall must
be in an amount that does not differ by
13 more than 0.2% of either the amount of insurance, if the
14 insurance is uniform in amount, or the average amount of
15 insurance at the beginning of each of the first 10 policy years
16 from the sum of (a) the greater of zero and the basic cash value
17 as specified in this subsection and (b) the present value of any
18 existing paid-up additions less the amount of any indebtedness to
19 the company under the policy.
20 The basic cash value shall must be equal to the present
21 value on such the anniversary of the future guaranteed benefits
22 that would have been provided for by the policy, excluding any
23 existing paid-up additions and before deduction of any
24 indebtedness to the company, if there had been no default, less
25 the then present value of the nonforfeiture factors, as defined
26 in this subsection, corresponding to premiums that would have
27 fallen due on and after such the anniversary. However,
the
1 effects on the basic cash value of supplemental life insurance or
2 annuity benefits or of family coverage shall must be
the same as
3 are the effects specified in subsection (3) or (5), whichever is
4 applicable, on the cash surrender values.
5 The nonforfeiture factor for each policy year shall must be
6 an amount equal to a percentage of the adjusted premium for the
7 policy year, as defined in paragraphs 1 to 4 of subsection (5) or
8 paragraphs 9 to 19 18
of subsection (5), whichever is
applicable.
9 The nonforfeiture factor:
10 (a) Must be the same percentage for each policy year between
11 the second policy anniversary and the later of the fifth policy
12 anniversary and the first policy anniversary at which there is
13 available under the policy a cash surrender value in an amount,
14 before including any paid-up additions and before deducting any
15 indebtedness, of at least 0.2% of either the amount of insurance,
16 if the insurance is uniform in amount, or the average amount of
17 insurance at the beginning of each of the first 10 policy years.
18 (b) Must be such that no percentage after the later of the 2
19 policy anniversaries specified in subdivision (a) may apply to
20 fewer than 5 consecutive policy years.
21 However, the basic cash value may not be less than the value
22 that would be obtained if the adjusted premiums for the policy,
23 as defined in paragraphs 1 to 4 or paragraphs 9 to 19 18 of
24 subsection (5), whichever is applicable, were substituted for the
25 nonforfeiture factors in the calculation of the basic cash value.
26 All adjusted premiums and present values referred to in this
27 subsection shall must
be calculated for a particular policy
on
1 the same mortality and interest bases as are used in
2 demonstrating the policy's compliance with the other subsections
3 of this section. The cash surrender values referred to in this
4 subsection shall must
include any endowment benefits provided
for
5 by the policy.
6 Any cash surrender value available other than in the event
7 of if there is a default in a premium payment due on a policy
8 anniversary and the amount of any paid-up nonforfeiture benefit
9 available under the policy in the event of if there is a default
10 in a premium payment shall must be determined in
manners
11 consistent with the manners specified for determining the
12 analogous minimum amounts in subsections (2), (3), (4), and (7)
13 and paragraphs 9 to 19 18
of subsection (5). The amounts of any
14 cash surrender values and of any paid-up nonforfeiture benefits
15 granted in connection with additional benefits such as those
16 listed in subsection (7) shall must conform with the
principles
17 of this subsection.
18 (9) This section does not apply to any of the following:
19 (a) Reinsurance.
20 (b) Group insurance.
21 (c) Pure endowment.
22 (d) Annuity or reversionary annuity contract.
23 (e) A term policy of uniform amount , which provides no that
24 does not provide guaranteed nonforfeiture or endowment benefits,
25 or renewal thereof, of
guaranteed nonforfeiture or endowment
26 benefits, of 20 years or less expiring before age 71, for which
27 uniform premiums are payable during the entire term of the
1 policy.
2 (f) A term policy of decreasing amount ,
which provides no
3 that does not provide guaranteed nonforfeiture or endowment
4 benefits , and
on which each adjusted premium,
calculated as
5 specified in subsection (5), is less than the adjusted premium so
6 calculated, calculated
under subsection (5), on a term policy
of
7 uniform amount, or the renewal thereof, which provides no of a
8 term policy that does not provide guaranteed nonforfeiture or
9 endowment benefits, issued at the same age and for the same
10 initial amount of insurance and for a term of 20 years or less
11 expiring before age 71, for which uniform premiums are payable
12 during the entire term of the policy.
13 (g) A policy , which provides no that does not provide
14 guaranteed nonforfeiture or endowment benefits, for which no cash
15 surrender value, if any, or present value of any paid-up
16 nonforfeiture benefit, at the beginning of any policy year,
17 calculated as specified in subsections (3) to (5), exceeds 2.5%
18 of the amount of insurance at the beginning of the same policy
19 year.
20 (h) A policy that shall be is delivered outside this
state
21 through an agent or other representative of the company issuing
22 the policy.
23 For purposes of determining the applicability of this
24 section, the age at expiry for a joint term life insurance policy
25 shall be is the age at expiry of the oldest life.
26 (10) After July 30, 1943, a company may file with the
27 commissioner director
a written notice of its election to
comply
1 with this section after a specified date before January 1, 1948.
2 After the filing of the notice, then on the specified date, which
3 shall be that is the operative date for the company, this section
4 shall become is operative with respect to the policies thereafter
5 issued by the company. If a company does not make an election,
6 the operative date of this section for the company shall be is
7 January 1, 1948.
8 (11) As used in this section, "operative date of the
9 valuation manual" means January 1 of the first calendar year that
10 the valuation manual as that term is defined in section 836b is
11 effective.
12 Sec. 4061. (1) All of the following apply to the minimum
13 cash surrender values for flexible premium universal life
14 insurance policies:
15 (a) Minimum cash surrender values for flexible premium
16 universal life insurance policies shall must be
determined
17 separately for the basic policy and any benefits and riders for
18 which premiums are paid separately. For a basic policy and any
19 benefits and riders for which premiums are not paid separately,
20 all of the following requirements apply:
21 (i) All accumulations shall
must be at the actual rate or
22 rates of interest at which interest credits have been made
23 unconditionally to the policy, or have been made conditionally,
24 but for which the conditions have since been met. The minimum
25 cash surrender value, before adjustment for indebtedness and
26 dividend credits, available on a date as of which interest is
27 credited to the policy shall must be equal to the
accumulation to
1 that date of the premiums paid minus the accumulations to that
2 date of all of the following minus any unamortized unused initial
3 and additional expense allowances:
4 (A) The benefits charges.
5 (B) The averaged administrative expense charges for the
6 first policy year and any insurance-increase years.
7 (C) Actual administrative expense charges for other years.
8 (D) Initial and additional acquisition expense charges not
9 exceeding the initial or additional expense allowances,
10 respectively.
11 (E) Any service charges actually made.
12 (F) Any deductions made for partial withdrawals.
13 (ii) Interest on the premiums and on all charges referred to
14 in subparagraph (i) (A) through
(F) shall must be accumulated from
15 and to such dates as are consistent with the manner in which
16 interest is credited in determining the policy value.
17 (iii) Service charges shall
must exclude charges for cash
18 surrender or election of a paid-up nonforfeiture benefit and
19 include charges permitted by the policy to be imposed as the
20 result of a policyowner's request for a service by the insurer,
21 such as the furnishing of future benefit illustrations or of
22 special transactions.
23 (iv) Benefit charges shall
must include the charges made for
24 mortality and any charges made for riders or supplementary
25 benefits for which premiums are not paid separately. If benefit
26 charges are substantially level by duration and develop low or no
27 cash values, then the commissioner shall have the right to
1 director may require higher cash values unless the insurer
2 provides adequate justification that the cash values are
3 appropriate in relation to the policy's other characteristics.
4 (v) If the amount of insurance is subsequently increased
5 upon on request of the policyowner or by the terms of the
policy,
6 an additional expense allowance and an unused additional expense
7 allowance shall must
be determined on a basis consistent
with
8 this subsection and with section 4060(5) paragraph 13 using the
9 face amount and the latest maturity date permitted at that time
10 under the policy.
11 (vi) The unamortized unused initial expense allowance during
12 the policy year beginning on the policy anniversary at age x+t,
13 where "x" is the same issue age, shall must be
the unused initial
14 expense allowance multiplied by
15 ax+t
16 ax
17 where ax+t and ax are present values of an annuity of 1 per
18 year payable on policy anniversaries beginning at ages x+t and x,
19 respectively, and continuing until the highest attained age at
20 which a premium may be paid under the policy, both on the
21 mortality and interest bases guaranteed in the policy. An
22 unamortized unused additional expense allowance shall must be
the
23 unused additional expense allowance multiplied by a similar ratio
24 of annuities, with ax replaced by an annuity beginning on the date
25 as of which the additional expense allowance was determined.
26 (b) As used in this subsection:
1 (i) "Additional acquisition expense charges" means the excess
2 of the expense charges, other than service charges, actually made
3 in an insurance-increase year over the averaged administrative
4 expense charges for that year.
5 (ii) "Administrative expense charges" means charges per
6 premium payment, charges per dollar of premium paid, periodic
7 charges per thousand dollars of insurance, periodic per policy
8 charges, and any other charges permitted by the policy to be
9 imposed without regard to the policyowner's request for services.
10 (iii) "Averaged administrative expense charges" means those
11 charges that would have been imposed in a year if the charge rate
12 or rates for each transaction or period within that year had been
13 equal to the arithmetic average of the corresponding charge rates
14 that the policy states will be imposed in policy years 2 through
15 20 in determining the policy value.
16 (iv) "Initial acquisition expense charges" means the excess
17 of the expense charges, other than service charges, actually made
18 in the first policy year over the averaged administrative expense
19 charges for that year.
20 (v) "Initial expense allowance" means the allowance provided
21 by items (ii), (iii), and (iv) of section 4060(5) paragraph 1 or by
22 items (ii) and (iii) of section 4060(5) paragraph 9, as applicable,
23 for a fixed premium, fixed benefit endowment policy with a face
24 amount equal to the initial face amount of the flexible premium
25 universal life insurance policy, with level premiums paid
26 annually until the highest attained age at which a premium may be
27 paid under the flexible premium universal life insurance policy,
1 and maturing on the latest maturity date permitted under the
2 policy, if any, otherwise at the highest age in the valuation
3 mortality table.
4 (vi) "Insurance-increase year" means the year beginning on
5 the date of increase in the amount of insurance by policyowner
6 request or by the terms of the policy.
7 (vii) "Unused initial expense allowance" means the excess, if
8 any, of the initial expense allowance over the initial
9 acquisition expense charges.
10 (2) All of the following provisions apply to the minimum
11 cash surrender values for fixed premium universal life insurance
12 policies:
13 (a) The minimum cash surrender values shall must be
14 determined separately for the basic policy and any benefits and
15 riders for which premiums are paid separately. All of the
16 following requirements pertain apply to a basic policy and
any
17 benefits and riders for which premiums are not paid separately:
18 (i) The minimum cash surrender value before adjustment for
19 indebtedness and dividend credits that is available on a date as
20 of which interest is credited to the policy is equal to (A - B -
21 C - D).
22 (ii) Future guaranteed benefits are determined by both of the
23 following:
24 (A) Projecting the policy value, taking into account future
25 premiums, if any, and using all guarantees of interest,
26 mortality, expense deductions, and other guarantees, that depend
27 upon the policy value, contained in the policy or declared by the
1 insurer.
2 (B) Taking into account any benefits guaranteed in the
3 policy or by declaration that do not depend on the policy value.
4 (iii) All present values shall
must be determined using an
5 interest rate or rates specified by section 4060 for policies
6 issued in the same year and the mortality rates specified by
7 section 4060 for policies issued in the same year or contained in
8 such any other table as approved by the commissioner director for
9 this purpose.
10 (b) As used in this subsection:
11 (i) "A" means the present value of all future guaranteed
12 benefits.
13 (ii) "B" means the present value of future adjusted premiums.
14 The adjusted premiums are calculated as described in section
15 4060(5) paragraphs 1 to 6 and 9, as applicable. If section
16 4060(5) paragraph 9 is applicable, the nonforfeiture net level
17 premium is equal to the quantity
18 PVFB.
19 ax
20 (iii) "C" means the present value of any quantities analogous
21 to the nonforfeiture net level premium that arise because of
22 guarantees declared by the insurer after the issue date of the
23 policy. Also, ax shall must be
replaced by an annuity beginning on
24 the date as of which the declaration became effective and payable
25 until the end of the period covered by the declaration. The types
26 of quantities included in "C" are increased current interest rate
1 credits guaranteed for a future period, decreased current
2 mortality rate charges guaranteed for a future period, or
3 decreased current expense charges guaranteed for a future period.
4 (iv) "D" means the sum of any quantities analogous to "B"
5 which arise because of structural changes in the policy.
6 (v) "PVFB" equals the present value of all benefits
7 guaranteed at issue assuming future premiums are paid by the
8 policyowner and all guarantees contained in the policy or
9 declared by the insurer.
10 (vi) "Structural changes" means those changes that are
11 separate from the automatic workings of the policy. Structural
12 changes usually would be initiated by the policy owner and
13 include changes in the guaranteed benefits, changes in latest
14 maturity date, or changes in allowable premium payment period.
15 (vii) "ax" equals the present value of an annuity of 1 per
16 year payable on policy anniversaries beginning at age x and
17 continuing until the highest attained age at which a premium may
18 be paid under the policy.
19 (3) All of the following apply to minimum paid-up
20 nonforfeiture benefits:
21 (a) If a universal life insurance policy provides for the
22 optional election of a paid-up nonforfeiture benefit, it shall be
23 such that its the present value shall of the paid-up
24 nonforfeiture benefit must be at least equal to the cash
25 surrender value provided for by the policy on the effective date
26 of the election. The present value shall must be
based on
27 mortality and interest standards at least as favorable to the
1 policyowner as 1 of the following:
2 (i) For a flexible premium universal life insurance policy,
3 the mortality and interest basis bases guaranteed in the
policy
4 for determining the policy value.
5 (ii) For a fixed premium policy, the mortality and interest
6 standards permitted for paid-up nonforfeiture benefits in section
7 4060.
8 (b) Instead of the paid-up nonforfeiture benefit, the
9 insurer may substitute, upon on proper request not later
than 60
10 days after the due date of the premium in default, an actuarially
11 equivalent alternative paid-up nonforfeiture benefit that
12 provides a greater amount or longer period of death benefits, or,
13 if applicable, a greater amount or earlier payment of endowment
14 benefits.
15 (c) Any secondary guarantees should be taken into
16 consideration when computing minimum paid-up nonforfeiture
17 benefits.
18 (d) A charge may be made at the surrender of the policy
19 provided that if the result after the deduction of the charge is
20 not less than the minimum cash surrender value required by this
21 section.
22 (e) To preserve equity between policies on a premium paying
23 basis and on a paid-up basis, present values shall must comply
24 with subsection (1) for flexible premium universal life insurance
25 policies and with subsection (2) for fixed premium universal life
26 insurance policies.