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Admitted
Reinsurance
- A
company
is
“admitted”
when it
has been
licensed
and
accepted
by
appropriate
insurance
governmental
authorities
of a
state or
country.
In
determining
its
financial
condition
a ceding
insurer
is
allowed
to take
credit
for the
unearned
premiums
and
unpaid
claims
on the
risks
reinsured
if the
reinsurance
is
placed
in an
admitted
reinsurance
company.
Arbitration
Clause -
Language
providing
a means
of
resolving
differences
between
the
reinsurer
and the
reinsured
without
litigation.
Usually,
each
party
appoints
an
arbiter.
The two
thus
appointed
select a
third
arbiter,
or
umpire,
and a
majority
decision
of the
three
becomes
binding
on the
parties
to the
arbitration
proceedings.
Bordereau
(plural
Bordereaux)
- A form
providing
premium
or loss
data
with
respect
to
identified
specific
risks
which is
furnished
the
reinsurer
by the
reinsured.
Burning
Cost
- A term
most
frequently
used in
spread
loss
property
reinsurance
to
express
pure
loss
cost or
more
specifically
the
ratio of
incurred
losses
within a
specified
amount
in
excess
of the
ceding
company’s
retention
to its
gross
premiums
over a
stipulated
number
of
years.
Cancellation
- (a)
Run-off
basis
means
that the
liability
of the
reinsurer
under
policies,
which
became
effective
under
the
treaty
prior to
the
cancellation
date of
such
treaty,
shall
continue
until
the
expiration
date of
each
policy;
(b)
Cut-off
basis
means
that the
liability
of the
reinsurer
under
policies,
which
became
effective
under
the
treaty
prior to
the
cancellation
date of
such
treaty,
shall
cease
with
respect
to
losses
resulting
from
accidents
taking
place on
and
after
said
cancellation
date.
Usually
the
reinsurer
will
return
to the
company
the
unearned
premium
portfolio,
unless
the
treaty
is
written
on an
earned
premium
basis.
Capacity
-
The
percentage
of
surplus
or the
dollar
amount
of
exposure
that an
insurer
or
reinsurer
is
willing
to place
at risk.
Capacity
may
apply to
a single
risk, a
program,
a line
of
business,
or an
entire
book of
business.
Catastrophe
Reinsurance
- A
form of
reinsurance
that
indemnifies
the
ceding
company
for the
accumulation
of
losses
in
excess
of a
stipulated
sum
arising
from a
catastrophic
event
such as
conflagration,
earthquake
or
windstorm.
Catastrophe
loss
generally
refers
to the
total
loss of
an
insurance
company
arising
out of a
single
catastrophic
event.
Cede
- When a
company
reinsures
its
liability
with
another,
it
“cedes”
business.
Ceding
Commission
-
The
cedant’s
acquisition
costs
and
overhead
expenses,
taxes,
licenses
and
fees,
plus a
fee
representing
a share
of
expected
profits
-
sometimes
expressed
as a
percentage
of the
gross
reinsurance
premium.
Ceding
Company
- The
original
or
primary
insurer;
the
insurance
company
which
purchases
reinsurance.
Claims-Made
Basis
- A
form of
reinsurance
under
which
the date
of the
claim
report
is
deemed
to be
the date
of the
loss
event.
Claims
reported
during
the term
of the
reinsurance
agreement
are
therefore
covered,
regardless
of when
they
occurred.
A claims
made
agreement
is said
to “cut
off the
tail” on
liability
business
by not
covering
claims
reported
after
the term
of the
reinsurance
agreement
- unless
extended
by
special
agreement.
See
Occurrence
Basis.
Commission
- In
reinsurance,
the
primary
insurance
company
usually
pays the
reinsurer
its
proportion
of the
gross
premium
it
receives
on a
risk.
The
reinsurer
then
allows
the
company
a ceding
or
direct
commission
allowance
on such
gross
premium
received,
large
enough
to
reimburse
the
company
for the
commission
paid to
its
agents,
plus
taxes
and its
overhead.
The
amount
of such
allowance
frequently
determines
profit
or loss
to the
reinsurer.
Commutation
Clause
- A
clause
in a
reinsurance
agreement,
which
provides
for
estimation,
payment
and
complete
discharge
of all
future
obligations
for
reinsurance
losses
incurred
regardless
of the
continuing
nature
of
certain
losses
such as
unlimited
medical
and
lifetime
benefits
for
Workers’
Compensation.
Contingent
Commissions
(or
Profit
Commission)
- An
allowance
payable
to the
ceding
company
in
addition
to the
normal
ceding
commission
allowance.
It is a
pre-determined
percentage
of the
reinsurer’s
net
profits
after a
charge
for the
reinsurer’s
overhead,
derived
from the
subject
treaty.
Contributing
Excess -
Where
there is
more
than one
reinsurer
sharing
a line
of
insurance
on a
risk in
excess
of a
specified
retention,
each
such
reinsurer
shall
contribute
towards
any
excess
loss in
proportion
to his
original
participation
in such
risk.
Example:
Retention
$100,000,
Reinsurer
A
accepts
one-half
contributing
share
part of
$1,000,000
in
excess
of said
$100,000.
Reinsurer
B
accepts
remaining
one-half
contribution
share
part of
$1,000,000.
Earned
Premium
- (1)
That
part of
the
premium
applicable
to the
expired
part of
the
policy
period,
including
the
short-rate
premium
on
cancellation,
the
entire
premium
on the
amount
of loss
paid
under
some
contracts,
and the
entire
premium
on the
contract
on the
expiration
of the
policy.
(2) That
portion
of the
reinsurance
premium
calculated
on a
monthly,
quarterly
or
annual
basis
which is
to be
retained
by the
reinsurer
should
there
cession
be
canceled.
(3) When
a
premium
is paid
in
advance
for a
certain
time,
the
company
is said
to
“earn”
the
premium
as the
time
advances.
For
example,
a policy
written
for
three
years
and paid
for in
advance
would be
one-third
“earned”
at the
end of
the
first
year.
Errors
and
Omissions
Clause
- A
provision
in
reinsurance
agreements
which is
intended
to
neutralize
any
change
in
liability
or
benefits
as a
result
of an
inadvertent
error by
either
party.
Excess
of Loss
- A
form of
reinsurance
under
which
recoveries
are
available
when a
given
loss
exceeds
the
cedant’s
retention
defined
in the
agreement.
Ex
Gratia
Payment
- A
payment
made for
which
the
company
is not
liable
under
the
terms of
its
policy.
Usually
made in
lieu of
incurring
greater
legal
expenses
in
defending
a claim.
Rarely
encountered
in
reinsurance
as the
reinsurer
by
custom
and for
practical
reasons
follows
the
fortunes
of the
ceding
company.
Expense
Ratio
-
The
percentage
of
premium
used to
pay all
the
costs of
acquiring,
writing
and
servicing
insurance
and
reinsurance.
Experience
- (1)
The loss
record
of an
insured
or of a
class of
coverage.
(2)
Classified
statistics
of
events
connected
with
insurance,
of
outgo,
or of
income,
actual
or
estimated.
(3) What
figures
show to
have
happened
in the
past.
Experience
may be
compiled
on
different
bases to
provide
various
means of
appraisal,
viz.
Accident
Year,
Calendar
Year, or
Policy
Year,
but, for
underwriting
purposes,
should
always
compare
earned
premium
with
incurred
losses
after
the
latter
have
been
modified
by an
allowance
for loss
development
and
incurred
but not
reported
losses (I.B.N.R.).
Extra
Contractual
Obligations
(ECO)
- A
generic
term
that,
when
used in
reinsurance
agreements,
refers
to
damages
awarded
by a
court
against
an
insurer
which
are
outside
the
provisions
of the
insurance
policy,
due to
the
insurer’s
bad
faith,
fraud,
or gross
negligence
in the
handling
of a
claim.
Examples
are
punitive
damages
and
losses
in
excess
of
policy
limits.
Facultative
-
Facultative
reinsurance
means
reinsurance
of
individual
risks by
offer
and
acceptance
wherein
the
reinsurer
retains
the
“faculty”
to
accept
or
reject
each
risk
offered.
Financial
Reinsurance
- A
form of
reinsurance
which
considers
the time
value of
money
and has
loss
containment
provisions.
One of
its
objectives
is the
enhancement
of the
cedant’s
financial
statements
or
operating
ratios,
e.g.,
the
combined
ratio;
loss
portfolio
transfers;
and
financial
quota
shares
are
examples.
Flat
Rate
- In
reinsurance,
a
percentage
rate
applied
to a
ceding
company’s
premium
writings
for the
classes
of
business
reinsured
to
determine
the
reinsurance
premiums
to be
paid the
reinsurer.
Following
the
Fortunes
-
The
clause
stipulating
that
once a
risk has
been
ceded by
the
reinsured,
the
reinsurer
is bound
by the
same
fate
thereon
as
experienced
by the
ceding
company.
Incurred
Loss
Ratio
- The
percentage
of
losses
incurred
to
premiums
earned.
(See
Experience.)
Inflation
Factor
- A
loading
to
provide
for
increased
medical
costs
and loss
payments
in the
future
due to
inflation.
Intermediary
- A
third
party in
the
design,
negotiation,
and
administration
of a
reinsurance
agreement.
Intermediaries
recommend
to
cedants
the type
and
amount
of
reinsurance
to be
purchased
and
negotiate
the
placement
of
coverage
with
reinsurers.
Intermediary
Clause
- A
provision
in
reinsurance
agreements
which
identifies
the
intermediary
negotiating
the
agreement.
Most
intermediary
clauses
shift
all
credit
risk to
reinsurers
by
providing
that:
-
the
cedant’s
payments
to
the
intermediary
are
deemed
payments
to
the
reinsurer;
and
-
the
reinsurer’s
payments
to
the
intermediary
are
not
payments
to
the
cedant
until
actually
received
by
the
cedant.
This
clause
is
mandatory
in some
states.
Layer
- A
horizontal
segment
of the
liability
insured,
e.g.,
the
second
$100,000
of a
$500,000
liability
is the
first
layer if
the
cedant
retains
$100,000
but a
higher
layer if
it
retains
a lesser
amount.
Lead
Reinsurer
- The
reinsurer
who
negotiates
the
terms,
conditions,
and
premium
rates
and
first
signs on
to the
slip;
reinsurers
who
subsequently
sign on
to the
slip
under
those
terms
and
conditions
are
considered
following
reinsurers.
Letter
of
Credit
- A
financial
guaranty
issued
by a
bank
that
permits
the
party to
which it
is
issued
to draw
funds
from the
bank in
the
event of
a valid
unpaid
claim
against
the
other
party;
in
reinsurance,
typically
used to
permit
reserve
credit
to be
taken
with
respect
to non-admitted
reinsurance;
and
alternative
to
funds
withheld
and
modified
coinsurance.
Loss
Adjustment
Expense
- All
expenditures
of an
insurer
associated
with its
adjustment,
recording,
and
settlement
of
claims,
other
than the
claim
payment
itself.
The term
encompasses
both
allocated
loss
adjustment
expenses
(ALAE)
which
are loss
adjustment
expenses
identified
by a
claim
file in
the
insurer’s
records,
such as
attorney’s
fees;
and
unallocated
loss
adjustment
expenses
(ULAE),
which
are
operating
expenses
not
identified
by claim
file,
but
functionally
associated
with
settling
losses,
such as
salaries
of
claims
department.
Loss
Development
- The
difference
between
the
original
loss as
originally
reported
to the
reinsurer
and its
subsequent
evaluation
at a
later
date or
at the
time of
its
final
disposal.
A
serious
problem
to
reinsurers
who,
being
involved
in the
more
serious
cases,
must
frequently
wait
many
years
for the
final
disposition
of a
loss.
Loss
Event
- The
total
losses
to the
ceding
company
or to
the
reinsurer
resulting
from a
single
cause
such as
a
windstorm.
Loss
Ratio
-
Proportionate
relationship
of
incurred
losses
to
earned
premiums
expressed
as a
percentage.
Non-Admitted
Reinsurance
- A
Company
is
“non-admitted”
when it
has not
been
licensed
and
thereby
recognized
by
appropriate
insurance
governmental
authority
of a
state or
country.
Reinsurance
is
“non-admitted”
when
placed
in a
non-admitted
company
and
therefore
may not
be
treated
as an
asset
against
reinsured
losses
or
unearned
premium
reserves
for
insurance
company
accounting
and
statement
purposes.
Occurrence
- An
adverse
contingent
accident
or event
neither
expected
nor
intended
from the
point of
view of
the
insured.
With
regard
to
limits
on
occurrences,
property
catastrophe
reinsurance
agreements
frequently
define
adverse
events
having a
common
cause
and
sometimes
within a
specified
time
frame,
for
example
72
hours,
as being
one
occurrence.
This
definition
prevents
multiple
retentions
and
reinsurance
limits
from
being
exposed
in a
single
catastrophe
loss.
Offset
Clause
- A
provision
in
reinsurance
agreements
which
permits
each
party to
net
amounts
due
against
those
payable
before
making
payment;
especially
important
in the
event of
insolvency
of one
party
which
ceases
to remit
amounts
due to
the
other.
Participating
or Pro
Rata
Reinsurance
-
Includes
Quota
Share,
First
Surplus,
Second
Surplus,
and all
other
sharing
forms of
reinsurance
whereunder
the
reinsurer
participates
pro rata
in all
losses
and in
all
premiums.
Peril
-
This
term
refers
to the
causes
of
possible
loss in
the
property
field -
for
instance:
Fire,
Windstorm,
Collision,
Hail,
etc. In
the
casualty
field
the term
“Hazard”
is more
frequently
used.
Per
Risk
Excess
Reinsurance
-
Retention
and
amount
of
reinsurance
apply
“per
risk”
rather
than on
a per
accident
or event
or
aggregate
basis.
Policy
Year
- The
year
commencing
with the
effective
date of
the
policy
or with
an
anniversary
of that
date.
Pool
- An
organization
of
insurers
or
reinsurers
through
which
particular
types of
risks
are
underwritten
with
premiums,
losses,
and
expenses
shared
in
agreed
ratios.
Portfolio
Reinsurance
- In
transactions
of
reinsurance,
it
refers
to all
the
risks of
the
reinsurance
transaction.
For
example,
if one
company
reinsures
all of
another’s
outstanding
Automobile
business,
the
reinsuring
company
is said
to
assume
the
“portfolio”
of
Automobile
business
and it
is paid
the
total of
the
unearned
premium
on all
the
risks so
reinsured
(less
some
agreed
commission).
Portfolio
Run-off
- The
opposite
of
Return
of
Portfolio
-
permitting
premiums
and
losses
in
respect
of
in-force
business
to run
to their
normal
expiration
upon
termination
of a
reinsurance
treaty.
Premium,
Deposit
- When
the
terms of
a policy
provide
that the
final
earned
premium
be
determined
at some
time
after
the
policy
itself
has been
written,
companies
may
require
tentative
or
“deposit”
premiums
at the
beginning
which
are
readjusted
when the
actual
earned
charge
has been
later
determined.
Premium,
Pure
- The
portion
of the
premium
calculated
to
enable
the
insurer
to pay
losses
and, in
some
cases,
allocated
claim
expenses
or the
premium
arrived
at by
dividing
losses
by
exposure
and in
which no
loading
has been
added
for
commission,
taxes,
and
expenses.
Premium
(Written/Unearned/Earned)
-
Written
premium
is
premium
registered
on the
books of
an
insurer
or
reinsurer
at the
time a
policy
is
issued
and paid
for.
Premium
for a
future
exposure
period
is said
to be
unearned
premium
for an
individual
policy,
written
premium
minus
unearned
premium
equals
earned
premium.
Earned
premium
is
income
for the
accounting
period,
while
unearned
premium
will be
income
in a
future
accounting
period.
Professional
Reinsurer
- A
term
used to
designate
a
company
whose
business
is
confined
solely
to
reinsurance
and the
peripheral
services
offered
by a
reinsurer
to its
customers
as
opposed
to
primary
insurers
who
exchange
reinsurance
or
operate
reinsurance
departments
as
adjuncts
to their
basic
business
of
primary
insurance.
The
majority
of
professional
reinsurers
provide
complete
reinsurance
and
service
at one
source
directly
to the
ceding
company.
Profit
Commission
- A
provision
found in
some
reinsurance
agreements
which
provides
for
profit
sharing.
Parties
agree to
a
formula
for
calculating
profit,
an
allowance
for the
reinsurer’s
expenses,
and the
cedant’s
share of
such
profit
after
expenses.
Quota
Share
-
The
basic
form of
participating
treaty
whereby
the
reinsurer
accepts
a stated
percentage
of each
and
every
risk
within a
defined
category
of
business
on a pro
rata
basis.
Participation
in each
risk is
fixed
and
certain.
Reinstatement
Clause
-
When the
amount
of
reinsurance
coverage
provided
under a
treaty
is
reduced
by the
payment
of a
reinsurance
loss as
the
result
of one
catastrophe,
the
reinsurance
cover is
automatically
reinstated
usually
by the
payment
of a
reinstatement
premium.
Reinstatement
Premium
- A
pro rata
reinsurance
premium
is
charged
for the
reinstatement
of the
amount
of
reinsurance
coverage
that was
reduced
as the
result
of a
reinsurance
loss
payment
under a
catastrophe
cover.
Reinsurance
-
The
practice
whereby
one
party
called
the
Reinsurer
in
consideration
of a
premium
paid to
him
agrees
to
indemnify
another
party,
called
the
Reinsured,
for part
or all
of the
liability
assumed
by the
latter
party
under a
policy
or
policies
of
insurance
which it
has
issued.
The
reinsured
may be
referred
to as
the
Original
or
Primary
Insurer,
or
Direct
Writing
Company,
or the
Ceding
Company.
Reinsurer
- An
insurer
or
reinsurer
assuming
the risk
of
another
under
contract.
Retention
-
The net
amount
of risk
which
the
ceding
company
or the
reinsurer
keeps
for its
own
account
or that
of
specified
others.
Retrocession
- A
reinsurance
of
reinsurance.
Example:
Company
“B” has
accepted
reinsurance
from
Company
“A”, and
then
obtains
for
itself,
on such
business
assumed,
reinsurance
from
Company
“C”.
This
secondary
reinsurance
is
called a
Retrocession.
The
transaction
whereby
a
reinsurer
cedes to
another
reinsurer
all or
part of
the
reinsurance
it has
previously
assumed.
Retrospective
Rating
- A
plan or
method
which
permits
adjustment
of the
final
reinsurance
ceding
commission
or
premium
on the
basis of
the
actual
loss
experience
under
the
subject
reinsurance
treaty -
subject
to
minimum
and
maximum
limits.
Risks
- A term
used to
denote
the
physical
units of
property
at risk
or the
object
of
insurance
protection
and not
Perils
or
Hazard.
Reinsurance
by
tradition
permits
each
insurance
company
to frame
its own
rules
for
defining
units of
Risks.
The word
is also
defined
as
chance
of loss
or
uncertainty
of loss.
Salvage
and
Subrogation
- Those
rights
of the
insured
which,
under
the
terms of
the
policy,
automatically
transfer
to the
insurer
upon
settlement
of a
loss.
Salvage
applies
to any
proceeds
from the
repaired,
recovered,
or
scrapped
property.
Subrogation
refers
to the
proceeds
of
negotiations
or legal
actions
against
negligent
third
parties
and may
apply to
either
property
or
casualty
coverages.
Self-Insurance
-
Setting
aside of
funds by
an
individual
or
organization
to meet
his or
its
losses,
and to
absorb
fluctuations
in the
amount
of loss,
the
losses
being
charged
against
the
funds so
set
aside or
accumulated.
Sliding
Scale
Commission
- A
ceding
commission
which
varies
inversely
with the
loss
ratio
under
the
reinsurance
agreement.
the
scales
are not
always
one to
one: for
example,
as the
loss
ratio
decreases
by 1%,
the
ceding
commission
might
increase
only 5%.
Slip
- A
binder
often
including
more
than one
reinsurer.
At
Lloyd’s
of
London,
the slip
is
carried
from
underwriter
to
underwriter
for
initialing
and
subscribing
to a
specific
share of
the
risk.
Special
Acceptance
-
The
facultative
extension
of a
reinsurance
treaty
to
embrace
a risk
not
automatically
included
within
its
terms.
Spread
Loss
- A form
of
reinsurance
under
which
premiums
are paid
during
good
years to
build up
a fund
from
which
losses
are
recovered
in bad
years.
This
reinsurance
has the
effect
of
stabilizing
a
cedant’s
loss
ratio
over an
extended
period
of time.
Stop
Loss
- A form
of
reinsurance
under
which
the
reinsurer
pays
some or
all of a
cedant’s
aggregate
retained
losses
in
excess
of a
predetermined
dollar
amount
or in
excess
of a
percentage
of
premium.
Subject
Premium
- A
cedant’s
premiums
(written
or
earned)
to which
the
reinsurance
premium
rate
is
applied
to
calculate
the
reinsurance
premium.
Often,
subject
premium
is
gross/net
written
premium
income (GNWPI)
or
gross/net
earned
premium
income (GNEPI),
where
the term
“gross/net”
means
gross
before
deducting
reinsurance
premiums
for the
reinsurance
agreement
under
consideration,
;but net
after
all
other
adjustments,
e.g.,
cancellations,
refunds,
or other
reinsurance.
Normally,
subject
premium
refers
to
premium
on
subject
business.
Also
known as
base
premium.
Surplus
- The
excess
of
assets
over
liabilities.
Statutory
surplus
is an
insurer’s
or
reinsurer’s
capital
as
determined
under
statutory
accounting
rules.
Surplus
determines
an
insurer’s
or
reinsurer’s
capacity
to write
business.
Surplus
Share
- A
form of
proportional
reinsurance
where
the
reinsurer
assumes
pro rata
responsibility
for only
that
portion
of any
risk
which
exceeds
the
company’s
established
retentions.
Treaty
- A
general
reinsurance
agreement
which is
obligatory
between
the
ceding
company
and the
reinsurer
containing
the
contractual
terms
applying
to the
reinsurance
of some
class or
classes
of
business,
in
contrast
to a
reinsurance
agreement
covering
an
individual
risk.
Ultimate
Net Loss
-
This
term
usually
means
the
total
sum
which
the
assured,
or any
company
as his
insurer,
or both,
become
obligated
to pay
either
through
adjudication
or
compromise,
and
usually
includes
hospital,
medical
and
funeral
charges
and all
sums
paid as
salaries,
wages,
compensation,
fees,
charges
and law
costs,
premiums
on
attachment
or
appeal
bonds,
interest,
expenses
for
doctors,
lawyers,
nurses,
and
investigators
and
other
persons,
and for
litigation,
settlement,
adjustment
and
investigation
of
claims
and
suits
which
are paid
as a
consequence
of the
insured
loss,
excluding
only the
salaries
of the
assured’s
or of
any
underlying
insurer’s
permanent
employees.
Unearned
Premium
-
That
portion
of the
original
premium
that
applies
to the
unexpired
portion
of risk.
A fire
or
casualty
insurer
or
reinsurer
must
carry a
reserve
against
all
unearned
premiums
as a
liability
in its
financial
statement,
for if
the
policy
should
be
canceled,
the
company
would
have to
pay back
the
unearned
part of
the
original
premium.
Working
Layer
- The
first
layer
above
the
cedant’s
retention
wherein
moderate
to heavy
loss
activity
is
expected
by the
cedant
and
reinsurer.
Working
layer
reinsurance
agreements
often
include
adjustable
features
to
reflect
actual
underwriting
results
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