ARTICLE
24 August 2017

Offshore Life Insurers Face New Conduct Of Business Rules

A
Appleby
Contributor
Appleby is one of the world’s leading offshore law firms, operating in 10 highly regarded and well-regulated locations. We provide comprehensive, expert advice and services across a number of key practice areas. We work with our clients to achieve practical solutions whether from a single location or across multiple jurisdictions.
In the race towards greater regulation and the codification of requirements to treat customers fairly, the general perception is that the Isle of Man life sector was lapped some time ago.
Isle of Man Wealth Management
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In the race towards greater regulation and the codification of requirements to treat customers fairly, the general perception is that the Isle of Man life sector was lapped some time ago. Now, however, the imminent introduction of the Insurance (Conduct of Business) (Long Term Business) Code 2017 means that - by the end of the year - the sector will have aligned their legislation with levels set by the UK; soon it may even be nudging ahead. Unfortunately, this is a race with no finishing line and probably no winners.

The draft Code published by the Isle of Man Financial Services Authority (IOMFSA) in May is expressed to constitute a "final consultation". In reality, we can expect the Code to be enacted in materially identical terms. Therefore many offshore life companies face a tough timetable to introduce significant changes in their internal governance and customer processes. Those businesses that are not already well advanced in implementing the associated culture change will find that this compounds the challenge.

The Code enshrines a "treating customers fairly" requirement, as well as more specific and prescriptive conduct of business obligations. The key areas when the Code bites are as follows:

  1. Policyholder onboarding: pre-contract disclosure, cancellation rights and ongoing disclosure
  2. Broker relationships: prescriptive terms of business requirements and ongoing monitoring
  3. Governance: obligations to treat policyholders fairly and specific requirements for market suitability assessments in the design of products and associated distribution plans

Click the icon below to read more on these key areas.

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The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

ARTICLE
24 August 2017

Offshore Life Insurers Face New Conduct Of Business Rules

Isle of Man Wealth Management
Contributor
Appleby is one of the world’s leading offshore law firms, operating in 10 highly regarded and well-regulated locations. We provide comprehensive, expert advice and services across a number of key practice areas. We work with our clients to achieve practical solutions whether from a single location or across multiple jurisdictions.
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