A-SHARE
VARIABLE ANNUITY
A form of
variable annuity contract where the contract holder pays sales
charges up front rather than eventually having to pay a surrender
charge.
ACCELERATED
DEATH BENEFITS
A life insurance
policy option that provides policy proceeds to insured individuals
over their lifetimes, in the event of a terminal illness. This is in
lieu of a traditional policy that pays beneficiaries after the
insured’s death. Such benefits kick in if the insured becomes
terminally ill, needs extreme medical intervention, or must reside
in a nursing home. The payments made while the insured is living are
deducted from any death benefits paid to beneficiaries.
ACCIDENT AND
HEALTH INSURANCE
Coverage for
accidental injury, accidental death, and related health expenses.
Benefits will pay for preventative services, medical expenses, and
catastrophic care, with limits.
ACCOUNT
RECEIVABLES
See Receivables
ACTUAL CASH
VALUE
A form of
insurance that pays damages equal to the replacement value of
damaged property minus depreciation. (See Replacement cost)
ACTUARY
An insurance
professional skilled in the analysis, evaluation, and management of
statistical information. Evaluates insurance firms’ reserves,
determines rates and rating methods, and determines other business
and financial risks.
ADDITIONAL
LIVING EXPENSES
Extra charges
covered by homeowners policies over and above the policyholder's
customary living expenses. They kick in when the insured requires
temporary shelter due to damage by a covered peril that makes the
home temporarily uninhabitable.
ADJUSTER
An individual
employed by a property/casualty insurer to evaluate losses and
settle policyholder claims. These adjusters differ from public
adjusters, who negotiate with insurers on behalf of policyholders,
and receive a portion of a claims settlement. Independent adjusters
are independent contractors who adjust claims for different
insurance companies.
ADMITTED
ASSETS
Assets recognized
and accepted by state insurance laws in determining the solvency of
insurers and reinsurers. To make it easier to assess an insurance
company’s financial position, state statutory accounting rules do
not permit certain assets to be included on the balance sheet. Only
assets that can be easily sold in the event of liquidation or
borrowed against, and receivables for which payment can be
reasonably anticipated, are included in admitted assets. (See
Assets)
ADMITTED
COMPANY
An insurance
company licensed and authorized to do business in a particular
state.
ADVERSE
SELECTION
The tendency of
those exposed to a higher risk to seek more insurance coverage than
those at a lower risk. Insurers react either by charging higher
premiums or not insuring at all, as in the case of floods. (Flood
insurance is provided by the federal government but sold mostly
through the private market.) In the case of natural disasters, such
as earthquakes, adverse selection concentrates risk instead of
spreading it. Insurance works best when risk is shared among large
numbers of policyholders.
AFFINITY
SALES
Selling insurance
through groups such as professional and business associations.
AFTERMARKET
PARTS
See Crash parts;
Generic auto parts
AGENCY
COMPANIES
Companies that
market and sell products via independent agents.
AGENT
Insurance is sold
by two types of agents: independent agents, who are self-employed,
represent several insurance companies and are paid on commission,
and exclusive or captive agents, who represent only one insurance
company and are either salaried or work on commission. Insurance
companies that use exclusive or captive agents are called direct
writers.
ALIEN
INSURANCE COMPANY
An insurance
company incorporated under the laws of a foreign country, as opposed
to a foreign insurance company that does business in states outside
its own.
ALLIED LINES
Property
insurance that is usually bought in conjunction with fire insurance;
it includes wind, water damage, and vandalism coverage.
ALTERNATIVE
DISPUTE RESOLUTION / ADR
Alternative to
going to court to settle disputes. Methods include arbitration,
where disputing parties agree to be bound to the decision of an
independent third party, and mediation, where a third party tries to
arrange a settlement between the two sides.
ALTERNATIVE
MARKETS
Mechanisms used
to fund self-insurance. This includes captives, which are insurers
owned by one or more non-insurers to provide owners with coverage.
Risk-retention groups, formed by members of similar professions or
businesses to obtain liability insurance, are also a form of
self-insurance.
ANNUAL
ANNUITY CONTRACT FEE
Covers the cost
of administering an annuity contract.
ANNUAL
STATEMENT
Summary of an
insurer’s or reinsurer’s financial operations for a particular year,
including a balance sheet. It is filed with the state insurance
department of each jurisdiction in which the company is licensed to
conduct business.
ANNUITANT
The person(s) who
receives the income from an annuity contract. Usually the owner of
the contract or his or her spouse.
ANNUITIZATION
The conversion of
the account balance of a deferred annuity contract to income
payments.
ANNUITY
A life insurance
product that pays periodic income benefits for a specific period of
time or over the course of the annuitant’s lifetime. There are two
basic types of annuities: deferred and immediate: Deferred annuities
allow assets to grow tax deferred over time before being converted
to payments to the annuitant. Immediate annuities allow payments to
begin within about a year of purchase.
ANNUITY
ACCUMULATION PHASE OR PERIOD
The period during
which the owner of a deferred annuity makes payments to build up
assets.
ANNUITY
ADMINISTRATIVE CHARGES
Covers the cost
of customer services for owners of variable annuities.
ANNUITY
BENEFICIARY
In certain types
of annuities, a person who receives annuity contract payments if the
annuity owner or annuitant dies while payments are still due.
ANNUITY
CONTRACT
An agreement
similar to an insurance policy for other insurance products such as
auto insurance.
ANNUITY
CONTRACT OWNER
The person or
entity that purchases an annuity and has all rights to the contract.
Usually, but not always, the annuitant (the person who receives
incomes from the contract).
ANNUITY DEATH
BENEFITS
The guarantee
that if an annuity contract owner dies before annuitization (the
switchover from the savings to the payment phase) the beneficiary
will receive the value of the annuity that is due.
ANNUITY
INSURANCE CHARGES
Covers
administrative and mortality and expense risk costs.
ANNUITY
INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT FEE
The fee paid for
the management of variable annuity invested assets.
ANNUITY
ISSUER
The insurance
company that issues the annuity.
ANNUITY
PROSPECTUS
Legal document
providing detailed information about variable annuity contracts.
Must be offered to each prospective buyer.
ANNUITY
PURCHASE RATE
The cost of an
annuity based on such factors as the age and gender of the contract
owner.
ANTITRUST
LAWS
Laws that
prohibit companies from working as a group to set prices, restrict
supplies or stop competition in the marketplace. The insurance
industry is subject to state antitrust laws but has a limited
exemption from federal antitrust laws. This exemption, set out in
the McCarran-Ferguson Act, permits insurers to jointly develop
common insurance forms and share loss data to help them price
policies.
APPORTIONMENT
The dividing of a
loss proportionately among two or more insurers that cover the same
loss.
APPRAISAL
A survey to
determine a property’s insurable value, or the amount of a loss.
ARBITRATION
Procedure in
which an insurance company and the insured or a vendor agree to
settle a claim dispute by accepting a decision made by a third
party.
ARSON
The deliberate
setting of a fire.
ASSET-BACKED
SECURITIES
Bonds that
represent pools of loans of similar types, duration and interest
rates. Almost any loan with regular repayments of principal and
interest can be securitized, from auto loans and equipment leases to
credit card receivables and mortgages.
ASSETS
Property owned,
in this case by an insurance company, including stocks, bonds, and
real estate. Insurance accounting is concerned with solvency and the
ability to pay claims. State insurance laws therefore require a
conservative valuation of assets, prohibiting insurance companies
from listing assets on their balance sheets whose values are
uncertain, such as furniture, fixtures, debit balances, and accounts
receivable that are more than 90 days past due. (See Admitted
assets)
ASSIGNED RISK
PLANS
Facilities
through which drivers can obtain auto insurance if they are unable
to buy it in the regular or voluntary market. These are the most
well-known type of residual auto insurance market, which exist in
every state. In an assigned risk plan, all insurers selling auto
insurance in the state are assigned these drivers to insure, based
on the amount of insurance they sell in the regular market. (See
Residual market)
AUTO
INSURANCE POLICY
There are
basically six different types of coverages. Some may be required by
law. Others are optional. They are:
Bodily injury
liability, for injuries the policyholder causes to someone else.
Medical payments
or Personal Injury Protection (PIP) for treatment of injuries to the
driver and passengers of the policyholder’s car.
Property damage
liability, for damage the policyholder causes to someone else’s
property.
Collision, for
damage to the policyholder’s car from a collision.
Comprehensive,
for damage to the policyholder’s car not involving a collision with
another car (including damage from fire, explosions, earthquakes,
floods, and riots), and theft.
Uninsured
motorists coverage, for costs resulting from an accident involving a
hit-and-run driver or a driver who does not have insurance.
AUTO
INSURANCE PREMIUM
The price an
insurance company charges for coverage, based on the frequency and
cost of potential accidents, theft and other losses. Prices vary
from company to company, as with any product or service.
Premiums also
vary depending on the amount and type of coverage purchased; the
make and model of the car; and the insured’s driving record, years
of driving and the number of miles the car is driven per year. Other
factors taken into account include the driver’s age and gender,
where the car is most likely to be driven and the times of day –
rush hour in an urban neighborhood or leisure-time driving in rural
areas, for example. Some insurance companies may also use credit
history-related information. (See Insurance score)
AVIATION
INSURANCE
Commercial
airlines hold property insurance on airplanes and liability
insurance for negligent acts that result in injury or property
damage to passengers or others. Damage is covered on the ground and
in the air. The policy limits the geographical area and individual
pilots covered.
Glossary of Insurance Terms
A
B C
D E
F G
H I
J K
L M
N O
P Q
R S
T U
V W X Y Z
|