State Regulators Allowed Life Insurers To Change Accounting
11 March 2009 - 5:55AM
Dow Jones News
Life insurers turned to their state regulators in 2008 to
benefit from relaxed statutory accounting standards that boosted
their statutory income, capital surplus, or both, according to
regulatory data.
A handful of life insurers, including Hartford Financial
Services Group (HIG), Lincoln National Corp. (LNC) and Allstate
Corp.'s (ALL) life insurance unit have already discussed their
requests to use so-called permitted accounting practices that allow
them to reduce their reserves against potential losses, or allow
them to expand what they consider as capital in their state
financial filings.
The changes have the effect of making insurers' capital position
look stronger on paper, by relaxing what life insurers call overly
conservative rules set by state insurance regulators.
Other insurers have followed suit and made the same request, and
data released Monday by the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners indicate that regulators looked favorably on the
requests.
Hartford, Lincoln National and Allstate were among the insurers
that boosted their capital surplus through a change in their
deferred tax asset accounting that allows the insurers to realize
deferred tax assets over three years rather than the usual one
year, and raise the asset-recognition limit to 15% from 10% of
statutory capital and surplus.
NAIC said that accounting change was also permitted for Aviva
Group (AV.LN), American International Group (AIG), MetLife Inc.
(MET), Conseco Inc. (CNO), Principal Financial Group (PFG),
Nationwide Financial Group and Aegon (AEG).
Some insurers, such as Lincoln National, Hartford, Protective
Life (PL), and Pacific Life received permission to relax one or
more standards used to set reserves.
-By Lavonne Kuykendall, Dow Jones Newswires; (312) 750 4141;
lavonne.kuykendall@dowjones.com