FACULTATIVE
REINSURANCE
A reinsurance
policy that provides an insurer with coverage for specific
individual risks that are unusual or so large that they aren’t
covered in the insurance company's reinsurance treaties. This can
include policies for jumbo jets or oil rigs. Reinsurers have no
obligation to take on facultative reinsurance, but can assess each
risk individually. By contrast, under treaty reinsurance, the
reinsurer agrees to assume a certain percentage of entire classes of
business, such as various kinds of auto, up to preset limits.
FAIR ACCESS
TO INSURANCE REQUIREMENTS PLANS / FAIR PLANS
Insurance pools
that sell property insurance to people who can’t buy it in the
voluntary market because of high risk over which they may have no
control. FAIR Plans, which exist in 28 states and the
District of Columbia,
insure fire, vandalism, riot, and windstorm losses, and some sell
homeowners insurance which includes liability. Plans vary by state,
but all require property insurers licensed in a state to participate
in the pool and share in the profits and losses. (See Residual
market)
FARMOWNERS-RANCHOWNERS INSURANCE
Package policy
that protects the policyholder against named perils and liabilities
and usually covers homes and their contents, along with barns,
stables, and other structures.
FEDERAL FUNDS
Reserve balances
that depository institutions lend each other, usually on an
overnight basis. In addition, Federal funds include certain other
kinds of borrowings by depository institutions from each other and
from federal agencies.
FEDERAL
INSURANCE ADMINISTRATION / FIA
Federal agency in
charge of administering the National Flood Insurance Program. It
does not regulate the insurance industry.
FEDERAL
RESERVE BOARD
Seven-member
board that supervises the banking system by issuing regulations
controlling bank holding companies and federal laws over the banking
industry. It also controls and oversees the
U.S.
monetary system and credit supply.
FIDELITY BOND
A form of
protection that covers policyholders for losses that they incur as a
result of fraudulent acts by specified individuals. It usually
insures a business for losses caused by the dishonest acts of its
employees.
FIDUCIARY
BOND
A type of surety
bond, sometimes called a probate bond, which is required of certain
fiduciaries, such as executors and trustees, that guarantees the
performance of their responsibilities.
FIDUCIARY
LIABILITY
Legal
responsibility of a fiduciary to safeguard assets of beneficiaries.
A fiduciary, for example a pension fund manager, is required to
manage investments held in trust in the best interest of
beneficiaries. Fiduciary liability insurance covers breaches of
fiduciary duty such as misstatements or misleading statements,
errors and omissions.
FILE-AND-USE
STATES
States where
insurers must file rate changes with their regulators, but don’t
have to wait for approval to put them into effect.
FINANCIAL
GUARANTEE INSURANCE
Covers losses
from specific financial transactions and guarantees that investors
in debt instruments, such as municipal bonds, receive timely payment
of principal and interest if there is a default. Raises the credit
rating of debt to which the guarantee is attached. Investment
bankers who sell asset-backed securities, securities backed by loan
portfolios, use this insurance to enhance marketability. (See
Municipal bond insurance)
FINANCIAL
RESPONSIBILITY LAW
A state law
requiring that all automobile drivers show proof that they can pay
damages up to a minimum amount if involved in an auto accident.
Varies from state to state but can be met by carrying a minimum
amount of auto liability insurance. (See Compulsory auto insurance)
FINITE RISK
REINSURANCE
Contract under
which the ultimate liability of the reinsurer is capped and on which
anticipated investment income is expressly acknowledged as an
underwriting component. Also known as Financial Reinsurance because
this type of coverage is often bought to improve the balance sheet
effects of statutory accounting principles.
FIRE
INSURANCE
Coverage
protecting property against losses caused by a fire or lightning
that is usually included in homeowners or commercial multiple peril
policies.
FIRST-PARTY
COVERAGE
Coverage for the
policyholder’s own property or person. In no-fault auto insurance it
pays for the cost of injuries. In no-fault states with the broadest
coverage, the personal injury protection (PIP) part of the policy
pays for medical care, lost income, funeral expenses and, where the
injured person is not able to provide services such as child care,
for substitute services. (See No-fault; Third-party coverage)
FIXED ANNUITY
An annuity that
guarantees a specific rate of return. In the case of a deferred
annuity, a minimum rate of interest is guaranteed during the savings
phase. During the payment phase, a fixed amount of income, paid on a
regular schedule, is guaranteed.
FLOATER
Attached to a
homeowners policy, a floater insures movable property, covering
losses wherever they may occur. Among the items often insured with a
floater are expensive jewelry, musical instruments, and furs. It
provides broader coverage than a regular homeowners policy for these
items.
FLOOD
INSURANCE
Coverage for
flood damage is available from the federal government under the
National Flood Insurance Program but is sold by licensed insurance
agents. Flood coverage is excluded under homeowners policies and
many commercial property policies. However, flood damage is covered
under the comprehensive portion of an auto insurance policy. (See
Adverse selection)
FORCED PLACE
INSURANCE
Insurance
purchased by a bank or creditor on an uninsured debtor’s behalf so
if the property is damaged, funding is available to repair it.
FOREIGN
INSURANCE COMPANY
Name given to an
insurance company based in one state by the other states in which it
does business.
FRAUD
Intentional lying
or concealment by policyholders to obtain payment of an insurance
claim that would otherwise not be paid, or lying or
misrepresentation by the insurance company managers, employees,
agents, and brokers for financial gain.
FREE-LOOK
PERIOD
A period of up to
one month during which the purchaser of an annuity can cancel the
contract with no penalty. Rules vary by state.
FREQUENCY
Number of times a
loss occurs. One of the criteria used in calculating premium rates.
FRONTING
A procedure in
which a primary insurer acts as the insurer of record by issuing a
policy, but then passes the entire risk to a reinsurer in exchange
for a commission. Often, the fronting insurer is licensed to do
business in a state or country where the risk is located, but the
reinsurer is not. The reinsurer in this scenario is often a captive
or an independent insurance company that cannot sell insurance
directly in a particular country.
FUTURES
Agreement to buy
a security for a set price at a certain date. Futures contracts
usually involve commodities, indexes or financial futures.
Glossary of Insurance Terms
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