Follow Us

Follow us on Twitter  Follow us on LinkedIn
 

30 January 2012

ABI: Solvency II


The Association of British Insurers comments that Solvency II is a new European regulatory regime for insurers, which will fundamentally change the capital requirements of the insurance industry and introduce a new form of risk management in the supervision of insurers.

By promoting more sophisticated approaches, including firm-specific internal capital models, Solvency II will ensure a more accurate allocation of capital to risk. Furthermore, the goals of the new risk-based regulation are to: 

  1. help protecting policyholder interests and the stability of the financial system as a whole more effectively by making firm failure less likely;
  2. increase efficiency in the use of capital, improving returns; and
  3. achieve a more efficiently priced market for insurance products and make it easier for firms to do business across the EU. 

The current Solvency I regime was introduced in the early 1970s and defines capital requirements by specifying simple blanket solvency margins. Volatility and uncertainty in the estimated value of liabilities is addressed in a fragmented way using broad assumptions that often do not reflect the underlying risk. This simplistic design means that Solvency I lacks risk sensitivity and does not capture a number of key risks, including market, credit and operational risk. Furthermore, it does not ensure accurate and timely intervention by supervisors, nor does it facilitate optimal allocation of capital. 

The starting date of the new regulatory framework is according to current proposals expected to be on 1 January, 2013. 

Press release



© ABI


< Next Previous >
Key
 Hover over the blue highlighted text to view the acronym meaning
Hover over these icons for more information



Add new comment