SB-1061, As Passed Senate, February 26, 2008

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

HOUSE SUBSTITUTE FOR

 

SENATE BILL NO. 1061

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

     A bill to amend 1956 PA 218, entitled

 

"The insurance code of 1956,"

 

(MCL 500.100 to 500.8302) by adding chapters 46, 47, and 48.

 

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:

 

CHAPTER 46

 

CAPTIVE INSURANCE COMPANIES

 

     Sec. 4601. As used in this chapter:

 

     (a) "Affiliated company" means a company in the same corporate

 

system as a parent, an industrial insured, or a member organization

 

by virtue of common ownership, control, operation, or management.

 

     (b) "Alien captive insurance company" means an insurer formed

 

to write insurance business for its parents and affiliates and

 

licensed pursuant to the laws of a country other than the United

 

States or any state, district, commonwealth, territory, or


 

possession of the United States.

 

     (c) "Association" means a legal group of individuals,

 

corporations, limited liability companies, partnerships, political

 

subdivisions, or groups that has been in continuous existence for

 

at least 1 year and the member organizations of which collectively,

 

or which does itself own, control, or hold, with power to vote, all

 

of the outstanding voting securities of an association captive

 

insurance company incorporated as a stock insurer or organized as a

 

limited liability company; or has complete voting control over an

 

association captive insurance company organized as a mutual

 

insurer.

 

     (d) "Association captive insurance company" means a company

 

that insures risks of the member organizations of the association

 

and their affiliated companies.

 

     (e) "Branch business" means any insurance business transacted

 

by a branch captive insurance company in this state.

 

     (f) "Branch captive insurance company" means an alien captive

 

insurance company authorized by the commissioner to transact the

 

business of insurance in this state through a business unit with a

 

principal place of business in this state.

 

     (g) "Branch operations" means any business operations of a

 

branch captive insurance company in this state.

 

     (h) "Captive insurance company" means a pure captive insurance

 

company, association captive insurance company, sponsored captive

 

insurance company, special purpose captive insurance company, or

 

industrial insured captive insurance company authorized under this

 

chapter. For purposes of this chapter, a branch captive insurance


 

company shall be a pure captive insurance company with respect to

 

operations in this state, unless otherwise permitted by the

 

commissioner.

 

     (i) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of the office of

 

financial and insurance regulation or the commissioner's designee.

 

     (j) "Control", including the terms "controlling", "controlled

 

by", and "under common control with", means the possession, direct

 

or indirect, of the power to direct or cause the direction of the

 

management and policies of a person, whether through the ownership

 

of voting securities, by contract other than a commercial contract

 

for goods or nonmanagement services, or otherwise, unless the power

 

is the result of an official position with or corporate office held

 

by the person. Control is presumed to exist if a person, directly

 

or indirectly, owns, controls, holds with the power to vote, or

 

holds proxies representing 10% or more of the voting securities of

 

another person. A showing that control does not exist may rebut

 

this presumption.

 

     (k) "Controlled unaffiliated business" means a company that

 

meets all of the following:

 

     (i) Is not in the corporate system of a parent and affiliated

 

companies.

 

     (ii) Has an existing contractual relationship with a parent or

 

affiliated company.

 

     (iii) Has risks managed by a captive insurance company in

 

accordance with this chapter.

 

     (l) "Foreign captive insurer" means an insurer formed under the

 

laws of the District of Columbia, or some state, commonwealth,


 

territory, or possession of the United States other than the state

 

of Michigan.

 

     (m) "GAAP" means generally accepted accounting principles.

 

     (n) "Industrial insured" means an insured that meets all of

 

the following:

 

     (i) That procures insurance by use of the services of a full-

 

time employee acting as a risk manager or insurance manager or

 

utilizing the services of a regularly and continuously qualified

 

insurance consultant.

 

     (ii) Whose aggregate annual premiums for insurance on all risks

 

total at least $25,000.00.

 

     (iii) That has at least 25 full-time employees.

 

     (o) "Industrial insured captive insurance company" means a

 

company that insures risks of the industrial insureds that comprise

 

the industrial insured group and their affiliated companies.

 

     (p) "Industrial insured group" means a group that meets either

 

of the following criteria:

 

     (i) Is a group of industrial insureds that collectively own,

 

control, or hold, with power to vote, all of the outstanding voting

 

securities of an industrial insured captive insurance company

 

incorporated as a stock insurer or limited liability company or

 

have complete voting control over an industrial insured captive

 

insurance company incorporated as a mutual insurer.

 

     (ii) Is a group created under the liability risk retention act

 

of 1986, 15 USC 3901 to 3906, and chapter 18, as a corporation or

 

other limited liability association taxable as a stock insurance

 

company or a mutual insurer under this chapter.


 

     (q) "Irrevocable letter of credit" means a letter of credit

 

that meets the description in section 1105(c).

 

     (r) "Member organization" means any individual, corporation,

 

limited liability company, partnership, or association that belongs

 

to an association.

 

     (s) "Office" means the office of financial and insurance

 

regulation.

 

     (t) "Organizational document" means the articles of

 

incorporation, articles of organization, bylaws, operating

 

agreement, or other foundational documents that create a legal

 

entity or prescribe its existence.

 

     (u) "Parent" means any corporation, limited liability company,

 

partnership, or individual that directly or indirectly owns,

 

controls, or holds with power to vote more than 50% of the

 

outstanding voting interests of a company.

 

     (v) "Participant" means an entity as described in section

 

4667, and any affiliates of that entity, that are insured by a

 

sponsored captive insurance company, where the recovery of the

 

participant is limited through a participant contract to the assets

 

of a protected cell.

 

     (w) "Participant contract" means a contract by which a

 

sponsored captive insurance company insures the risks of a

 

participant and limits the recovery of the participant to the

 

assets of a protected cell.

 

     (x) "Protected cell" means a segregated account established

 

and maintained by a sponsored captive insurance company for 1

 

participant.


 

     (y) "Pure captive insurance company" means a company that

 

insures risks of its parent, affiliated companies, controlled

 

unaffiliated business, or a combination of its parent, affiliated

 

companies, and controlled unaffiliated business.

 

     (z) "Qualified United States financial institution" means that

 

term as defined in section 1101.

 

     (aa) "Safe, reliable, and entitled to public confidence" means

 

that term as defined in section 116(d).

 

     (bb) "Special purpose captive insurance company" means a

 

captive insurance company that is authorized under this chapter and

 

chapter 47 that does not meet the definition of any other type of

 

captive insurance company defined in this section.

 

     (cc) "Sponsor" means an entity that meets the requirements of

 

section 4665 and is approved by the commissioner to provide all or

 

part of the capital and retained earnings required by applicable

 

law and to organize and operate a sponsored captive insurance

 

company.

 

     (dd) "Sponsored captive insurance company" means a captive

 

insurance company in which the minimum capital and retained

 

earnings required by applicable law is provided by 1 or more

 

sponsors, is authorized under this chapter, insures the risks of

 

separate participants through the participant contract, and

 

segregates each participant's liability through 1 or more protected

 

cells.

 

     (ee) "Surplus" means unassigned funds for an entity using

 

statutory accounting principles, with capital and surplus including

 

all capital stock, paid in capital and contributed surplus, and


 

other surplus funds with corresponding items under GAAP consisting

 

of retained earnings and accumulated other comprehensive income,

 

with capital and retained earnings including all capital stock,

 

additional paid in capital, and other equity funds.

 

     (ff) "Treasury rates" means the United States treasury strips

 

asked yield as published in the Wall Street Journal as of a balance

 

sheet date.

 

     (gg) "Voting security" includes any security convertible into

 

or evidencing the right to acquire a voting security.

 

     Sec. 4603. (1) A captive insurance company, if permitted by

 

its organizational documents, may apply to the commissioner for a

 

limited certificate of authority to do any and all insurance

 

authorized by this chapter except worker's compensation insurance,

 

long-term care insurance, critical care insurance, personal

 

automobile insurance, or homeowners insurance, or any component of

 

these coverages. A captive insurance company is subject to all of

 

the following:

 

     (a) A pure captive insurance company shall not insure any

 

risks other than those of its parent, affiliated companies,

 

controlled unaffiliated business, or a combination of its parent,

 

affiliated companies, and controlled unaffiliated business.

 

     (b) An association captive insurance company shall not insure

 

any risks other than those of the member organizations of its

 

association and their affiliated companies.

 

     (c) An industrial insured captive insurance company shall not

 

insure any risks other than those of the industrial insureds that

 

comprise the industrial insured group and their affiliated


 

companies.

 

     (d) In general, a special purpose captive insurance company

 

shall only insure the risks of its parent. Notwithstanding any

 

other provisions of this chapter, a special purpose captive

 

insurance company may provide insurance or reinsurance, or both,

 

for risks as approved by the commissioner.

 

     (e) A captive insurance company shall not accept or cede

 

reinsurance except as provided in section 4641.

 

     (2) To conduct insurance business in this state, a captive

 

insurance company shall do all of the following:

 

     (a) Obtain from the commissioner a limited certificate of

 

authority authorizing it to conduct insurance business in this

 

state.

 

     (b) Hold at least 1 board of directors meeting, or for a

 

limited liability company, a meeting of the managing board, each

 

year in this state.

 

     (c) Maintain its principal place of business in this state, or

 

for a branch captive insurance company, maintain the principal

 

place of business for its branch operations in this state.

 

     (d) File with the commissioner the name and address of a

 

resident registered agent designated to accept service of process

 

and to otherwise act on its behalf in this state. The designation

 

shall remain in force as long as any liability remains within this

 

state.

 

     (3) Before granting a limited certificate of authority, the

 

commissioner shall require the applicant to submit organizational

 

documents that contain the following:


 

     (a) The names and places of residence of at least 3

 

incorporators or organizers of whom at least 2 are residents of

 

this state.

 

     (b) The location of the principal office in this state.

 

     (c) The name by which the legal entity will be known.

 

     (d) The purposes of the creation of the entity including a

 

reference to this chapter.

 

     (e) The manner in which the corporate powers are to be

 

exercised.

 

     (f) The number of directors or managers, as applicable.

 

     (g) The number of directors or managers, as applicable, that

 

constitute a quorum for the purposes of doing business which shall

 

consist of no fewer than 1/3 of the directors or managers.

 

     (h) The amount and value of capital stock, if any. Each share

 

of authorized capital stock shall have a value of not less than

 

$1.00.

 

     (i) The term of existence of the entity.

 

     (4) The organizational documents of a proposed captive

 

insurance company may contain a provision providing that a director

 

is not personally liable to the corporation or its shareholders or

 

policyholders for monetary damages for a breach of the director's

 

fiduciary duty. However, the provision does not eliminate or limit

 

the liability of a director for any of the following:

 

     (a) A breach of the director's duty of loyalty to the

 

corporation or its shareholders or policyholders.

 

     (b) Acts or omissions not in good faith or that involve

 

intentional misconduct or knowing violation of law.


 

     (c) A transaction from which the director derived an improper

 

personal benefit.

 

     (5) Before the organizational documents shall be effective for

 

the purposes of this chapter, the organizational documents shall be

 

submitted to the office of the attorney general for examination. If

 

such documents are found to be in compliance with this chapter, the

 

office of the attorney general shall so certify to the

 

commissioner. Each applicant for a captive insurance company

 

limited certificate of authority that submits its organizational

 

documents to the office of the attorney general shall pay to the

 

attorney general the examination fee provided in section 240(2).

 

     (6) Prior to granting a limited certificate of authority to

 

any applicant, the commissioner shall require, consider, and review

 

all of the following:

 

     (a) A statement acknowledging that all financial records of

 

the captive insurance company, including records pertaining to

 

protected cells, if applicable, shall be made available for

 

inspection or examination by the commissioner.

 

     (b) A plan of operation, including, if applicable, a business

 

plan demonstrating how the applicant will account for the loss and

 

expense experience of each protected cell at a level of detail

 

found to be sufficient by the commissioner and how it will report

 

the experience to the commissioner.

 

     (c) Evidence of the source and form of the minimum

 

capitalization to be contributed to the company.

 

     (d) Evidence of the amount and liquidity of its assets

 

relative to the risks to be assumed.


 

     (e) Evidence of the character, reputation, financial standing,

 

and purposes of the incorporators or organizers.

 

     (f) Evidence of the character, reputation, financial

 

responsibility, insurance experience, and business qualifications

 

of the officers and directors or managers.

 

     (g) Biographical affidavits in the format prescribed by the

 

commissioner for all officers and directors.

 

     (h) Evidence of the adequacy of the loss prevention programs

 

of its parent, member organization, or industrial insureds as

 

applicable.

 

     (i) For sponsored insurance companies, copies of all contracts

 

or sample contracts with participants and evidence that expenses

 

will be allocated to each protected cell in an equitable manner.

 

     (j) For limited liability company applicants, a certificate of

 

status demonstrating that the limited liability company has been

 

formed pursuant to the Michigan limited liability company act, 1993

 

PA 23, MCL 450.4101 to 450.5200, and is in good standing.

 

     (k) Such other factors or documentation considered relevant by

 

the commissioner.

 

     (7) The commissioner shall issue a limited certificate of

 

authority to an applicant if, after reviewing the documents and

 

information provided pursuant to this chapter, the commissioner

 

finds that the documents and statements filed by the applicant

 

comply with this chapter, the applicant meets the standards in this

 

chapter and will promote the general good of the state, and all

 

required fees have been paid. The limited certificate of authority

 

shall authorize the applicant to do business in this state until


 

March 1, at which time the commissioner may renew the limited

 

certificate of authority.

 

     (8) Information submitted pursuant to this section is

 

confidential as provided in section 4609.

 

     (9) An applicant shall pay to the office a nonrefundable

 

$10,000.00 fee for processing its application for a limited

 

certificate of authority. In addition, the commissioner may retain

 

legal, financial, and examination services from outside the office

 

to examine and investigate the application, the reasonable cost of

 

which may be charged against the applicant, or the commissioner may

 

use internal resources to examine and investigate the application

 

for a $2,700.00 fee.

 

     (10) Upon approval of the commissioner, a foreign captive

 

insurance company may become a captive insurance company by

 

complying with all of the requirements of law relative to the

 

authorization of a captive insurance company of the same or

 

equivalent type in this state. After this is accomplished, the

 

foreign captive insurance company is entitled to a limited

 

certificate of authority to transact business in this state and is

 

subject to the authority and jurisdiction of this state. It is not

 

necessary for a foreign captive insurance company redomesticating

 

into this state to merge, consolidate, transfer assets, or

 

otherwise engage in any other reorganization, other than as

 

specified in this section.

 

     Sec. 4607. A captive insurance company shall not adopt a name

 

that is the same as, deceptively similar to, or likely to be

 

confused with or mistaken for any other existing business name


 

registered in this state.

 

     Sec. 4609. (1) Information and testimony submitted or

 

furnished to the office pursuant to this chapter, examination

 

reports, preliminary examination reports or results, and the

 

office's work papers, correspondence, memoranda, reports, records,

 

and other written or oral information related to an examination

 

report or an investigation shall be confidential, shall be withheld

 

from public inspection, shall not be subject to subpoena, and shall

 

not be divulged to any person, except as provided in this section

 

or with the written consent of the company. If assurances are

 

provided that the information will be kept confidential, the

 

commissioner may disclose confidential work papers, correspondence,

 

memoranda, reports, records, or other information as follows:

 

     (a) To the governor or the attorney general.

 

     (b) To any relevant regulatory agency, including regulatory

 

agencies of other states or the federal government.

 

     (c) In connection with an enforcement action brought pursuant

 

to this or another applicable act.

 

     (d) To law enforcement officials.

 

     (e) To persons authorized by the Ingham county circuit court

 

to receive the information.

 

     (f) To persons entitled to received such information in order

 

to discharge duties specifically provided for in this act.

 

     (2) The confidentiality requirements of subsection (1) do not

 

apply in any proceeding or action brought against or by the captive

 

insurer under this act or any other applicable act of this state,

 

any other state, or the United States.


 

     Sec. 4611. (1) The commissioner shall not issue a limited

 

certificate of authority to a captive insurance company unless the

 

company possesses and maintains unimpaired paid in capital and

 

retained earnings as follows:

 

     (a) For a pure captive insurance company, not less than

 

$150,000.00.

 

     (b) For an association captive insurance company incorporated

 

as a stock insurer or organized as a limited liability company, not

 

less than $400,000.00.

 

     (c) For an association captive insurance company incorporated

 

as a mutual insurer, not less than $750,000.00.

 

     (d) For an industrial insured captive insurance company

 

incorporated as a stock insurer or organized as a limited liability

 

company, not less than $300,000.00.

 

     (e) For a sponsored captive insurance company, not less than

 

$500,000.00. However, if the sponsored captive insurance company

 

does not assume any risk, the risks insured by the protected cells

 

are homogeneous, and there are no more than 10 cells, the

 

commissioner may reduce this amount to an amount not less than

 

$150,000.00.

 

     (f) For a special purpose captive insurance company, an amount

 

determined by the commissioner after giving due consideration to

 

the company's business plan, feasibility study, and pro formas,

 

including the nature of the risks to be insured.

 

     (2) Except for a sponsored captive that does not assume any

 

risk, a captive insurance company initially shall possess and after

 

that maintain minimum capitalization as required by subsection (1).


 

All of the minimum initial capitalization shall be in cash. All

 

other funds of the captive insurer in excess of its minimum initial

 

capitalization shall be in the forms as provided by this chapter.

 

     (3) The commissioner shall not issue a limited certificate of

 

authority to a captive insurance company incorporated as a

 

nonprofit corporation unless the company possesses and maintains

 

unencumbered equity as follows:

 

     (a) For a pure captive insurance company, not less than

 

$250,000.00.

 

     (b) For a special purpose captive insurance company, an amount

 

determined by the commissioner after giving due consideration to

 

the company's business plan, feasibility study, and pro formas,

 

including the nature of the risks to be insured.

 

     (4) Net assets required by subsection (3) of a captive

 

insurance company incorporated as a nonprofit corporation shall be

 

in the form of cash, cash equivalent, or an irrevocable letter of

 

credit.

 

     (5) For the purposes of subsections (1) through (4), the

 

commissioner may issue a limited certificate of authority expressly

 

conditioned upon the captive insurance company providing to the

 

commissioner satisfactory evidence of possession of the minimum

 

required unimpaired paid in capital. Until this evidence is

 

provided, the captive insurance company shall not issue any policy,

 

assume any liability, or otherwise provide coverage. The

 

commissioner may revoke the conditional limited certificate of

 

authority without legal recourse by the company if satisfactory

 

evidence of the required capital is not provided within a maximum


 

period of time, not to exceed 1 year, to be established by the

 

commissioner at the time the conditional limited certificate of

 

authority is issued.

 

     (6) The commissioner may prescribe additional capital based

 

upon the type, volume, and nature of insurance business transacted.

 

This additional capital shall be in the form of cash, cash

 

equivalent, an irrevocable letter of credit, or securities invested

 

as provided in section 4639.

 

     (7) For a branch captive insurance company, as security for

 

the payment of liabilities attributable to branch operations, the

 

commissioner shall require that a trust fund, funded by an

 

irrevocable letter of credit or other acceptable asset, be

 

established and maintained in the United States for the benefit of

 

United States policyholders and United States ceding insurers under

 

insurance policies issued or reinsurance contracts issued or

 

assumed, by the branch captive insurance company through its branch

 

operations. The amount of the security shall be no less than the

 

capital and retained earnings required by this chapter and the

 

reserves on these insurance policies or reinsurance contracts,

 

including reserves for losses, allocated loss adjustment expenses,

 

incurred but not reported losses and unearned premiums with regard

 

to business written through branch operations; however, the

 

commissioner may permit a branch captive insurance company that is

 

required to post security for loss reserves on branch business by

 

its reinsurer to reduce the funds in the trust account required by

 

this section by the same amount so long as the security remains

 

posted with the reinsurer.


 

     (8) A captive insurance company shall not pay a dividend out

 

of, or other distribution with respect to, capital or retained

 

earnings, in excess of the limitations set forth in section 1343,

 

without the prior approval of the commissioner. Approval of an

 

ongoing plan for the payment of dividends or other distributions

 

shall be conditioned upon retention, at the time of each payment,

 

of capital or retained earnings in excess of amounts specified by,

 

or determined in accordance with formulas approved by, the

 

commissioner. A captive insurance company incorporated as a

 

nonprofit corporation shall not make any distributions without the

 

prior approval of the commissioner.

 

     Sec. 4619. (1) A pure captive insurance company or a sponsored

 

captive insurance company may be any of the following:

 

     (a) Incorporated as a stock insurer with its capital divided

 

into shares and held by the stockholders.

 

     (b) Incorporated as a public benefit, mutual benefit, or

 

religious nonprofit corporation with members in accordance with the

 

Michigan nonprofit corporation act of 1982, 1982 PA 162, MCL

 

450.2101 to 450.3192.

 

     (c) Organized as a limited liability company with its capital

 

divided into capital accounts and held by its members.

 

     (2) An association captive insurance company or an industrial

 

insured captive insurance company may be any of the following:

 

     (a) Incorporated as a stock insurer with its capital divided

 

into shares and held by the stockholders.

 

     (b) Organized as a limited liability company with its capital

 

divided into capital accounts and held by its members.


 

     (c) Incorporated as a mutual insurer without capital stock,

 

the governing body of which is elected by the member organizations

 

of its association.

 

     (3) The capital stock or membership interests of a captive

 

insurance company incorporated as a stock insurer or limited

 

liability company shall be issued at not less than par value.

 

     (4) For a captive insurance company formed as a corporation or

 

a nonprofit corporation, at least 1 of the members of the board of

 

directors of a captive insurance company incorporated in this state

 

shall be a resident of this state.

 

     (5) For a captive insurance company formed as a limited

 

liability company, at least 1 of the managers of the captive

 

insurance company shall be a resident of this state.

 

     (6) A captive insurance company formed as a limited liability

 

company has the privileges and is subject to the provisions of the

 

Michigan limited liability company act, 1993 PA 23, MCL 450.4101 to

 

450.5200, for limited liability companies, as well as the

 

applicable provisions contained in this chapter. If a conflict

 

occurs between a provision of the Michigan limited liability

 

company act, 1993 PA 23, MCL 450.4101 to 450.5200, for limited

 

liability companies, and a provision of this chapter, this chapter

 

controls.

 

     (7) All captive insurers formed as corporations under this

 

chapter are considered bodies corporate and politic, in fact and in

 

name, are subject to all of the provisions of law in relation to

 

corporations as far as they are applicable, and have the corporate

 

powers provided for in chapter 52.


 

     (8) This act's provisions pertaining to mergers,

 

consolidations, conversions, mutualizations, and redomestications

 

apply in determining the procedures to be followed by a captive

 

insurance company in carrying out any of the transactions described

 

in those provisions.

 

     Sec. 4621. (1) A captive insurance company shall not be

 

required to make an annual report except as provided in this

 

chapter.

 

     (2) Annually, on or before March 1 of each year, a captive

 

insurance company shall submit to the commissioner a report of its

 

financial condition, verified by oath of 2 of its executive

 

officers. A captive insurance company may report using generally

 

accepted accounting principles or, with the approval of the

 

commissioner, statutory accounting principles, with useful or

 

necessary modifications or adaptations required or approved or

 

accepted by the commissioner for the type of insurance and kinds of

 

insurers to be reported upon, and as supplemented by additional

 

information required by the commissioner. The commissioner may

 

prescribe the form and manner in which captive insurance companies

 

shall report. Information submitted pursuant to this section is

 

confidential as provided in section 4609.

 

     (3) The commissioner may address inquiries to any captive

 

insurer concerning the insurer's activities or conditions or any

 

other matter connected with the insurer's transactions. An insurer

 

so addressed shall reply in writing to each inquiry from the

 

commissioner within 30 days of receipt of the inquiry.

 

     (4) The commissioner may require interim reporting on any or


 

all of the captive insurer's business, including any matter,

 

condition, or requirement regulated by this chapter. The

 

commissioner shall prescribe the format and content of the interim

 

report.

 

     (5) Each captive insurer that fails to file a report required

 

by this section, or fails to reply within 30 days to an inquiry of

 

the commissioner, is subject to a civil penalty of not less than

 

$1,000.00 or more than $5,000.00 per occurrence, and an additional

 

$50.00 for every day that the captive insurer fails to file the

 

report or reply to the inquiry. In addition, each captive insurer

 

that fails to file a report, or fails to make a satisfactory reply

 

to an inquiry of the commissioner concerning the captive insurer's

 

affairs, is subject to proceedings under section 4637.

 

     (6) A pure captive insurance company may make written

 

application for filing the annual report on a fiscal year end that

 

is consistent with the parent company's fiscal year. The annual

 

report shall be on a form prescribed by the commissioner.

 

     (7) A branch captive insurance company shall file with the

 

commissioner 60 days after the fiscal year end a copy of all

 

reports and statements required to be filed under the laws of the

 

jurisdiction in which the alien captive insurance company is

 

formed, verified by oath by 2 of its executive officers. If the

 

commissioner is satisfied that the annual report filed by the alien

 

captive insurance company in its domiciliary jurisdiction provides

 

adequate information concerning the financial condition of the

 

alien captive insurance company, the commissioner may waive the

 

requirement for completion of the captive annual statement.


 

     (8) A captive insurance company shall annually submit to the

 

commissioner the opinion of a qualified actuary as to whether the

 

reserves and related actuarial items held in support of the

 

reserves are computed appropriately, are based on assumptions that

 

satisfy contractual provisions, are consistent with prior reported

 

amounts, and comply with applicable laws of this state. The

 

actuarial opinion required by this section shall be submitted in a

 

form prescribed by the commissioner. For purposes of this section,

 

"qualified actuary" means a member of either the American academy

 

of actuaries or the society of actuaries who also meets any other

 

criteria that the commissioner may establish by rule, regulation,

 

or order.

 

     Sec. 4623. (1) A sponsored captive insurance company may

 

discount its loss and loss adjustment expense reserves at the

 

lesser of treasury rates or the captive insurance company's actual

 

rate of return applied to the applicable payments projected through

 

the use of the expected payment pattern associated with the

 

reserves.

 

     (2) The commissioner may disallow the discounting of reserves

 

if a sponsored captive insurance company violates a provision of

 

this act.

 

     Sec. 4625. (1) No provisions of this act, other than those

 

specifically referenced in this chapter, apply to a captive

 

insurance company, and those provisions apply only as modified by

 

this chapter. If a conflict occurs between a provision of this act

 

and a provision of this chapter, this chapter controls.

 

     (2) The commissioner by rule, regulation, or order may exempt


 

special purpose captive insurance companies, on a case-by-case

 

basis, from provisions of this chapter that the commissioner

 

determines to be inappropriate given the nature of the risks to be

 

insured.

 

     (3) Sections 210 to 222, 226 to 238, 244 to 251, and 2057 to

 

2062, and chapter 45 apply to captive insurance companies.

 

     (4) The expenses and charges of a captive insurance company

 

examination shall be paid to the state by the captive insurance

 

company or companies examined, and the office shall issue warrants

 

for the proper charges incurred in all examinations. The payments

 

received by the state shall be deposited into the captive insurance

 

regulatory and supervision fund.

 

     (5) A captive insurance company shall pay an annual renewal

 

fee by March 1 of each calendar year. The annual renewal fee shall

 

be calculated based upon the annual volume of insurance or

 

reinsurance premiums received by the captive insurance company as

 

follows:

 

     (a) For annual premiums less than $5,000,000.00, the renewal

 

fee shall be $5,000.00.

 

     (b) For annual premiums equal to or greater than

 

$5,000,000.00, but less than $10,000,000.00, the renewal fee shall

 

be $10,000.00.

 

     (c) For annual premiums equal to or greater than

 

$10,000,000.00, but less then $15,000,000.00, the renewal fee shall

 

be $15,000.00.

 

     (d) For annual premiums equal to or greater than

 

$15,000,000.00, but less than $25,000,000.00, the renewal fee shall


 

be $25,000.00.

 

     (e) For annual premiums equal to or greater than

 

$25,000,000.00, but less than $40,000,000.00, the renewal fee shall

 

be $40,000.00.

 

     (f) For annual premiums equal to or greater than

 

$40,000,000.00, but less than $55,000,000.00, the renewal fee shall

 

be $50,000.00.

 

     (g) For annual premiums equal to or greater than

 

$55,000,000.00, but less than $75,000,000.00, the renewal fee shall

 

be $75,000.00.

 

     (h) For annual premiums equal to or greater than

 

$75,000,000.00, the renewal fee shall be $100,000.00.

 

     (6) The office may charge a $15.00 fee for any document

 

requiring certification of authenticity or the signature of the

 

commissioner. The payments received shall be deposited into the

 

captive insurance regulatory and supervision fund.

 

     (7) The office may charge a fee of $25.00 payable to the

 

attorney general for the examination of any amendment to the

 

organizational documents.

 

     (8) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the

 

commissioner may employ legal counsel as he or she considers

 

necessary to assist in his or her responsibilities under this

 

chapter.

 

     (9) The confidentiality provisions of this chapter do not

 

extend to final examination reports produced by the commissioner in

 

inspecting or examining a captive insurance company formed as a

 

risk retention group under the liability risk retention act of


 

1986, 15 USC 3901 to 3906.

 

     (10) Section 222 applies to all business written by a captive

 

insurance company except that the examination for a branch captive

 

insurance company shall be of branch business and branch operations

 

only, as long as the branch captive insurance company provides

 

annually to the commissioner, a certificate of compliance, or its

 

equivalent, issued by or filed with the licensing authority of the

 

jurisdiction in which the branch captive insurance company is

 

formed and demonstrates to the commissioner's satisfaction that it

 

is operating in sound financial condition in accordance with all

 

applicable laws and regulations of that jurisdiction.

 

     Sec. 4637. (1) The limited certificate of authority of a

 

captive insurance company to conduct an insurance business in this

 

state may be suspended or revoked by the commissioner for any of

 

the following:

 

     (a) Insolvency or impairment of capital or retained earnings.

 

     (b) Failure to meet the requirements of section 4611.

 

     (c) Refusal or failure to submit an annual report, as required

 

by section 4621, or any other report or statement required by law

 

or by order of the commissioner.

 

     (d) Failure to comply with its own charter, bylaws, or other

 

organizational document.

 

     (e) Failure to submit to examination or any legal obligation

 

relative to an examination, as required by section 4625.

 

     (f) Refusal or failure to pay the cost of examination as

 

required by section 4625.

 

     (g) The company is no longer safe, reliable, or entitled to


 

public confidence or is unsound, or is using financial methods and

 

practices in the conduct of its business that render further

 

transaction of insurance by the company in this state hazardous to

 

policyholders, creditors, or the public.

 

     (h) The certificate of authority or equivalent authorization

 

of a branch captive insurance company has been suspended or revoked

 

in the jurisdiction in which the company was formed.

 

     (i) For a captive insurer formed as a limited liabiity

 

company, the captive insurer is no longer in good standing under

 

the Michigan limited liability company act, 1993 PA 23, MCL

 

450.4101 to 450.5200.

 

     (j) The company has failed, after written request by the

 

commissioner, to remove or discharge an officer or director whose

 

record of business conduct does not satisfy the requirements of

 

section 4603 or who has been convicted of any crime involving

 

fraud, dishonesty, or like moral turpitude.

 

     (k) The company has failed, within 30 days after notice of

 

delinquency from the commissioner, to cure its failure to pay

 

taxes, fees, assessments, or expenses required by this act.

 

     (l) The captive insurance company has failed for an

 

unreasonable period to pay any final judgment rendered against it

 

in this state on any policy, bond, recognizance, or undertaking

 

issued or guaranteed by it.

 

     (m) Failure otherwise to comply with the laws of this state.

 

     (2) If the commissioner finds, upon examination, hearing, or

 

other evidence, that a captive insurance company has committed any

 

of the acts specified in subsection (1), the commissioner may


 

suspend or revoke the captive insurance company's limited

 

certificate of authority if the commissioner considers it in the

 

best interest of the public and the policyholders of the captive

 

insurance company, notwithstanding any other provision of this act.

 

     Sec. 4639. (1) An association captive insurance company and an

 

industrial insured captive insurance company insuring the risks of

 

an industrial insured group shall comply with the investment

 

requirements contained in sections 910 to 947. Notwithstanding any

 

other provision of this chapter or in chapter 9, the commissioner

 

may approve the use of alternative reliable methods of valuation

 

and rating.

 

     (2) A pure captive insurance company and a special purpose

 

captive insurance company are not subject to any restrictions on

 

allowable investments contained in chapter 9 except that the

 

commissioner may request a written investment plan and may prohibit

 

or limit an investment that threatens the solvency or liquidity of

 

the company.

 

     (3) Only a pure captive insurance company may make loans to

 

its parent company or affiliates and only upon the prior written

 

approval of the commissioner evidenced by a note in a form approved

 

by the commissioner. Loans of minimum capital and retained earnings

 

required to be held by section 4611(1) are prohibited.

 

     (4) Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 4663 and 4665,

 

the assets of 2 or more protected cells may be combined for

 

purposes of investment upon written agreement of the participants,

 

and this combination shall not be construed as defeating the

 

segregation of those assets for accounting or other purposes.


 

     (5) Sponsored captive insurance companies shall comply with

 

the investment requirements contained in chapter 9, as applicable;

 

provided, however, that compliance with such investment

 

requirements shall be waived for sponsored captive insurance

 

companies to the extent that credit for reinsurance ceded to

 

reinsurers is allowed pursuant to section 4641(2) or to the extent

 

otherwise considered reasonable and appropriate by the

 

commissioner. Sections 841 and 842 shall apply to sponsored captive

 

insurance companies except to the extent it is inconsistent with

 

approved accounting standards in use by the company.

 

Notwithstanding any other provision of this act, the commissioner

 

may approve the use of alternative reliable methods of valuation

 

and rating.

 

     Sec. 4641. (1) A captive insurance company may provide

 

reinsurance, as authorized by this act and with the prior approval

 

of the commissioner, on risks ceded by any other insurer.

 

     (2) A captive insurance company may take credit for reserves

 

on risks or portions of risks ceded to reinsurers complying with

 

the provisions of sections 1103 and 1105. A captive insurer shall

 

not take credit for reserves on risks or portions of risks ceded to

 

a reinsurer if the reinsurer is not in compliance with sections

 

1103 and 1105.

 

     Sec. 4643. A captive insurance company shall not be required

 

to join a rating organization.

 

     Sec. 4645. A captive insurance company shall not join or

 

contribute financially to a plan, pool, association, or guaranty or

 

insolvency fund in this state. A captive insurance company, its


 

insured, its parent, or any affiliated company or any member

 

organization of its association, shall not receive a benefit from a

 

plan, pool, association, or guaranty or insolvency fund for claims

 

arising out of the operations of the captive insurance company.

 

     Sec. 4651. The commissioner may promulgate pursuant to the

 

administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.201 to

 

24.328, rules, and may issue regulations and orders relating to

 

captive insurance companies as are necessary to enable the

 

commissioner to carry out the provisions of this chapter.

 

     Sec. 4655. (1) Except as otherwise provided in this section,

 

the terms and conditions under chapter 81 pertaining to

 

administrative supervision, conservation, rehabilitation,

 

receivership, and liquidation of insurers apply in full to captive

 

insurers authorized under this chapter.

 

     (2) For a sponsored captive insurance company, both of the

 

following apply:

 

     (a) The assets of the protected cell shall not be used to pay

 

expenses or claims other than those attributable to the protected

 

cell.

 

     (b) The capital and surplus of the sponsored captive insurance

 

company shall at all times be available to pay expenses of or

 

claims against the sponsored captive insurance company and shall

 

not be used to pay expenses or claims attributable to a protected

 

cell.

 

     Sec. 4659. The commissioner by rule, regulation, or order may

 

establish standards to ensure that a parent or affiliated company

 

is able to exercise control of the risk management function of any


 

controlled unaffiliated business to be insured by the pure captive

 

insurance company. Until such time as the standards are

 

established, the commissioner may by temporary order grant

 

authority to a pure captive insurance company to insure risks.

 

     Sec. 4663. (1) One or more sponsors may form a sponsored

 

captive insurance company under this chapter.

 

     (2) A sponsored captive insurance company authorized under

 

this chapter may establish and maintain 1 or more protected cells

 

to insure risks of 1 or more participants, subject to all of the

 

following:

 

     (a) The shareholders of a sponsored captive insurance company

 

shall be limited to its participants and sponsors, provided that a

 

sponsored captive insurance company may issue nonvoting securities

 

to other persons on terms approved by the commissioner.

 

     (b) Each protected cell shall be accounted for separately on

 

the books and records of the sponsored captive insurance company to

 

reflect the financial condition and results of operations of the

 

protected cell, net income or loss, dividends or other

 

distributions to participants, and other factors may be provided in

 

the participant contract or required by the commissioner.

 

     (c) The assets of a protected cell shall not be chargeable

 

with liabilities arising out of any other insurance business the

 

sponsored captive insurance company may conduct.

 

     (d) No sale, exchange, or other transfer of assets shall be

 

made by the sponsored captive insurance company between or among

 

any of its protected cells without the consent of the protected

 

cells.


 

     (e) No sale, exchange, or other transfer of assets shall be

 

made from a protected cell to a sponsor or participant unless the

 

captive insurer has notified the commissioner in writing at least

 

30 days, or a shorter period as the commissioner allows, prior to

 

such transaction and the commissioner has not disapproved the

 

transaction during that period.

 

     (f) No dividend or distribution shall be made from a protected

 

cell to a sponsor or participant without the commissioner's

 

approval and in no event shall the approval be given if the

 

dividend or distribution would result in insolvency or impairment

 

with respect to a protected cell.

 

     (g) A sponsored captive insurance company shall file annually

 

with the commissioner financial reports the commissioner requires,

 

which shall include, but are not limited to, accounting statements

 

detailing the financial experience of each protected cell.

 

     (h) A sponsored captive insurance company shall notify the

 

commissioner in writing within 10 business days of a protected cell

 

that is insolvent or otherwise unable to meet its claim or expense

 

obligations.

 

     (i) No participant contract shall take effect without the

 

commissioner's prior written approval, and the addition of each new

 

protected cell and withdrawal of any participant of any existing

 

protected cell requires the commissioner's prior written approval.

 

     Sec. 4665. A sponsor of a sponsored captive insurance company

 

shall be an insurer authorized pursuant to the laws of a state or

 

the District of Columbia, an insurance holding company that

 

controls an insurer authorized pursuant to the laws of a state or


 

the District of Columbia and subject to registration pursuant to

 

the insurance holding company system laws of the state of domicile

 

of the insurer, a reinsurer authorized or approved pursuant to the

 

laws of a state or the District of Columbia, or a captive insurance

 

company authorized pursuant to this chapter. A risk retention group

 

shall not be either a sponsor or a participant of a sponsored

 

captive insurance company. The business written by a sponsored

 

captive insurance company with respect to each protected cell shall

 

meet at least 1 of the following:

 

     (a) Be fronted by an insurance company authorized pursuant to

 

the laws of any state or any jurisdiction if the insurance company

 

is a wholly owned subsidiary of an insurance company authorized

 

pursuant to the laws of any state or any jurisdiction.

 

     (b) Be reinsured by a reinsurer authorized or approved by this

 

state.

 

     (c) Be secured by a trust fund in the United States for the

 

benefit of policyholders and claimants funded by an irrevocable

 

letter of credit or other asset acceptable to the commissioner. The

 

amount of security provided by the trust fund shall not be less

 

than the reserves associated with those liabilities, including

 

reserves for losses, allocated loss adjustment expenses, incurred

 

but not reported losses, and unearned premiums for business written

 

through the participant's protected cell. The commissioner may

 

require the sponsored captive to increase the funding of a trust

 

established pursuant to this subdivision. A trust and trust

 

instrument maintained pursuant to this subdivision shall be in a

 

form and upon terms approved by the commissioner.


 

     Sec. 4667. (1) An association, a corporation, a limited

 

liability company, a partnership, a trust, or other business entity

 

may be a participant in a sponsored captive insurance company

 

authorized pursuant to this chapter.

 

     (2) A sponsor may be a participant in a sponsored captive

 

insurance company.

 

     (3) A participant need not be a shareholder of the sponsored

 

captive insurance company or an affiliate of the company.

 

     (4) A participant shall insure only its own risks through a

 

sponsored captive insurance company, unless otherwise approved by

 

the commissioner.

 

     Sec. 4669. (1) Except as otherwise provided in this chapter,

 

the terms and conditions provided in chapter 48 relating to a

 

protected cell insurance company apply in full to a sponsored

 

captive insurance company.

 

     (2) Except as otherwise provided, all of the following apply

 

to a sponsored captive insurance company:

 

     (a) A protected cell need not be established solely for the

 

purpose of effecting insurance securitizations, but may be

 

established for the purpose of isolating the expenses and claims of

 

a sponsored captive insurance company participant.

 

     (b) The sponsored captive insurance company shall attribute

 

all insurance obligations, assets, and liabilities relating to a

 

participant's risks to the participant's protected cell.

 

     (c) Section 4805 does not apply.

 

     Sec. 4673. (1) The captive insurance regulatory and

 

supervision fund is created within the state treasury.


 

     (2) The state treasurer may receive money or other assets from

 

any source for deposit into the captive insurance regulatory and

 

supervision fund. All fees and assessments received by the

 

department of treasury or the office pursuant to the administration

 

of this chapter and chapter 47 shall be credited to the captive

 

insurance regulatory and supervision fund. All fees received by the

 

department of treasury from reinsurers who assume risk only from

 

captive insurance companies shall be deposited into the captive

 

insurance regulatory and supervision fund. All fines and

 

administrative penalties ordered under this chapter or chapter 47

 

shall be deposited directly into the captive insurance regulatory

 

and supervision fund. The state treasurer shall direct the

 

investment of the captive insurance regulatory and supervision

 

fund. The state treasurer shall credit to the captive insurance

 

regulatory and supervision fund interest and earnings from fund

 

investments.

 

     (3) Money in the captive insurance regulatory and supervision

 

fund at the close of the fiscal year shall remain in the captive

 

insurance regulatory and supervision fund and shall not lapse to

 

the general fund.

 

     (4) The commissioner shall be the administrator of the captive

 

insurance regulatory and supervision fund for auditing purposes.

 

Money in the captive insurance regulatory and supervision fund

 

shall be expended by the commissioner, upon appropriation, for the

 

purpose of administering chapters 18 and 47 and this chapter and

 

for reasonable expenses incurred in promoting the captive insurance

 

industry in this state.


 

CHAPTER 47

 

SPECIAL PURPOSE FINANCIAL CAPTIVES

 

     Sec. 4701. As used in this chapter:

 

     (a) "Affiliated company" means a company in the same corporate

 

system as a parent, by virtue of common ownership, control,

 

operation, or management.

 

     (b) "Captive LLC" means a limited liability company

 

established under the Michigan limited liability company act, 1993

 

PA 23, MCL 450.4101 to 450.5200, or comparable provisions of any

 

other state law, including the District of Columbia by a parent,

 

counterparty, affiliated company, or SPFC for the purpose of

 

issuing SPFC securities, entering an SPFC contract with a

 

counterparty, or otherwise facilitating an insurance

 

securitization.

 

     (c) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of the office of

 

financial and insurance regulation or the commissioner's designee.

 

     (d) "Contested case" means a proceeding in which the legal

 

rights, duties, obligations, or privileges of a party are required

 

by law to be determined by the circuit court after an opportunity

 

for hearing.

 

     (e) "Control" including the terms "controlling", "controlled

 

by", and "under common control with" means the possession, direct

 

or indirect, of the power to direct or cause the direction of the

 

management and policies of a person, whether through the ownership

 

of voting securities, by contract other than a commercial contract

 

for goods or nonmanagement services, or otherwise, unless the power

 

is the result of an official position with or corporate office held


 

by the person. Control shall be presumed to exist if a person,

 

directly or indirectly, owns, controls, holds with the power to

 

vote, or holds proxies representing 10% or more of the voting

 

securities of another person. This presumption may be rebutted by a

 

showing that control does not exist. However, for purposes of this

 

chapter, the fact that an SPFC exclusively provides reinsurance to

 

a ceding insurer under an SPFC contract is not by itself sufficient

 

grounds for a finding that the SPFC and ceding insurer are under

 

common control.

 

     (f) "Counterparty" means an SPFC's parent or affiliated

 

company, or, subject to the prior approval of the commissioner, a

 

nonaffiliated company as ceding insurer to the SPFC contract.

 

     (g) "Fair value" means the following:

 

     (i) For cash, the amount of the cash.

 

     (ii) For assets other than cash, the amount at which that asset

 

could be bought or sold in a current transaction between arm's

 

length, willing parties. If available, the quoted mid-market price

 

for the asset in active markets shall be used; and if quoted mid-

 

market prices are not available, a value shall be determined using

 

the best information available considering values of similar assets

 

and other valuation methods, such as present value of future cash

 

flows, historical value of the same or similar assets, or

 

comparison to values of other asset classes, the value of which

 

have been historically related to the subject asset.

 

     (h) "Foreign captive" means a captive insurer formed under the

 

laws of the District of Columbia or some state, commonwealth,

 

territory, or possession of the United States other than the state


 

of Michigan.

 

     (i) "Insolvency" or "insolvent" means 1 or more of the

 

following:

 

     (i) That the SPFC is unable to pay its obligations within 30

 

days after they are due, unless those obligations are the subject

 

of a bona fide dispute.

 

     (ii) That the admitted assets of the SPFC do not exceed

 

liabilities plus minimum capital and surplus for a period of time

 

in excess of 30 days.

 

     (iii) That the Ingham county circuit court has issued an order

 

as provided for in section 8113, 8117, or 8120 in connection with a

 

delinquency proceeding under chapter 81 instituted against the

 

SPFC.

 

     (j) "Insurance securitization" means a package of related risk

 

transfer instruments, capital market offerings, and facilitating

 

administrative agreements by which all of the following apply:

 

     (i) The proceeds of the sale of SPFC securities are obtained,

 

in a transaction that complies with applicable securities laws, by

 

an SPFC directly through the issuance of the SPFC securities by the

 

SPFC or indirectly through the issuance of preferred securities by

 

the SPFC in exchange for some or all of the proceeds of the sale of

 

SPFC securities by the SPFC's parent, an affiliated company of the

 

SPFC, a counterparty, or a captive LLC.

 

     (ii) The proceeds of the issuance of the SPFC securities secure

 

the obligations of the SPFC under 1 or more SPFC contracts with a

 

counterparty.

 

     (iii) The obligation to the holders of the SPFC securities is


 

secured by assets obtained with proceeds of the SPFC securities in

 

accordance with the transaction terms.

 

     (k) "Irrevocable letter of credit" means a letter of credit

 

that meets the description in section 1105(c).

 

     (l) "Management" means the board of directors, managing board,

 

or other individual or individuals vested with overall

 

responsibility for the management of the affairs of the SPFC,

 

including the election and appointment of officers or other agents

 

to act on behalf of the SPFC.

 

     (m) "Office" means the office of financial and insurance

 

regulation.

 

     (n) "Organizational document" means the SPFC's articles of

 

incorporation, articles of organization, bylaws, operating

 

agreement, or other foundational documents that establish the SPFC

 

as a legal entity or prescribes its existence.

 

     (o) "Parent" means any corporation, limited liability company,

 

partnership, or individual that directly or indirectly owns,

 

controls, or holds with power to vote more than 50% of the

 

outstanding voting securities of an SPFC.

 

     (p) "Permitted investments" means those investments that meet

 

the qualifications in section 4727(1).

 

     (q) "Preferred securities" means securities, whether stock or

 

debt, issued by an SPFC to the issuer of the SPFC securities in

 

exchange for some or all of the proceeds of the issuance of the

 

SPFC securities.

 

     (r) "Protected cell" means a segregated account established

 

and maintained by an SPFC for 1 or more SPFC contracts that are


 

part of a single securitization transaction as further provided for

 

in chapter 48.

 

     (s) "Qualified United States financial institution" means that

 

term as defined in section 1101.

 

     (t) "Reserves" means that term as used in chapter 8.

 

     (u) "Safe, reliable, and entitled to public confidence" means

 

that term as defined in section 116(d).

 

     (v) "Securities" means those different types of debt

 

obligations, equity, surplus certificates, surplus notes, funding

 

agreements, derivatives, and other legal forms of financial

 

instruments.

 

     (w) "Securities commissioner" means the commissioner.

 

     (x) "SPFC" or "special purpose financial captive" means a

 

captive insurance company, a captive LLC, or a company otherwise

 

qualified as an authorized insurer that has received a limited

 

certificate of authority from the commissioner for the purposes

 

provided for in this chapter.

 

     (y) "SPFC contract" means a contract between the SPFC and the

 

counterparty pursuant to which the SPFC agrees to provide insurance

 

or reinsurance protection to the counterparty for risks associated

 

with the counterparty's insurance or reinsurance business.

 

     (z) "SPFC securities" means the securities issued pursuant to

 

an insurance securitization, the proceeds of which are used in the

 

manner described in subdivision (j).

 

     (aa) "Surplus note" means an unsecured subordinated debt

 

obligation possessing characteristics consistent with accounting

 

practices and procedures designated by the commissioner.


 

     (bb) "Third party" means a person unrelated to an SPFC or its

 

counterparty, or both, that has been aggrieved by a decision of a

 

commissioner regarding that SPFC or its activities.

 

     Sec. 4703. (1) No provisions of this act, other than those

 

specifically referenced in this chapter, apply to an SPFC, and

 

those provisions apply only as modified by this chapter. If a

 

conflict occurs between a provision of this act and a provision of

 

this chapter, this chapter controls.

 

     (2) Sections 210 to 222, 226 to 238, 244 to 251, 2057 to 2062,

 

and 4673 and chapter 45 apply to SPFCs.

 

     (3) The commissioner, by rule, regulation, or order, may

 

exempt an SPFC or its protected cells, on a case-by-case basis,

 

from provisions of this chapter that the commissioner determines to

 

be inappropriate given the nature of the risks to be insured.

 

     Sec. 4705. (1) A captive insurance company, a captive LLC, or

 

a company otherwise qualified as an authorized insurer may apply to

 

the commissioner for a limited certificate of authority to transact

 

insurance or reinsurance business as authorized by this chapter. An

 

SPFC only may insure or reinsure the risks of its counterparty.

 

Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, an SPFC may

 

purchase reinsurance to cede the risks assumed under the SPFC

 

contract as approved by the commissioner.

 

     (2) To transact business in this state, an SPFC shall do all

 

of the following:

 

     (a) Obtain from the commissioner a limited certificate of

 

authority authorizing it to conduct insurance or reinsurance

 

business, or both, in this state.


 

     (b) Hold at least 1 management meeting each year in this

 

state.

 

     (c) Maintain its principal place of business in this state.

 

     (d) File with the commissioner the name and address of a

 

resident registered agent designated to accept service of process

 

and to otherwise act on its behalf in this state. The designation

 

shall remain in force as long as any liability remains within the

 

state.

 

     (e) Provide such documentation of the insurance securitization

 

as requested by the commissioner immediately upon the closing of

 

the insurance securitization transaction, including an opinion of

 

legal counsel with respect to compliance with this chapter and any

 

other applicable laws as of the effective date of the insurance

 

securitization transaction and a statement under oath of its

 

president and secretary showing its financial condition.

 

     (f) Provide a complete set of documentation of the insurance

 

securitization to the commissioner shortly following closing of the

 

insurance securitization transaction.

 

     (3) Before granting a limited certificate of authority for an

 

SPFC, the commissioner shall require the applicant to submit

 

organizational documents that contain all of the following:

 

     (a) The names and places of residence of at least 3

 

incorporators or organizers of whom at least 2 are residents of

 

this state.

 

     (b) The location of the principal office in this state.

 

     (c) The name by which the legal entity will be known.

 

     (d) The purposes of the creation of the entity including a


 

reference to this chapter.

 

     (e) The manner in which the corporate powers are to be

 

exercised.

 

     (f) The number of directors or managers, as applicable.

 

     (g) The number of directors or managers, as applicable, that

 

constitute a quorum for the purposes of doing business which

 

consists of no fewer than 1/3 of the managers required by the

 

organizational document.

 

     (h) The amount and value of capital stock, if any. Each share

 

of authorized capital stock shall have a value of not less than

 

$1.00.

 

     (i) The term of existence of the entity.

 

     (4) The organizational documents of an SPFC may contain a

 

provision providing that a director is not personally liable to the

 

corporation or its shareholders or policyholders for monetary

 

damages for a breach of the director's fiduciary duty. However, the

 

provision does not eliminate or limit the liability of a director

 

for any of the following:

 

     (a) A breach of the director's duty of loyalty to the

 

corporation or its shareholders or policyholders.

 

     (b) Acts or omissions not in good faith or that involve

 

intentional misconduct or knowing violation of law.

 

     (c) A transaction from which the director derived an improper

 

personal benefit.

 

     (5) Before the organizational documents shall be effective for

 

the purposes of this chapter, the organizational documents shall be

 

submitted to the office of the attorney general for examination. If


 

such documents are found to be in compliance with this chapter, the

 

office of the attorney general shall so certify to the

 

commissioner. Each applicant for an SPFC limited certificate of

 

authority that submits its organizational documents to the office

 

of the attorney general shall pay to the attorney general the

 

examination fee provided in section 240(2).

 

     (6) Prior to granting a limited certificate of authority to

 

any SPFC, the commissioner shall require, consider, and review all

 

of the following:

 

     (a) Evidence of all of the following:

 

     (i) The amount and liquidity of its assets relative to the

 

risks to be assumed.

 

     (ii) The adequacy of the expertise, experience, and character

 

of the person or persons who manage it.

 

     (iii) The overall soundness of its plan of operation.

 

     (iv) Other factors considered relevant by the commissioner in

 

ascertaining whether the proposed SPFC is able to meet its policy

 

obligations.

 

     (v) The applicant SPFC's financial condition, including the

 

source and form of the minimum capitalization to be contributed to

 

the SPFC.

 

     (b) A plan of operation, consisting of a description of or

 

statement of intent with respect to the contemplated insurance

 

securitization, the SPFC contract, and related transactions, which

 

shall include all of the following:

 

     (i) Draft documentation or, at the commissioner's discretion, a

 

written summary of all material agreements that are entered into in


 

connection with the SPFC contracts and the insurance

 

securitization, including the names of the counterparty, the nature

 

of the risks to be assumed, and the proposed use of protected

 

cells, if any. The documentation or written summary shall also

 

include the maximum amounts, purpose, nature, and the relationship

 

between the various transactions effectuating the insurance

 

securitization.

 

     (ii) A description of any party, other than the SPFC or the

 

counterparty, that will issue SPFC securities in an insurance

 

securitization, including a description of its contemplated

 

operation.

 

     (iii) The source and form of additional capitalization to be

 

contributed to the SPFC.

 

     (iv) The proposed investment strategy of the SPFC.

 

     (v) A description of the underwriting, reporting, and claims

 

payment methods by which reserves covered by the SPFC contract are

 

reported, accounted for, and settled.

 

     (vi) A pro forma balance sheet and income statement

 

illustrating various stress case scenarios for the performance of

 

the SPFC under the SPFC contract.

 

     (c) Biographical affidavits in a form prescribed by the

 

commissioner of all of the prospective SPFC's officers and

 

directors, providing their legal names, any names under which they

 

have or are conducting their affairs, and any affiliations with

 

other persons, together with other biographical information as the

 

commissioner may request.

 

     (d) An affidavit from the applicant SPFC verifying all of the


 

following:

 

     (i) The applicant SPFC meets the provisions of this chapter.

 

     (ii) The applicant SPFC operates only pursuant to the

 

provisions in this chapter.

 

     (iii) The applicant SPFC's investment strategy reflects and

 

takes into account the liquidity of assets and the reasonable

 

preservation, administration, and asset management of such assets

 

relative to the risks associated with the SPFC contract and the

 

insurance securitization transaction.

 

     (iv) The SPFC securities proposed to be issued are valid legal

 

obligations that are either properly registered with the securities

 

commissioner or constitute an exempt security or form part of an

 

exempt transaction under section 402 of the uniform securities act,

 

1964 PA 265, MCL 451.802. If the issuer of the SPFC securities is

 

not the SPFC, the SPFC shall obtain and submit an affidavit from

 

the issuer that the securities proposed to be issued satisfy this

 

subparagraph.

 

     (v) Unless otherwise exempted by the commissioner, the trust

 

agreement, the trusts holding assets that secure the obligations of

 

the SPFC under the SPFC contract, and the SPFC contract with the

 

counterparty in connection with the contemplated insurance

 

securitization are structured pursuant to the provisions in this

 

chapter.

 

     (e) Any other statements or documents required by the

 

commissioner to evaluate and authorize the SPFC.

 

     (7) In addition to the requirements of this section and

 

section 4713, if a protected cell is used, an applicant SPFC shall


 

file with the commissioner all of the following:

 

     (a) A business plan demonstrating how the applicant accounts

 

for the paid losses, reserves, and expenses of each protected cell

 

at a level of detail found to be sufficient by the commissioner,

 

and how it reports those paid losses, reserves, and expenses to the

 

commissioner.

 

     (b) A statement acknowledging that all financial records of

 

the SPFC, including reports pertaining to any protected cells,

 

shall be made available for inspection or examination by the

 

commissioner.

 

     (c) All contracts or sample contracts between the SPFC and any

 

counterparty or captive LLC related to each protected cell.

 

     (d) A description of the expenses allocated to each protected

 

cell.

 

     (8) Information submitted pursuant to this section is

 

confidential and is subject to sections 4734 and 4743.

 

     (9) To transact insurance or reinsurance business in this

 

state, an SPFC is subject to all of the following:

 

     (a) For an applicant not authorized under chapter 46 and not

 

filing a concurrent application under chapter 46, a nonrefundable

 

fee of $10,000.00 for processing its application for a limited

 

certificate of authority. In addition, the commissioner may retain

 

legal, financial, actuarial, and examination services from outside

 

the office to examine and investigate the application, the

 

reasonable cost of which may be charged against the applicant, or

 

the commissioner may use internal resources to examine and

 

investigate the application for a fee of $2,700.00, which is


 

payable upon the filing of the application.

 

     (b) An SPFC shall pay an annual renewal fee by March 1 of each

 

calendar year. However, an SPFC that is authorized under both

 

chapter 46 and this chapter and that pays the renewal fee provided

 

in section 4625(5) is exempt from paying this renewal fee. The

 

annual renewal fee shall be calculated based upon the annual volume

 

of insurance or reinsurance premiums received by the SPFC as

 

follows:

 

     (i) For annual premiums less than $5,000,000.00, the renewal

 

fee shall be $5,000.00.

 

     (ii) For annual premiums equal to or greater than

 

$5,000,000.00, but less than $10,000,000.00, the renewal fee shall

 

be $10,000.00.

 

     (iii) For annual premiums equal to or greater than

 

$10,000,000.00, but less than $15,000,000.00, the renewal fee shall

 

be $15,000.00.

 

     (iv) For annual premiums equal to or greater than

 

$15,000,000.00, but less than $25,000,000.00, the renewal fee shall

 

be $25,000.00.

 

     (v) For annual premiums equal to or greater than

 

$25,000,000.00, but less than $40,000,000.00, the renewal fee shall

 

be $40,000.00.

 

     (vi) For annual premiums equal to or greater than

 

$40,000,000.00, but less than $55,000,000.00, the renewal fee shall

 

be $50,000.00.

 

     (vii) For annual premiums equal to or greater than

 

$55,000,000.00, but less than $75,000,000.00, the renewal fee shall


 

be $75,000.00.

 

     (viii) For annual premiums equal to or greater than

 

$75,000,000.00, the renewal fee shall be $100,000.00.

 

     (10) The commissioner may grant a limited certificate of

 

authority authorizing the applicant to transact insurance or

 

reinsurance business as an SPFC in this state upon finding by the

 

commissioner of all of the following:

 

     (a) The proposed plan of operation provides a reasonable and

 

expected successful operation.

 

     (b) The terms of the SPFC contract and related transactions

 

comply with this chapter.

 

     (c) All required fees have been paid.

 

     (d) The commissioner of the state of domicile of each

 

counterparty has notified the commissioner in writing or otherwise

 

provided assurance satisfactory to the commissioner that it has

 

approved or not disapproved the transaction.

 

     (e) The limited certificate of authority authorizing the SPFC

 

to transact business is limited to the insurance or reinsurance

 

activities that the SPFC is allowed to conduct pursuant to this

 

chapter.

 

     (11) The limited certificate of authority shall be renewed

 

annually upon payment of the renewal fee provided for by this

 

section.

 

     (12) A foreign captive, upon approval of the commissioner, may

 

become an SPFC by complying with all of the provisions of this

 

chapter. After this is accomplished, the foreign captive is

 

entitled to a limited certificate of authority to transact business


 

as an SPFC in this state and is subject to the authority and

 

jurisdiction of this state. It is not necessary for a foreign

 

captive redomesticating into this state to merge, consolidate,

 

transfer assets, or otherwise engage in another reorganization,

 

other than as specified in this section.

 

     Sec. 4707. (1) An SPFC may be established as a stock

 

corporation, limited liability company, mutual, partnership, or

 

other form of organization approved by the commissioner.

 

     (2) The SPFC's organizational documents shall limit the SPFC's

 

authority to transact the business of insurance or reinsurance to

 

those activities the SPFC conducts to accomplish its purpose as

 

expressed in this chapter and activities it conducts pursuant to

 

any other chapter in this act.

 

     (3) The SPFC shall not adopt a name that is the same as,

 

deceptively similar to, or likely to be confused with or mistaken

 

for another existing business name registered in this state.

 

     (4) The provisions of this act pertaining to mergers,

 

consolidations, conversions, mutualizations, and redomestications

 

apply in determining the procedures to be followed by an SPFC in

 

carrying out any of the transactions described in those provisions.

 

     (5) At least 1 of the members of the management of the SPFC

 

shall be a resident of this state.

 

     (6) An SPFC or captive LLC formed as a limited liability

 

company has the privileges and is subject to the provisions of the

 

Michigan limited liability company act, 1993 PA 23, MCL 450.4101 to

 

450.5200, for limited liability companies, as well as the

 

applicable provisions contained in this chapter. Nothing contained


 

in this provision with respect to an SPFC shall abrogate, limit, or

 

rescind in any way the authority of the commissioner.

 

     (7) All SPFCs formed as corporations under this chapter are

 

considered bodies corporate and politic, in fact and in name, are

 

subject to all of the provisions of law in relation to corporations

 

as far as they are applicable, and have the corporate powers

 

provided for in chapter 52.

 

     Sec. 4709. (1) An SPFC initially shall possess and after that

 

maintain minimum capitalization of not less than $250,000.00. All

 

of the minimum initial capitalization shall be in cash. All other

 

funds of the SPFC in excess of its minimum initial capitalization

 

shall be in the forms as provided in section 4727.

 

     (2) Additional capitalization for the SPFC shall be

 

determined, if so required, by the commissioner after giving due

 

consideration to the SPFC's business plan, feasibility study, pro

 

formas, and the nature of the risks being insured or reinsured,

 

which may be prescribed in formulas approved by the commissioner.

 

     (3) An SPFC that is authorized as an insurer other than solely

 

pursuant to this chapter and chapter 46 initially shall possess,

 

and after that maintain, minimum capital and surplus in compliance

 

with sections 408 to 410a.

 

     (4) An SPFC that is authorized as an insurer other than solely

 

pursuant to this chapter and chapter 46 shall maintain deposits as

 

specified in section 411.

 

     Sec. 4711. (1) An SPFC may insure or reinsure only the risks

 

insured or reinsured by a counterparty.

 

     (2) An SPFC shall not issue a contract for assumption of risk


 

or indemnification of loss other than an SPFC contract. However,

 

the SPFC may cede risks assumed through an SPFC contract to third

 

party reinsurers through the purchase of reinsurance or

 

retrocession protection.

 

     (3) An SPFC may enter into contracts and conduct other

 

commercial activities related or incidental to and necessary to

 

fulfill the purposes of the SPFC contract, insurance

 

securitization, and this chapter. Those activities may include, but

 

are not limited to: entering into SPFC contracts; issuing

 

securities of the SPFC in accordance with applicable securities

 

law; complying with the terms of these contracts or securities;

 

entering into trust, swap, tax, administration, reimbursement, or

 

fiscal agent transactions; or complying with trust indenture,

 

reinsurance, or retrocession, and other agreements necessary or

 

incidental to effectuate an insurance securitization in compliance

 

with this chapter or the plan of operation submitted to the

 

commissioner.

 

     (4) An SPFC shall annually submit to the commissioner the

 

opinion of a qualified actuary as to whether the reserves and

 

related actuarial items held in support of the reserves are

 

computed appropriately, are based on assumptions that satisfy

 

contractual provisions, are consistent with prior reported amounts,

 

and comply with applicable laws of this state. The actuarial

 

opinion required by this section shall be submitted in a form

 

prescribed by the commissioner. For purposes of this section,

 

"qualified actuary" means a member of either the American academy

 

of actuaries or the society of actuaries who also meets any other


 

criteria that the commissioner may establish by rule, regulation,

 

or order.

 

     Sec. 4713. (1) This section and section 4715 provide a basis

 

for the creation and use of protected cells by an SPFC. If a

 

conflict occurs between a provision of chapter 46 or chapter 48 and

 

either this section or section 4715, this section and section 4715

 

control.

 

     (2) An SPFC may establish and maintain 1 or more protected

 

cells with prior written approval of the commissioner and subject

 

to compliance with the applicable provisions of this chapter and

 

the following conditions:

 

     (a) A protected cell shall be established only for the purpose

 

of isolating and identifying the assets and liabilities

 

attributable to the risk ceded to the SPFC by the counterparty

 

pursuant to 1 or more SPFC contracts and the assets and liabilities

 

of the SPFC arising out of the related insurance securitization.

 

     (b) Each protected cell shall be accounted for separately on

 

the books and records of the SPFC to reflect the financial

 

condition and results of operations of the protected cell,

 

including income, gain, expense, or loss; dividends; other

 

distributions to the counterparty for the SPFC contract with each

 

cell; and other items as may be provided in the SPFC contract,

 

insurance securitization transaction documents, plan of operation,

 

or business plan, or as required by the commissioner.

 

     (c) Amounts attributed to a protected cell under this chapter,

 

including assets transferred to a protected cell account, are owned

 

by the SPFC, and the SPFC shall not be, or shall not hold itself


 

out to be, a trustee with respect to those protected cell assets of

 

that protected cell account.

 

     (d) All attributions of assets and liabilities between a

 

protected cell and the general account shall be in accordance with

 

the plan of operation submitted to the commissioner. No other

 

attribution of assets or liabilities shall be made by an SPFC

 

between the SPFC's general account and its protected cell or cells.

 

The SPFC shall attribute all insurance obligations, assets, and

 

liabilities relating to an SPFC contract and all obligations,

 

assets, and liabilities of the SPFC arising out of the related

 

insurance securitization transaction to a particular protected

 

cell. The rights, benefits, obligations, and liabilities of any

 

securities attributable to that protected cell, the performance

 

under an SPFC contract and the related securitization transaction,

 

and any tax benefits, losses, refunds, or credits allocated at any

 

point in time pursuant to a tax allocation agreement between the

 

SPFC and the SPFC's counterparty, parent, or affiliated company, as

 

the case may be, including any payments made by or due to be made

 

to the SPFC pursuant to the terms of the tax allocation agreement,

 

shall reflect the insurance obligations, assets, and liabilities

 

relating to the SPFC contract and proceeds of the insurance

 

securitization transaction that are attributed to a particular

 

protected cell.

 

     (e) The assets of a protected cell shall not be chargeable

 

with liabilities arising out of an SPFC contract related to or

 

associated with another protected cell. However, 1 or more SPFC

 

contracts may be attributed to a protected cell so long as those


 

SPFC contracts are intended to be, and ultimately are, part of a

 

single securitization transaction.

 

     (f) A sale, an exchange, or another transfer of assets shall

 

not be made by the SPFC between or among any of its protected cells

 

without the consent of the counterparty and each protected cell.

 

     (g) Except as otherwise contemplated in the SPFC contract or

 

related insurance securitization transaction documents, or both, a

 

dividend or a distribution shall not be made from a protected cell

 

to a counterparty, captive LLC, or parent or affiliated company of

 

the SPFC without the commissioner's approval and shall not be

 

approved if the dividend or distribution would result in insolvency

 

or impairment with respect to a protected cell.

 

     (h) Except as otherwise contemplated in the SPFC contract or

 

related insurance securitization transaction documents, or both, a

 

sale, an exchange, or a transfer of assets shall not be made from a

 

protected cell to a counterparty, captive LLC, or parent or

 

affiliated company of the SPFC if the sale, exchange, or transfer

 

would result in insolvency or impairment with respect to the

 

protected cell.

 

     (i) An SPFC shall pay interest or repay principal or both or

 

make distributions or repayments of any SPFC securities issued by

 

the SPFC or make payments of preferred securities issued to a

 

particular protected cell from assets or cash flows relating to or

 

emerging from the SPFC contract and the insurance securitization

 

transactions that are attributable to that particular protected

 

cell as provided in this chapter or as otherwise approved by the

 

commissioner.


 

     (3) An SPFC contract with or attributable to a protected cell

 

does not take effect without the commissioner's prior written

 

approval. The commissioner may retain legal, financial, and

 

examination services from outside the office to examine and

 

investigate the application for a protected cell, the reasonable

 

cost of which may be charged against the applicant, or the

 

commissioner may use internal resources to examine and investigate

 

the application the reasonable cost of which may be charged against

 

the applicant up to a maximum of $1,200.00, or may use both

 

retained services and internal resources.

 

     (4) An SPFC utilizing protected cells shall possess minimum

 

capitalization for each protected cell separate and apart from the

 

capitalization required by section 4709. For purposes of

 

determining the capitalization of each protected cell, an SPFC

 

initially shall capitalize and after that time maintain

 

capitalization in each protected cell in the amount and manner

 

required for an SPFC in section 4709.

 

     (5) The establishment of 1 or more protected cells alone does

 

not constitute, and shall not be considered to be, a fraudulent

 

conveyance, an intent by the SPFC to defraud creditors, or the

 

carrying out of business by the SPFC for any other fraudulent

 

purpose.

 

     Sec. 4715. (1) The creation of a protected cell does not

 

create, with respect to that protected cell, a legal person

 

separate from the SPFC.

 

     (2) Notwithstanding subsection (1), if an order of

 

conservation, rehabilitation, or liquidation is entered for a


 

counterparty, the SPFC and each protected cell of the SPFC shall be

 

considered separate persons for purposes of any offset undertaken

 

as part of the conservation, rehabilitation, or liquidation, such

 

that any offset of mutual debts and credits between the

 

counterparty and either the SPFC or any protected cell shall not

 

involve the debts and credits of any other protected cell or, if

 

the offset involves a protected cell, the SPFC.

 

     (3) Notwithstanding subsection (1), a protected cell shall

 

have its own distinct name or designation that includes the words

 

"protected cell". The SPFC shall transfer all assets attributable

 

to the protected cell to 1 or more separately established and

 

identified protected cell accounts bearing the name or designation

 

of that protected cell.

 

     (4) Although the protected cell is not a separate legal

 

person, the property of an SPFC in a protected cell is subject to

 

orders of a court by name as it would have been if the protected

 

cell were a separate legal person.

 

     (5) The property of an SPFC in a protected cell shall be

 

served in its own name with process in all civil actions or

 

proceedings involving or relating to the activities of that

 

protected cell or a breach by the SPFC of a duty to the protected

 

cell or to a counterparty to a transaction linked or attributed to

 

it by serving the SPFC in the manner described in section 1920 of

 

the revised judicature act of 1961, 1961 PA 236, MCL 600.1920.

 

     (6) A protected cell exists only at the pleasure of the SPFC.

 

At the cessation of business of a protected cell in accordance with

 

the plan of operation submitted to the commissioner, the SPFC


 

voluntarily shall close out the protected cell account.

 

     (7) Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit an

 

SPFC from contracting with, or arranging for, an investment

 

advisor, commodity trading advisor, or other third party to manage

 

the assets of a protected cell, if all remuneration, expenses, and

 

other compensation of the third party advisor or manager are

 

payable from the assets of that protected cell and not from the

 

assets of other protected cells or the assets of the SPFC's general

 

account.

 

     (8) Creditors to a protected cell are not entitled to have

 

recourse against the protected cell assets of other protected cells

 

or the assets of the SPFC's general account. If an obligation of an

 

SPFC relates only to the general account, the obligation of the

 

SPFC extends only to that creditor for that obligation and that

 

creditor is entitled to have recourse only to the assets of the

 

SPFC's general account.

 

     (9) The assets of the protected cell shall not be used to pay

 

expenses or claims other than those attributable to the protected

 

cell. Protected cell assets are available only to the SPFC

 

counterparty and other creditors of the SPFC that are creditors

 

only to that protected cell and, accordingly, are entitled, in

 

conformity with this chapter, to have recourse to the protected

 

cell assets attributable to that protected cell. Protected cell

 

assets are absolutely protected from the creditors of the SPFC that

 

are not creditors with respect to that protected cell and who,

 

accordingly, are not entitled to have recourse to the protected

 

cell assets attributable to that protected cell. If an obligation


 

of an SPFC to a person or counterparty arises from an SPFC contract

 

or related insurance securitization transaction or is otherwise

 

incurred for a protected cell, both of the following apply:

 

     (a) That obligation of the SPFC extends only to the protected

 

cell assets attributable to that protected cell, and the person or

 

counterparty, for that obligation, is entitled to have recourse

 

only to the protected cell assets attributable to that protected

 

cell.

 

     (b) That obligation of the SPFC does not extend to the

 

protected cell assets of another protected cell or the assets of

 

the SPFC's general account, and that person, for that obligation,

 

is not entitled to have recourse to the protected cell assets of

 

another protected cell or the assets of the SPFC's general account.

 

The SPFC's capitalization of its protected cell or cells as

 

required by section 4713(4) shall be available at all times to pay

 

expenses of or claims against the SPFC and shall not be used to pay

 

expenses or claims attributable to any protected cell.

 

     (10) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, an SPFC may

 

allow for a security interest in accordance with applicable law to

 

attach to protected cell assets or a protected cell account when in

 

favor of a creditor of the protected cell or to facilitate the

 

insurance securitization, including, without limitation, the

 

issuance of the SPFC contract, to the extent those protected cell

 

assets are not required at all times to support the risk, but

 

without otherwise affecting the discharge of liabilities under the

 

SPFC contract, or as otherwise approved by the commissioner.

 

     (11) An SPFC shall establish administrative and accounting


 

procedures necessary to properly identify the 1 or more protected

 

cells of the SPFC and the assets and liabilities of each protected

 

cell. The directors of an SPFC shall keep protected cell assets and

 

liabilities separate and separately identifiable from the assets

 

and liabilities of the SPFC's general account. The assets and

 

liabilities attributable to 1 protected cell shall be kept separate

 

and separately identifiable from the assets and liabilities

 

attributable to other protected cells.

 

     (12) All contracts or other documentation reflecting protected

 

cell liabilities shall indicate clearly that only the protected

 

cell assets are available for the satisfaction of those protected

 

cell liabilities. In all SPFC insurance securitizations involving a

 

protected cell, including the issuance of preferred securities, the

 

contracts or other documentation effecting the transaction shall

 

contain provisions identifying the protected cell to which the

 

transaction is attributed. In addition, the contracts or other

 

documentation shall disclose clearly that the assets of that

 

protected cell, and only those assets, are available to pay the

 

obligations of that protected cell. Notwithstanding the provisions

 

of this subsection and subject to the provisions of this chapter

 

and any other applicable law or regulation, the failure to include

 

this language in the contracts or other documentation shall not be

 

used as the sole basis by creditors, insureds or reinsureds,

 

insurers or reinsurers, or other claimants to circumvent this

 

section.

 

     (13) The income, and gains and losses, whether realized or

 

unrealized, from protected cell assets and protected cell


 

liabilities shall be credited to or charged against the protected

 

cell without regard to other income and gains or losses of the

 

SPFC, including income and gains or losses of other protected

 

cells. Amounts attributed to any protected cell and accumulations

 

on the attributed amounts may be invested and reinvested. The

 

investments in a protected cell or cells shall not be taken into

 

account in applying the investment limitations otherwise applicable

 

to the investments of the SPFC.

 

     (14) An SPFC with protected cells shall file annually with the

 

office accounting statements and financial reports required by this

 

chapter that, among other things, shall do all of the following:

 

     (a) Detail the financial experience of each protected cell and

 

the SPFC separately.

 

     (b) Provide the combined financial experience of the SPFC and

 

all protected cells.

 

     (c) Account for the financial experience of each protected

 

cell and the SPFC, both separately and on a combined basis, in

 

satisfaction of section 4731(4).

 

     (15) An SPFC with protected cells shall notify the

 

commissioner in writing within 10 business days of a protected cell

 

becoming insolvent.

 

     Sec. 4717. (1) An SPFC may issue securities, including SPFC

 

securities and preferred securities, surplus notes, and other forms

 

of financial instruments, subject to and in accordance with

 

applicable law, the SPFC's approved plan of operation, and its

 

organizational documents.

 

     (2) An SPFC, its parent or an affiliated company, its


 

counterparty, or a captive LLC may issue SPFC securities and any

 

other securities necessary to implement the insurance

 

securitization.

 

     (3) Preferred securities may be issued by the SPFC to the

 

issuer of the SPFC securities in connection with the insurance

 

securitization in order to facilitate distributions to service SPFC

 

securities and these preferred securities shall identify the

 

associated protected cell. The SPFC may lawfully account for

 

preferred securities as surplus and not as debt for purposes of

 

statutory accounting.

 

     (4) An SPFC, in connection with the issuance of securities,

 

may enter into and perform all of its obligations under any

 

required contracts to facilitate the issuance of these securities.

 

     (5) Subject to the commissioner's approval, the issuer of the

 

SPFC securities or, if the issuer is a captive LLC, the party

 

controlling the captive LLC, may lawfully account for the SPFC

 

securities as surplus and not as debt for purposes of statutory

 

accounting and submit for the commissioner's prior approval

 

periodic written requests for payments of interest on and

 

repayments of principal of surplus notes.

 

     (6) Surplus notes issued pursuant to this section constitute

 

surplus or contribution notes of the type described in section

 

8142(1)(h).

 

     (7) The commissioner, without otherwise prejudicing the

 

commissioner's authority, may approve formulas for an ongoing plan

 

of interest payments, principal repayments, or both interest

 

payments and principal repayments, to provide guidance in


 

connection with his or her ongoing reviews of requests to approve

 

the payments on and principal repayments of the surplus notes.

 

     (8) The obligation to repay principal or interest, or both, on

 

the SPFC securities shall reflect, in whole or in part, the risk

 

associated with the obligations of the SPFC to the counterparty

 

under the SPFC contract, either directly or by being secured by

 

assets, including the preferred securities, obtained with the

 

proceeds of the sale of the SPFC securities.

 

     Sec. 4719. An SPFC may enter into swap agreements, or other

 

forms of asset management agreements, including guaranteed

 

investment contracts, or other transactions that have the objective

 

of leveling timing differences in funding of up front or ongoing

 

transaction expenses or managing asset, credit, or interest rate

 

risk of the investments in the trust to ensure that the investments

 

are sufficient to assure payment or repayment of the securities,

 

and related interest or principal payments, issued pursuant to an

 

SPFC insurance securitization transaction or the obligations of the

 

SPFC under the SPFC contract.

 

     Sec. 4721. (1) An SPFC, at any given time, may enter into and

 

effectuate an SPFC contract with a counterparty, provided that the

 

SPFC contract meets all of the following:

 

     (a) Complies with the plan of operation submitted to the

 

commissioner.

 

     (b) Obligates the SPFC to indemnify the counterparty for

 

losses.

 

     (c) Provides that contingent obligations of the SPFC under the

 

SPFC contract are securitized through an SPFC insurance


 

securitization and are funded and secured with assets held in trust

 

for the benefit of the counterparty pursuant to this chapter and

 

under agreements contemplated by this chapter and that are invested

 

in a manner that meet the criteria under section 4727.

 

     (2) An SPFC may enter into agreements with affiliated

 

companies and third parties and conduct business necessary to

 

fulfill its obligations and administrative duties incidental to the

 

insurance securitization and the SPFC contract. The agreements may

 

include management and administrative services agreements and other

 

allocation and cost sharing agreements, or swap and asset

 

management agreements, or both, or agreements for other

 

contemplated types of transactions provided in section 4719.

 

     (3) An SPFC contract shall contain all of the following:

 

     (a) A requirement for the SPFC to enter into a trust agreement

 

specifying what recoverables or reserves, or both, the agreement is

 

to cover and to establish a trust account for the benefit of the

 

counterparty.

 

     (b) A stipulation that assets deposited in the trust account

 

shall be valued according to their current fair value and shall

 

consist only of permitted investments.

 

     (c) A requirement for the SPFC, before depositing assets with

 

the trustee, to execute assignments, endorsements in blank, or to

 

transfer legal title to the trustee of all shares, obligations, or

 

any other assets requiring assignments, in order that the

 

counterparty, or the trustee upon the direction of the

 

counterparty, may negotiate whenever necessary the assets without

 

consent or signature from the SPFC or another entity.


 

     (d) A requirement that all settlements of account between the

 

counterparty and the SPFC be made in cash or its equivalent.

 

     (e) A stipulation that the SPFC and the counterparty agree

 

that the assets in the trust account, established pursuant to the

 

SPFC contract, are under the control of the counterparty and may be

 

withdrawn by the counterparty at any time, notwithstanding any

 

other provisions in the SPFC contract, and shall be utilized and

 

applied by the counterparty or any successor by operation of law of

 

the counterparty, including, subject to the provisions of section

 

4741, but without further limitation, any liquidator,

 

rehabilitator, receiver, or conservator of the counterparty,

 

without diminution because of insolvency on the part of the

 

counterparty or the SPFC, only for the following purposes:

 

     (i) To transfer all of the assets into 1 or more trust accounts

 

for the benefit of the counterparty pursuant to the terms of the

 

SPFC contract and in compliance with this chapter.

 

     (ii) To pay any other incurred and paid amounts that the

 

counterparty claims are due pursuant to the terms of the SPFC

 

contract and in compliance with this chapter.

 

     (4) The SPFC contract may contain provisions that give the

 

SPFC the right to seek approval from the counterparty to withdraw

 

from the trust all or part of the assets, or income from them,

 

contained in the trust and to transfer the assets to the SPFC,

 

provided that at the time of the withdrawal, the SPFC shall replace

 

the withdrawn assets, excluding any income withdrawn, with other

 

assets having a fair value equal to the fair value of the assets

 

withdrawn and that meet the provisions of section 4727; and after


 

the withdrawals and transfer, the fair value of the assets in trust

 

securing the obligations of the SPFC under the SPFC contract is no

 

less than an amount needed to satisfy the funded requirement of the

 

SPFC contract. The counterparty shall be the sole judge as to the

 

application of these provisions but shall not unreasonably nor

 

arbitrarily withhold its approval.

 

     Sec. 4723. SPFC securities and preferred securities issued

 

pursuant to an insurance securitization are not, and shall not be

 

considered to be, insurance or reinsurance contracts. An investor

 

in these securities or a holder or issuer of these securities, by

 

sole means of this investment, holding, or issuance, is not, and

 

shall not be considered to be, transacting the business of

 

insurance in this state. The underwriter's placement agent or

 

selling agent and their partners, directors, officers, members,

 

managers, employees, agents, representatives, and advisors involved

 

in an insurance securitization pursuant to this chapter shall not

 

be considered to be insurance producers or brokers or conducting

 

business as an insurance or reinsurance company or agency,

 

brokerage, intermediary, advisory, or consulting business only by

 

virtue of their activities in connection with them.

 

     Sec. 4725. In fulfilling its function, the SPFC shall adhere

 

to the following and, to the extent of its powers, shall ensure

 

that contracts obligating other parties to perform certain

 

functions incident to its operations are substantively and

 

materially consistent with all of the following:

 

     (a) The assets of an SPFC shall be preserved and administered

 

by or on behalf of the SPFC to satisfy the liabilities and


 

obligations of the SPFC incident to the SPFC contract with the

 

counterparty, the issuance of preferred securities, or the

 

insurance securitization and other related agreements.

 

     (b) Assets held by an SPFC in trust shall be valued at their

 

fair value.

 

     (c) The proceeds from the sale of SPFC securities pursuant to

 

the insurance securitization shall be deposited with the trustee to

 

the extent required to secure the obligations of the SPFC under the

 

SPFC contract as provided by this chapter and shall be held or

 

invested by the trustee pursuant to section 4727 and an asset

 

management agreement, if any.

 

     (d) Assets of the SPFC, other than those held in trust for the

 

counterparty, and income on trust assets received by the SPFC may

 

be used to pay interest or other consideration on any SPFC

 

securities or other securities or outstanding debt or payments on

 

preferred securities or other obligation of the SPFC. Nothing in

 

this chapter shall be construed or interpreted to prevent an SPFC

 

from entering into a swap agreement or other asset management

 

transaction that has the effect of hedging or guaranteeing the

 

fixed or floating interest rate returns paid on the assets in trust

 

or required for the securities issued by the SPFC generated from or

 

other consideration or payment flows in the transaction.

 

     (e) In the SPFC insurance securitization, the contracts or

 

other relating documentation shall contain provisions identifying

 

the SPFC.

 

     (f) Unless otherwise approved by the commissioner, an SPFC

 

shall not do any of the following:


 

     (i) Issue or otherwise administer primary insurance policies.

 

     (ii) Enter into an SPFC contract with a person that is not

 

licensed or otherwise authorized to transact the business of

 

insurance or reinsurance in at least its state or country of

 

domicile.

 

     (iii) Assume or retain exposure to insurance or reinsurance

 

losses for its own account that is not funded by proceeds from an

 

SPFC insurance securitization that meets the provisions of this

 

chapter. However, the SPFC may wholly or partially reinsure or

 

retrocede the risks assumed to a third party reinsurer.

 

     (g) An SPFC shall not do any of the following:

 

     (i) Have any direct obligation to the policyholders or

 

reinsureds of the counterparty.

 

     (ii) Lend or otherwise invest, or place in custody, trust, or

 

under management any of its assets with, or to borrow money or

 

receive a loan from, other than by issuance of the securities

 

pursuant to an insurance securitization, or advance from, anyone

 

convicted of a felony, anyone who is untrustworthy or of known bad

 

character, or anyone convicted of a criminal offense involving the

 

conversion or misappropriation of fiduciary funds or insurance

 

accounts, theft, deceit, fraud, misrepresentation, or corruption.

 

     Sec. 4727. (1) Assets of the SPFC held in trust to secure

 

obligations under the SPFC contract shall at all times be held in

 

cash and cash equivalents, securities listed by the securities

 

valuation office of the national association of insurance

 

commissioners, or another form of security acceptable to the

 

commissioner.


 

     (2) Assets of the SPFC that are pledged to secure obligations

 

of the SPFC to a counterparty under an SPFC contract shall be held

 

in trust and administered by a qualified United States financial

 

institution that does not control, is not controlled by, or is not

 

under common control with, the SPFC or the counterparty.

 

     (3) The agreement governing a trust described in this section

 

shall create 1 or more trust accounts into which all pledged assets

 

shall be deposited and held until distributed in accordance with

 

the trust agreement. The pledged assets shall be held by the

 

trustee at 1 of the trustee's offices or branch offices in the

 

United States and may be held in certificated or electronic form.

 

     (4) The provisions for withdrawal by the counterparty of

 

assets from the trust shall be clean and unconditional, subject

 

only to the following:

 

     (a) The counterparty has the right to withdraw assets from the

 

trust account at any time, without notice to the SPFC, subject only

 

to written notice to the trustee and the commissioner from the

 

counterparty that funds in the amount requested are due and payable

 

by the SPFC, pursuant to the SPFC contract.

 

     (b) A statement or document does not need to be presented in

 

order to withdraw assets, except the counterparty may be required

 

to acknowledge receipt of withdrawn assets.

 

     (c) The trust agreement shall indicate that it is not subject

 

to any conditions or qualifications outside of the trust agreement.

 

     (d) The trust agreement shall not contain references to any

 

other agreements or documents.

 

     (5) The trust agreement shall be established for the sole use


 

and benefit of the counterparty at least to the full extent of the

 

obligations of the SPFC to the counterparty under the SPFC

 

contract. If there is more than 1 counterparty, or more than 1 SPFC

 

contract with the same counterparty, a separate trust agreement

 

shall be entered into with the counterparty and a separate trust

 

account shall be maintained for each SPFC contract with the

 

counterparty, unless otherwise approved by the commissioner.

 

     (6) The trust agreement shall provide for the trustee to do

 

all of the following:

 

     (a) Receive assets and hold all assets in a safe place.

 

     (b) Determine that all assets are in a form that the

 

counterparty or the trustee, upon direction by the counterparty,

 

may negotiate, whenever necessary, without consent or signature

 

from the SPFC or another person or entity.

 

     (c) Furnish to the SPFC, the commissioner, and the

 

counterparty a statement of all assets in the trust account

 

reported at fair value upon its inception and at intervals no less

 

frequent than 45 days after the end of each calendar quarter.

 

     (d) Notify the SPFC and the counterparty, within 10 days, of

 

any deposits to or withdrawals from the trust account.

 

     (e) Upon written demand of the counterparty, immediately take

 

the necessary steps to transfer absolutely and unequivocally all

 

right, title, and interest in the assets held in the trust account

 

to the counterparty and deliver physical custody of the assets to

 

the counterparty.

 

     (f) Allow no substitutions or withdrawals of assets from the

 

trust account, except pursuant to the trust agreement or SPFC


 

contract, or as otherwise permitted by the counterparty.

 

     (7) The trust agreement shall provide that at least 30 days,

 

but not more than 45 days, before termination of the trust account,

 

written notification of termination shall be delivered by the

 

trustee to the counterparty with a copy of the notice provided to

 

the commissioner.

 

     (8) In addition to the requirement for the trust as provided

 

in this chapter, the trust agreement may be made subject to and

 

governed by the laws of any state. The state shall be disclosed in

 

the plan of operation submitted to the commissioner.

 

     (9) The trust agreement shall prohibit invasion of the trust

 

corpus for the purpose of paying compensation to, or reimbursing

 

the expenses of, the trustee.

 

     (10) The trust agreement shall provide that the trustee is

 

liable for its own negligence, willful misconduct, or lack of good

 

faith.

 

     (11) Notwithstanding subsection (4)(c) and (d), when a trust

 

agreement is established in conjunction with an SPFC contract, then

 

the trust agreement or SPFC contract, or both, may provide that the

 

counterparty shall undertake to use and apply any amounts drawn

 

upon the trust account, without diminution because of the

 

insolvency of the counterparty or the SPFC, only for 1 or more of

 

the following purposes:

 

     (a) To pay or reimburse the counterparty for payment of the

 

SPFC's share of premiums to be returned to owners of counterparty's

 

policies covered under the SPFC contract on account of

 

cancellations of the policies under the counterparties policies.


 

     (b) To pay or reimburse the counterparty for payment of the

 

SPFC's share of surrenders, benefits, losses, or other benefits

 

covered and payable pursuant to the SPFC contract.

 

     (c) To fund an account with the counterparty in an amount to

 

secure the credit or reduction from liability for reinsurance

 

coverage provided under the SPFC contract.

 

     (d) To pay any other amounts the counterparty claims are

 

legally and properly due under the SPFC contract.

 

     (12) Any assets deposited into an account of the counterparty

 

pursuant to subsection (11)(c) or withdrawn by the counterparty

 

pursuant to subsection (11)(d) and any interest or other earnings

 

on them, shall be held by the counterparty in trust and separate

 

and apart from any general assets of the counterparty, for the sole

 

purpose of funding the payments and reimbursements of the SPFC

 

contract described in subsection (11).

 

     (13) The counterparty shall return to the SPFC amounts

 

withdrawn under subsection (11) in excess of actual amounts

 

required under subsection (11)(a) to (c), and in excess of the

 

amounts subsequently determined to be due under subsection (11)(d),

 

plus interest at a rate not in excess of the prime rate for the

 

amounts held pursuant to subsection (11)(c) unless a higher rate of

 

interest has been awarded by an arbitration panel, and any net

 

costs or expenses, including attorney fees, awarded by an

 

arbitration panel.

 

     (14) If the counterparty has received notification of

 

termination of the trust account while any of the SPFC's

 

obligations or liabilities under the SPFC contract that are secured


 

by the trust account remain unliquidated as of 10 days prior to the

 

termination date of the trust account, then the counterparty may

 

withdraw amounts from the trust account equal to the unliquidated

 

obligations and shall deposit such amounts in an account

 

established by the counterparty, which account is separate and

 

apart from the counterparty's general assets and is with a

 

qualified United States financial institution, but only to the

 

extent the obligations or liabilities have not been funded by the

 

SPFC and only for those uses and purposes specified in subsection

 

(11)(a) that may remain executory after the withdrawal and

 

termination until such obligations or liabilities are discharged.

 

     Sec. 4729. (1) An SPFC shall not declare or pay dividends in

 

any form to its owners other than in accordance with the insurance

 

securitization transaction agreements, and in no event shall the

 

dividends decrease the capital of the SPFC below $250,000.00, and,

 

after giving effect to the dividends, the assets of the SPFC,

 

including assets held in trust pursuant to the terms of the

 

insurance securitization, shall be sufficient to satisfy the

 

commissioner that it can meet its obligations. Approval by the

 

commissioner of an ongoing plan for the payment of dividends or

 

other distribution by an SPFC with respect to securities shall be

 

conditioned upon the retention, at the time of each payment, of

 

capital or surplus equal to or in excess of amounts specified by,

 

or determined in accordance with formulas approved for the SPFC by

 

the commissioner.

 

     (2) The dividends may be declared by the management of the

 

SPFC if the dividends do not violate the provisions of this chapter


 

or jeopardize the fulfillment of the obligations of the SPFC or the

 

trustee pursuant to the SPFC insurance securitization agreements,

 

the SPFC contract, or any related transaction and other provisions

 

of this chapter.

 

     Sec. 4731. (1) An SPFC may make the following material changes

 

to its plan of operation pursuant to section 4705(6)(b), whether or

 

not through an SPFC protected cell:

 

     (a) If included in the initial plan of operation, securities

 

subsequently issued to continue the securitization activities of

 

the SPFC either during or after expiration, redemption, or

 

satisfaction, of part or all of the securities issued pursuant to

 

initial insurance securitization transactions, shall not be

 

considered a material change.

 

     (b) A change and substitution in a counterparty to a swap

 

transaction for an existing insurance securitization as allowed

 

pursuant to this chapter shall not be considered a material change

 

if the replacement swap counterparty carries a similar or higher

 

rating to its predecessor with 2 or more nationally recognized

 

rating agencies.

 

     (2) No later than 5 months after the fiscal year end of the

 

SPFC, the SPFC shall file with the commissioner audited financial

 

statements of the SPFC and the trust accounts prepared by an

 

independent public accountant. The independent public accountant

 

shall be an independent certified public accountant or accounting

 

firm in good standing with the American institute of certified

 

public accountants and in good standing in all states in which the

 

independent public accountant is licensed to practice.


 

     (3) The commissioner may address inquiries to any captive

 

insurer concerning the insurer's activities or conditions or any

 

matter connected with the insurer's transactions. An insurer so

 

addressed shall reply in writing to each inquiry from the

 

commissioner within 30 days of receipt of the inquiry.

 

     (4) Each SPFC shall file by March 1 of each year a statement

 

of operations. An SPFC with a counterparty that is authorized as an

 

insurance company shall report using statutory accounting

 

principles and shall value its assets and liabilities pursuant to

 

this act and in a manner consistent with the counterparty. An SPFC

 

with a counterparty that uses GAAP may report using either GAAP or,

 

with the approval of the commissioner, statutory accounting

 

principles, with useful or necessary modifications or adaptations

 

required or approved or accepted by the commissioner for the type

 

of insurance and kinds of insurers to be reported upon, and as

 

supplemented by additional information required by the

 

commissioner. The statement of operations shall include a statement

 

of income and a balance sheet and may include a detailed listing of

 

invested assets, including identification of assets held in trust

 

to secure the obligations of the SPFC under the SPFC contract and

 

additional descriptions and accounting of the reserves required or

 

maintained by the SPFC. The SPFC also may include with the filing

 

risk based capital calculations and other adjusted capital

 

calculations to assist the commissioner with evaluating the levels

 

of the surplus of the SPFC for the year ending on December 31 of

 

the previous year. The statements shall be prepared on forms

 

required by the commissioner. In addition, the commissioner may


 

require the filing of performance assessments of the SPFC contract.

 

     (5) An SPFC that is authorized as an insurer other than solely

 

pursuant to this chapter and chapter 46 or that is reinsuring risk

 

of a counterparty that is authorized as an insurer under this act

 

shall file annual reports pursuant to sections 438 and 438a and

 

chapter 10. An SPFC shall maintain its records in this state, or in

 

1 or more locations outside the state with the approval of the

 

commissioner, and shall make its records available for examination

 

by the commissioner at any time. The SPFC shall keep its books and

 

records in such manner that its financial condition, affairs, and

 

operations can be ascertained and so that the commissioner may

 

readily verify its financial statements and determine its

 

compliance with this chapter.

 

     (6) The commissioner may require interim reporting on any or

 

all of the SPFC's business, including any matter, condition, or

 

requirement regulated by this chapter. The commissioner shall

 

prescribe the format and content of the interim report.

 

     (7) Each SPFC that fails to file a report required by this

 

section, or fails to reply within 30 days to an inquiry of the

 

commissioner, is subject to a civil penalty of not less than

 

$1,000.00 or more than $5,000.00 per occurrence, and an additional

 

$50.00 for every day that the SPFC fails to file a report or reply

 

to the inquiry. In addition, each SPFC that fails to file a report,

 

or fails to make a satisfactory reply to an inquiry of the

 

commissioner concerning the SPFC's affairs, is subject to

 

proceedings under section 4735(2).

 

     (8) All original books, records, documents, accounts, and


 

vouchers shall be preserved and kept available in this state for

 

the purpose of examination. The original records, however, may be

 

kept and maintained outside this state if, according to a plan

 

adopted by the management of the SPFC and approved by the

 

commissioner, it maintains suitable records. The books or records

 

may be photographed, reproduced on film, or stored and reproduced

 

electronically.

 

     (9) Nothing contained in this section with respect to an SPFC

 

shall abrogate, limit, or rescind in any way the authority of the

 

securities commissioner pursuant to 1935 PA 13, MCL 451.1 to 451.4.

 

     Sec. 4732. An SPFC shall not enter into any of the following

 

transactions or engage in any of the following activities unless

 

the SPFC has notified the commissioner in writing of its intention

 

to enter into the transaction or activity at least 30 days, or a

 

shorter period as the commissioner allows, prior to entering into

 

the transaction or activity and the commissioner has not

 

disapproved of it within that period:

 

     (a) A sale, an exchange, or another transfer of assets made by

 

the SPFC between or among any of its protected cells.

 

     (b) Any third party management contract or arrangement that

 

does not meet the requirements of section 4715(7).

 

     (c) Any material change to the SPFC's plan of operation

 

submitted pursuant to section 4705(6)(b) except those changes

 

listed in section 4731(1).

 

     (d) Except as otherwise contemplated in the SPFC contract or

 

related insurance securitization documents, or both, a sale, an

 

exchange, or a transfer of assets from a protected cell to a


 

counterparty, captive LLC, or parent or affiliated company of the

 

SPFC.

 

     Sec. 4733. (1) The expenses and charges of a captive insurance

 

company examination shall be paid to the state by the captive

 

insurance company or companies examined, and the office shall issue

 

warrants for the proper charges incurred in all examinations. The

 

payments received by the state shall be deposited into the captive

 

insurance regulatory and supervision fund.

 

     (2) The office may charge a $15.00 fee for any document

 

requiring certification of authenticity or the signature of the

 

commissioner. The payments received shall be deposited into the

 

captive insurance regulatory and supervision fund.

 

     (3) The office may charge a fee of $25.00 payable to the

 

attorney general for the examination of any amendment to the

 

organizational documents.

 

     Sec. 4734. (1) Information and testimony submitted or

 

furnished to the office pursuant to this chapter, examination

 

reports, preliminary examination reports or results, and the

 

office's work papers, correspondence, memoranda, reports, records,

 

and other written or oral information related to an examination

 

report or an investigation shall be confidential, shall be withheld

 

from public inspection, shall not be subject to subpoena, and shall

 

not be divulged to any person, except as provided in this section

 

or with the written consent of the company. If assurances are

 

provided that the information will be kept confidential, the

 

commissioner may disclose confidential work papers, correspondence,

 

memoranda, reports, records, or other information as follows:


 

     (a) To the governor or the attorney general.

 

     (b) To any relevant regulatory agency, including regulatory

 

agencies of other states or the federal government.

 

     (c) In connection with an enforcement action brought pursuant

 

to this or another applicable act.

 

     (d) To law enforcement officials.

 

     (e) To persons authorized by the Ingham county circuit court

 

to receive the information.

 

     (f) To persons entitled to receive such information in order

 

to discharge duties specifically provided for in this act.

 

     (2) The confidentiality requirements of subsection (1) do not

 

apply in any proceeding or action brought against or by the insurer

 

under this act or any other applicable act of this state, any other

 

state, or the United States.

 

     Sec. 4735. (1) At the cessation of business of an SPFC

 

following termination or cancellation of an SPFC contract and the

 

redemption of any related SPFC securities issued in connection with

 

it, the authority granted by the commissioner expires or, for

 

retiring and surviving protected cells, is modified. The SPFC is no

 

longer authorized to conduct activities unless and until a new or

 

modified limited certificate of authority is issued pursuant to a

 

new filing under section 4705 or as agreed by the commissioner.

 

     (2) The commissioner may suspend or revoke the limited

 

certificate of authority of an SPFC in this state for any of the

 

following:

 

     (a) Insolvency.

 

     (b) Failure to meet the provisions of section 4709 or 4713(4).


 

     (c) The SPFC is no longer safe, reliable, or entitled to

 

public confidence or is unsound, or the SPFC is using financial

 

methods and practices in the conduct of its business that render

 

further transaction of insurance by the SPFC in this state

 

hazardous to the public, the holders of the securities, or

 

counterparties in the SPFC.

 

     (d) Failure to respond within 30 days to an inquiry from the

 

commissioner under section 4731(3).

 

     (e) Failure to submit to examination or any legal obligation

 

relative to an examination under section 4703.

 

     (f) Refusal or failure to pay the costs of examination under

 

section 4733.

 

     (g) For a captive insurer formed as a limited liability

 

company, the captive insurer is no longer in good standing under

 

the Michigan limited liability company act, 1993 PA 23, MCL

 

450.4101 to 450.5200.

 

     (h) The SPFC has failed, after written request by the

 

commissioner, to remove or discharge an officer or director whose

 

record of business conduct does not satisfy the requirements of

 

section 4603 or who has been convicted of any crime involving

 

fraud, dishonesty, or like moral turpitude.

 

     (i) The captive insurance company has failed for an

 

unreasonable period to pay any final judgment rendered against it

 

in this state on any policy, bond, recognizance, or undertaking

 

issued or guaranteed by it.

 

     (j) Failure to otherwise comply in any material respect with

 

applicable laws of this state.


 

     (3) If the commissioner finds, upon examination or other

 

evidence, that an SPFC has committed any of the acts specified in

 

subsection (2)(b), (c), or (d), the commissioner may impose the

 

penalties provided in section 150 if the commissioner considers it

 

in the best interest of the public, the holders of the securities,

 

and the policyholders of the SPFC.

 

     (4) Unless the grounds for suspension or revocation relate

 

only to the financial condition or soundness of the SPFC or to a

 

deficiency in its assets, the commissioner shall notify the SPFC

 

not less than 30 days before revoking its authority to do business

 

in this state and shall specify in the notice the particulars of

 

the alleged violation of the law or its organizational documents or

 

grounds for revocation and the SPFC shall be offered the

 

opportunity to be heard pursuant to section 437.

 

     Sec. 4741. (1) Except as otherwise provided in this section,

 

the terms and conditions under chapter 81 pertaining to

 

administrative supervision, conservation, rehabilitation,

 

receivership, and liquidation of insurers apply in full to SPFCs or

 

each of the SPFC's protected cells, individually or in combination,

 

without causing or otherwise effecting an administrative

 

supervision, conservation, rehabilitation, receivership, or

 

liquidation of the SPFC or another protected cell.

 

     (2) Notwithstanding any other provision of this act and

 

without causing or otherwise affecting the conservation or

 

rehabilitation of an otherwise solvent protected cell of an SPFC

 

and subject to subsection (7)(e), the commissioner may petition the

 

circuit court for an order authorizing the commissioner to


 

conserve, rehabilitate, or liquidate an SPFC domiciled in this

 

state on 1 or more of the following grounds:

 

     (a) There has been embezzlement, wrongful sequestration,

 

dissipation, or diversion of the assets of the SPFC intended to be

 

used to pay amounts owed to the counterparty or the holders of SPFC

 

securities.

 

     (b) The SPFC is insolvent and the holders of a majority in

 

outstanding principal amount of each class of SPFC securities

 

request or consent to conservation, rehabilitation, or liquidation

 

pursuant to this chapter.

 

     (3) Notwithstanding any other provision of this act, the

 

commissioner may petition the circuit court for an order

 

authorizing the commissioner to conserve, rehabilitate, or

 

liquidate 1 or more of an SPFC's protected cells, independently,

 

without causing or otherwise effecting a conservation,

 

rehabilitation, receivership, or liquidation of the SPFC generally

 

or another of its protected cells, on 1 or more of the following

 

grounds:

 

     (a) There has been embezzlement, wrongful sequestration,

 

dissipation, or diversion of the assets of the SPFC attributable to

 

the affected protected cell or cells intended to be used to pay

 

amounts owed to the counterparty or the holders of SPFC securities

 

of the affected cell or cells.

 

     (b) The affected protected cell is insolvent and the holders

 

of a majority in outstanding principal amount of each class of SPFC

 

securities attributable to that particular protected cell request

 

or consent to conservation, rehabilitation, or liquidation pursuant


 

to this chapter.

 

     (4) The court may not grant relief provided by subsection

 

(2)(a) or subsection (3)(a) unless, after notice and a hearing, the

 

commissioner, who shall have the burden of proof, establishes by

 

the applicable rules of evidence that relief must be granted. The

 

court's order may be made in respect of 1 or more protected cells

 

by name, rather than the SPFC generally.

 

     (5) Notwithstanding any other provision of this act, rules

 

promulgated or regulations entered under this act, or other

 

applicable law, rule, or regulation, a receiver appointed pursuant

 

to any order or conservation, rehabilitation, or liquidation shall

 

do all of the following:

 

     (a) For an SPFC subject to an order of conservation,

 

rehabilitation, or liquidation, manage the assets and liabilities

 

of the SPFC pursuant to this chapter.

 

     (b) For a protected cell or cells subject to an order of

 

conservation, rehabilitation, or liquidation, manage the assets and

 

liabilities of the protected cell or cells pursuant to this chapter

 

and the SPFC contract.

 

     (c) Ensure that the assets of 1 protected cell are not

 

utilized to satisfy the liabilities of another protected cell or of

 

the SPFC generally.

 

     (6) With respect to amounts recoverable under an SPFC

 

contract, the amount recoverable by the receiver, including all

 

expenses of taking possession of the SPFC or 1 or more of the

 

SPFC's protected cells, shall not be reduced or diminished as a

 

result of the entry of an order of conservation, rehabilitation, or


 

liquidation with respect to the counterparty, notwithstanding any

 

other provision in the contracts or other documentation governing

 

the SPFC insurance securitization.

 

     (7) Notwithstanding any other provision of this act or other

 

laws of this state:

 

     (a) An application or petition, or a temporary restraining

 

order or injunction issued pursuant to this act, with respect to a

 

counterparty does not prohibit the transaction of a business by an

 

SPFC, including any payment by an SPFC made pursuant to an SPFC

 

security, or any action or proceeding against an SPFC or its

 

assets.

 

     (b) The commencement of a summary proceeding or other interim

 

proceeding commenced before a formal delinquency proceeding with

 

respect to an SPFC, and any order issued by the court does not

 

prohibit the payment by an SPFC made pursuant to an SPFC security

 

or SPFC contract or the SPFC from taking any action required to

 

make the payment.

 

     (c) A receiver of a counterparty shall not void a

 

nonfraudulent transfer by a counterparty to an SPFC of money or

 

other property made pursuant to an SPFC contract.

 

     (d) A receiver of an SPFC shall not void a nonfraudulent

 

transfer by the SPFC of money or other property made to a

 

counterparty pursuant to an SPFC contract or made to or for the

 

benefit of any holder of an SPFC security on account of the SPFC

 

security.

 

     (e) The commissioner shall not seek to have an SPFC with

 

protected cells declared insolvent as long as at least 1 of the


 

SPFC's protected cells remains solvent, and in the case of such an

 

insolvency, the receiver shall handle SPFC's assets in compliance

 

with subsection (5) and other laws of this state.

 

     (8) Subsection (7) does not prohibit the commissioner from

 

taking any action permitted under chapter 81 with respect only to

 

the conservation or rehabilitation of an SPFC with protected cell

 

or cells, provided the commissioner would have had sufficient

 

grounds to seek to declare the SPFC insolvent, subject to and

 

without otherwise affecting subsection (7)(e). In this case, with

 

respect to the solvent protected cell or cells, the commissioner

 

shall not prohibit payments made by the SPFC pursuant to an SPFC

 

security, an SPFC contract, or otherwise made under the insurance

 

securitization transaction that are attributable to these protected

 

cell or cells or prohibit the SPFC from taking any action required

 

to make these payments.

 

     (9) With the exception of the fulfillment of the obligations

 

under an SPFC contract, and notwithstanding any other provision of

 

this chapter or other laws of this state, the assets of an SPFC,

 

including assets held in trust, shall not be consolidated with or

 

included in the estate of a counterparty in any delinquency

 

proceeding against the counterparty pursuant to this chapter for

 

any purpose including, without limitation, distribution to

 

creditors of the counterparty.

 

     Sec. 4745. (1) A contested case brought by a third party based

 

on a decision of the commissioner pursuant to this chapter is

 

governed by applicable law of this state except that the third

 

party shall do all of the following:


 

     (a) Prove its case in accordance with the applicable rules of

 

evidence.

 

     (b) Demonstrate irreparable harm to the SPFC or its

 

counterparty, or both.

 

     (c) Show that there is no other adequate remedy at law.

 

     (d) Post a bond of sufficient surety to protect the interests

 

of the holders of the SPFC securities and policyholders so long as

 

it is not less than 15% of the total amount of the securitized

 

transaction.

 

     (2) The commissioner may suspend, revoke, or modify a limited

 

certificate of authority issued to an SPFC or an order made in

 

connection with a limited certificate of authority issued to an

 

SPFC in compliance with the standards and criteria provided in

 

subsection (1) or in conformance with section 4735(2).

 

     Sec. 4747. (1) The commissioner may issue regulations

 

necessary to effectuate the purposes of this chapter. Regulations

 

issued pursuant to this section do not affect an SPFC insurance

 

securitization in effect at the time of the issuance of the

 

regulation.

 

     (2) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the

 

commissioner may employ legal counsel as he or she considers

 

necessary to assist in his or her responsibilities under this

 

chapter.

 

CHAPTER 48

 

PROTECTED CELL INSURANCE COMPANIES

 

     Sec. 4801. As used in this chapter:

 

     (a) "Domestic insurer" means an insurer domiciled in this


 

state.

 

     (b) "Fair value" means the following:

 

     (i) For cash, the amount of the cash.

 

     (ii) For assets other than cash, the amount at which that asset

 

could be bought or sold in the current transaction between arm's

 

length, willing parties. If available, the quoted mid-market price

 

for the asset in active markets shall be used; and if quoted mid-

 

market prices are not available, a value shall be determined using

 

the best information available considering values of similar assets

 

and other valuation methods, such as present value of future cash

 

flows, historical value of the same and similar assets, or

 

comparison to values of other asset classes, the value of which

 

have been historically related to the subject asset.

 

     (c) "Fully funded" means that, with respect to any exposure

 

attributed to a protected cell, the fair value of the protected

 

cell assets, on the date on which the insurance securitization is

 

effected, equals or exceeds the maximum possible exposure

 

attributable to the protected cell with respect to such exposures.

 

     (d) "General account" means the assets and liabilities of a

 

protected cell company other than protected cell assets and

 

protected cell liabilities.

 

     (e) "Indemnity trigger" means a transaction term by which

 

relief of the issuer's obligation to repay investors is triggered

 

by its incurring a specified level of losses under its insurance or

 

reinsurance contracts.

 

     (f) "Nonindemnity trigger" means a transaction term by which

 

relief of the issuer's obligation to repay investors is triggered


 

solely by some event or condition other than the individual

 

protected cell company incurring a specified level of losses under

 

its insurance or reinsurance contracts.

 

     (g) "Protected cell" means an identified pool of assets and

 

liabilities of a protected cell company segregated and insulated by

 

means of this chapter from the remainder of the protected cell

 

company's assets and liabilities.

 

     (h) "Protected cell account" means a specifically identified

 

bank or custodial account established by a protected cell company

 

for the purpose of segregating the protected cell assets of 1

 

protected cell from the protected cell assets of other protected

 

cells and from the assets of the protected cell company's general

 

account.

 

     (i) "Protected cell assets" means all assets, contract rights,

 

and general intangibles, identified with and attributable to a

 

specific protected cell of a protected cell company.

 

     (j) "Protected cell company" means a domestic insurer or

 

captive insurer that has 1 or more protected cells.

 

     (k) "Protected cell company insurance securitization" means

 

the issuance of debt instruments, the proceeds from which support

 

the exposures attributed to the protected cell, by a protected cell

 

company where repayment of principal or interest, or both, to

 

investors pursuant to the transaction terms is contingent upon the

 

occurrence or nonoccurrence of an event with respect to which the

 

protected cell company is exposed to loss under insurance or

 

reinsurance contracts it has issued.

 

     (l) "Protected cell liabilities" means all liabilities and


 

other obligations identified with and attributable to a specific

 

protected cell of a protected cell company.

 

     Sec. 4803. (1) A protected cell company may establish 1 or

 

more protected cells with the prior written approval of the

 

commissioner of a plan of operation or amendments submitted by the

 

protected cell company with respect to each protected cell in

 

connection with an insurance securitization. Upon the written

 

approval of the commissioner of the plan of operation, which shall

 

include, but is not limited to, the specific business objectives

 

and investment guidelines of the protected cell, the protected cell

 

company, in accordance with the approved plan of operation, may

 

attribute to the protected cell insurance obligations for its

 

insurance business and obligations relating to the insurance

 

securitization and assets to fund the obligations. A protected cell

 

shall have its own distinct name or designation, which shall

 

include the words "protected cell". The protected cell company

 

shall transfer all assets attributable to a protected cell to 1 or

 

more separately established and identified protected cell accounts

 

bearing the name or designation of that protected cell. Protected

 

cell assets shall be held in the protected cell accounts for the

 

purpose of satisfying the obligations of that protected cell.

 

     (2) All attributions of assets and liabilities between a

 

protected cell and the general account shall be in accordance with

 

the plan of operation approved by the commissioner. No other

 

attribution of assets or liabilities shall be made by a protected

 

cell company between the protected cell company's general account

 

and its protected cells. Any attribution of assets and liabilities


 

between the general account and a protected cell, or from investors

 

in the form of principal on a debt instrument issued by a protected

 

cell company in connection with a protected cell company

 

securitization, shall be in cash or in readily marketable

 

securities with established fair values.

 

     (3) The creation of a protected cell does not create, with

 

respect to that protected cell, a legal person separate from the

 

protected cell company. Amounts attributed to a protected cell

 

under this chapter, including assets transferred to a protected

 

cell account, are owned by the protected cell company, and the

 

protected cell company shall not be, and shall not hold itself out

 

to be, a trustee with respect to those protected cell assets of

 

that protected cell account. Notwithstanding this subsection, the

 

protected cell company may allow for a security interest to attach

 

to protected cell assets or a protected cell account if in favor of

 

a creditor of the protected cell and as otherwise allowed under

 

applicable law.

 

     (4) This chapter shall not be construed to prohibit the

 

protected cell company from contracting with or arranging for an

 

investment advisor, commodity trading advisor, or other third party

 

to manage the protected cell assets of a protected cell, if all

 

remuneration, expenses, and other compensation of the third party

 

advisor or manager are payable from the protected cell assets of

 

that protected cell and not from the protected cell assets of other

 

protected cells or the assets of the protected cell company's

 

general account.

 

     (5) A protected cell company shall establish administrative


 

and accounting procedures necessary to properly identify the 1 or

 

more protected cells of the protected cell company and the

 

protected cell assets and protected cell liabilities attributable

 

to the protected cells. The directors of a protected cell company

 

shall keep protected cell assets and protected cell liabilities

 

separate and separately identifiable from the assets and

 

liabilities of the protected cell company's general account and

 

attributable to 1 protected cell separate and separately

 

identifiable from protected cell assets and protected cell

 

liabilities attributable to other protected cells. If this

 

subsection is violated, the remedy of tracing is applicable to

 

protected cell assets when commingled with protected cell assets of

 

other protected cells or the assets of the protected cell company's

 

general account. The remedy of tracing is not an exclusive remedy.

 

     (6) When establishing a protected cell, the protected cell

 

company shall attribute to the protected cell assets with a value

 

at least equal to the reserves and other insurance liabilities

 

attributed to that protected cell.

 

     Sec. 4805. (1) The protected cell assets of a protected cell

 

shall not be charged with liabilities arising out of any other

 

business the protected cell company may conduct. All contracts or

 

other documentation reflecting protected cell liabilities shall

 

clearly indicate that only the protected cell assets are available

 

for the satisfaction of those protected cell liabilities.

 

     (2) The income, and gains and losses, whether realized or

 

unrealized, from protected cell assets and protected cell

 

liabilities shall be credited to or charged against the protected


 

cell without regard to other income and gains or losses of the

 

protected cell company, including income and gains or losses of

 

other protected cells. Amounts attributed to any protected cell and

 

accumulations on the attributed amounts may be invested and

 

reinvested. The investments in a protected cell or cells shall not

 

be taken into account in applying the investment limitations

 

otherwise applicable to the investments of the protected cell

 

company.

 

     (3) Assets attributed to a protected cell shall be valued at

 

their fair value on the date of valuation or if there is no readily

 

available market, as provided in the contract or the rules or other

 

written documentation applicable to the protected cell.

 

     (4) A protected cell company with respect to any of its

 

protected cells shall engage in fully funded indemnity triggered

 

insurance securitization to support in full the protected cell

 

exposures attributable to that protected cell. A protected cell

 

company insurance securitization that is nonindemnity triggered

 

shall qualify as an insurance securitization under the terms of

 

this chapter only after the commissioner by rule, regulation, or

 

order addresses the methods of funding of the portion of this risk

 

that is not indemnity based and addressing accounting, disclosure,

 

risk based capital treatment, and risks associated with such

 

securitizations. A protected cell company insurance securitization

 

that is not fully funded, whether indemnity triggered or

 

nonindemnity triggered, is prohibited. Protected cell assets may be

 

used to pay interest or other consideration on any outstanding debt

 

or other obligation attributable to that protected cell. Nothing in


 

this subsection shall be construed or interpreted to prevent a

 

protected cell company from entering into a swap agreement or other

 

transaction for the account of the protected cell that has the

 

effect of guaranteeing interest or other consideration.

 

     (5) In all protected cell company insurance securitizations,

 

the contracts or other documentation effecting the transaction

 

shall contain provisions identifying the protected cell to which

 

the transaction will be attributed. In addition, the contracts or

 

other documentation shall clearly disclose that the assets of that

 

protected cell, and only those assets, are available to pay the

 

obligations of that protected cell. Notwithstanding this subsection

 

and subject to the provisions of this chapter and any other

 

applicable law, rule, or regulation, the failure to include such

 

language in the contracts or other documentation shall not be used

 

as the sole basis by creditors, reinsurers, or other claimants to

 

circumvent this chapter.

 

     (6) A protected cell company may attribute to a protected cell

 

account only the insurance obligations relating to the protected

 

cell company's general account. Under no circumstances shall a

 

protected cell be authorized to issue insurance or reinsurance

 

contracts directly to policyholders or reinsureds or have any

 

obligation to the policyholders or reinsureds of the protected cell

 

company's general account.

 

     (7) At the cessation of business of a protected cell in

 

accordance with the plan approved by the commissioner, the

 

protected cell company voluntarily shall close out the protected

 

cell account.


 

     Sec. 4807. (1) Protected cell assets are only available to the

 

creditors of the protected cell company that are creditors for that

 

protected cell and are entitled, in conformity with this chapter,

 

to have recourse to the protected cell assets attributable to that

 

protected cell. Protected cell assets are absolutely protected from

 

the creditors of the protected cell company that are not creditors

 

for that protected cell and who, accordingly, are not entitled to

 

have recourse to the protected cell assets attributable to that

 

protected cell. Creditors for a protected cell are not entitled to

 

have recourse against the protected cell assets of other protected

 

cells or the assets of the protected cell company's general

 

account. Protected cell assets are only available to creditors of a

 

protected cell company after all protected cell liabilities have

 

been extinguished or otherwise provided for in accordance with the

 

plan of operation relating to that protected cell.

 

     (2) When an obligation of a protected cell company to a person

 

arises from a transaction, or is otherwise imposed, with respect to

 

a protected cell, both of the following apply:

 

     (a) That obligation of the protected cell company extends only

 

to the protected cell assets attributable to that protected cell,

 

and the person, with respect to that obligation, is entitled to

 

have recourse only to the protected cell assets attributable to

 

that protected cell.

 

     (b) That obligation of the protected cell company does not

 

extend to the protected cell assets of any other protected cell or

 

the assets of the protected cell company's general account, and

 

that person, with respect to that obligation, is not entitled to


 

have recourse to the protected cell assets of any other protected

 

cell or the assets of the protected cell company's general account.

 

     (3) When an obligation of a protected cell company relates

 

solely to the general account, the obligation of the protected cell

 

company extends only to, and that creditor, with respect to that

 

obligation, is entitled to have recourse only to, the assets of the

 

protected cell company's general account.

 

     (4) The activities, assets, and obligations relating to a

 

protected cell are not subject to the provisions of chapters 77 and

 

79, and neither a protected cell nor a protected cell company shall

 

be assessed by, or otherwise be required to contribute to, any

 

guaranty fund or guaranty association in this state with respect to

 

the activities, assets, or obligations of a protected cell. Nothing

 

in this subsection affects the activities or obligations of an

 

insurer's general account.

 

     (5) The establishment of 1 or more protected cells alone does

 

not constitute, and shall not be considered to be, a fraudulent

 

conveyance, an intent by the protected cell company to defraud

 

creditors, or the carrying out of business by the protected cell

 

company for any other fraudulent purpose.

 

     Sec. 4809. (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of law,

 

rule, or regulation, upon an order of conservation, rehabilitation,

 

or liquidation of a protected cell company, the receiver shall deal

 

with the protected cell company's assets and liabilities, including

 

protected cell assets and protected cell liabilities, in accordance

 

with this chapter.

 

     (2) For amounts recoverable under a protected cell company


 

insurance securitization, the amount recoverable by the receiver

 

shall not be reduced or diminished as a result of the entry of an

 

order of conservation, rehabilitation, or liquidation with respect

 

to the protected cell company, notwithstanding any other provision

 

to the contrary in the contracts or other documentation governing

 

the protected cell company insurance securitization.

 

     Sec. 4811. A protected cell company insurance securitization

 

is not, and shall not be considered to be, an insurance or

 

reinsurance contract. An investor in a protected cell company

 

insurance securitization, by sole means of this investment, is not,

 

and shall not be considered to be, conducting an insurance business

 

in this state. The underwriters or selling agents and their

 

partners, directors, officers, members, managers, employees,

 

agents, representatives, and advisors involved in a protected cell

 

company insurance securitization are not, and shall not be

 

considered to be, conducting an insurance or reinsurance agency,

 

brokerage, intermediary, advisory, or consulting business by virtue

 

of their activities in connection with that business.

 

     Sec. 4813. The commissioner may issue rules, regulations, or

 

orders necessary to effectuate the purposes of this chapter.