Insurance Europe and Invest Europe have today published a joint position paper that calls on the European Commission to make improvements to Solvency II to remove unnecessary barriers that undermine insurers’ ability to invest in long-term equities.
While Solvency II in general works well, it has also created
unnecessary costs and barriers, in particular in relation to insurers’ ability
to offer long-term products and to invest in long-term assets that can help
drive the EU’s goals in terms of economic recovery, sustainable growth and the
climate transition. This includes a detrimental impact on all types of
investments in equities, including private equity and venture capital.
For these reasons, it is important that the review of
Solvency II brings about much needed improvements to enable insurers, who are
key institutional investors, to make long-term investments in the European
economy and to contribute fully to the EU’s objectives set out in the Green
Deal and the Capital Markets Union.
To achieve this, the review of Solvency II must achieve
three things:
- Free-up insurers’ risk-taking capacity via appropriate
reductions in the risk margin and improvements to the volatility adjustment and
the matching adjustment.
- Avoid unnecessary and excessive increases in capital
requirements (eg avoid unnecessary increases in liabilities due to changes to
risk-free rate curve extrapolation).
- Improve the treatment of equities in Solvency II.
The joint position focuses on how the treatment of equities
under Solvency II can be improved by changing the criteria for the long-term
equity (LTE) sub-module so that it works in practice. The proposed changes
would not alter the intended scope of the LTE category, would remain risk-based
and would maintain the necessary level of customer protection. However, they
would also account better for the way insurers prudently arrange and manage
their long-term portfolios.
Introducing these improvements to the LTE module, along with
the other improvements to Solvency II noted earlier, would increase insurers’
capacity and appetite to increase their investments in all types of equity
including private equity, venture capital and infrastructure.
position paper
Insurance Europe
© InsuranceEurope
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