Glossary
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
C-SHARE
VARIABLE ANNUITIES
A form of variable annuity contract where the contract holder
pays no sales up front or surrender charges. Owners can claim
full liquidity at any time.
CAPACITY
The supply of insurance available to meet demand. Capacity depends
on the industry’s financial ability to accept risk. For
an individual insurer, the maximum amount of risk it can underwrite
based on its financial condition. The adequacy of an insurer’s
capital relative to its exposure to loss is an important measure
of solvency.
A property/casualty insurer must maintain a certain level of
capital and policyholder surplus to underwrite risks. This capital
is known as capacity. When the industry is hit by high losses,
such as after the World Trade Center terrorist attack, capacity
is diminished. It can be restored by increases in net income,
favorable investment returns, reinsuring more risk and or raising
additional capital. When there is excess capacity, usually because
of a high return on investments, premiums tend to decline as
insurers compete for market share. As premiums decline, underwriting
losses are likely to grow, reducing capacity and causing insurers
to raise rates and tighten conditions and limits in an effort
to increase profitability. Policyholder surplus is sometimes
used as a measure of capacity.
CAPITAL
Shareholder’s equity (for publicly-traded insurance companies)
and retained earnings (for mutual insurance companies). There
is no general measure of capital adequacy for property/casualty
insurers. Capital adequacy is linked to the riskiness of an
insurer’s business. A company underwriting medical device
manufacturers needs a larger cushion of capital than a company
writing Main Street business, for example. (See Risk-based capital;
Surplus; Solvency)
CAPITAL MARKETS
The markets in which equities and debt are traded. (See Securitization
of insurance risk)
CAPTIVE AGENT
A person who represents only one insurance company and is restricted
by agreement from submitting business to any other company,
unless it is first rejected by the agent’s captive company.
(See Exclusive agent)
CAPTIVES
Insurers that are created and wholly-owned by one or more non-insurers,
to provide owners with coverage. A form of self-insurance.
CAR YEAR
Equal to 365 days of insured coverage for a single vehicle.
It is the standard measurement for automobile insurance.
CASE MANAGEMENT
A system of coordinating medical services to treat a patient,
improve care, and reduce cost. A case manager coordinates health
care delivery for patients.
CATASTROPHE
Term used for statistical recording purposes to refer to a single
incident or a series of closely related incidents causing severe
insured property losses totaling more than a given amount, currently
$25 million.
CATASTROPHE BONDS
Risk-based securities that pay high interest rates and provide
insurance companies with a form of reinsurance to pay losses
from a catastrophe such as those caused by a major hurricane.
They allow insurance risk to be sold to institutional investors
in the form of bonds, thus spreading the risk. (See Securitization
of insurance risk)
CATASTROPHE DEDUCTIBLE
A percentage or dollar amount that a homeowner must pay before
the insurance policy kicks in when a major natural disaster
occurs. These large deductibles limit an insurer’s potential
losses in such cases, allowing it to insure more property. A
property insurer may not be able to buy reinsurance to protect
its own bottom line unless it keeps its potential maximum losses
under a certain level.
CATASTROPHE FACTOR
Probability of catastrophic loss, based on the total number
of catastrophes in a state over a 40-year period.
CATASTROPHE MODEL
Using computers, a method to mesh long-term disaster information
with current demographic, building and other data to determine
the potential cost of natural disasters and other catastrophic
losses for a given geographic area.
CATASTROPHE REINSURANCE
Reinsurance (insurance for insurers) for catastrophic losses.
The insurance industry is able to absorb the multibillion dollar
losses caused by natural and man-made disasters such as hurricanes,
earthquakes and terrorist attacks because losses are spread
among thousands of companies including catastrophe reinsurers
who operate on a global basis. Insurers’ ability and willingness
to sell insurance fluctuates with the availability and cost
of catastrophe reinsurance.
After major disasters, such as Hurricane Andrew and the World
Trade Center terrorist attack, the availability of catastrophe
reinsurance becomes extremely limited. Claims deplete reinsurers’
capital and, as a result, companies are more selective in the
type and amount of risks they assume. In addition, with available
supply limited, prices for reinsurance rise. This contributes
to an overall increase in prices for property insurance.
CELL PHONE INSURANCE
Separate insurance provided to cover cell phones for damage
or theft. Policies are often sold with the cell phones themselves.
CHARTERED FINANCIAL CONSULTANT / ChFC
A professional designation given by The American College to
financial services professionals who complete courses in financial
planning.
CHARTERED LIFE UNDERWRITER / CLU
A professional designation by The American College for those
who pass business examinations on insurance, investments, and
taxation, and have life insurance planning experience.
CHARTERED PROPERTY/CASUALTY UNDERWRITER / CPCU
A professional designation given by the American Institute for
Property and Liability Underwriters. National examinations and
three years of work experience are required.
CLAIMS-MADE POLICY
A form of insurance that pays claims presented to the insurer
during the term of the policy or within a specific term after
its expiration. It limits liability insurers’ exposure
to unknown future liabilities. (See Occurrence policy)
COBRA
Short for Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act. A
federal law under which group health plans sponsored by employers
with 20 or more employees must offer continuation of coverage
to employees who leave their jobs and their dependents. The
employee must pay the entire premium. Coverage can be extended
up to 18 months. Surviving dependents can receive longer coverage.
COINSURANCE
In property insurance, requires the policyholder to carry insurance
equal to a specified percentage of the value of property to
receive full payment on a loss. For health insurance, it is
a percentage of each claim above the deductible paid by the
policyholder. For a 20 percent health insurance coinsurance
clause, the policyholder pays for the deductible plus 20 percent
of his covered losses. After paying 80 percent of losses up
to a specified ceiling, the insurer starts paying 100 percent
of losses.
COLLATERAL
Property that is offered to secure a loan or other credit and
that becomes subject to seizure on default. (Also called security.)
COLLATERAL SOURCE RULE
Bars the introduction of information that indicates a person
has been compensated or reimbursed by a source other than the
defendant in civil actions related to negligence or other liability.
COLLISION COVERAGE
Portion of an auto insurance policy that covers the damage to
the policyholder’s car from a collision.
COMBINED RATIO
Percentage of each premium dollar a property/casualty insurer
spends on claims and expenses. A decrease in the combined ratio
means financial results are improving; an increase means they
are deteriorating.
COMMERCIAL GENERAL LIABILITY INSURANCE / CGL
A broad commercial policy that covers all liability exposures
of a business that are not specifically excluded. Coverage includes
product liability, completed operations, premises and operations,
and independent contractors.
COMMERCIAL LINES
Products designed for and bought by businesses. Among the major
coverages are boiler and machinery, business interruption, commercial
auto, comprehensive general liability, directors and officers
liability, fire and allied lines, inland marine, medical malpractice
liability, product liability, professional liability, surety
and fidelity, and workers compensation. Most of these commercial
coverages can be purchased separately except business interruption
which must be added to a fire insurance (property) policy. (See
Commercial multiple peril policy)
COMMERCIAL MULTIPLE PERIL POLICY
Package policy that includes property, boiler and machinery,
crime, and general liability coverages.
COMMERCIAL PAPER
Short-term, unsecured, and usually discounted promissory note
issued by commercial firms and financial companies often to
finance current business. Commercial paper, which is rated by
debt rating agencies, is sold through dealers or directly placed
with an investor.
COMMISSION
Fee paid to an agent or insurance salesperson as a percentage
of the policy premium. The percentage varies widely depending
on coverage, the insurer, and the marketing methods.
COMMUNITY RATING LAWS
Enacted in several states on health insurance policies. Insurers
are required to accept all applicants for coverage and charge
all applicants the same premium for the same coverage regardless
of age or health. Premiums are based on the rate determined
by the geographic region’s health and demographic profile.
COMPETITIVE REPLACEMENT PARTS
See Crash parts; Generic auto parts
COMPETITIVE STATE FUND
A facility established by a state to sell workers compensation
in competition with private insurers.
COMPLAINT RATIO
A measure used by some state insurance departments to track
consumer complaints against insurance companies. Generally,
it is written as the number of complaints upheld against an
insurance company, as a percentage of premiums written. In some
states, complaints from medical providers over the promptness
of payments may also be included.
COMPLETED OPERATIONS COVERAGE
Pays for bodily injury or property damage caused by a completed
project or job. Protects a business that sells a service against
liability claims.
COMPREHENSIVE COVERAGE
Portion of an auto insurance policy that covers damage to the
policyholder’s car not involving a collision with another
car (including damage from fire, explosions, earthquakes, floods,
and riots), and theft.
COMPULSORY AUTO INSURANCE
The minimum amount of auto liability insurance that meets a
state law. Financial responsibility laws in every state require
all automobile drivers to show proof, after an accident, of
their ability to pay damages up to the state minimum. In compulsory
liability states this proof, which is usually in the form of
an insurance policy, is required before you can legally drive
a car.
CONTINGENT LIABILITY
Liability of individuals, corporations, or partnerships for
accidents caused by people other than employees for whose acts
or omissions the corporations or partnerships are responsible.
COVERAGE
Synonym for insurance.
CRASH PARTS
Sheet metal parts that are most often damaged in a car crash.
(See Generic auto parts)
CREDIT
The promise to pay in the future in order to buy or borrow in
the present. The right to defer payment of debt.
CREDIT DERIVATIVES
A contract that enables a user, such as a bank, to better manage
its credit risk. A way of transferring credit risk to another
party.
CREDIT ENHANCEMENT
A technique to lower the interest payments on a bond by raising
the issue’s credit rating, often through insurance in
the form of a financial guarantee or with standby letters of
credit issued by a bank.
CREDIT INSURANCE
Commercial coverage against losses resulting from the failure
of business debtors to pay their obligation to the insured,
usually due to insolvency. The coverage is geared to manufacturers,
wholesalers, and service providers who may be dependent on a
few accounts and therefore could lose significant income in
the event of an insolvency.
CREDIT LIFE INSURANCE
Life insurance coverage on a borrower designed to repay the
balance of a loan in the event the borrower dies before the
loan is repaid. It may also include disablement and can be offered
as an option in connection with credit cards and auto loans.
CREDIT RATING
See Bond rating
CREDIT SCORE
The number produced by an analysis of an individual’s
credit history. The use of credit information affects all consumers
in many ways, from getting a job, finding a place to live, securing
a loan, getting a telephone, and buying insurance. Credit history
is routinely reviewed by insurers before issuing a commercial
policy because businesses in poor financial condition tend to
cut back on safety which can lead to more accidents and more
claims. Auto and home insurers may use information in a credit
history to produce an insurance score. Insurance scores may
be used in underwriting and rating insurance policies. (See
Insurance score.)
CRIME INSURANCE
Term referring to property coverages for the perils of burglary,
theft and robbery.
CROP-HAIL INSURANCE
Protection against damage to growing crops from hail, fire,
or lightning provided by the private market. By contrast, multiple
peril crop insurance covers a wider range of yield-reducing
conditions, such as drought and insect infestation, and is subsidized
by the federal government.
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