New Florida Law on Reinsurance Becomes Effective July 1

June 20, 2021

A newly-enacted Florida law revises reinsurance statutes, providing insurers with credit for reinsurance and eliminating additional collateral requirements for a reinsurer if it is domiciled in a reciprocal jurisdiction and meets other requirements.

The measure, SB 728, signed into law by Gov. Ron DeSantis, incorporates recent changes made by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners to its model reinsurance law and regulation. It takes effect July 1, 2021.

The bill defines reciprocal jurisdiction to mean:

The requirements the reinsurer must meet include, but are not limited to:

The law also provides insurers with protections against reinsurer failure that include requiring the reinsurer to post collateral equal to all outstanding reinsurance liabilities in the event the reinsurer enters into receivership; requiring the reinsurer to consent to the jurisdiction of courts of the state of Florida; and requiring the reinsurer to post collateral equal to all outstanding liabilities if the reinsurer resists enforcement of a court order from a jurisdiction in which it has consented.

A 2017 agreement between the U.S. and EU commits the U.S. to phasing-out state-based reinsurance collateral requirements for EU reinsurers by 2022. The agreement further exempts EU reinsurers from current U.S. domiciliary requirements for authorized reinsurer status by creating a new, broader classification of jurisdiction called a reciprocal jurisdiction.

Florida Insurance Commissioner David Altmaier said SB 728 helps provide regulatory certainty for carriers to keep the Florida market competitive.

{This article was previously published on Insurance Journal’s website)