§ 6904. Limitations. (a) Financial guaranty insurance may be transacted in this state only by a corporation licensed for such purpose pursuant to section six thousand nine hundred two of this article.

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Terms Used In N.Y. Insurance Law 6904

  • Aggregate net liability: means the aggregate amount of insured unpaid principal, interest and other monetary payments, if any, of guarantied obligations insured or assumed, less reinsurance ceded and less collateral. See N.Y. Insurance Law 6901
  • Assets: (1) The property comprising the estate of a deceased person, or (2) the property in a trust account.
  • Average annual debt service: means the amount of insured unpaid principal and interest on an obligation, multiplied by the number of such insured obligations (assuming each obligation represents one thousand dollars par value), divided by the amount equal to the aggregate life of all such obligations (assuming each obligation represents one thousand dollars par value). See N.Y. Insurance Law 6901
  • Collateral: means :

    (1) cash;

    (2) the cash flow from specific obligations which are not callable and scheduled to be received based on expected prepayment speed on or prior to the date of scheduled debt service (including scheduled redemptions or prepayments) on the insured obligation provided that (i) such specific obligations are directly payable by, guaranteed by or backed by the full faith and credit of the United States government, (ii) in the case of insured obligations denominated or payable in foreign currency as permitted under paragraph four of subsection (b) of section six thousand nine hundred four of this article, such specific obligations are directly payable by, guaranteed by or backed by the full faith and credit of such foreign government or the central bank thereof, or (iii) such specific obligations are insured by the same insurer that insures the obligations being collateralized, and the cash flows from such specific obligations are sufficient to cover the insured scheduled payments on the obligations being collateralized;

    (3) the market value of investment grade obligations, other than obligations evidencing an interest in the project or projects financed with the proceeds of the insured obligations;

    (4) the face amount of each letter of credit that:

    (A) is irrevocable;

    (B) provides for payment under the letter of credit in lieu of or as reimbursement to the insurer for payment required under a financial guaranty insurance policy;

    (C) is issued, presentable and payable either:

    (i) at an office of the letter of credit issuer in the United States; or

    (ii) at an office of the letter of credit issuer located in the jurisdiction in which the trustee or paying agent for the insured obligation is located;

    (D) contains a statement that either:

    (i) identifies the insurer and any successor by operation of law, including any liquidator, rehabilitator, receiver or conservator, as the beneficiary; or

    (ii) identifies the trustee or the paying agent for the insured obligation as the beneficiary;

    (E) contains a statement to the effect that the obligation of the letter of credit issuer under the letter of credit is an individual obligation of such issuer and is in no way contingent upon reimbursement with respect thereto;

    (F) contains an issue date and a date of expiration;

    (G) either:

    (i) has a term at least as long as the shorter of the term of the insured obligation or the term of the financial guaranty policy; or

    (ii) provides that the letter of credit shall not expire without thirty days prior written notice to the beneficiary and allows for drawing under the letter of credit in the event that, prior to expiration, the letter of credit is not renewed or extended or a substitute letter of credit or alternate collateral meeting the requirements of this subsection is not provided;

    (H) states that it is governed by the laws of the state of New York or by the 1983 or 1993 Revision of the Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits of the International Chamber of Commerce (Publication 400 or 500) or any successor Revision if approved by the superintendent, and contains a provision for an extension of time, of not less than thirty days after resumption of business, to draw against the letter of credit in the event that one or more of the occurrences described in Article 19 of Publication 400 or 500 occurs; and

    (I) is issued by a bank, trust company, or savings and loan association that:

    (i) is organized and existing under the laws of the United States or any state thereof or, in the case of a non-domestic financial institution, has a branch or agency office licensed under the laws of the United States or any state thereof and is domiciled in a member country of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development having a sovereign rating in one of the top two generic lettered rating classifications by a nationally recognized statistical rating organization acceptable to the superintendent;

    (ii) has (or is the principal operating subsidiary of a financial institution holding company that has) a long-term debt rating of at least investment grade; and

    (iii) is not a parent, subsidiary or affiliate of the trustee or paying agent, if any, with respect to the insured obligation if such trustee or paying agent is the named beneficiary of the letter of credit; or

    (5) the amount of credit protection available to the insurer (or its nominee) under each credit default swap that:

    (A) may not be amended without the consent of the insurer and may only be terminated: (i) at the option of the insurer; (ii) at the option of the counterparty to the insurer (or its nominee), if the credit default swap provides for the payment of a termination amount equal to the replacement cost of the terminated credit default swap determined with reference to standard documentation of the International Swap and Derivatives Association, Inc. See N.Y. Insurance Law 6901
  • Commercial real estate: means income producing real property other than residential property consisting of less than five units. See N.Y. Insurance Law 6901
  • Contingency reserve: means an additional liability reserve established to protect policyholders against the effects of adverse economic developments or cycles or other unforeseen circumstances. See N.Y. Insurance Law 6901
  • Corporation: A legal entity owned by the holders of shares of stock that have been issued, and that can own, receive, and transfer property, and carry on business in its own name.
  • corporation: means an insurer licensed to transact the business of financial guaranty insurance in this state. See N.Y. Insurance Law 6901
  • Excess spread: means , with respect to any insured issue of asset-backed securities, the excess of (A) the scheduled cash flow on the underlying assets that is reasonably projected to be available, over the term of the insured securities after payment of the expenses associated with the insured issue, to make debt service payments on the insured securities over (B) the scheduled debt service requirements on the insured securities, provided that such excess is held in the same manner as collateral is required to be held under subsection (g) of this section. See N.Y. Insurance Law 6901
  • Financial guaranty insurance: means a surety bond, an insurance policy or, when issued by an insurer or any person doing an insurance business as defined in paragraph one of subsection (b) of section one thousand one hundred one of this chapter, an indemnity contract, and any guaranty similar to the foregoing types, under which loss is payable, upon proof of occurrence of financial loss, to an insured claimant, obligee or indemnitee as a result of any of the following events:

    (A) failure of any obligor on or issuer of any debt instrument or other monetary obligation (including equity securities guarantied under a surety bond, insurance policy or indemnity contract) to pay when due to be paid by the obligor or scheduled at the time insured to be received by the holder of the obligation, principal, interest, premium, dividend or purchase price of or on, or other amounts due or payable with respect to, such instrument or obligation, when such failure is the result of a financial default or insolvency or, provided that such payment source is investment grade, any other failure to make payment, regardless of whether such obligation is incurred directly or as guarantor by or on behalf of another obligor that has also defaulted;

    (B) changes in the levels of interest rates, whether short or long term or the differential in interest rates between various markets or products;

    (C) changes in the rate of exchange of currency;

    (D) changes in the value of specific assets or commodities, financial or commodity indices, or price levels in general; or

    (E) other events which the superintendent determines are substantially similar to any of the foregoing. See N.Y. Insurance Law 6901
  • Gift: A voluntary transfer or conveyance of property without consideration, or for less than full and adequate consideration based on fair market value.
  • Governmental unit: means the United States of America, Canada, a member country of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development having a sovereign rating in one of the top three generic lettered rating classifications by a nationally recognized statistical rating organization acceptable to the superintendent, a state, territory or possession of the United States of America, the District of Columbia, a province of Canada, a municipality, or a political subdivision of any of the foregoing, or any public agency or instrumentality thereof. See N.Y. Insurance Law 6901
  • Investment grade: means that:

    (1) the obligation or parity obligation of the same issuer has been determined to be in one of the top four generic lettered rating classifications by a nationally recognized statistical rating organization acceptable to the superintendent;

    (2) the obligation or parity obligation of the same issuer has been identified in writing by such nationally recognized statistical rating organization to be of investment grade quality; or

    (3) if the obligation or parity obligation of the same issuer has not been submitted to any such nationally recognized statistical rating organization, the obligation is determined to be investment grade (as indicated by a rating in category 1 or 2) by the Securities Valuation Office of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners. See N.Y. Insurance Law 6901
  • Liabilities: The aggregate of all debts and other legal obligations of a particular person or legal entity.
  • Mortgage: The written agreement pledging property to a creditor as collateral for a loan.
  • Municipal bonds: means municipal obligation bonds and special revenue bonds. See N.Y. Insurance Law 6901
  • Obligation: An order placed, contract awarded, service received, or similar transaction during a given period that will require payments during the same or a future period.
  • Partnership: A voluntary contract between two or more persons to pool some or all of their assets into a business, with the agreement that there will be a proportional sharing of profits and losses.
  • Real property: Land, and all immovable fixtures erected on, growing on, or affixed to the land.
  • Reinsurance: means cessions qualifying for credit under section six thousand nine hundred six of this article. See N.Y. Insurance Law 6901

(b) Permissible guarantees. (1) The superintendent shall not permit the writing of financial guaranty insurance except as defined in subparagraph (A) of paragraph one of subsection (a) of section six thousand nine hundred one of this article, and a corporation may insure the timely payment of United States dollar debt instruments, or other monetary obligations, only in the following categories:

(A) municipal obligation bonds;

(B) special revenue bonds;

(C) industrial development bonds;

(D) obligations of corporations, trusts or other similar entities established under applicable law;

(E) partnership obligations;

(F) asset-backed securities, trust certificates and trust obligations other than mortgage-backed securities secured by first mortgages on real property which are insurable by a mortgage guaranty insurer authorized under paragraph twenty-three of subsection (a) of section one thousand one hundred thirteen of this chapter, unless:

(i) such mortgages with loan-to-value ratios in excess of eighty percent are:

(I) in the case of mortgages on property located in the state of New York, insured by mortgage guaranty insurers authorized under paragraph twenty-three of subsection (a) of section one thousand one hundred thirteen of this chapter;

(II) in the case of mortgages on property located in a state other than the state of New York, insured by mortgage guaranty insurers authorized to do business in such other state; or

(III) in an aggregate principal amount less than the single risk limits prescribed in paragraph five of subsection (d) of this section; or

(ii) additional mortgages with principal balances, other collateral with a market value, or (provided the insured risk is investment grade) excess spread in an amount, in each instance at least equal to the coverage that would otherwise be provided by such mortgage guaranty insurers in accordance with item (i) of this subparagraph are pledged as additional security for the asset-backed securities;

(G) installment purchase agreements executed as a condition of sale;

(H) consumer debt obligations;

(I) utility first mortgage obligations; and

(J) any other debt instrument or financial obligation that the superintendent determines to be substantially similar to any of the foregoing or shall otherwise be approved by the superintendent.

(2) An insurer may insure obligations enumerated in subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of paragraph one of this subsection that are not investment grade so long as at least ninety-five percent of the insurer's aggregate net liability on the kinds of obligations enumerated in subparagraphs (A), (B) and (C) of paragraph one of this subsection shall be investment grade.

(3) A corporation may insure the timely payment of monetary obligations in any category designated in this subsection notwithstanding that such obligation may be insured by a financial guaranty insurance policy issued by another insurer. In the event that any obligation is insured by more than one financial guaranty insurance policy, then each such insurance policy may by its terms specify its priority of payment in the event of a default under the obligation insured or any other insurance policy; provided that an insurer shall be entitled to take into account payment under another policy insuring such obligation for purposes of establishing and maintaining loss reserves only to the extent that the policy issued by such insurer provides for payment only in the event of payment default under both such obligation and the other policy.

(4) A corporation may also write financial guaranty insurance as defined in subparagraph (A) of paragraph one of subsection (a) of section six thousand nine hundred one of this article to insure the timely payment of non-United States dollar debt instruments or other monetary obligations denominated or payable in foreign currency, only for the categories listed in subparagraphs (A) through (J) of paragraph one of this subsection, provided that:

(A) such currency is that of an Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development country or such other country (i) whose sovereign rating is investment grade or (ii) as shall not otherwise be disapproved by the superintendent within thirty days following receipt of written notification. The superintendent shall not disapprove such notification upon demonstration that there is no undue risk associated with insuring the timely payment of such instruments or obligations. In making such a determination the superintendent shall take into consideration the corporation's outstanding liabilities on non-investment grade instruments and obligations in relation to its outstanding liabilities on all instruments and obligations and in relation to the amount of its surplus to policyholders;

(B) reserves required pursuant to section six thousand nine hundred three of this article in regard to such obligations shall be established and adjusted quarterly based upon the then current foreign exchange rates;

(C) such obligations shall not exceed twenty-five percent of an insurer's aggregate net liability; and

(D) the aggregate and single risk limitations prescribed by subsections (c) and (d) of this section shall be determined by applying the then current foreign exchange rates.

(c) Aggregate risk limits. The corporation must at all times maintain surplus to policyholders and contingency reserves in the aggregate no less than the sum of:

(1)(A) 0.3333 percent or 1/300th of the aggregate net liability under guaranties of municipal bonds including obligations demonstrated to the satisfaction of the superintendent to be the functional equivalent thereof and investment grade utility first mortgage obligations; plus

(B) 0.6666 percent or 1/150th of the aggregate net liability under guaranties of investment grade asset-backed securities; plus

(C) 1.0 percent or 1/100th of the aggregate net liability under guaranties, secured by collateral or having a term of seven years or less, of:

(i) investment grade industrial development bonds,

(ii) other investment grade obligations; plus

(D) 1.5 percent or 1/66.67th of the aggregate net liability under guaranties of other investment grade obligations; plus

(E) 2.0 percent or 1/50th of the aggregate net liability under guaranties of:

(i) non-investment grade consumer debt obligations, and

(ii) non-investment grade asset-backed securities; plus

(F) 2.5 percent or 1/40th of the aggregate net liability under guaranties of non-investment grade obligations secured by first mortgages on commercial real estate and having loan-to-value ratios of eighty percent or less; plus

(G) 4.0 percent or 1/25th of the aggregate net liability under guaranties of other non-investment grade obligations; and

(H) if the amount of collateral required by subparagraph (C) of this paragraph is no longer maintained, that proportion of the obligation insured which is not so collateralized shall be subject to the aggregate limits specified in subparagraph (D) of this paragraph; and

(2) surplus to policyholders determined by the superintendent to be adequate to support the writing of residual value insurance, surety insurance and credit insurance, if the corporation has elected to transact such kinds of insurance pursuant to subsection (a) of section six thousand nine hundred two of this article.

(d) Single risk limits. A financial guaranty insurance corporation shall limit its exposure to loss on any one risk insured by policies providing financial guaranty insurance, net of collateral and reinsurance, as follows:

(1) for municipal obligation bonds, special revenue bonds, and obligations demonstrated to the satisfaction of the superintendent to be the functional equivalent thereof:

(A) the insured average annual debt service with respect to a single entity and backed by a single revenue source shall not exceed ten percent of the aggregate of the insurer's surplus to policyholders and contingency reserve; and

(B) the insured unpaid principal issued by a single entity and backed by a single revenue source shall not exceed the following percent of the aggregate of the insurer's surplus to policyholders and contingency reserve based on the highest sovereign rating, by a nationally recognized statistical rating organization acceptable to the superintendent, of the country of the applicable governmental unit:

(i) seventy-five percent: any rating in one of the top two generic lettered rating classifications;

(ii) fifty-nine percent: an A+, A1, or equivalent rating at the highest grade of the third generic lettered rating classification;

(iii) forty-three percent: an A, A2, or equivalent rating at the middle grade of the third generic lettered rating classification; and

(iv) twenty-six percent: an A-, A3, or equivalent rating at the lowest grade of the third generic lettered rating classification;

(2) for each issue of asset-backed securities issued by a single entity and for each pool of consumer debt obligations, the lesser of:

(A) insured average annual debt service; or

(B) insured unpaid principal (reduced by the extent to which the unpaid principal of the supporting assets and, provided the insured risk is investment grade, excess spread exceed the insured unpaid principal) divided by nine; shall not exceed ten percent of the aggregate of the insurer's surplus to policyholders and contingency reserve, provided that no asset in the pool supporting the asset-backed securities exceeds the single risk limits prescribed in paragraph five of this subsection, if directly guaranteed; and provided further that, if the issuer of such insured asset-backed securities is a special purpose corporation, trust or other entity and such issuer shall have indebtedness outstanding with respect to any other pool of assets, either such other indebtedness shall be entitled to the benefits of a financial guaranty policy of the same insurer, or such other indebtedness shall: (i) be fully subordinated to the insured obligation, with respect to, or be non-recourse with respect to, the pool of assets that supports the insured obligation, (ii) be non-recourse to the issuer other than with respect to the asset pool securing such other indebtedness and proceeds in excess of the proceeds necessary to pay the insured obligation ("excess proceeds") and (iii) not constitute a claim against the issuer to the extent that the asset pool securing such other indebtedness or excess proceeds are insufficient to pay such other indebtedness;

(3) for obligations issued by a single entity and secured by commercial real estate, and not meeting the definition of asset-backed securities, the insured unpaid principal less fifty percent of the appraised value of the underlying real estate shall not exceed ten percent of the aggregate of the insurer's surplus to policyholders and contingency reserve;

(4) for utility first mortgage obligations, the insured average annual debt service shall not exceed ten percent of the aggregate of the insurer's surplus to policyholders and contingency reserve; and

(5) for all other policies providing financial guaranty insurance with respect to obligations issued by a single entity and backed by a single revenue source, the insured unpaid principal shall not exceed ten percent of the aggregate of the insurer's surplus to policyholders and contingency reserve.

(e) Except as provided in subsection (f) of this section, if an insurer at any time exceeds any limitation prescribed by subsection (c) or (d) of this section or paragraph two of subsection (b) of this section, the insurer shall within thirty days after the limitations are breached, submit a written plan to the superintendent detailing the steps that it will take or has taken to reduce its exposure to loss to no more than the permitted amounts, and if after notice and hearing the superintendent determines that an insurer has exceeded any limitation prescribed by this section, he may order such insurer to cease transacting any new financial guaranty insurance business until its exposure to loss no longer exceeds said limitations or with respect to the limitations prescribed in paragraph two of subsection (b) of this section, may order such insurer to limit its writing of the types of guaranties permitted under subparagraphs (A), (B) and (C) of paragraph one of subsection (b) of this section to investment grade obligations until such time as it shall be in compliance with such limitations.

(f) An insurer shall not be deemed in violation of any limitation prescribed by subsection (d) of this section with respect to any financial guaranty insurance outstanding prior to the effective date of this article, if the insurer was in compliance with the applicable single risk limit in effect in this state at the time that the financial guaranty insurance policy was issued. If the insurer was not so in compliance, such financial guaranty insurance shall comply with the limitations prescribed by subsection (d) of this section no later than three years after the effective date of this article.

(g) No insurer authorized to transact the business of financial guaranty insurance shall pay any commission or make any gift of money, property or other valuable thing to any employee, agent or representative of any potential purchaser of a financial guaranty insurance policy, as an inducement to the purchase of such a policy, and no such employee, agent or representative of such potential purchaser shall receive any such payment or gift. Violation of the provisions of this section shall not, however, have the effect of rendering void the insurance policy issued by the insurer.