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managing-insurance-regulatory-filings

Structures statutory filing preparation with SAP differences, risk-based capital, and annual statement schedules. Use when preparing statutory filings, calculating RBC, or managing regulatory submissions.

personAuthor: jakexiaohubgithub

Managing Insurance Regulatory Filings

Structures statutory filing preparation with SAP differences, risk-based capital, and annual statement schedules.

When To Use

  • Preparing NAIC Annual or Quarterly Statement filings (blanks: Life/A&H, Property/Casualty, Health)
  • Reconciling GAAP-to-SAP differences for statutory financial statements
  • Calculating or reviewing Risk-Based Capital (RBC) ratios and action-level triggers
  • Coordinating state-specific filing requirements across multiple domiciliary and licensed jurisdictions
  • Managing filing calendars for NAIC, state departments of insurance, and ORSA submissions
  • Preparing for financial examination or market conduct exam readiness

Inputs To Gather

  • Entity details: Legal entity name, NAIC company code, domiciliary state, lines of business written, group structure (if holding company)
  • Financial data: Trial balance (SAP basis), investment schedules, reserve opinions, reinsurance contracts and recoverables
  • Prior filings: Previous Annual Statement, RBC filing, Actuarial Opinion and Memorandum, Management Discussion & Analysis (MD&A)
  • Filing calendar: Applicable deadlines by state — Annual Statement (typically March 1), Quarterly Statements (May 15, Aug 15, Nov 15), Audited Financial Reports (June 1) [VERIFY: confirm domiciliary state deadlines as they may vary]
  • Regulatory correspondence: Any recent orders, consent agreements, or examination findings from state regulators
  • Reinsurance: Schedule F / Schedule S data, authorized vs. unauthorized reinsurer classification, collateral held

Workflow

  1. Map filing obligations

    • Identify all states where the entity is licensed or authorized
    • Catalog required filings per jurisdiction: Annual Statement, Quarterly Statements, RBC, Audited Financials, Actuarial Opinion, Holding Company Act filings (Form B, Form D), ORSA
    • Build a consolidated calendar with internal deadlines (typically 2-3 weeks ahead of regulatory deadlines)
  2. Reconcile GAAP-to-SAP adjustments

    • Prepare SAP adjustment schedule covering key differences: non-admitted assets (furniture, equipment, agents' balances >90 days), deferred acquisition costs (DAC eliminated under SAP), goodwill treatment, deferred tax asset limitations [VERIFY: SSAP No. 101 paragraph 11 DTA admissibility thresholds for specific entity]
    • Validate investment valuations per NAIC Securities Valuation Office (SVO) designations
    • Reconcile reinsurance recoverables and apply Schedule F penalty calculations for unauthorized or slow-paying reinsurers
  3. Prepare Annual Statement schedules

    • Complete all required exhibits and schedules: Schedule A (Real Estate), Schedule B (Mortgages), Schedule D (Bonds/Stocks), Schedule DB (Derivatives), Schedule F (Reinsurance Ceded), Schedule S (Reinsurance Assumed)
    • Prepare Five-Year Historical Data exhibit and Insurance Expense Exhibit (IEE)
    • Draft Notes to Financial Statements per NAIC statutory guidance
    • Compile Supplemental Investment Risks Interrogatories (SIRI) and General Interrogatories
  4. Calculate Risk-Based Capital

    • For P&C: compute R0 (asset risk — affiliates), R1 (asset risk — fixed income), R2 (asset risk — equity), R3 (credit risk), R4 (reserve risk), R5 (premium risk) using the NAIC RBC formula with covariance adjustment
    • For Life: compute C-0 through C-4 components with covariance
    • Determine Total Adjusted Capital (TAC) and Authorized Control Level (ACL)
    • Identify RBC ratio and applicable action level: No Action (>200%), Company Action (150-200%), Regulatory Action (100-150%), Authorized Control (<100%), Mandatory Control (<70%) [VERIFY: confirm current NAIC RBC thresholds as percentages may be updated]
    • Flag any trend test triggers
  5. Coordinate review and sign-off

    • Route filing drafts to appointed actuary for Actuarial Opinion and Memorandum
    • Obtain officer certifications (CEO, CFO) for Annual Statement jurat page
    • Coordinate with external auditors for Audited Financial Report and CPA attestation
    • Submit via NAIC Financial Data Repository (FDR) / System for Electronic Rates & Forms Filing (SERFF) as applicable
    • File state-specific supplements and fees to individual departments of insurance
  6. Post-filing monitoring

    • Track NAIC analyst team review and respond to financial analysis inquiries
    • Monitor for any state-specific follow-up requests or deficiency letters
    • Log amendments or corrected filings if errors are identified post-submission

Output

  • Filing calendar: Consolidated timeline with all jurisdictional deadlines, internal milestones, and responsible parties
  • GAAP-to-SAP reconciliation: Detailed adjustment schedule with line-item mapping and SAP authority citations (SSAP references)
  • RBC calculation workpaper: Component-level detail with TAC computation, ratio determination, and action-level classification
  • Annual Statement review checklist: Schedule-by-schedule completion tracker with cross-reference validations
  • Filing status tracker: Submission confirmation log by state, with amendment history and outstanding regulator inquiries

Quality Checks

  • Verify all non-admitted asset write-downs are applied consistently with SSAP No. 4 and state-specific permitted practices [VERIFY: check for any permitted or prescribed practices unique to domiciliary state]
  • Confirm Schedule F penalty calculations tie to underlying reinsurance contract data and aging of recoverables
  • Cross-check RBC components against filed Annual Statement schedules — investment risk charges must reconcile to Schedule D Part 1 and Part 2 totals
  • Validate that the Actuarial Opinion covers all required reserve categories and states compliance with Actuarial Standards of Practice (ASOPs) Nos. 28, 36, and 43
  • Ensure jurat page signatures are from officers of sufficient authority per state insurance code
  • Reconcile prior-year surplus to current-year beginning surplus, accounting for all changes in surplus items
  • Confirm electronic filing checksums match submitted data in NAIC FDR