2018-03-31
OSFI mandates federally regulated life insurers to publicly disclose capital adequacy data under the LICAT framework, requiring minimum Core and Total ratios of 55% and 90%, respectively. Insurers must publish annual quantitative templates alongside qualitative narratives on their websites, ensuring consistent and comparable reporting of capital positions and risk exposures. These disclosures undergo internal audit review and ongoing supervisory oversight, thereby enhancing market discipline and enabling stakeholders to accurately assess insurer solvency.
Information
Publication type
Guideline
Category
Accounting and Disclosure
Date
Sector
Life Insurance and Fraternal Companies
Effective Date
December 31, 2018
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Table of contents
Background
The Life Insurance Capital Adequacy Test (LICAT) guideline replaced the Minimum Continuing Capital and Surplus Requirements (MCCSR) guideline effective January 1, 2018. The LICAT guideline establishes the standards used by OSFI to assess whether a life insurer Footnote 1 maintains adequate capital or an adequate margin to support risks specific to the life insurance business. The LICAT guideline does not address public solvency risk disclosures by life insurers.
Requiring relevant public disclosures is consistent with OSFI’s mandate of protecting policyholders. When appropriate information is disclosed to stakeholders, it provides them with an opportunity to assess key risk information.
OSFI’s desire to improve the transparency of life insurer activities was outlined and broadly communicated in OSFI’s Life Insurance Regulatory Framework issued in 2012. To achieve this objective, the Framework stated that OSFI will promote enhancements to the regulatory framework for life insurers through information disclosures to support the revised regulatory capital requirement.
The LICAT Public Disclosure Requirements guideline is comprised of the following sections:
Guiding principles
Scope and implementation
The Annexes to this guideline contain minimum quantitative disclosure templates intended to supplement qualitative disclosures.
I. Guiding principles
OSFI’s expectations outlined in this guideline are based on the following five guiding principles aimed to provide a foundation for achieving transparent, high-quality disclosures that will enable users to better understand and compare a life insurer’s business and risks. The qualitative and quantitative information will provide stakeholders with a broader picture of the life insurer’s capital and risk position and promote market discipline. Life insurers are expected to produce LICAT public disclosures that reflect the following disclosure principles:
Principle 1 – Disclosures should be clear – Life insurers should communicate in a form that is understandable to key stakeholders and through an accessible medium.
Principle 2 – Disclosures should be meaningful to users – Life insurers should highlight significant current and emerging risks and how they are managed, including information that is likely to be of business value to markets. Disclosures that do not add value to the users’ understanding or do not communicate useful information should be avoided.
Principle 3 – Disclosures should be consistent over time – Life insurers should provide a consistent level of information over time to enable key stakeholders to identify trends in an insurance company’s risk profile across all significant aspects of its business.
Principle 4 – Disclosures should be comparable across life insurers – The format and level of detail disclosed should enable stakeholders to perform meaningful comparisons with respect to solvency and adequacy of capital or margin for life insurers in Canada.
Principle 5 – Disclosures should be accompanied by qualitative narrative – Life insurers are expected to supplement the quantitative information reflected in annexes A (LICAT) and B (Life Insurance Margin Requirement and Adequacy of Assets – (LIMAT)) with a narrative commentary explaining, at a minimum, any significant changes between reporting periods and any other issues that management considers to be of interest to stakeholders. The qualitative form of disclosure is at the insurer’s discretion.
II. Scope and implementation
The LICAT Public Disclosure Requirements guideline applies to all active Footnote 2 federally regulated life insurers. OSFI expects LICAT public disclosures to be tailored to the nature, size and complexity of the insurer and to include, at a minimum: i) all key quantitative data points outlined in the LICAT/LIMAT Public Disclosure Requirement templates (Annexes A and B); and ii) a narrative description of material LICAT/LIMAT movements from period to period.
Life insurers are expected to provide LICAT public disclosures at least annually and should be aligned with the publication of the life insurer’s annual report.
For the first LICAT public disclosure reporting period (i.e., December 31, 2018), OSFI expects life insurers to apply the guidance prospectively. Comparative period disclosures should be provided in subsequent reporting periods.
Life insurers are expected to supplement the quantitative information with a qualitative narrative that explains the significant movement between periods for each of the LICAT/LIMAT components as shown in Annexes A and B. Disclosure of quantitative and qualitative information should provide stakeholders with a better understanding of an insurer’s capital and risk position and promote market discipline.
LICAT public disclosures should be publically available on the life insurer’s website and the insurer should have an archive of LICAT public disclosures relating to prior reporting periods.
OSFI expects life insurers to comply with the LICAT public disclosure requirements stated within this guideline. The LICAT information disclosed should be subject to the same level of internal review and control process as the information provided for financial reporting. This should include a process whereby an internal audit function (or a review function with similar level of authority) reviews compliance with LICAT public disclosure expectations on initial application and, subsequently, on a periodic basis. OSFI will address issues of non-compliance on a case-by-case basis through bilateral discussions with the insurance company.
Annex A – LICAT public disclosure requirements
Qualitative analysis of solvency ratio (period over period)
The Total Ratio period change is primarily attributed to….
The Core Ratio period change is primarily attributed to….
LICAT ratios public disclosure summary template (thousands of dollars, except percentages)
Companies are required, at minimum, to maintain a Core Ratio of 55% Footnote 3 and a Total Ratio of 90%. OSFI has established supervisory target levels of 70% for Core and 100% for Total capital.
Definition of terms can be found in Guideline A: LICAT - Life Insurance Capital Adequacy Test
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Current period
Prior period
Change - %
Available capital (AC1+B)
(AC)
XX
XX
XX
Tier 1 Capital
(AC1)
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Tier 2 Capital
B
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Surplus allowance and eligible deposits
(SA+ED)
XX
XX
XX
Base solvency buffer
(BSB)
XX
XX
XX
Total Ratio ([AC + SA + ED] / BSB) x 100
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XX
XX
XX
Core Ratio ([AC1 + 70% SA + 70% ED] / BSB) x 100
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XX
XX
XX
Annex B – LIMAT public disclosure requirements
Qualitative analysis of solvency ratio (period over period)
The LIMAT Total Ratio period change is primarily attributed to…
LIMAT Ratios Public Disclosure Summary Template (thousands of dollars, except percentages)
Branches are required, at minimum, to maintain a Total Ratio of 90%. OSFI has established supervisory target level of 100% for Total margin.
Definition of terms can be found in Guideline A: LICAT - Life Insurance Capital Adequacy Test
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Current Period
Prior Period
Change - %
Available margin (A-B)
C
XX
XX
XX
Assets Available
A
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Assets Required
B
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Surplus allowance and eligible deposits
D
XX
XX
XX
Required margin
E
XX
XX
XX
LIMAT total ratio
([C + D] / E) x 100
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XX
XX
XX
Footnotes
Footnote 1
For purposes of the LICAT guideline, "life insurers" or "insurers" refer to all federally regulated life insurers, including Canadian branches of foreign life companies, fraternal benefit societies, regulated insurance holding companies and non-operating life insurance companies
Return to footnote 1
Footnote 2
Active FRFI Life Insurers describes life insurers issuing new life and health policies /contracts in Canada.
Return to footnote 2
Footnote 3
During 2023 and 2024, regulated insurance holding companies and non-operating insurance companies are required to maintain a minimum Core Ratio of 50%. Starting in 2025, the minimum Core Ratio for regulated insurance holding companies and non-operating insurance companies will be 55%.
Return to footnote 3