N.D. Admin. Code 45-04-04-05

Current through Supplement No. 394, October, 2024
Section 45-04-04-05 - Separate accounts

The following requirements apply to the establishment and administration of variable life insurance separate accounts by any domestic insurer

1.Establishment and administration of separate accounts. Any domestic insurer issuing variable life insurance shall establish one or more separate accounts pursuant to North Dakota Century Code sections 26.1-33-13 and 26.1-34-11.
a. If no law or other regulation provides for the custody of separate account assets and if such insurer is not the custodian of such separate account assets, all contracts for custody of such assets must be in writing and the commissioner may review and approve of both the terms of any such contract and the proposed custodian prior to the transfer of custody.
b. The insurer may not without the prior written approval of the commissioner employ in any material connection with the handling of separate account assets any person who:
(1) Within the last ten years has been convicted of any felony or misdemeanor arising out of such person's conduct involving embezzlement, fraudulent, conversion, or misappropriation offundsorsecuritiesor involving violation of 18 U.S.C. 1341, 1342, or 1343;
(2) Within the last ten years has been found by any state regulatory authority to have violated or has acknowledged violation of any provision of any state insurance law involving fraud, deceit, or knowing misrepresentation; or
(3) Within the last ten years has been found by federal or state regulatory authorities to have violated or has acknowledged violation of any provision of federal or state securities laws involving fraud, deceit, or knowing misrepresentation.
c. All persons with access to the cash, securities, or other assets of the separate account must be under bond in the amount of not less than a value indexed to the fidelity bonding recommendations stated in the financial condition examiners handbook published by the national association of insurance commissioners, 2009 edition, regarding personnel handling general account assets.
d. The assets of such separate accounts must be valued at least as often as variable benefits are determined but in any event at least monthly.
2.Amounts in the separate account. The insurer shall maintain in each separate account assets with a value at least equal to the greater of the valuation reserves for the variable portion of the variable life insurance policies or the benefit base for such policies.
3.Investments by the separate account.
a. No sale, exchange, or other transfer of assets may be made by an insurer or any of its affiliates between any of its separate accounts or between any other investment account and one or more of its separate accounts unless:
(1) In case of a transfer into a separate account, the transfer is made solely to establish the account or to support the operation of the policies with respect to the separate account to which the transfer is made; and
(2) The transfer, whether into or from a separate account, is made by a transfer of cash; but other assets may be transferred if approved by the commissioner in advance.
b. The separate account must have sufficient net investment income and readily marketable assets to meet anticipated withdrawals under policies funded by the account.
4.Limitations on ownership.
a. A separate account may not purchase or otherwise acquire the securities of any issuer, other than securities issued or guaranteed as to principal and interest by the United States, if immediately after such purchase or acquisition the value of such investment, together with prior investments of such account in such security valued as required by these regulations, would exceed ten percent of the value of the assets of the separate account. The commissioner may waive this limitation in writing if the commissioner believes waiver will not render the operation of the separate account hazardous to the public or the policyholders in this state.
b. No separate account may purchase or otherwise acquire the voting securities of an issuer if as a result of such acquisition the insurer and its separate accounts, in the aggregate, will own more than ten percent of the total issued and outstanding voting securities of the issuer The commissioner may waive this limitation in writing if the commissioner believes waiver will not render the operation of the separate account hazardous to the public or the policyholders in this state or jeopardize the independent operation of the issuer of such securities.
c. The percentage limitation specified in subdivision a may not be construed to preclude the investment of the assets of separate accounts in shares of investment companies registered pursuant to the Investment Company Act of 1940 or other pools of investment assets if the investments and investment policies of such investment companies or assets pools comply substantially with subsection 3 and the other applicable portions of this chapter.
5.Valuation of separate account assets. Investments of the separate account must be valued at their market value on the date of valuation, or at amortized cost if it approximates market value.
6.Separate account investment policy. The investment policy of a separate account operated by a domestic insurer filed under subdivision c of subsection 2 of section 45-04-04-02 may not be changed without first filing the change with the commissioner.
a. Any change filed pursuant to this subsection is effective sixty days after the date it was filed with the commissioner, unless the commissioner notifies the insurer before the end of such sixty-day period of approval of the proposed change. At any time the commissioner may, after notice and public hearing, disapprove any change that has become effective pursuant to this subsection.
b. The commissioner may disapprove the change if the commissioner determines that the change would be detrimental to the interests of the policyholders participating in such separate account.
7.Charges against separate account. The insurer must disclose in writing, prior to or contemporaneously with delivery of the policy, all charges that may be made against the separate account, including the following:
a. Taxes or reserves for taxes attributable to investment gains and income of the separate account.
b. Actual cost of reasonable brokerage fees and similar direct acquisition and sale costs incurred in the purchase or sale of separate account assets.
c. Actuarially determined costs of insurance (tabular costs) and the release of separate account liabilities.
d. Charges for administrative expenses and investment management expenses, including internal costs attributable to the investment management of assets of the separate account.
e. A charge, at a rate specified in the policy, for mortality and expense guarantees.
f. Any amounts in excess of those required to be held in the separate accounts.
g. Charges for incidental insurance benefits.
8.Standards of conduct. Every insurer seeking approval to enter into the variable life insurance business in this state shall adopt by formal action of its board of directors a written statement specifying the standards of conduct of the insurer, its officers, directors, employees, and affiliates with respect to the purchase or sale of investments of separate accounts. The standards of conduct must be binding on the insurer and those to whom it refers. A code or codes of ethics meeting the requirements of section 17j under the Investment Company Act of 1940 and applicable rules and regulations thereunder satisfies the provisions of this subsection.
9.Conflicts of interest. Rules under any provision of the insurance laws of this state or any rule applicable to the officers and directors of insurance companies with respect to conflicts of interest also apply to members of any separate account's committee or other similar body.
10.Investment advisory services to a separate account. An insurer may not enter into a contract under which any person undertakes, for a fee, to regularly furnish investment advice to the insurer with respect to its separate accounts maintained for variable life insurance policies unless the investment advisory contract is in writing and provides that it may be terminated by the insurer without penalty to the insurer or the separate account upon no more than sixty clays' written notice to the investment adviser and unless:
a. The person providing such advice is registered as an investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940;
b. The person providing such advice is an investment manager under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 with respect to the assets of each employee benefit plan allocated to the separate account; or
c. The insurer has filed with the commissioner and continues to file annually the following information and statements concerning the proposed adviser:
(1) The name and form of organization, state of organization, and its principal place of business;
(2) The names and addresses of its partners, officers, directors, and persons performing similar functions or, if such an investment adviser be an individual, of such individual;
(3) A written standard of conduct complying in substance with the requirements of subsection 8 which has been adopted by the investment adviser and is applicable to the investment adviser, its officers, directors, and affiliates;
(4) A statement provided by the proposed adviser as to whether the adviser or any person associated therewith:
(a) Has been convicted within ten years of any felony, or misdemeanor arising out of such person's conduct as an employee, salesman, officer or director of an insurance company, a banker, an insurance agent, a securities broker, or an investment adviser involving embezzlement, fraudulent conversion, or misappropriation of funds or securities, or involving the violation of 18 U.S.C. 1341, 1342, or 1343;
(b) Has been permanently or temporarily enjoined by order, judgment, or decree of any court of competent jurisdiction from acting as an investment adviser, underwriter, broker, or dealer, or as an affiliated person or as an employee of any investment company, bank, or insurance company, or from engaging or in continuing any conduct or practice in connection with any such activity;
(c) Has been found by federal or state regulatory authorities to have willfully violated or have acknowledged willful violation of any provision of federal or state securities laws or state insurance laws or of any rule or regulation under any such laws; or
(d) Has been censured, denied an investment adviser registration, had a registration as an investment adviser revoked or suspended, or been barred or suspended from being associated with an investment adviser by order of federal or state regulatory authorities.

The commissioner may, after notice and opportunity for hearing, by order require such investment advisory contract to be terminated if the commissioner deems continued operation thereunder to be hazardous to the public or the insurer's policyholders.

N.D. Admin Code 45-04-04-05

Effective June 1, 1984; amended effective April 1, 2010.

General Authority: NDCC 26.1-33-17, 26.1-34-11

Law Implemented: NDCC 26.1-33, 26.1-34