THE SENATE |
S.B. NO. |
3079 |
THIRTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2022 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO INSURANCE.
BE IT
ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The
purpose of the Act is to amend various portions of title
24 of the Hawaii Revised Statutes, to update and improve existing provisions
and promote consumer protection, including:
(1) Adding
the National Association of Insurance Commissioners Travel Insurance Model Law
definition of "travel insurance" and eliminating optional limited
licenses for travel insurance vending machines or selling certain policies as a
promotional device to improve newspaper circulation;
(2) Amending
the definition of "administrator" or "third party administrator"
to exclude dental insurers and dental service corporations; increasing the
surety bond threshold amount for consistency with requirements for other
entities; and adding audited financial statements as part of required annual
report filings; and
(3) Adopting the National Association
of Insurance Commissioners revised Suitability in Annuity Transactions
Model Regulation provisions, which require producers to act in the best
interest of the consumer when making a recommendation of an annuity, and
require insurers to establish and maintain a system to supervise
recommendations.
SECTION 2. Section 431:9A-107.5, Hawaii Revised
Statutes, is amended by
amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this
article, the commissioner may issue:
(1) A limited
license to persons selling travel tickets of a common carrier of persons or
property who shall act only as to travel ticket policies of accident and health
or sickness insurance or baggage insurance on personal effects;
(2) A limited license
to each individual who has charge of vending machines used in this State for
the effectuation of travel insurance;
(3) A limited
license to any individual who sells policies of accident and health or sickness
insurance as a promotional device to improve the circulation of a newspaper in this State;]
(1) A limited license
to persons selling travel insurance, which means insurance coverage for personal risks
incident to planned travel, including:
(A) Interruption
or cancellation of trip or event;
(B) Loss
of baggage or personal effects;
(C) Damages
to accommodations or rental vehicles;
(D) Sickness,
accident, disability, or death occurring during travel;
(E) Emergency
evacuation;
(F) Repatriation
of remains; or
(G) Any
other contractual obligations to indemnify or pay a specified amount to the
traveler upon determinable contingencies related to travel as approved by the
commissioner.
Travel insurance does not
include major medical plans that provide comprehensive medical protection for travelers
with trips lasting longer than six months, including those working or residing
overseas as an expatriate, or any other insurance product that requires a
specific insurance producer license.
[(4)] (2) A limited line credit insurance producer license
to any individual who sells, solicits, or negotiates limited line credit
insurance; or
[(5)] (3) A limited license to any owner of a
self-service storage facility, as defined in section 507-61, to sell stored property
insurance, as defined in section 431:9A-171."
SECTION 3. Section 431:9J-101, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending the definition of "administrator" or "third party administrator" to read as follows:
""Administrator"
or "third party administrator" means a person who collects charges or
premiums from, or who adjusts or settles claims on, residents of this State in
connection with self-insurance, stop-loss, or life insurance coverage, accident
and health or sickness insurance coverage, or article 1 of chapter 432, except
the following:
(1) An employer on behalf of its employees or the employees of a subsidiary or an affiliated corporation of the employer;
(2) A union on behalf of its members;
(3) An insurer authorized to transact insurance in this State with respect to a policy lawfully issued and delivered in and pursuant to the laws of this State or another state;
(4) A dental
insurer licensed under chapter 432G;
(5) A dental
service corporation licensed under chapter
423;
[(4)] (6) A producer licensed to sell life insurance coverage
or accident and health or sickness insurance coverage in this State, whose
activities are limited exclusively to the sale of insurance;
[(5)] (7) A managing general agent licensed in this
State whose activities are limited exclusively to the scope of activities
conveyed under that license;
[(6)] (8) An individual adjuster licensed in this State whose
activities are limited exclusively to the scope of activities conveyed under
that license;
[(7)] (9) An individual who adjusts or settles claims in
the normal course of practice or employment as an attorney at law and who does
not collect charges or premiums in connection with life insurance coverage or
accident and health or sickness insurance coverage;
[(8)] (10) A creditor on behalf of its debtors with respect
to insurance covering a debt between the creditor and its debtors;
[(9)] (11) A trust established in conformity with title
29 United States Code section 186 and trustees, agents, and employees acting
under that trust;
[(10)] (12) A trust exempt from taxation under title 26 United
States Code section 501(a) and trustees and employees acting under that trust,
or a custodian and the custodian's agents and employees acting under a
custodian account that meets the requirements of title 26 United States Code
section 401(f);
[(11)] (13) A financial institution subject to
supervision or examination by federal or state banking authorities, or a
mortgage lender that collects and remits premiums to licensed producers or
authorized insurers in connection with loan payments;
[(12)] (14)
A credit card issuing company advancing
for and collecting premiums or charges from its credit card holders who have
authorized collection; provided that the company does not adjust or settle
claims; and
[(13)] (15)
A person who acts solely as an
administrator of one or more employee benefit plans established by an employer
or an employee organization."
SECTION 4. Section 431:9J-103, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as
follows:
"[[]§431:9J-103[]] Surety bond required. (a) Prior to the issuance of the
administrator license, the administrator shall file with the commissioner, and
maintain in force while so licensed, a surety bond of at least $100,000[,]
for the first two years, and at least $300,000 from the third year, in
the form and penal sum acceptable to the commissioner, and shall provide that
the bond may not be canceled or otherwise terminated until two years have
elapsed from the last day the applicant was an administrator, unless the commissioner
has given prior written consent. The
surety bond shall be undertaken and may be enforced in the name of "Commissioner
of Insurance, State of Hawaii".
(b) At the third renewal, and
each subsequent renewal, the surety bond amount shall be at least $300,000 and filed
in accordance with section 431:9J-112."
SECTION 5.
Section 431:9J-112, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"[[]§431:9J-112[]] Annual report required. (a) An administrator shall file an annual report
for the preceding calendar year with the commissioner on or before March 1 of
each year, in a form and manner prescribed by the commissioner.
(b) The annual report shall
include the names and addresses of all insurers with which the administrator
had an agreement during the preceding calendar year.
(c) The annual report
shall include a renewal certificate for the surety bond required in section
431:9J-103(a) and (b) and an updated surety bond form, if needed.
(d) The annual report
shall include an audited financial statement prepared by an independent
certified public accountant."
SECTION 6. Chapter 431, article 10D, part VII, Hawaii
Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"[[]PART VII.[]] SUITABILITY
IN ANNUITY TRANSACTIONS
§431:10D-621
Scope. (a) This
part applies to any sale or recommendation [to purchase, exchange, or
replace] of an annuity [made to a consumer by an insurance
producer, or an insurer where no producer is involved, that results in the
purchase, exchange, or replacement recommended].
(b) This part does not
apply to transactions involving:
(1) Direct-response solicitations where there is no recommendation based on information collected from the consumer pursuant to this part; or
(2) Contracts used to fund:
(A) An employee pension or welfare benefit
plan that is covered by the Employee Retirement and Income Security Act[;]
of 1974, P.L. 93-406;
(B) A plan described by [sections] section
401(a), 401(k), 403(b), 408(k), or 408(p) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended, if established or maintained by an employer;
(C) A [governmental] government
plan or church plan defined in section 414 of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986, as amended, a government or church welfare benefit plan, or a deferred
compensation plan of a state or local government or tax exempt organization
subject to section 457 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended; or
(D) A non-qualified deferred compensation arrangement established or maintained by an employer or plan sponsor;
[(E)]
(3) Settlements of or
assumptions of liabilities associated with personal injury litigation or any
dispute or claim resolution process; or
[(F)]
(4) Formal prepaid funeral
contracts.
(c) Nothing in this part shall be construed to affect in any manner any provision of chapter 485A.
§431:10D-622 Definitions. For the purposes of this part:
"Annuity" means an annuity that is an insurance product under state law that is individually solicited, whether the product is classified as an individual or group annuity.
"Approved continuing education course provider" means an individual or entity that is approved to offer continuing education courses pursuant to article 9A.
"Cash compensation" means any discount,
concession, fee, service fee, commission, sales charge, loan, override, or cash
benefit received by a producer in connection with the recommendation or sale of
an annuity from an insurer, intermediary, or directly from the consumer.
"Comparable standards" means:
(1) With respect to broker-dealers and
registered representatives of broker-dealers, applicable United States
Securities and Exchange Commission and Financial Industry Regulatory Authority
rules pertaining to best interest obligations and supervision of annuity
recommendations and sales, including, but not limited to, Regulation Best Interest,
title 17 Code of Federal Regulations section 240.15l-1, and any amendments or
successor regulations thereto;
(2) With respect to investment advisers
registered under federal or state securities laws or investment adviser
representatives, the fiduciary duties and all other requirements imposed on
such investment advisers or investment adviser representatives by contract or
under the Rules and Regulations, Investment Company Act of 1940, title 17 Code
of Federal Regulations part 270, or applicable state securities law, including
but not limited to, the Form ADV and interpretations; and
(3) With respect to plan fiduciaries or
fiduciaries, the duties, obligations, prohibitions and all other requirements
attendant to such status under Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974,
P.L. 93-406, or the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and any
amendments or successor statutes thereto.
"Consumer
profile information" means information that is reasonably appropriate to
determine whether a recommendation addresses the consumer's financial
situation, insurance needs and financial objectives, including, at a minimum,
the following:
(1) Age;
(2) Annual income;
(3) Financial situation and needs,
including debts and other obligations;
(4) Financial experience;
(5) Insurance needs;
(6) Financial objectives;
(7) Intended use of the annuity;
(8) Financial times horizon;
(9) Existing assets or financial
products, including investment, annuity and insurance holdings;
(10) Liquidity needs;
(11) Liquid net worth;
(12) Risk tolerance, including but not
limited to, willingness to accept non-guaranteed elements in the annuity;
(13) Financial resources used to fund the
annuity; and
(14) Tax status.
"Continuing education credit" means one continuing education credit hour. For the purposes of this paragraph, "credit hour" has the same meaning as set forth in section 431:9A-102.
"Financial professional" means a producer that is regulated and
acting as:
(1) A broker-dealer registered under
federal or state securities laws or a registered representative of a
broker-dealer;
(2) An investment adviser registered
under federal or state securities laws or an investment adviser representative
associated with the federal or state registered investment adviser; or
(3) A plan fiduciary under section 3(21)
of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, P.L. 93-406, or
fiduciary under section 4975(E)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended, or any amendments or successor statutes thereto.
["Insurance
producer" means a person required to be licensed under the laws of this
State to sell, solicit, or negotiate insurance, including annuities.]
"Insurer" means a company required to be licensed
under the laws of this State to provide insurance products, including
annuities.
"Intermediary" means an entity contracted directly
with an insurer or with another entity contracted with an insurer to facilitate
the sale of the insurer's annuities by producers.
"Material conflict of interest" means a financial
interest of the insurance producer in the sale of an annuity that a reasonable
person would expect to influence the impartiality of a recommendation. "Material conflict of interest"
does not include cash compensation or non-cash compensation.
"Non-cash compensation" means any form of
compensation that is not cash compensation, including, but not limited to,
health insurance, office rent, office support, and retirement benefits.
"Non-guaranteed elements" means the premiums,
credited interest rates (including any bonus), benefits, values, dividends,
non-interest based credits, charges, or elements of formulas used to determine
any of these, that are subject to company discretion and are not guaranteed at
issue. An element is considered
non-guaranteed if any of the underlying non-guaranteed elements are used in its
calculation.
"Producer" means a person or entity required to be
licensed under the laws of this State to sell, solicit, or negotiate insurance,
including annuities. For purposes of
this part, "producer" includes an insurer where no producer is
involved.
"Recommendation" means advice provided by [an
insurance] a producer[, or an insurer where no producer is
involved,] to an individual consumer that [results] was intended
to result or does result in a purchase, an exchange, or a
replacement of an annuity in accordance with that advice. "Recommendation" does not
include general communication to the public, generalized customer services
assistance or administrative support, general educational information and
tools, prospectuses, or other product and sales material.
"Replacement" means a transaction [for the purchase
of a new policy or contract that] in which a new annuity is to be
purchased, and it is known or should be known to the proposing producer, or
to the proposing insurer [if there is no producer, knows or has
reason to know will cause an existing policy or contract to be:] whether
or not a producer is involved, that by reason of the transaction, an existing
annuity or other insurance policy has been or is to be any of the following:
(1) Terminated, lapsed, forfeited, or surrendered, partially surrendered, or assigned to the replacing insurer;
(2) Converted to reduced paid-up insurance, continued as extended term insurance, or otherwise reduced in value by the use of nonforfeiture benefits or other policy values;
(3) Amended to effect a reduction in either benefits or the term for which coverage would otherwise remain in force or for which benefits would be paid;
(4) Reissued with any reduction in cash value; or
(5) Used in a finance purchase.
["Suitability
information" means information about the consumer that is reasonably
related to the determination of the appropriateness of a recommendation,
including the following:
(1) Age;
(2) Annual income;
(3) Financial situation and needs,
including the financial resources used for funding the annuity at issue;
(4) Financial experience;
(5) Financial objectives;
(6) Intended use of the annuity;
(7) Financial time horizon;
(8) Existing assets, including
investment and life insurance holdings;
(9) Liquidity needs;
(10) Liquid net worth;
(11) Risk tolerance; and
(12) Tax status.]
§431:10D-623
Duties of insurers and [insurance] producers. [(a) In recommending to a consumer the purchase of
an annuity or the exchange of an annuity that results in another insurance
transaction or series of insurance transactions, the insurance producer, or the
insurer where no producer is involved, shall have reasonable grounds for
believing that the recommendation is suitable for the consumer based on the
facts, including the consumer's suitability information, disclosed by the
consumer about the consumer's investments, other insurance products, financial
situation, and needs and that:
(1) The consumer has been reasonably
informed of the various features of the annuity, including the potential
surrender period and surrender charge; potential tax penalty if the consumer
sells, exchanges, surrenders or annuitizes the annuity; mortality and expense
fees; investment advisory fees; potential charges for and features of riders;
limitations on interest returns; insurance and investment components; and
market risk;
(2) The consumer would benefit from
certain features of the annuity, including tax-deferred growth, annuitization,
or death or living benefit;
(3) The particular annuity as a whole,
the underlying subaccounts to which funds are allocated at the time of the
purchase or exchange of the annuity, and riders and similar product enhancements,
if any, are suitable and, in the case of an exchange or replacement, the
transaction as a whole is suitable for the particular consumer; and
(4) In the case of an exchange or
replacement of an annuity, the exchange or replacement is suitable for the
particular consumer taking into consideration whether:
(A) The consumer will incur a surrender
charge; be subject to the commencement of a new surrender period; lose existing
benefits such as death, living, or other contractual benefits; or be subject to
increased fees, investment advisory fees, or charges for riders and similar
product enhancements;
(B) The consumer would benefit from
product enhancements and improvements; and
(C) The consumer has had another annuity
exchange or replacement, particularly an exchange or replacement within the
preceding thirty-six months.
(b)
Prior to the execution of a purchase,
exchange, or replacement of an annuity resulting from a recommendation, an
insurance producer, or an insurer where no producer is involved, shall make
reasonable efforts to obtain the consumer's suitability information.
(c)
Except as permitted under subsection
(d), an insurer shall not issue an annuity that has been recommended to a
consumer unless the insurer has a reasonable basis to believe the annuity is
suitable for the particular consumer based on the consumer's suitability
information.]
(a) A producer, when making a recommendation of an annuity, shall act in the best interest of the consumer under the circumstances known at the time the recommendation is made, without placing the producer's or the insurer's financial interest ahead of the consumer's interest. A producer has acted in the best interest of the consumer if the producer has satisfied the obligations regarding care, disclosure, conflict of interest, and documentation as set forth in this part.
[(d)(1)] (b)(1) Except as provided under paragraph (2), [neither an insurance] a producer [nor an insurer]
shall have [any] no obligation to a consumer under section 431:10D-623.1 related to
any annuity transaction if:
(A) No recommendation is made;
(B) A recommendation was made based on materially inaccurate information provided by the consumer;
(C) A consumer refuses to provide relevant [suitability]
consumer profile information and the annuity transaction is not
recommended; or
(D) A consumer decides to enter into an
annuity transaction that is not based on a recommendation of [the insurer or]
the [insurance] producer[; and].
(2) An insurer's issuance of an annuity
subject to paragraph (1) shall be
reasonable under all the circumstances actually known to the insurer at the
time the annuity is issued.
[(e)
An insurance producer or a
representative of the insurer, where no insurance producer is involved, shall
at the time of sale:
(1) Make a record of any recommendation
subject to this section;
(2) Obtain a signed statement from the
consumer documenting the customer's refusal to provide suitability information,
if applicable; and
(3) Obtain a signed statement from the
consumer acknowledging that an annuity transaction is not recommended if a
consumer decides to enter into an annuity transaction that is not based on the
insurance producer's or insurer's recommendation.
(f)]
(c) Except as permitted under
subsection (b), an
insurer may not issue an annuity recommended to a consumer unless there is a reasonable basis to believe the annuity would effectively address the particular consumer's financial situation, insurance needs, and financial objectives based on the consumer's consumer profile information.
(d) An insurer shall establish and maintain a
supervision system that is reasonably designed to achieve the insurer's and its
[insurance] producers' compliance with this part, including:
(1) Reasonable procedures to inform the
insurer's [insurance] producers of the requirements of this part,
including incorporating the requirements of this part into relevant [insurance]
producer training manuals;
(2) Standards for [insurance]
producer product training, including reasonable procedures to require its [insurance]
producers to comply with section 431:10D-626;
(3) Product-specific training and training
materials that explain all material features of its annuity products to its [insurance]
producers;
(4) Procedures for the review of
each recommendation prior to the issuance of an annuity to ensure [that]
there is a reasonable basis to determine [the suitability of a
recommendation that may include additional review of selected transactions
through electronic, physical, or other means; provided that the insurer may
specify criteria for selection of transactions for additional review;] that
the recommended annuity would effectively address the particular consumer's
financial situation, insurance needs, and financial objectives. The review procedures may apply a screening
system for the purpose of identifying selected transactions for additional
review and may be accomplished electronically or through other means including,
but not limited to, physical review. An
electronic or other system may be designed to require additional review only of
those transactions identified for additional review by the selection criteria;
(5) Reasonable procedures to detect
recommendations that are not [suitable, including] in compliance with
subsections (b), (g), and (h), and sections 431:10D-623.1, 431:10D-623.2,
431:10D-623.3, and 431:10D-623.4. This
may include confirmation of [consumer suitability] the consumer's
consumer profile information, systematic consumer surveys, producer and
consumer interviews, confirmation letters, producer statements or
attestations, and programs of internal monitoring; provided that nothing in
this paragraph shall prevent an insurer applying sampling procedures or
confirming [suitability] the consumer profile information or
other required information under this section after issuance or delivery of
the annuity;
(6) Reasonable procedures to assess, prior to
or upon issuance or delivery of an annuity, whether a producer has provided to
the consumer the information required to be provided under this section;
(7) Reasonable
procedures to identify and address suspicious consumer refusals to provide
consumer profile information;
(8) Reasonable
procedures to identify and eliminate any sales contests, sale quotas, bonuses,
and non-cash compensation that are based on the sales of specific annuities
within a limited period of time. The
requirements of this paragraph are not intended to prohibit the receipt of
health insurance, office rent, office support, retirement benefits, or other
employee benefits by employees as long as those benefits are not based upon the
volume of sales of a specific annuity within a limited period of time;
[(6)] (9) Annual review and testing of the supervision system
[which] that shall be documented in a written report to
the insurer's senior management, including the senior manager responsible for
audit functions, to determine the effectiveness of the supervision system, the
exceptions found, and corrective action taken or recommended, if any;
[(7)] (10) Procedures for monitoring contracts and, as appropriate,
conducting audits to assure that any contracted functions are properly
performed; and
[(8)] (11) Annual certification based on reasonable facts
from a senior manager who has responsibility for contracted functions that the
contracted functions are properly performed.
[(g)]
(e) An insurer may contract for
performance of any functions, including maintenance of procedures, required by subsection
[(f)(1) to (6);] (d)(1) to (9); provided that an insurer shall be
responsible for taking any appropriate corrective action and may be subject to
sanctions and penalties pursuant to section 431:10D-624 regardless of whether
the insurer contracts for performance of a function and regardless of the
insurer's compliance with subsection [(f).] (d).
[(h)] (f) An insurer is not required to include in its
system of supervision [an insurance]:
(1) A producer's recommendations to
consumers of products other than the annuities offered by the insurer[.];
or
(2) Consideration of or comparison to options available to the producer or compensation relating to those options other than annuities or other products offered by the insurer.
[(i) An insurance producer shall not] (g) Neither a producer nor an insurer shall
dissuade, or attempt to dissuade, a consumer from:
(1) Truthfully responding to an insurer's
request for confirmation of [suitability] the consumer profile
information;
(2) Filing a complaint; or
(3) Cooperating with the investigation of a complaint.
[(j) Sales] (h)
Recommendations and sales of annuities made in compliance with [requirements
of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority or its successor agency pertaining
to suitability and supervision of annuity transactions] comparable
standards shall satisfy the requirements of this [section; provided that
an insurer that issues an annuity subject to this part shall:] part. This section applies to all recommendations
and sales of annuities made by financial professionals in compliance with
business rules, controls, and procedures that satisfy a comparable standard
even if such standard would not otherwise apply to the product or
recommendation at issue. However, nothing
in this subsection shall limit the insurance commissioner's ability to
investigate and enforce the provisions of this part. Nothing in this subsection shall limit the insurer's
obligation to comply with subsection (c), although the insurer may base its
analysis on information received from either the financial professional or the
entity supervising the financial professional.
(i) For subsection (h)
to apply, an insurer shall:
(1) Monitor the [sales by entities
registered as broker-dealers with the
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority of annuities issued by the insurer] relevant conduct of the financial professional seeking to
rely on subsection (h) or the entity responsible for supervising the financial
professional, such as the financial professional's broker-dealer or an
investment adviser registered under federal or state securities laws using
information collected in the normal course of an insurer's business; and
(2) Provide to the
entity [subject to paragraph (1) with
any] responsible for supervising the financial professional
seeking to rely on subsection (h), such as the financial professional's
broker-dealer or investment adviser registered under federal or state
securities laws, information and reports that are reasonably [necessary]
appropriate to assist the entity [in maintaining the] to maintain
its supervision system [required by the Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority.
This
subsection shall apply to sales of variable annuities and fixed annuities where
suitability and supervision requirements are similar to those applied to
variable annuity sales. Nothing in this
subsection shall limit the insurance commissioner's ability to enforce this
part].
§431:10D-623.1
Care obligation of insurers and
producers. (a) The producer, in making a recommendation,
shall exercise reasonable diligence, care, and skill to:
(1) Know the consumer's financial
situation, insurance needs, and financial objectives;
(2) Understand the available
recommendation options after making a reasonable inquiry into options available
to the producer;
(3) Have a reasonable basis to believe
the recommended option effectively addresses the consumer's financial
situation, insurance needs, and financial objectives over the life of the
product, as evaluated in light of the consumer profile information; and
(4) Communicate the basis or bases of
the recommendation.
(b) The requirements under subsection (a) include:
(1) Making reasonable efforts to obtain
consumer profile information from the consumer prior to the recommendation of
an annuity; and
(2) Considering the types of products
the producer is authorized and licensed to recommend or sell that address the
consumer's financial situation, insurance needs, and financial objectives.
This does
not require analysis or consideration of any products outside the authority and
license of the producer or other possible alternative products or strategies
available in the market at the time of the recommendation. Producers shall be held to standards
applicable to producers with similar authority and licensure.
(c) The requirements under this section do not
create a
fiduciary
obligation or relationship and only create a regulatory obligation as
established in this regulation.
(d) The consumer profile information,
characteristics of
the
insurer, and product costs, rates, benefits, and features are those factors
generally relevant in making a determination whether an annuity effectively
addresses the consumer's financial situation, insurance needs, and financial
objectives, but the level of importance of each factor may vary depending on
the facts and circumstances of a particular case. However, each factor may not be considered in
isolation.
(e) The requirements under subsection (a):
(1) Include having a reasonable basis to
believe the consumer would benefit from certain features of the annuity, such
as annuitization, death, or living benefit, or other insurance-related features;
(2) Apply to the particular annuity as a
whole and the underlying subaccounts to which funds are allocated at the time
of purchase or exchange of an annuity, and riders and similar producer
enhancements, if any;
(3) Do not mean the annuity with the
lowest one-time or multiple occurrence compensation structure shall necessarily
be recommended; and
(4) Do not mean the producer has ongoing
monitoring obligations under this section, although such an obligation may be
separately owed under the terms of a fiduciary, consulting, investment advising,
or financial planning agreement between the consumer and the producer.
(f) In the case of an exchange or replacement of
an annuity, the producer shall consider the whole transaction, which includes
taking into consideration whether:
(1) The consumer will incur a surrender
charge, be subject to the commencement of a new surrender period, lose existing
benefits, such as death, living, or other contractual benefits, or be subject
to increased fees, investment advisory fees, or charges for riders and similar
product enhancements;
(2) The replacing product would substantially
benefit the consumer in comparison to the replaced product over the life of the
product; and
(3) The consumer has had another annuity
exchange or replacement and, in particular, an exchange or replacement within
the preceding sixty months.
(g)
Nothing in this part should be construed
to require a producer to obtain any license other than a producer license with
the appropriate line of authority to sell, solicit, or negotiate insurance in
this State, including but not limited to any securities license in order to
fulfill the duties and obligations contained in this part; provided that the
producer does not give advice or provide services that are otherwise subject to
securities laws or engage in any other activity requiring other professional
licenses.
§431:10D-623.2
Disclosure obligation of insurers and
producers. (a) Prior to the recommendation or sale of an
annuity, the producer shall prominently disclose to the consumer on a form
substantially similar to Appendix A of the Spring 2020, National Association of
Insurance Commissioners Suitability In Annuity Transactions Model Regulation:
(1) A description of the scope and terms
of the relationship with the consumer and the role of the producer in the
transaction;
(2) An affirmative statement on whether
the producer is licensed and authorized to sell the following products:
(A) Fixed annuities;
(B) Fixed indexed annuities;
(C) Variable annuities;
(D) Life insurance;
(E) Mutual funds;
(F) Stocks and bonds; and
(G) Certificates of deposit;
(3) An affirmative statement describing
the insurers the producer is authorized, contracted, appointed, or otherwise
able to sell insurance products for, using the following descriptions:
(A) One insurer;
(B) From two or more insurers; or
(C) From two or more insurers although
primarily contracted with one insurer;
(4) A description of the sources and
types of cash compensation and non-cash compensation to be received by the
producer, including whether the producer is to be compensated for the sale of a
recommended annuity by commission as part of premium or other remuneration
received from the insurer, intermediary, or other producer or by fee as a
result of a contract for advice or consulting services; and
(5) A notice of the consumer's right to
request additional information regarding cash compensation described in subsection
(b).
(b) Upon request of the consumer or the consumer's
designated representative, the producer shall disclose:
(1) A reasonable estimate of the amount
of cash compensation to be received by the producer, which may be stated as a
range of amounts or percentages; and
(2) Whether the cash compensation is a
one-time or multiple occurrence amount, and, if a multiple occurrence amount,
the frequency and amount of the occurrence, which may be stated as a range of
amounts or percentages.
(c) Prior to or at the time of the recommendation
or sale of an annuity, the producer shall have a reasonable basis to believe
the consumer has been informed of various features of the annuity, such
as the potential surrender period and surrender charge, potential tax penalty
if the consumer sells, exchanges, surrenders, or annuitizes the annuity,
mortality and expense fees, investment advisory fees, any annual fees,
potential charges for and features of riders or other options of the annuity,
limitations on interest returns, potential changes in non-guaranteed elements
of the annuity, insurance and investment components, and market risk.
§431:10D-623.3
Conflicts of interest obligation of
insurers and producers. A
producer shall identify and avoid or reasonably manage and disclose material
conflicts of interest, including material conflicts of interest related to an
ownership interest.
§431:10D-623.4 Documentation obligation of insurers and producers. (a) A producer shall at the time of recommendation or sale:
(1) Make a written record of any
recommendation and the basis for the recommendation subject to this part;
(2) Obtain a consumer signed statement
on a form substantially similar to Appendix B of the Spring 2020, National
Association of Insurance Commissioners Suitability In Annuity Transactions
Model Regulation, documenting:
(A) A customer's refusal to provide the
consumer profile information, if any; and
(B) A customer's understanding of the ramifications
of not providing his or her consumer profile information or providing
insufficient consumer profile information; and
(3) Obtain a consumer signed statement
on a form substantially similar to Appendix C of the Spring 2020, National
Association of Insurance Commissioners Suitability In Annuity Transactions
Model Regulation, acknowledging the annuity transaction is not recommended if a
customer decides to enter into an annuity transaction that is not based on the
producer's recommendation.
(b) Any requirement applicable to a producer
under this part shall apply to every producer who has exercised material
control or influence in the making of a recommendation and has received direct
compensation as a result of the recommendation or sale, regardless of whether
the producer has had any direct contact with the consumer. Activities such as providing or delivering
marketing or educational materials, product wholesaling or other back office
product support, and general supervision of a producer do not, in and of
themselves, constitute material control or influence.
§431:10D-624
Compliance mitigation; penalties[.]; enforcement. (a) An insurer shall be responsible for compliance
with this part. If a violation occurs
because of the action or inaction of the insurer or its [insurance]
producer, the commissioner may order:
(1) An insurer to take reasonably
appropriate corrective action for any consumer harmed by a failure to comply
with this part by the [insurer's] insurer, an entity contracted
to perform the insurer's supervisory duties, or [its insurance producer's
violation of this part;] by the producer;
(2) A business entity, general agency,
independent agency, or the [insurance] producer to take reasonably
appropriate corrective action for any consumer harmed by the [insurance]
producer's violation of this part; and
(3) Appropriate penalties and sanctions.
(b) Any penalty applicable to an insurer, a managing general agent, independent agencies, or a producer under article 13 of chapter 431 may be applicable to a violation of this part; provided that penalties may be reduced or eliminated if corrective action for the consumer was taken promptly after a violation was discovered or if the violation was not part of a pattern or practice.
(c)
The authority to enforce compliance with
this part is vested exclusively with the commissioner.
§431:10D-625
Recordkeeping. Insurers, managing general agents, independent
agencies, and [insurance] producers shall maintain or make available to
the commissioner records of the information collected from the consumer, disclosures
made to the consumer, including summaries of oral disclosures, and other
information used in making the recommendations that were the basis for
insurance transactions for five years after the insurance transaction
has been completed by the insurer. An
insurer may maintain documentation on behalf of [an insurance] a producer.
§431:10D-626 [Insurance producer]
Producer training. (a) [An insurance] A producer shall
not solicit the sale of an annuity product unless the [insurance]
producer has adequate knowledge of the product to recommend the annuity and the
[insurance] producer is in compliance with the insurer's standards for
product training. [An insurance] A
producer may rely on insurer-provided product-specific training standards and
materials to comply with this subsection.
(b) [Any insurance]
A producer who is authorized to sell annuity products on or before
January 31, 2012, shall complete by January 31, 2012, a one-time training
course on annuity products meeting the requirements of subsection (d). A producer who has completed an annuity
training course approved by the commissioner prior to July 1, 2022, shall,
within six months after July 1, 2022, complete either:
(1) A new four credit training course
approved by the commissioner after July 1, 2022; or
(2) An additional one-credit training
course approved by the commissioner and provided by an approved education
provider on appropriate sales practices, replacement, and disclosure requirements
under this part.
(c) [An
insurance] A producer who obtains a life or variable life and
variable annuity products line of authority after January 31, 2012, shall not
engage in the sale of annuities until the insurance producer has completed
training meeting the requirements of subsection (d).
(d) The training required by this section shall be approved by the commissioner, be conducted by an approved continuing education course provider, and meet the following requirements:
(1) The minimum length of the training shall be sufficient to qualify for at least four continuing education credits;
(2) The training shall include information on the following topics:
(A) The types and various classifications of annuities available on the market;
(B) Identification of the parties to an annuity;
(C) How fixed, variable, and indexed annuity contract provisions affect consumers;
(D) The application of income taxation to qualified and non-qualified annuities;
(E) The primary uses of annuities; and
(F) Appropriate standard of conduct, sales practices, replacement, and disclosure requirements; and
(3) The
training shall not include any marketing information for products
of any particular insurer or training on sales techniques.
(e) A
provider of an annuity training course intending to comply with this section
shall register as an approved continuing education course provider in this
State and comply with the rules and guidelines applicable to [insurance]
producer continuing education courses as set forth in article 9A.
(f) Annuity training courses may be conducted and completed by classroom or self-study methods in accordance with article 9A.
(g) Providers of annuity training shall comply with the reporting requirements and shall issue certificates of completion in accordance with article 9A.
(h) The satisfaction of the training requirements
of another state that are substantially similar to the provisions of this
section shall be deemed to satisfy the training requirements of this section in
this State.
(i) The satisfaction
of the components of the training requirements of any course or courses with
components determined by the commissioner to be substantially similar to the
provisions of this section shall be deemed to satisfy the training requirements
of this section.
[(i)] (j) An
insurer shall verify that [an insurance] the producer has
completed the annuity training course required by this section before allowing
the producer to sell an annuity product for the insurer. An insurer may satisfy its responsibility under
this subsection by obtaining certificates of completion of the training course
or from a reasonably reliable commercial database vendor that has a reporting
arrangement with approved continuing education course providers."
SECTION 7. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 8. This Act shall take effect upon its approval; provided that section 1 shall take effect on December 31, 2022.
INTRODUCED BY: |
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BY REQUEST |
Report Title:
Limited License, Travel Insurance, Administrator, Third Party Administrator, Dental Insurer, Dental Service Corporation, Surety Bond, Annual Report, Audited Financial Statement, Annuity, Annuity Recommendation, Consumer Profile Information, Producer, Insurer, Intermediary, Material Conflict of Interest
Description:
Amends various portions of title 24 of the Hawaii Revised Statutes to update and improve existing provisions.
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.