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*Terms marked with an asterisk are from LOMA’s Glossary of Insurance and Financial Services Terms. Copyright © 2002
LOMA (Life Office Management Association, Inc.). Used with
permission from LOMA. Click here
for more information
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SALVAGE
Damaged property an insurer takes over to reduce its loss after
paying a claim. Insurers receive salvage rights over property on
which they have paid claims, such as badly-damaged cars. Insurers
that paid claims on cargoes lost at sea now have the right to
recover sunken treasures. Salvage charges are the costs associated
with recovering that property.
SCHEDULE
A list of individual items or groups of items that are covered under
one policy or a listing of specific benefits, charges, credits,
assets or other defined items.
SECONDARY MARKET
Market for previously issued and outstanding securities.
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION / SEC
The organization that oversees publicly-held insurance companies.
Those companies make periodic financial disclosures to the SEC,
including an annual financial statement (or 10K), and a quarterly
financial statement (or 10-Q). Companies must also disclose any
material events and other information about their stock.
SECURITIES OUTSTANDING
Stock held by shareholders.
SECURITIZATION OF INSURANCE RISK
Using the capital markets to expand and diversify the assumption of
insurance risk. The issuance of bonds or notes to third-party
investors directly or indirectly by an insurance or reinsurance
company or a pooling entity as a means of raising money to cover
risks. (See Catastrophe bonds)
SELF-INSURANCE
The concept of assuming a financial risk oneself, instead of paying
an insurance company to take it on. Every policyholder is a
self-insurer in terms of paying a deductible and co-payments. Large
firms often self-insure frequent, small losses such as damage to
their fleet of vehicles or minor workplace injuries. However, to
protect injured employees state laws set out requirements for the
assumption of workers compensation programs. Self-insurance also
refers to employers who assume all or part of the responsibility for
paying the health insurance claims of their employees. Firms that
self insure for health claims are exempt from state insurance laws
mandating the illnesses that group health insurers must cover.
SEVERITY
Size of a loss. One of the criteria used in calculating premiums
rates.
SEWER BACK-UP COVERAGE
An optional part of homeowners insurance that covers sewers.
SHARED MARKET
See Residual market
SINGLE PREMIUM ANNUITY
An annuity that is paid in full upon purchase.
SOFT MARKET
An environment where insurance is plentiful and sold at a lower
cost, also known as a buyers' market. (See Property/casualty
insurance cycle)
SOLVENCY
Insurance companies' ability to pay the claims of policyholders.
Regulations to promote solvency include minimum capital and surplus
requirements, statutory accounting conventions, limits to insurance
company investment and corporate activities, financial ratio tests,
and financial data disclosure.
SPREAD OF RISK
The selling of insurance in multiple areas to multiple policyholders
to minimize the danger that all policyholders will have losses at
the same time. Companies are more likely to insure perils that offer
a good spread of risk. Flood insurance is an example of a poor
spread of risk because the people most likely to buy it are the
people close to rivers and other bodies of water that flood. (See
Adverse selection)
STACKING
Practice that increases the money available to pay auto liability
claims. In states where this practice is permitted by law, courts
may allow policyholders who have several cars insured under a single
policy, or multiple vehicles insured under different policies, to
add up the limit of liability available for each vehicle.
STATUTORY ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES / SAP
More conservative standards than under GAAP accounting rules, they
are imposed by state laws that emphasize the present solvency of
insurance companies. SAP helps ensure that the company will have
sufficient funds readily available to meet all anticipated insurance
obligations by recognizing liabilities earlier or at a higher value
than GAAP and assets later or at a lower value. For example, SAP
requires that selling expenses be recorded immediately rather than
amortized over the life of the policy. (See GAAP accounting;
Admitted assets)
STOCK INSURANCE COMPANY
An insurance company owned by its stockholders who share in profits
through earnings distributions and increases in stock value.
STRUCTURED SETTLEMENT
Legal agreement to pay a designated person, usually someone who has
been injured, a specified sum of money in periodic payments, usually
for his or her lifetime, instead of in a single lump sum payment.
(See Annuity)
SUBROGATION
The legal process by which an insurance company, after paying a
loss, seeks to recover the amount of the loss from another party who
is legally liable for it.
SUPERFUND
A federal law enacted in 1980 to initiate cleanup of the nation's
abandoned hazardous waste dump sites and to respond to accidents
that release hazardous substances into the environment. The law is
officially called the Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act.
SURETY BOND
A contract guaranteeing the performance of a specific obligation.
Simply put, it is a three-party agreement under which one party, the
surety company, answers to a second party, the owner, creditor or "obligee,"
for a third party's debts, default or nonperformance. Contractors
are often required to purchase surety bonds if they are working on
public projects. The surety company becomes responsible for carrying
out the work or paying for the loss up to the bond "penalty" if the
contractor fails to perform.
SURPLUS
The remainder after an insurer's liabilities are subtracted from its
assets. The financial cushion that protects policyholders in case of
unexpectedly high claims. (See Capital;
Risk-based capital)
SURPLUS LINES
Property/casualty insurance coverage that isn't available from
insurers licensed in the state, called admitted companies, and must
be purchased from a non-admitted carrier. Examples include risks of
an unusual nature that require greater flexibility in policy terms
and conditions than exist in standard forms or where the highest
rates allowed by state regulators are considered inadequate by
admitted companies. Laws governing surplus lines vary by state.
SURRENDER CHARGE
A charge for withdrawals from an annuity contract before a
designated surrender charge period, usually from five to seven
years.
SWAPS
The simultaneous buying, selling or exchange of one security for
another among investors to change maturities in a bond portfolio,
for example, or because investment goals have changed.
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