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The I in FIRE Slips Into Shadowland

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  • The I in FIRE Slips Into Shadowland

    Companies looking to do business in secret once had to travel to places like the Cayman Islands or Bermuda.

    Today, all it takes is a trip to Vermont.

    Vermont, and a handful of other states including Utah, South Carolina, Delaware and Hawaii, are aggressively remaking themselves as destinations of choice for the kind of complex private insurance transactions once done almost exclusively offshore. Roughly 30 states have passed some type of law to allow companies to set up special insurance subsidiaries called captives, which can conduct Bermuda-style financial wizardry right in a policyholder’s own backyard.

    Captives provide insurance to their parent companies, and the term originally referred to subsidiaries set up by any large company to insure the company’s own risks. Oil companies, for example, used them for years to gird for environmental claims related to infrequent but potentially high-cost events. They did so in overseas locations that offered light regulation amid little concern since the parent company was the only one at risk.

    Now some states make it just as easy. And they have broadened the definition of captives so that even insurance companies can create them. This has given rise to concern that a shadow insurance industry is emerging, with less regulation and more potential debt than policyholders know, raising the possibility that some companies will find themselves without enough money to pay future claims. Critics say this is much like the shadow banking system that contributed to the financial crisis.

    Aetna recently used a subsidiary in Vermont to refinance a block of health insurance policies, reaping $150 million in savings, according to its chief financial officer, Joseph M. Zubretsky. The main reason is that the insurer did not need to maintain conventional reserves at the same level as would have been required by insurance regulators in Aetna’s home state of Connecticut.

    In other big transactions, companies including MetLife, the Hartford Financial Services Group, Swiss Reinsurance, Genworth Financial and the American International Group, among others, have refinanced life, disability and long-term-care insurance policies, as well as annuities.

    For the states, attracting these insurance deals promotes business travel and creates jobs for lawyers, actuaries and other white-collar workers, who pay taxes. States have also found that they can impose modest taxes on the premiums collectedby captives.

    For insurers, these subsidiaries offer ways to unlock some of the money tied up in reserves, making millions available for dividends, acquisitions, bonuses and other projects. Three weeks after Aetna’s deal closed, the company announced it was increasing its dividend fifteenfold.
    The cost of some of the deals has been considerable. In 2008, MetLife used a subsidiary in Vermont to handle a crucial $3.5 billion letter of credit, with help from Deutsche Bank, because the subsidiary was not subject to the same collateral requirements as in New York.The trade immediately bolstered MetLife’s balance sheet, helping the company to endure that year’s market turmoil without government assistance. But MetLife agreed to pay Deutsche Bank $3.5 million a year for 15 years, according to internal documents obtained by The New York Times — locking itself into high costs for years.

    MetLife said its transaction was in keeping with industry rules and norms, and Deutsche Bank declined to comment.

    Another issue is public oversight. State regulators normally require insurance companies to make available reams of detailed information. A policyholder can find every asset in an insurer’s investment portfolio, for instance, or the company the carrier turns to for reinsurance. But not if the insurer relies on a captive. The new state laws make the audited financial statements of the captives confidential.

    A.I.G. illustrates the kind of secrets companies can keep. One of its many lines of business involves a mortgage insurance unit, based in North Carolina but with affiliates as far away as Australia. The unit promised to keep making payments when homeowners defaulted, but nearly failed when the housing bubble burst in 2008 and claims poured in.

    Normally, state regulators shut down insolvent insurers, but Vermont saved the day. It allowed A.I.G. to create a subsidiary, called MG Reinsurance, that took on $7 billion worth of insurance claims. Getting the claims off the books of the North Carolina unit made it solvent again, so it could keep selling more policies.

    A.I.G.’s mortgage insurance affiliates in Europe and Australia sent the Vermont captive even more obligations, making the transfers retroactive to Jan. 1, 2009, even though MG Reinsurance was not licensed until May. That turned what would have been big losses into a modest profit for A.I.G.’s offshore mortgage insurers.

    Vermont’s confidentiality rules make it impossible to find out how MG Re is juggling all that debt. A.I.G. is liable, but for now the problem is hidden away.

    A.I.G. confirmed it was responsible for the pending claims but declined to comment further.

    David F. Provost, the deputy commissioner of captive insurance in Vermont, said he believed confidential treatment was appropriate because these entities were, in essence, insurance companies with only one policyholder — their parent. He said Vermont’s large and experienced staff of regulators vetted all transactions carefully to make sure they were sound.

    Furthermore, he said, his staff worked with less experienced states to help them avoid undue risks. “We try to make sure that everybody does a good job,” Mr. Provost said.
    Other states took note of Vermont’s success. Hawaii charged lower taxes than Vermont on the revenue that captives took in on premiums, leading Vermont to reconsider its rates. Delaware gave its insurance commissioner the power to exempt a captive from provisions of state insurance law; the number of captives in the state doubled last year.

    New Jersey, the latest entrant, offered to cap its tax on such subsidiaries at $200,000 a year. Michigan decided not to tax them at all, but charged a modest fee. Nevada passed a law allowing captives to be formed with as little as $200,000 in capital.

    And now Aetna may not have to look outside its home state at all, as Connecticut has adopted a law allowing onshore captives.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/09/bu...ef=todayspaper


    don't worry, we got it covered . . . .

  • #2
    Re: The I in FIRE Slips Into Shadowland

    You know - the times has been doing a pretty good job covering different aspects of the FIRE industry. Not sure how they were doing back between 1996 - 2008 as I had mostly stopped reading the finance/business sections, but it seems like someone is awake over there now.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: The I in FIRE Slips Into Shadowland

      Originally posted by wayiwalk View Post
      You know - the times has been doing a pretty good job covering different aspects of the FIRE industry. Not sure how they were doing back between 1996 - 2008 as I had mostly stopped reading the finance/business sections, but it seems like someone is awake over there now.
      I read the paper edition every day and every day my skepticism de-constructs their motives. They're a mouthpiece of the elite, after all, plus they're located in New York, home for many of the boyz of FIRE. Nevertheless they say useful things, though there are plenty of pieces the kind of which most likely contributed to your '96 vacation.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: The I in FIRE Slips Into Shadowland

        Originally posted by don View Post
        I read the paper edition every day and every day my skepticism de-constructs their motives. They're a mouthpiece of the elite, after all, plus they're located in New York, home for many of the boyz of FIRE. Nevertheless they say useful things, though there are plenty of pieces the kind of which most likely contributed to your '96 vacation.
        kinda like this maybe: http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/ ?

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: The I in FIRE Slips Into Shadowland

          Originally posted by lektrode View Post
          kinda like this maybe: http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/ ?
          Not sure what your point is but I never read the Times editorial blather.

          Why, when it's 100% ideology.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: The I in FIRE Slips Into Shadowland

            This is not all that new. As a young actuary I was setting up limited capital insurance companies for Auto Dealers in the early 70s. All of these limited capital companies were set up at that time in Arizona.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: The I in FIRE Slips Into Shadowland

              The mortgage originators used to be big users of these reinsurance arrangements - here's how this used to work for them:

              - Mortgage originator (e.g., Countrywide) would originate a loan to a subprime borrower worth up to, say, 95% of the purchase price

              - Borrower would be required to buy mortgage insurance if down payment was less than 20% (or if they couldn't just get a first mortgage for the first 80% of the purchase price and a "piggyback" second mortgage for the last 15%)

              - Mortgage originator would direct most mortgage insurance business to one or two of the six major mortgage insurers

              - However, originator would require mortgage insurer to give part of the insurance fees paid by the borrower to its own "captive" insurer (e.g., Countrywide owned something called Balboa)

              - Captive reinsurer would require mortgage insurer to take the first loss, so that home prices would have to really, really crash before captive would face any real risk

              - If mortgage insurer refused, some risk that business might go elsewhere for a bit

              - Mortgage originator would get a nice, healthy fee stream from the reinsurance payments even after the mortgage itself was resold to Fannie Mae, a Norwegian pension fund, etc.

              Four years later...

              BofA's Countrywide Wins Approval of $34 Million Settlement

              March 18 (Bloomberg) -- Bank of America Corp.'s Countrywide unit won preliminary court approval of a $34 million settlement of a lawsuit claiming the company overcharged for mortgage insurance.

              U.S. District Judge Juan R. Sanchez in Philadelphia granted tentative approval to the agreement today. A final hearing is scheduled for Aug. 23.

              Three Pennsylvania homeowners alleged in their 2007 lawsuit that Countrywide, once the biggest home lender, required homebuyers who took out mortgages with a down payment of less than 20 percent to obtain private mortgage insurance from a preselected group of providers.

              Those providers agreed, in turn, to reinsure the policies with a Countrywide affiliate, Balboa Reinsurance Co. The homeowners alleged that Balboa collected more than $892 million in reinsurance premiums since 1999 and paid nothing in claims.

              Countrywide was accused of accepting a portion of the premiums and providing no services in return...

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: The I in FIRE Slips Into Shadowland

                Originally posted by don View Post
                Not sure what your point is but I never read the Times editorial blather.

                Why, when it's 100% ideology.

                was ref'g your comment re:
                "...though there are plenty of pieces the kind of which most likely contributed to (wayiwalk's) vacation.." from reading the biz pages of the nyt

                and i agreed with wayiwalk/you, using krugmans column for an example ;) - tho i do like to read him/them, just for insight into their POV, even tho i dont usually agree with em, do think they do a better than typical job of dredging up info, sometimes its even fairly factual... contrasting them with say, the McPaper (usa today)

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: The I in FIRE Slips Into Shadowland

                  Originally posted by mmreilly View Post
                  ....- Mortgage originator would get a nice, healthy fee stream from the reinsurance payments even after the mortgage itself was resold to Fannie Mae, a Norwegian pension fund, etc.

                  Four years later...
                  "...Balboa collected more than $892 million in reinsurance premiums since 1999 and paid nothing in claims.

                  Countrywide was accused of accepting a portion of the premiums and providing no services in return..."

                  HILARIOUS!
                  wonder how much of that was part of the 480mil that mozillo slithered off with?
                  and did they lay-off any of the action to AIG/GS et al?

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: The I in FIRE Slips Into Shadowland

                    Originally posted by lektrode View Post
                    was ref'g your comment re:
                    "...though there are plenty of pieces the kind of which most likely contributed to (wayiwalk's) vacation.." from reading the biz pages of the nyt

                    and i agreed with wayiwalk/you, using krugmans column for an example ;) - tho i do like to read him/them, just for insight into their POV, even tho i dont usually agree with em, do think they do a better than typical job of dredging up info, sometimes its even fairly factual... contrasting them with say, the McPaper (usa today)
                    Just to clarify - I'm not talking about the editorial side of the paper, just the news end side of things.....of editorials like those by Krugman, I can't stomach that side of the paper at all!

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: The I in FIRE Slips Into Shadowland

                      A U.S. council of regulators is poised to label MetLife Inc. a potential threat to the financial system, subjecting the insurer to oversight by the Federal Reserve, two people with knowledge of the matter said.

                      A decision by the Financial Stability Oversight Council may come as early as July 31, when the panel is tentatively planning to meet, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the process isn’t public. The vote could be delayed briefly because the council hasn’t formally closed its review of the company, the people said.

                      By Ian Katz and Robert SchmidtJul 23, 2014 12:00 AM ET


                      http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-07-22/u-s-said-poised-to-designate-metlife-as-systemically-important.html

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