Treasury Issues Notice on Data Collection, Comments in Aid of Analyses of Terrorism Risk Insurance Program
Data Collection and Comments in Aid of Analyses of the Terrorism Risk Insurance Program
A Notice by the
This document has a comment period that ends in 62 days. (02/27/2017)
Printed version: PDF
Publication Date:
Agency:
Dates: Submit comments on or before
Comments Close:
Document Type: Notice
Document Citation: 81 FR 95310
Page: 95310-95312 (3 pages)
Document Number: 2016-31238
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Request for comments.
SUMMARY:
The Terrorism Risk Insurance Act of 2002 (TRIA) created the Terrorism Risk Insurance Program (Program) to address disruptions in the market for terrorism risk insurance, to help ensure the continued availability and affordability of commercial property and casualty insurance for terrorism risk, and to allow for the private markets to stabilize and build insurance capacity to absorb any future losses for terrorism events. The Program has been reauthorized on a number of occasions, most recently in the Terrorism Risk Insurance Program Reauthorization Act of 2015. TRIA requires the Secretary of the
DATES:
Submit comments on or before
ADDRESSES:
Submit comments electronically through the Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov, or by mail to the Federal Insurance Office, Attn:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
TRIA[1] directs the Secretary, beginning in calendar year 2016, to "require insurers participating in the Program to submit to the Secretary such information regarding insurance coverage for terrorism losses of such insurers as the Secretary considers appropriate to analyze the effectiveness of the Program[.]"[2] This information and data includes information regarding: (1) Lines of insurance with exposure to such losses; (2) premiums earned on such coverage; (3) geographical location of exposures; (4) pricing of such coverage; (5) the take-up rate for such coverage; (6) the amount of private reinsurance for acts of terrorism purchased; and (7) such other matters as the Secretary considers appropriate.
31 CFR 50.51 outlines the data collection process and requires insurers to submit the specified data and information relating to Program participation no later than
The first year of data collection under Section 104(h) was 2016. In
In addition, Section 108(h) of TRIA requires the Secretary to conduct, by
II. Data Collection Templates: Request for Comments
Pursuant to Section 104(h)(4) of TRIA,
Based on feedback received following the voluntary 2016 data collection, and pursuant to 31 CFR 50.51(c),
Small insurers are defined in 31 CFR 50.4(z) as insurers (or an affiliated group of insurers) whose policyholder surplus for the immediately preceding year is less than five times the Program Trigger amount[4] for the current year, and whose TRIP-eligible lines direct earned premium for the previous year is also five times less than the Program Trigger amount. For the 2017 data collection, which is otherwise requesting information from calendar year 2016, this will require an insurer to have 2015 policyholder surplus and 2015 direct earned premium of less than
Captive insurers are defined in 31 CFR 50.4(g) as insurers licensed under the captive insurance laws or regulations of any state. All captive insurers as defined, regardless of size, are required to complete the captive insurer template if the captive insurer writes some amount of terrorism risk insurance subject to the Program. To the extent a captive insurer writes policies in TRIP-eligible lines of insurance, but does not actually provide its insureds with any terrorism risk insurance subject to the Program, the captive insurer is not required to provide data.
Alien surplus lines insurers are defined in 31 CFR 50.4(o)(1)(i)(B) as insurers not licensed or admitted to engage in the business of providing primary or excess insurance in any state, but that are eligible surplus line insurers listed on the NAIC Quarterly Listing of Alien Insurers. To the extent an alien surplus lines insurer is part of a larger group that is subject to reporting under either the "Insurer (Non-Small) Groups or Companies" or "Small Insurers" template, the information for that alien surplus lines insurer should be reported as part of the larger group, using the proper template. The "Alien Surplus Lines" template is to be used by any other alien surplus lines insurer, regardless of size, that is not part of a larger group. Such alien surplus lines insurers must report, at least for calendar year 2017, even if they fall within the
Insurers will be required to complete these forms online through a web portal that will be established for the calendar year 2017 collection, the link for which will be provided at a later date. Reporting for all Program participants for calendar year 2017 is mandatory, unless an insurer falls within the exceptions for certain small insurers and captive insurers as identified above. As was the case with the voluntary data call in calendar year 2016,
III. Solicitation for Comments on Small Insurer Participation in the Program
Section 108(h) of TRIA requires the Secretary to conduct a study to identify any competitive challenges that small insurers, as now defined in 31 CFR 50.4(z), participating in the Program face in the terrorism risk insurance marketplace. As discussed above,
(1) Changes to the market share, premium volume, and policyholder surplus of small insurers relative to large insurers.
(2) How the property and casualty insurance market for terrorism risk differs between small and large insurers, and whether such a difference exists within other perils.
(3) The impact of the Program's mandatory availability requirement under Section 103(c) of TRIA on small insurers.
(4) The effect of increasing the trigger amount for the Program under Section 103(e)(1)(B) of TRIA for small insurers.
(5) The availability and cost of private reinsurance for small insurers.
(6) The impact that State workers compensation laws have on small insurers and workers compensation carriers in the terrorism risk insurance marketplace.
IV. Procedural Requirements
Paperwork Reduction Act. The collection of information contained in this notice has been submitted to the
Comments are being sought with respect to the collection of information in connection with data collection.
Each set of data collection forms is expected to incur a different level of burden.
Assuming this breakdown, the estimated annual burden would be 38,750 hours (100 insurers dz 75 hours + 300 insurers dz 25 hours + 400 insurers dz 50 hours + 75 insurers dz 50 hours). At a blended, fully loaded hourly rate of
Dated:
Director, Federal Insurance Office.
Footnotes omitted. It can be viewed at: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2016/12/27/2016-31238/data-collection-and-comments-in-aid-of-analyses-of-the-terrorism-risk-insurance-program
[FR Doc. 2016-31238 Filed 12-23-16;
BILLING CODE 4810-25-P
18QamarN-1286965



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