![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Sompo Japan Insurance Inc [2011] EWHC 260 (Ch) (16 February 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/260.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 260 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF SOMPO JAPAN INSURANCE INC. |
||
- and - |
||
IN THE MATTER OF TRANSFERCOM LIMITED |
||
- and - |
||
IN THE MATTER OF THE FINANCIAL SERVICES AND MARKETS ACT 2000 |
____________________
Mr Jonathan Nash QC & Ms Charlotte Eborall (instructed by The Financial Services Authority, General Counsel's Division, 25 The North Colonnade, Canary Wharf, London E14 5HS)
Hearing date: 8th February 2011
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Briggs :
"The court must consider that, in all the circumstances of the case it is appropriate to sanction the scheme."
The procedural requirements of FSMA are such that, before a scheme comes before the court for sanction, it will have been subjected to detailed scrutiny both by an independent suitably qualified expert and by the FSA. Even in a case, such as the present, where both the expert and the FSA have reached conclusions favourable to sanction, and where there are either no objectors, or no objector has appeared to oppose sanction, the exercise of the court's discretion under section 111(3) nonetheless remains one of real importance, not to be exercised in any sense by way of rubber stamp. This is, in particular, because the effect of the court's sanction of an insurance business transfer scheme is to substitute for the transferor as the policyholders' chosen insurer (or, as here, re-insurer) a stranger to the contractual relationship which the policyholders have neither chosen nor consented to be substituted by novation.
"Ultimately what the court is concerned with is whether the scheme is fair as between different classes of affected persons, and in arriving at a conclusion as to whether or not it is, among the most important material before the court is material which the Act requires to be before it, namely the report of an independent actuary as to his opinion on the scheme."
i) Sompo and its shareholders;ii) Transfercom and its shareholders;
iii) policyholders whose re-insurer will change from Sompo
iv) to Transfercom under the Scheme ("the transferring policyholders");
v) the remaining policyholders of Sompo;
vi) the existing policyholders of Transfercom.
(a) A reinsurance policy written by NICO in respect of its existing business (transferred from Sompo in 2007) with a remaining limit of US$438 million, with an additional US$50 million for unallocated loss adjustment expenses.(b) A US$30 million investment in a ten year fixed interest debt security issued by another company within the Berkshire Hathaway group.
(c) Some US$15.76 million in cash and other easily liquidated investments.
i) Transfercom will enter into a new reinsurance treaty with NICO ("the new reinsurance") with an upper limit of US$277.1 million together with US$25 million for unallocated loss adjustment expenses, written on terms which transfer the whole of Transfercom's risk in relation to the transferred business to NICO subject to that limit, and which prevent NICO from avoiding or cancelling on grounds of non-disclosure or misrepresentation, falling short of fraud or deceit, by Transfercom.ii) By way of endorsement, and to provide additional security and liquidity to Transfercom ("the funds withheld endorsement") the whole of the premium payable by Transfercom for that reinsurance (derived from the amount paid by Sompo to Transfercom for taking on the transferring business) will be retained in a special account by Transfercom (or at NICO's election in a trust account) for use in paying claims. That premium is in excess of 90% of the current outstanding losses and IBNR attributable to the transferring policies. The funds withheld endorsement permits NICO to withdraw amounts in excess of 102% of the aggregate of Transfercom's attributable loss reserves and expected operating expenses in relation to the transferred business from time to time. In return Transfercom will pay NICO interest on the funds retained at a rate of 1% over the US dollar Treasury Bill three month rate from time to time.
iii) NICO will raise the limit in its existing reinsurance of Transfercom's existing business ("the existing reinsurance") by US$100 million (from US$482 million to US$582 million). The amount of US$100 million has increased during the formulation of the Scheme from an originally proposed US$75 million.
iv) By way of endorsement to the existing reinsurance, NICO undertakes to place in trust for Transfercom funds or securities sufficient to enable Transfercom to discharge its liabilities to its existing policyholders, in the event that NICO's credit rating falls below BBB+ ("the ratings trigger endorsement").
(1) The transferring policyholders' confidence level while remaining with Sompo was substantially in excess of the 99.5% one year level.(2) If the Scheme was implemented, then there would be a 97.5% confidence level in relation to all Transfercom's policyholders (i.e. both its existing policyholders and the transferring policyholders) being paid in full over the whole period of the combined run-off.
On that analysis, the confidence level attributable to the transferring policyholders would be reduced if the Scheme were implemented, but not below that set by the FSA as its regulatory benchmark. This was because, although the transferring business was expected to run off in less than five years, the longer tail of Transfercom's existing business would extend beyond five years, and therefore justify the use of the 97.5% benchmark attributed to a five years or longer run-off period.
(1) Over the two year average anticipated run-off period for the transferring policyholders, their level of confidence while customers of Sompo is 99.88%.(2) On the implementation of the Scheme, the level of confidence attributable over the same two year mean run-off period for the transferring policyholders as customers of Transfercom is 99.6%.
(3) His opinion as to the level of confidence, if the Scheme is implemented, of Transfercom paying all its policyholders (existing and transferring) remains unchanged, at 97.5%.