Ameriprise 2015 Annual Report Download - page 146

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7. Reinsurance
The Company reinsures a portion of the insurance risks associated with its traditional life, DI and LTC insurance products
through reinsurance agreements with unaffiliated reinsurance companies. Reinsurance contracts do not relieve the
Company from its primary obligation to policyholders.
The Company generally reinsures 90% of the death benefit liability for new term life insurance policies beginning in 2001
and new individual fixed and variable universal life insurance policies beginning in 2002. Policies issued prior to these
dates are not subject to these same reinsurance levels.
However, for IUL policies issued after September 1, 2013 and VUL policies issued after January 1, 2014, the Company
generally reinsures 50% of the death benefit liability. Similarly, the Company reinsures 50% of the death benefit and
morbidity liabilities related to its universal life product with long term care benefits.
The maximum amount of life insurance risk the Company will retain is $10 million on a single life and $10 million on any
flexible premium survivorship life policy; however, reinsurance agreements are in place such that retaining more than
$1.5 million of insurance risk on a single life or a flexible premium survivorship life policy is very unusual. Risk on fixed and
variable universal life policies is reinsured on a yearly renewable term basis. Risk on most term life policies starting in
2001 is reinsured on a coinsurance basis, a type of reinsurance in which the reinsurer participates proportionally in all
material risks and premiums associated with a policy.
For existing LTC policies, the Company has continued ceding 50% of the risk on a coinsurance basis to subsidiaries of
Genworth Financial, Inc. (‘‘Genworth’’) and retained the remaining risk. For RiverSource Life of NY, this reinsurance
arrangement applies for 1996 and later issues only.
Generally, the Company retains at most $5,000 per month of risk per life on DI policies sold on policy forms introduced in
most states in 2007 and reinsures the remainder of the risk on a coinsurance basis with unaffiliated reinsurance
companies. The Company retains all risk for new claims on DI contracts sold on other policy forms. The Company also
retains all risk on accidental death benefit claims and substantially all risk associated with waiver of premium provisions.
At December 31, 2015 and 2014, traditional life and UL insurance in force aggregated $196.3 billion and $195.5 billion,
respectively, of which $144.2 billion and $143.4 billion were reinsured at the respective year ends. Life insurance in force
is reported on a statutory basis.
The effect of reinsurance on premiums for the Company’s traditional long-duration contracts was as follows:
Years Ended December 31,
2015 2014 2013
(in millions)
Direct premiums $ 629 $ 645 $ 650
Reinsurance ceded (223) (222) (220)
Net premiums $ 406 $ 423 $ 430
Cost of insurance and administrative charges for non-traditional long-duration products are reflected in other revenues and
were net of reinsurance ceded of $107 million, $94 million and $87 million for the years ended December 31, 2015,
2014 and 2013, respectively.
The Company also reinsures a portion of the risks associated with its personal auto, home and umbrella insurance
products through three types of reinsurance agreements with unaffiliated reinsurance companies. The Company purchases
reinsurance with a limit of $5 million per loss and the Company retains $750,000 per loss. For 2015, the Company’s
catastrophe reinsurance had a limit of $155 million per event and the Company retained $20 million per event. For 2016,
the Company’s catastrophe reinsurance has a limit of $180 million per event of which the Company retains $20 million
per event. The Company also cedes 80% of every personal umbrella loss with a limit of $5 million per loss.
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