Section 206C. (a) Every insurer which is authorized to do business in the commonwealth and which is a member of an insurance holding company system shall register with the commissioner, except a foreign insurer subject to registration requirements and standards adopted by statute or regulation in the jurisdiction of its domicile which are substantially similar to those contained in:

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Terms Used In Massachusetts General Laws ch. 175 sec. 206C

  • Assets: (1) The property comprising the estate of a deceased person, or (2) the property in a trust account.
  • Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
  • 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.
  • Discovery: Lawyers' examination, before trial, of facts and documents in possession of the opponents to help the lawyers prepare for trial.
  • Evidence: Information presented in testimony or in documents that is used to persuade the fact finder (judge or jury) to decide the case for one side or the other.
  • Fair market value: The price at which an asset would change hands in a transaction between a willing, informed buyer and a willing, informed seller.
  • Interests: includes any form of membership in a domestic or foreign nonprofit corporation. See Massachusetts General Laws ch. 156D sec. 11.01
  • Jurisdiction: (1) The legal authority of a court to hear and decide a case. Concurrent jurisdiction exists when two courts have simultaneous responsibility for the same case. (2) The geographic area over which the court has authority to decide cases.
  • Lease: A contract transferring the use of property or occupancy of land, space, structures, or equipment in consideration of a payment (e.g., rent). Source: OCC
  • Liabilities: The aggregate of all debts and other legal obligations of a particular person or legal entity.
  • Lien: A claim against real or personal property in satisfaction of a debt.
  • Litigation: A case, controversy, or lawsuit. Participants (plaintiffs and defendants) in lawsuits are called litigants.
  • 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.
  • Oversight: Committee review of the activities of a Federal agency or program.
  • Right of offset: Banks' legal right to seize funds that a guarantor or debtor may have on deposit to cover a loan in default. It is also known as the right of set-off. Source: OCC
  • Statute: A law passed by a legislature.
  • Subpoena: A command to a witness to appear and give testimony.
  • Testify: Answer questions in court.

(1) subsection (a) to subsection (1), inclusive, (2) subsection (m), subsection (r), and subsection (t); and (3) either subsection (n) or a provision such as the following: Each registered insurer shall keep current the information required to be disclosed in its registration statement by reporting all material changes or additions within fifteen days after the end of the month in which it learns of each such change or addition, and provided the jurisdiction of its domicile grants a similar exemption to insurers domiciled in the commonwealth. Any insurer which is subject to registration under this section shall register within fifteen days after it becomes subject to registration, and annually thereafter by April thirtieth of each year for the previous calendar year, unless the commissioner for good cause shown extends the time for registration, and then within such extended time. The commissioner may require any insurer authorized to do business in the commonwealth which is a member of a holding company system, and which is not subject to registration under this section, to furnish a copy of the registration statement, the summary specified in subsection (c) or other information filed by such insurance company with the insurance regulatory authority of domiciliary jurisdiction.

(b) Every insurer subject to registration shall file the registration statement on a form prescribed by the commissioner which shall contain the following current information:

(1) the capital structure, general financial condition, ownership and management of the insurer and any person controlling the insurer;

(2) the identity and relationship of every member of the insurance holding company system;

(3) the following agreements in force, and transactions currently outstanding or which have occurred during the last calendar year between such insurer and its affiliates:

(i) loans, other investments, or purchases, sales or exchanges of securities of the affiliates by the insurer or of the insurer by its affiliates;

(ii) purchases, sales or exchange of assets;

(iii) transactions not in the ordinary course of business;

(iv) guarantees or undertakings for the benefit of an affiliate which result in an actual contingent exposure of the insurer’s assets to liability, other than insurance contracts entered into in the ordinary course of the insurer’s business;

(v) all management agreements, service contracts and all cost-sharing arrangements;

(vi) reinsurance agreements;

(vii) dividends and other distributions to shareholders; and

(viii) consolidated tax allocation agreements;

(4) any pledge of the insurer’s stock, including stock of any subsidiary or controlling affiliate, for a loan made to any member of the insurance holding company system;

(5) other matters concerning transactions between registered insurers and any affiliates as may be included from time to time in any registration forms adopted or approved by the commissioner.

(c) All registration statements shall contain a summary outlining all items in the current registration statement representing changes from the prior registration statement.

(d) No information need be disclosed on the registration statement filed pursuant to subsection (b) if such information is not material for the purposes of this section. Unless the commissioner by rule, regulation or order provides otherwise; sales, purchases, exchanges, loans or extensions of credit, investments, or guarantees, any transaction involving one-half of one percent or less of an insurer’s admitted assets as of the thirty-first day of December next preceding shall not be deemed material for purposes of this section. The determination of materiality in this subsection shall not apply for purposes of the group capital calculation or the liquidity stress test framework.

(e) Subject to clause (1) of subsection (r), each domestic insurer shall report to the commissioner all dividends and other distributions to its shareholders within five business days following the declaration thereof and at least ten business days, commencing from the date of receipt by the commissioner, prior to the payment thereof. No domestic insurer shall pay any dividend or make any distribution to its shareholders from other than unassigned funds unless the commissioner shall have approved such dividend or distribution. For purposes of this subsection, the term unassigned funds shall have the same meaning as that term is used in the annual statement required to be filed with the commissioner under the provisions of section twenty-five.

(f) Any person within an insurance holding company system subject to registration shall be required to provide complete and accurate information to an insurer, where such information is reasonably necessary to enable the insurer to comply with the provisions of sections two hundred and six to two hundred and six D, inclusive.

(g) The commissioner shall terminate the registration of any insurer which demonstrates that it no longer is a member of an insurance holding company system.

(h) The commissioner may require or allow two or more affiliated insurers subject to registration hereunder to file a consolidated registration statement.

(i) The commissioner may allow an insurer which is authorized to do business in the commonwealth and which is part of an insurance holding company system to register on behalf of any affiliated insurer which is required to register under subsection (a) and to file all information and material required to be filed under this section.

(j) The provisions of this section shall not apply to any insurer, information or transaction if and to the extent that the commissioner by rule, regulation or order shall exempt the same from the provisions of the this section.

(k) Any person may file with the commissioner a disclaimer of affiliation with any authorized insurer or such a disclaimer may be filed by such insurer or any member of an insurance holding company system. The disclaimer shall fully disclose all material relationships and bases for affiliation between such person and such insurer as well as the basis for disclaiming such affiliation. After a disclaimer has been filed, the insurer shall be relieved of any duty to register or report under this section which may arise out of the insurer’s relationship with such person unless and until the commissioner disallows such a disclaimer. The commissioner shall disallow such a disclaimer only after furnishing all parties in interest with notice and opportunity to be heard and after making specific findings of fact to support such disallowance.

(l) The failure to file a registration statement or any summary of the registration statement thereto required by this section within the time specified for such filing shall be a violation of this section.

(m) Transactions within a holding company system to which an insurer subject to registration is a party shall be subject to the following standards:

(1) the terms shall be fair and reasonable;

(2) charges or fees for services performed shall be reasonable;

(3) expenses incurred and payment received shall be allocated to the insurer in conformity with customary insurance accounting practices consistently applied;

(4) the books, accounts and records of each party to all such transactions shall be so maintained as to clearly and accurately disclose the nature and details of the transactions including such accounting information as is necessary to support the reasonableness of the charges or fees to the respective parties;

(5) the insurer’s surplus as regards policyholders following any dividends or distributions to shareholder affiliates shall be reasonable in relation to the insurer’s outstanding liabilities and adequate to its financial needs;

(6) if an insurer subject to this section is deemed by the commissioner to be in a hazardous financial condition as described in section 3 of chapter 175J or a condition that would be grounds for supervision, conservation or a delinquency proceeding, the commissioner may require the insurer to secure and maintain either a deposit held by the commissioner or a bond, as determined by the insurer at the insurer’s discretion, for the protection of the insurer for the duration of the contract or agreement, or the existence of the condition for which the commissioner required the deposit or the bond; provided, however, that in determining whether a deposit or a bond is required, the commissioner shall consider whether concerns exist with respect to the affiliated person’s ability to fulfill the contract or agreement if the insurer were to be put into liquidation; and provided further, that once the insurer is deemed to be in a hazardous financial condition or a condition that would be grounds for supervision, conservation or a delinquency proceeding and a deposit or bond is deemed necessary by the commissioner, the commissioner may determine the amount of the deposit or bond, not to exceed the value of the contract or agreement in any 1 year, and whether such deposit or bond should be required for a single contract, multiple contracts or a contract only with a specific person;

(7) all records and data of the insurer held by an affiliate are and remain the property of the insurer, are subject to control of the insurer, are identifiable and are segregated or readily capable of segregation, at no additional cost to the insurer, from all other persons’ records and data. This shall include all records and data that are otherwise the property of the insurer, in whatever form maintained, including, but not limited to, claims and claim files, policyholder lists, application files, litigation files, premium records, rate books, underwriting manuals, personnel records, financial records or similar records within the possession, custody or control of the affiliate; provided, however, that at the request of the insurer, the affiliate shall provide that the receiver can obtain a complete set of all records of any type that pertain to the insurer’s business; obtain access to the operating systems on which the data is maintained; obtain the software that runs those systems either through assumption of licensing agreements or otherwise; and restrict the use of the data by the affiliate if it is not operating the insurer’s business; and provided further that the affiliate shall provide a waiver of any landlord lien or other encumbrance to give the insurer access to all records and data in the event of the affiliate’s default under a lease or other agreement; and

(8) premiums or other funds belonging to the insurer that are collected by or held by an affiliate are the exclusive property of the insurer and are subject to the control of the insurer; provided, however, that any right of offset in the event an insurer is placed into receivership shall be subject to sections 180A to 180L1/2, inclusive.

(n) The following transactions involving a domestic insurer and any person in its holding company system may not be entered into unless the insurer has notified the commissioner in writing of its intention to enter into such transaction at least thirty days prior thereto, or such shorter period as the commissioner may permit, and the commissioner has not disapproved it within such period.

(1) sales, purchases, exchanges, loans or extensions of credit, guarantees, or investments provided such transactions are equal to or exceed: (a) with respect to non-life insurers, the lesser of three percent of the insurer’s admitted assets or twenty-five percent of surplus as regards policyholders; (b) with respect to life insurers, three percent of the insurer’s admitted assets: each as of the thirty-first day of December next preceding;

(2) loans or extensions of credit to any person who is not an affiliate, where the insurer makes such loans or extensions of credit with the agreement or understanding that the proceeds of such transactions, in whole or in substantial part, are to be used to make loans or extensions of credit to, to purchase assets of, or to make investments in, any affiliate of the insurer making such loans or extensions of credit provided such transactions are equal to or exceed: (a) with respect to non-life insurers, the lesser of three percent of the insurer’s admitted assets or twenty-five percent of surplus as regards policyholders; (b) with respect to life insurers, three percent of the insurer’s admitted assets: each as of the thirty-first day of December next preceding;

(3) reinsurance agreements or modifications thereto in which the reinsurance premium or a change in the insurer’s liabilities equals or exceeds the lesser of three percent of the insurer’s admitted assets or twenty-five percent of surplus as regards policyholders as of the thirty-first day of December next preceding, including those agreements which may require as consideration the transfer of assets from an insurer to a non-affiliate, if an agreement or understanding exists between the insurer and non-affiliate that any portion of such assets will be transferred to one or more affiliates of the insurer;

(4) all management agreements and service contracts, and all cost-sharing arrangements which are not based on generally accepted accounting principles pertaining to cost allocation, and all cost-sharing arrangements the transactions under which would be reportable as transactions with affiliates on the insurer’s annual statement. The commissioner may exempt from the requirements of this subsection any management agreement, service contract, or cost-sharing arrangement;

(5) any material transactions, specified by regulation, which the commissioner determines may adversely affect the interests of the insurer’s policyholders; or

(6) notifications shall be provided to the commissioner for transactions in clauses (1) to (5), inclusive, which increase or decrease the insurer’s surplus as regards policyholders as of the thirty-first day of December next preceding by five percent or more. This notification shall accompany the next quarterly financial statement filing.

Nothing herein contained shall be deemed to authorize or permit any transactions which, in the case of an insurer not a member of the same holding company system, would be otherwise contrary to law.

(o) A domestic insurer may not enter into transactions which are part of a plan or series of like transactions with persons within the holding company system if the purpose of those separate transactions is to avoid the statutory threshold amount and thus avoid the review that would occur otherwise. If the commissioner determines that such separate transactions were entered into over any twelve month period for such purpose, he may exercise his authority under subsection (b) of section two hundred and six D.

(p) The commissioner, in reviewing transactions pursuant to subsections (m) and (n), shall consider whether the transactions comply with the standards set forth in said subsections (m) and (n) and whether they may adversely affect the interests of policyholders.

(q) The commissioner shall be notified within thirty days of any investment of the domestic insurer in any one corporation if the total investment in such corporation by the insurance holding company system exceeds ten percent of such corporation’s voting securities.

(q1/2)(1) Any affiliate that is party to an agreement or contract with a domestic insurer that is subject to paragraph (4) of subsection (n) shall be subject to the jurisdiction of any supervision, seizure, conservatorship or receivership proceedings against the insurer and to the authority of any supervisor, conservator, rehabilitator or liquidator for the insurer appointed pursuant to sections 180A to 180L1/2, inclusive, for the purpose of interpreting, enforcing and overseeing the affiliate’s obligations under the agreement or contract to perform services for the insurer that:

(i) are an integral part of the insurer’s operations, including, but not limited to management, administrative, accounting, data processing, marketing, underwriting, claims handling, investment or any other similar functions; or

(ii) are essential to the insurer’s ability to fulfill its obligations under insurance policies.

(2) The commissioner may require that an agreement or contract that is subject to paragraph (4) of subsection (n) for the provision of services described in clauses (i) and (ii) of paragraph (1) specify that the affiliate consents to the jurisdiction as set forth in this subsection.

(r) No domestic insurer shall pay any extraordinary dividend or make any other extraordinary distributions to its shareholders until (1) thirty days after the commissioner has received notice of the declaration thereof and has not within such period disapproved such payment, or (2) the commissioner shall have approved such payment within such thirty day period. For purposes of this section, an extraordinary dividend or distribution includes any dividend or distribution of cash or other property, whose fair market value together with other dividends or distributions made within the preceding twelve months exceeds the greater of (i) ten percent of such insurer’s surplus as regards policyholders as of the thirty-first day of December next preceding, or (ii) the net gain from operations of the insurer if the insurer is a life insurance company, or the net income of the insurer if such insurer is not a life insurance company, for the twelve month period ending the thirty-first day of December next preceding, but shall not include pro rata distributions of any class of the insurer’s own securities.

Notwithstanding any other provision of the General Laws, an insurer may declare an extraordinary dividend or distribution which is conditional on the commissioner’s approval thereof, and such a declaration shall confer no rights upon shareholders until (1) the commissioner has approved the payment of such dividend or distribution or (2) the commissioner has not disapproved such payment within the thirty day period referred to above.

(s)(1) Notwithstanding the control of a domestic insurer by any person, the officers and directors of the insurer shall not thereby be relieved of any obligation or liability to which they would otherwise be subject by law, and the insurer shall be managed so as to assure its separate operating identity consistent with this chapter.

(2) Nothing herein shall preclude a domestic insurer from having or sharing a common management or cooperative or joint use of personnel, property or services with one or more other persons under arrangements meeting the standards of subsection (m) of section two hundred and six D.

(t) For purposes of sections two hundred and six to two hundred and six D, inclusive, in determining whether an insurer’s surplus as regards policyholders is reasonable in relation to the insurer’s outstanding liabilities and adequate to its financial needs, the following factors, among others, shall be considered:

(1) the size of the insurer as measured by its assets, capital and surplus, reserves, premium writings, insurance in force and other appropriate criteria;

(2) the extent to which the insurer’s business is diversified among the several lines of insurance;

(3) the number and size of risks insured in each line of business;

(4) the extent of the geographical dispersion of the insurer’s insured risks;

(5) the nature and extent of the insurer’s reinsurance program;

(6) the quality, diversification and liquidity of the insurer’s investment portfolio;

(7) the recent past and projected future trend in the size of the insurer’s investment portfolio and surplus to policyholders;

(8) the surplus as regards policyholders maintained by other comparable insurers;

(9) the adequacy of the insurer’s reserves;

(10) the quality and liquidity of investments in affiliates. The commissioner may treat any such investment as a disallowed asset for purposes of determining the adequacy of surplus as regards policyholders whenever in the judgment such investment so warrants; and

(11) the quality of the company’s earnings and the extent to which the reported earnings include extraordinary items.

(u)(1) Subject to the limitation contained in this section and in addition to the powers which the commissioner has under section four relating to the examination of insurers, the commissioner shall also have the power to order any insurer registered under section two hundred and six C to produce such records, books, or other information papers in the possession of the insurer or its affiliates as are reasonably necessary to ascertain the financial condition of such insurer or to determine compliance with this chapter. In the event such insurer fails to comply with such order, the commissioner shall have the power to examine such affiliates to obtain such information.

(2) The commissioner may retain at the registered insurer’s expense such attorneys, actuaries, accountants and other experts not otherwise a part of the commissioner’s staff as shall be reasonably necessary to assist in the conduct of the examination under paragraph (1) of subsection (u). Any persons so retained shall be under the direction and control of the commissioner and shall act in a purely advisory capacity.

(3) Each registered insurer producing for examination records, books and papers pursuant to said paragraph (1) of said subsection (u) shall be liable for and shall pay the expense of such examination in accordance with section four.

(1) Documents, materials or other information in the possession or control of the division that are obtained by or disclosed to the commissioner or any other person in the course of an examination or investigation made pursuant to subsection (u) and all information reported or provided to the division pursuant to this section shall be recognized as being proprietary and containing trade secrets, shall be confidential by law and privileged, shall not be a public record under clause Twenty-sixth of section 7 of chapter 4 or under chapter 66, shall not be subject to subpoena and shall not be subject to discovery or admissible in evidence in any private civil action; provided, however, that the commissioner may use the documents, materials or other information in the furtherance of any regulatory or legal action brought as a part of the commissioner’s official duties. The commissioner shall not otherwise make the documents, materials or other information public without the prior written consent of the insurer to which it pertains unless the commissioner, after giving the insurer and its affiliates who would be affected thereby notice and opportunity to be heard, determines that the interest of policyholders, shareholders or the public shall be served by the publication thereof, in which event the commissioner may publish all or any part in such manner as may be considered appropriate.

(i) For purposes of the information reported and provided to the division pursuant to paragraph (2) of subsection (z), the commissioner shall maintain the confidentiality of the group capital calculation and group capital ratio produced within the calculation and any group capital information received from an insurance holding company supervised by the Federal Reserve Board or any U.S. group-wide supervisor.

(ii) For purposes of the information reported and provided to the division pursuant to paragraph (3) of subsection (z), the commissioner shall maintain the confidentiality of the liquidity stress test results and supporting disclosures and any liquidity stress test information received from an insurance holding company supervised by the Federal Reserve Board and non-U.S. group-wide supervisors.

(2) Neither the commissioner nor any person who received documents, materials or other information while acting under the authority of the commissioner or with whom such documents, materials or other information are shared pursuant to this section shall be permitted or required to testify in any private civil action concerning any confidential documents, materials or information subject to paragraph (1) of subsection (v).

(3) In order to assist in the performance of the commissioner’s duties, the commissioner:

(i) may share documents, materials or other information, including the confidential and privileged documents, materials or information subject to paragraph (1), including proprietary and trade secret documents with other state, federal and international regulatory agencies, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners and its affiliates and subsidiaries, the International Association of Insurance Supervisors, the Bank for International Settlements, the Federal Insurance Office and state, federal and international law enforcement authorities, including members of any supervisory college described in subsection (x); provided, however, that the recipient shall agree in writing to maintain the confidentiality and privileged status of the document, material or other information and has verified in writing the legal authority to maintain confidentiality;

(ii) may receive documents, materials or information, including otherwise confidential and privileged documents, materials or information, including proprietary and trade-secret information from the National Association of Insurance Commissioners and its affiliates and subsidiaries, the International Association of Insurance Supervisors, the Bank for International Settlements, the Federal Insurance Office and from regulatory and law enforcement officials of other foreign or domestic jurisdictions and shall maintain as confidential and privileged any document, material or information received with notice or the understanding that it is confidential or privileged under the laws of the jurisdiction that is the source of the document, material or information; and

(iii) shall enter into written agreements with the National Association of Insurance Commissioners and any third-party consultant designated by the commissioner governing sharing and the use of information provided pursuant to this subsection that shall:

(A) specify procedures and protocols regarding the confidentiality and security of information shared with the National Association of Insurance Commissioners and any third-party consultant designated by the commissioner pursuant to this section, including procedures and protocols for sharing by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners with other state, federal or international regulators;

(B) provide within the agreement that the recipient agrees in writing to maintain the confidentiality and privileged status of the documents, materials or other information and has verified in writing the legal authority to maintain such confidentiality;

(C) specify that ownership of information shared with the National Association of Insurance Commissioners or a third-party consultant designated by the commissioner pursuant to this section remains with the commissioner and the National Association of Insurance Commissioners or the third-party consultant, and that use of the information is subject to the direction of the commissioner;

(D) excluding documents, materials or information reported pursuant to paragraph (3) of subsection (z), prohibit the National Association of Insurance Commissioners or a third-party consultant designated by the commissioner pursuant to this section from storing the information shared pursuant to this section in a permanent database after the underlying analysis is completed;

(E) require prompt notice to be given to an insurer whose confidential information is in the possession of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners or a third-party consultant designated by the commissioner pursuant to this section and is subject to a request or subpoena to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners or a third-party consultant designated by the commissioner for disclosure or production;

(F) require the National Association of Insurance Commissioners or a third-party consultant designated by the commissioner pursuant to this section to consent to intervention by an insurer in any judicial or administrative action in which the National Association of Insurance Commissioners or the third-party consultant may be required to disclose confidential information about the insurer shared with the National Association of Insurance Commissioners or the third-party consultant; and

(G) for documents, material or information reporting pursuant to paragraph (3) of subsection (z), in the case of an agreement involving a third-party consultant designated by the commissioner pursuant to this section, provide for notification of the identity of the consultant to the applicable insurers.

(4) The sharing of information by the commissioner pursuant to this section shall not constitute a delegation of regulatory authority or rulemaking and the commissioner is solely responsible for the administration, execution and enforcement of this section.

(5) No waiver of any applicable privilege or claim of confidentiality in the documents, materials or information shall occur as a result of disclosure to the commissioner under this section or as a result of sharing as authorized in paragraph (3).

(6) Documents, materials or other information in the possession or control of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners pursuant to this section shall be confidential by law and privileged, shall not be a public record under clause Twenty-sixth of section 7 of chapter 4, shall not be subject to subpoena and shall not be subject to discovery or admissible in evidence in any private civil action.

(7) The group capital calculation and resulting group capital ratio required pursuant to paragraph (2) of subsection (z) and the liquidity stress test along with its results and supporting disclosures required pursuant to paragraph (3) of said subsection (z) shall be regulatory tools for assessing group risks and capital adequacy and group liquidity risks, respectively, and are not intended as a means to rank insurers or insurance holding company systems generally. Except as otherwise may be required pursuant to this section, the making, publishing, disseminating, circulating or placing before the public in a newspaper, magazine or other publication, or in the form of a notice, circular, pamphlet, letter or poster, or over any radio or television station or any electronic means of communication available to the public, or in any other way as an advertisement, announcement or statement containing a representation or statement with regard to the group capital calculation, group capital ratio, the liquidity stress test results or supporting disclosures for the liquidity stress test of any insurer or any insurer group, or of any component derived in the calculation by any insurer, broker, or other person engaged in any manner in the insurance business shall be deemed misleading and shall be prohibited; provided, however, that if any materially false statement with respect to the group capital calculation, resulting group capital ratio, an inappropriate comparison of any amount to an insurer’s or insurance group’s capital calculation or resulting group capital ratio, liquidity stress test result, supporting disclosures for the liquidity stress test or an inappropriate comparison of any amount to an insurer’s or insurance group’s liquidity stress test result or supporting disclosures is published in any written publication and the insurer is able to demonstrate to the commissioner with substantial proof the falsity of such statement or the inappropriateness, the insurer may publish announcements in a written publication if the sole purpose of the announcement is to rebut the materially false statement.

(w) The commissioner may, pursuant to chapter thirty A, upon notice and opportunity for all interested parties to be heard, issue such rules, regulations and orders as shall be necessary to carry out the provisions of sections two hundred and six to two hundred and six D, inclusive.

(x)(1) For purposes of this subsection, the term ”supervisory college” shall mean a meeting of insurance regulators or supervisors to discuss regulatory oversight of 1 specific insurance group that is writing significant amounts of insurance in several jurisdictions to facilitate both the supervision of the group as a whole, on a group-wide basis, and to improve the legal entity supervision of the entities within the insurance group.

(2) With respect to any insurer registered under this section and in accordance with paragraph (4), the commissioner may participate in a supervisory college for any domestic insurer that is part of an insurance holding company system with international operations in order to determine compliance with this section by the insurer. The powers of the commissioner with respect to supervisory colleges shall include, but shall not be limited to:

(i) initiating the establishment of a supervisory college;

(ii) clarifying the membership and participation of other supervisors in the supervisory college;

(iii) clarifying the functions of the supervisory college and the role of other regulators, including the establishment of a group-wide supervisor;

(iv) coordinating the ongoing activities of the supervisory college, including planning meetings, supervisory activities and processes for information sharing; and

(v) establishing a crisis management plan.

(3) Each registered insurer subject to this subsection shall be liable for and shall pay the reasonable expenses of the commissioner’s participation in a supervisory college in accordance with paragraph (4), including reasonable travel expenses. For purposes of this section, a supervisory college may be convened as either a temporary or permanent forum for communication and cooperation between the regulators charged with the supervision of the insurer or its affiliates and the commissioner may establish a regular assessment to the insurer for the payment of these expenses.

(4) In order to assess the business strategy, financial position, legal and regulatory position, risk exposure, risk management and governance processes, and as part of the examination of individual insurers in accordance with subsection (u), the commissioner may participate in a supervisory college with other regulators charged with supervision of the insurer or its affiliates, including other state, federal and international regulatory agencies. The commissioner may enter into agreements providing the basis for cooperation between the commissioner and the other regulatory agencies and the activities of the supervisory college. Nothing in this subsection shall delegate to the supervisory college the authority of the commissioner to regulate or supervise the insurer or its affiliates within its jurisdiction.

(y)(1) The commissioner may act as the group-wide supervisor for any internationally active insurance group in accordance with this subsection; provided however, the commissioner may otherwise acknowledge another regulatory official as the group-wide supervisor if the internationally active insurance group:

(i) does not have substantial insurance operations in the United States;

(ii) has substantial insurance operations in the United States, but not the commonwealth; or

(iii) has substantial insurance operations in the United States and the commonwealth, but the commissioner has determined pursuant to the factors set forth in paragraphs (2) and (6) that another regulatory official is the appropriate group-wide supervisor.

An insurance holding company system that does not qualify as an internationally active insurance group may request that the commissioner make a determination or acknowledgement as to a group-wide supervisor.

(2) In cooperation with other state, federal and international regulatory agencies, the commissioner shall identify a single group-wide supervisor for an internationally active insurance group. The commissioner may determine that the commissioner is the appropriate group-wide supervisor for an internationally active insurance group that conducts substantial insurance operations concentrated in the commonwealth; provided however, the commissioner may determine that it is appropriate to acknowledge another supervisor to serve as the group-wide supervisor. The acknowledgement of the group-wide supervisor shall be made after consideration of the factors listed in clauses (i) to (v) of the second paragraph, and shall be made in cooperation with and subject to the acknowledgment of other regulatory officials involved with supervision of members of the internationally active insurance group, and in consultation with the internationally active insurance group.

The commissioner may acknowledge that a regulatory official from another jurisdiction is the appropriate group-wide supervisor for the internationally active insurance group. The commissioner shall consider the following factors when making a determination or acknowledgement under this subsection:

(i) the domicile of the insurers within the internationally active insurance group that hold the largest share of the group’s written premiums, assets or liabilities;

(ii) the domicile of the top-tiered insurers in the insurance holding company system of the internationally active insurance group;

(iii) the location of the executive offices or largest operational offices of the internationally active insurance group;

(iv) whether another regulatory official is acting or is seeking to act as the group-wide supervisor under a regulatory system that the commissioner determines to be substantially similar to the system of regulation by the commonwealth, or otherwise sufficient in terms of providing for group-wide supervision, enterprise risk analysis and cooperation with other regulatory officials; and

(v) whether another regulatory official acting or seeking to act as the group-wide supervisor provides the commissioner with reasonably reciprocal recognition and cooperation.

(3) Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, when another regulatory official is acting as the group-wide supervisor of an internationally active insurance group, the commissioner shall acknowledge that regulatory official as the group-wide supervisor. However, in the event of a material change in the internationally active insurance group that results in: (i) the internationally active insurance group’s insurers domiciled in the commonwealth holding the largest share of the group’s premiums, assets or liabilities; or (ii) the commonwealth being the domicile of the top-tiered insurers in the insurance holding company system of the internationally active insurance group, the commissioner shall make a determination or acknowledgment as to the appropriate group-wide supervisor for such an internationally active insurance group pursuant to paragraph (2).

(4) Pursuant to subsection (u), the commissioner may collect from any insurer registered pursuant to subsection (a) all information necessary to determine if the commissioner may act as the group-wide supervisor of an internationally active insurance group or acknowledge another regulatory official to act as the group-wide supervisor. Prior to issuing a determination that an internationally active insurance group is subject to group-wide supervision by the commissioner, the commissioner shall notify the insurer registered pursuant to subsection (a) and the ultimate controlling person within the internationally active insurance group. The internationally active insurance group shall have not less than 30 days to provide the commissioner with additional information pertinent to the pending determination. The commissioner shall publish on the division of insurance’s website the identity of internationally active insurance groups that the commissioner has determined are subject to group-wide supervision by the commissioner.

(5) If the commissioner is the group-wide supervisor for an internationally active insurance group, the commissioner may engage in any of the following group-wide supervision activities:

(i) assess the enterprise risks within the internationally active insurance group to ensure that the material financial condition and liquidity risks to the members of the internationally active insurance group that are engaged in the business of insurance are identified by management and reasonable and effective mitigation measures are in place;

(ii) request, from any member of an internationally active insurance group subject to the commissioner’s supervision, information necessary and appropriate to assess enterprise risk, including but not limited to, information about the members of the internationally active insurance group regarding governance, risk assessment and management; capital adequacy; and material intercompany transactions;

(iii) coordinate and, through the authority of the regulatory officials of the jurisdictions where members of the internationally active insurance group are domiciled, compel development and implementation of reasonable measures designed to ensure that the internationally active insurance group is able to timely recognize and mitigate enterprise risks to members of such internationally active insurance group that are engaged in the business of insurance;

(iv) communicate with other state, federal and international regulatory agencies for members within the internationally active insurance group and share relevant information subject to the confidentiality provisions of subsection (v), through supervisory colleges as set forth in subsection (x) or otherwise;

(v) enter into agreements with or obtain documentation providing the basis for or otherwise clarifying the commissioner’s role as group-wide supervisor, including provisions for resolving disputes with other regulatory officials from: any insurer registered under subsection (a), any member of the internationally active insurance group and any other state, federal and international regulatory agencies for members of the internationally active insurance group. Said agreements or documentation shall not serve as evidence that an insurer or person within an insurance holding company system not domiciled or incorporated in the commonwealth is doing business in the commonwealth or is otherwise subject to jurisdiction in this state in any proceeding; and

(vi) other group-wide supervision activities, consistent with the authorities and purposes enumerated in this paragraph, as considered necessary by the commissioner.

(6) If the commissioner acknowledges that another regulatory official from a jurisdiction that is not accredited by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners is the group-wide supervisor, the commissioner may reasonably cooperate, through supervisory colleges or otherwise, with group-wide supervision undertaken by the group-wide supervisor, provided that: (i) the commissioner’s cooperation is in compliance with the laws of the commonwealth; and (ii) the regulatory official acknowledged as the group-wide supervisor also recognizes and cooperates with the commissioner’s activities as a group-wide supervisor for other internationally active insurance groups where applicable. If such recognition and cooperation is not reasonably reciprocal, the commissioner may refuse recognition and cooperation.

(7) The commissioner may enter into agreements with or obtain documentation from any insurer registered under subsection (a), any affiliate of said insurer and other state, federal and international regulatory agencies for members of the internationally active insurance group that provide the basis for or otherwise clarify a regulatory official’s role as group-wide supervisor.

(8) A registered insurer subject to this subsection shall be liable for and shall pay the reasonable expenses of the commissioner’s participation in the administration of this subsection, including the engagement of attorneys, actuaries and any other professionals and all reasonable travel expenses.

(z)(1) The ultimate controlling person of every insurer subject to registration shall also file an annual enterprise risk report. The report shall, to the best of the ultimate controlling person’s knowledge and belief, identify the material risks within the insurance holding company system that could pose enterprise risk to the insurer. The report shall be filed with the lead state commissioner of the insurance holding company system as determined by the procedures within the financial analysis handbook adopted by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners.

(2) Except as otherwise provided in this paragraph, the ultimate controlling person of every insurer subject to registration pursuant to this section shall concurrently file with the registration statement an annual group capital calculation as directed by the lead state commissioner. The report shall be completed in accordance with the National Association of Insurance Commissioner’s group capital calculation instructions, which may permit the lead state commissioner to allow a controlling person that is not the ultimate controlling person to file the group capital calculation. The report shall be filed with the lead state commissioner of the insurance holding company system as determined by the commissioner in accordance with the procedures within the financial analysis handbook adopted by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners. Insurance holding company systems described below shall be exempt from filing the group capital calculation:

(i) An insurance holding company system that has only 1 insurer within its holding company structure, that only writes business and is only licensed in its domestic state and assumes no business from any other insurer;

(ii) An insurance holding company system that is required to perform a group capital calculation specified by the United States Federal Reserve Board; provided, however, that the lead state commissioner shall request the calculation from the Federal Reserve Board under the terms of information sharing agreements in effect; and provided further, that if the Federal Reserve Board cannot share the calculation with the lead state commissioner, the insurance holding company system shall not be exempt from the group capital calculation filing;

(iii) An insurance holding company system whose non-United States group-wide supervisor is located within a reciprocal jurisdiction as described in section 20A that recognizes the United States regulatory approach to group supervision and group capital; and

(iv) An insurance holding company system:

(A) That provides information to the lead state that meets the requirements for accreditation under the National Association of Insurance Commissioners financial standards and accreditation program, either directly or indirectly through the group-wide supervisor, who has determined such information is satisfactory to allow the lead state to comply with the National Association of Insurance Commissioners group supervision approach, as detailed in the National Association of Insurance Commissioners financial analysis handbook; and

(B) Whose non-United States group-wide supervisor that is not in a reciprocal jurisdiction recognizes and accepts, as specified by the commissioner in regulation, the group capital calculation as the world-wide group capital assessment for United States insurance groups who operate in that jurisdiction.

(3)(i) Notwithstanding clauses (iii) and (iv) of paragraph (2), a lead state commissioner shall require the group capital calculation for United States operations of any non-United States based insurance holding company system where, after any necessary consultation with other supervisors or officials, it is deemed appropriate by the lead state commissioner for prudential oversight and solvency monitoring purposes or for ensuring the competitiveness of the insurance marketplace.

(ii) Notwithstanding the exemptions from filing the group capital calculation stated in clauses (i) to (iv), inclusive, of paragraph (2), the lead state commissioner shall have the discretion to exempt the ultimate controlling person from filing the annual group capital calculation or to accept a limited group capital filing or report in accordance with criteria as specified by the commissioner in regulation.

(iii) If the lead state commissioner determines that an insurance holding company system no longer meets at least 1 of the requirements for an exemption from filing the group capital calculation under this subsection, the insurance holding company system shall file the group capital calculation at the next annual filing date unless given an extension by the lead state commissioner based on reasonable grounds shown.

(4) The ultimate controlling person of every insurer subject to registration pursuant to this section and scoped into the National Association of Insurance Commissioners liquidity stress test Framework shall file the results of a specific year’s liquidity stress test. The filing shall be made to the lead state insurance commissioner of the insurance holding company system as determined by the procedures within the financial analysis handbook adopted by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners.

(i) The National Association of Insurance Commissioners liquidity stress test Framework includes scope criteria applicable to a specific data year. The scope criteria are reviewed at least annually by the financial stability task force or its successor. Any change to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners liquidity stress test framework or to the data year for which the scope criteria are to be measured shall be effective on January 1 of the year following the calendar year when such changes are adopted. Insurers meeting at least 1 threshold of the scope criteria shall be considered scoped into the National Association of Insurance Commissioners liquidity stress test framework for the specified data year unless the lead state insurance commissioner, in consultation with the National Association of Insurance Commissioners financial stability task force or its successor, determines the insurer should not be scoped into the framework for that data year. Similarly, insurers that do not trigger at least 1 threshold of the scope criteria shall be considered scoped out of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners liquidity stress test framework for the specified data year, unless the lead state insurance commissioner, in consultation with the National Association of Insurance Commissioners financial stability task force or its successor, determines the insurer should be scoped into the framework for that data year.

(A) The lead state insurance commissioner, in consultation with the financial stability task force or its successor, shall take into consideration how best to avoid having insurers scoped in and out of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners liquidity stress test framework on a frequent basis as part of the determination for an insurer.

(ii) The performance of, and filing of the results from, a specific year’s liquidity stress test shall comply with the National Association of Insurance Commissioners liquidity stress test framework’s instructions and reporting templates for that year and any lead state insurance commissioner determinations, in consultation with the financial stability task force or its successor, provided within the framework.