Mexico: Amendments to the Mexican Insurance Law and Insurance Contract Law
By Yves Hayaux-du-Tilly L. and Henri Capin Gally, Jáuregui, Navarrete y Nader, S.C.
Introduction
On March 7, 2006 the Senate (Senado) of Mexico approved a Bill ("Bill")
amending the General
Law of Insurance and Mutual Companies (Ley General de Instituciones y Sociedades Mutualistas de Seguros) ("Insurance Law") and the Insurance Contract
Law (Ley Sobre el Contrato de Seguro) ("Insurance Contract
Law") that had previously been approved by the House of
Representatives (Cámara de Diputados).
The Bill will become effective the day following its publication in the
Official Gazette of the Federation.
The main
purpose of the Bill is to (i) regulate mortgage
credit insurance (seguro de crédito
a la vivienda) and financial guarantee insurance (seguro de garantía financiera); (ii) transform the legal framework currently
applicable to the participation of foreign governments and foreign official
entities in the capital stock of Mexican insurance companies; (iii) strengthen
the legal regime applicable to the distribution of insurance products through
non-insurance agents; (iv) modify the legal framework applicable to capital
reserves; and (v) establish additional fines. The Bill also amends certain
provisions of the Insurance Contract Law, mostly related to claims-made in
civil liability insurance.
This Article
focuses on the most relevant aspects of the Bill with amendments to the
Insurance Law and Insurance Contract Law.
1. Mortgage
Insurance and Financial Guarantee Insurance
The
Insurance Law will create the mortgage credit and financial guarantee insurance
lines of business. In order to operate one of said lines of business, Mexican
insurance companies must be expressly authorized by the Ministry of the
Treasury and Public Credit (Secretaría de Hacienda y Crédito Público) (the "SHCP")
to carry-out damages insurance operations in one of the credit insurance,
mortgage credit insurance or financial guarantee insurance line of business.1
Mortgage credit insurance and financial guarantee insurance will be regulated
by general rules issued by the SHCP.2
Mexican
insurance companies authorized by the SHCP to operate the credit insurance3,
mortgage credit insurance or financial guarantee insurance line of business
will not be authorized to carry-out insurance operations in any other line of
business.4
The
Amendments define mortgage credit insurance and financial guarantee insurance,
as follows: (i) mortgage insurance is the insurance
covering payments for breaches of borrowers under credits to acquire housing
granted by financial intermediaries or entities dedicated to finance housing;
and (ii) financial guarantee insurance is the insurance covering payments for
breaches of issuers of securities, negotiable instruments or documents subject
to public offerings or intermediation in the securities market.5
The
Amendments also contain an express prohibition to contract credit insurance,
mortgage credit insurance or financial guarantee insurance with foreign
insurance companies when the insured is subject to Mexican law. The foregoing
will require that all credit, mortgage credit and financial guarantee insurance
covering individuals subject to Mexican law must be contracted with Mexican
insurance companies incorporated under Mexican law and licensed to operate in
Mexico the credit, mortgage credit or financial guarantee insurance line of
business, respectively.
This
prohibition does not apply to individuals or corporate entities that contract
financial guarantee insurance with a foreign insurance company, vis-à-vis, investments in securities, negotiable instruments or notes
that are only offered in foreign markets. In this regard, it will be of outmost
importance to carefully review the structure of all financings that include a
public offer of securities and a corporate or other guarantee from non-Mexican
insurance companies to avoid having guarantees that may be deemed to be
financial guarantee insurance under Mexican law.
The
Amendments also prohibit that Mexican insurance companies that carry-out
operations in the mortgage credit insurance and financial guarantee insurance
lines of business enter into insurance agreements with financial intermediaries
if: (i) the financial intermediary and the Mexican
insurance company are members of the same financial group, (ii) the financial
intermediary has participation in the capital stock of the Mexican insurance
company, (iii) the Mexican insurance company has participation in the capital
stock of the financial intermediary, or (iv) the Mexican insurance company and
the financial intermediary are controlled by the same holding company.6
2.
Limitations to the Participation of Foreign Governments in the Capital Stock of
Mexican Insurance Companies
Article 29,
Section I Bis, has been revised to provide that
foreign entities that act as "authorities" may not participate in any
manner whatsoever in the capital of Mexican insurance companies.7 The Insurance
Law fails to define what must be understood by "authorities" and the
cases in which it may be considered that a foreign authority
"participates" in the capital of a Mexican insurance company. In our
opinion (a) an "authority" is an entity that may issue binding
resolutions and the compliance with said resolutions may be enforced by the
lawful use of the public force; and (b) in order to "participate" in
the capital of a Mexican insurance company, the respective entity must have
corporate and economic rights as a shareholder of the Mexican insurance company
either directly or indirectly through third parties.
The
amendment under the Bill substitutes a much broader prohibition pursuant to
which foreign governments or foreign official entities were not allowed to
participate in the capital of Mexican insurance companies directly or
indirectly (through an interposed person).
Article 75,
Section II of the Insurance Law has also been revised to allow the SHCP to
revoke the license of a Mexican insurance company only if the Mexican insurance
company establishes relationships of dependence with foreign governments or
foreign official entities.8 Although the Insurance Law and the Bill are silent,
vis-à-vis, the concept o "relationship of dependence", in our
opinion, there is a "relationship of dependence" only when the foreign
government or foreign official entity has financial or corporate control or has
the capacity to influence, directly or indirectly, the decisions of the Mexican
insurance company.
Mexican
insurance companies must inform to the National Insurance and Bonding
Commission (Comisión Nacional
de Seguros y Fianzas)
("CNSF") any case in which a foreign entity that acts as authority
participates directly in the capital stock of a Mexican insurance company In
case the Mexican insurance company fails to inform the CNSF of the foregoing,
it would be subject to a fine of up to $486,700 Pesos (approximately US$45,250
Dollars)9; and the foreign "authorities" participating in the capital
of the Mexican insurance would also be subject to a fine of up to $973,400
Pesos (approximately US$90,500 Dollars).10
The direct
or indirect acquisition of shares by foreign entities that act as "authorities" may be nullified, in which case these entities may not
exercise any right, corporate or other rights stemming from the shares of the
Mexican insurance company.11
3. Distribution
of Insurance Products
Article 41
of the Insurance Law provides that entities without a license to act as
insurance agents may receive compensation for the distribution of
non-negotiable insurance contracts on behalf of Mexican insurance companies;
provided that these are not pension insurance products under Mexican social
security laws (the "Distributors").12 Distributors may be compensated
for the aforementioned services in the terms and subject to the conditions of
service agreements registered with the CNSF.
Financial
intermediaries subject to the inspection and surveillance of Mexican regulatory
authorities that distribute insurance products under Article 41 of the
Insurance Law for one or more Mexican insurance companies of the same financial
group or that operate different lines of business will be required to comply
with the following:
(i) In case the insurance products offered to the public
contain a savings or investments component, the Mexican insurance company
responsible for developing such products must register with the CNSF a
specialized training program for the employees, representatives and
attorneys-in-fact of the respective Distributor;13 and
(ii) For
insurance products different to those referred to in Section (i) above, the Mexican insurance company must agree in the
service agreement entered into with the Distributors the training programs for
employees, representatives and attorneys-in-fact of the Distributor.14
Distributors
that are not financial intermediaries and/or are not subject to the inspection
and surveillance of Mexican financial regulatory authorities will be required
to comply with the following requirements that will be specified by the CNSF
through general rules15:
(i) The insurance companies must provide such cases in which
due to the complexity or characteristics of the insurance products, the
employees, representatives or attorneys-in-fact of the Distributor must be
trained by Mexican insurance companies or evaluated and certified by the CNSF16;
and
(ii) The
specific requirements and measures to be taken to avoid conflicts of interest
which may arise when one or more Distributors are under the financial or
administrative control of one company or a group of companies, and distribute
insurance products for more than one Mexican insurance company.17
The
Distributors will now be subject to the surveillance and regulation of the CNSF
and Mexican insurance companies will now be liable for the damages and loss of
profit caused to insureds or beneficiaries for
damages caused for services provided by Distributors.
4. Reserves
Reserves for
ongoing risks which must be created and maintained by Mexican insurance
companies that offer pension or survival insurance for age, early retirement or
retirement under private schemes that complement social security, will be
formed as follows: (i) the expenses that arise from
the administration of the portfolio in which the funds of the pension or
survival insurance premiums are invested, and (ii) the mathematical reserve of
premiums that correspond to the policies in force at the time of their
appraisal. The mathematical reserve must now be calculated with actuarial
methods based on generally accepted principles that must be registered by the
Mexican insurance company with the CNSF pursuant to General Rules to be issued
by same.18
5. Investment
of Technical and Capital Reserves
The
Amendments provide that Mexican insurance companies must now invest the total
amount of their technical reserves, resources and assets, and capital reserves
pursuant to general rules to be issued by the SHCP.19
It will be
considered that Mexican insurance companies fail to cover technical reserves,
resources and assets or minimum capital reserves if they do not have enough resources
to back them up or when the resources are not invested pursuant to the
investment regime referred to in the previous paragraph or as otherwise
provided by the Insurance Law.
The CNSF
will have authority to impose fines to Mexican insurance companies when they
fail to cover technical reserves, resources and assets or minimum capital
reserves. The fines will be enforced for deficits in the technical reserves,
resources and assets or minimum capital reserves. The amount of the fines will
be calculated by multiplying the deficit in a given period by the average
equilibrium inter-banking interest rates (tasas de interés interbancaria de equilibrio) published in the Official Gazette of the
Federation.
6. Liens on
the Property of the Insurance Companies
Mexican
insurance companies were not allowed to create any lien on their property.
Under the Bill, Mexican insurance companies will be authorized to create liens
on cash or bonds as it may be required to comply with their obligations under
future or option agreements, securities, lease of securities (reportos) and loans of securities carried-out pursuant to
general rules issued by the CNSF.20
7. Reconstitution
of the Financial Deficits of Insurance Companies
When the
CNSF notices that the technical reserves, investments of the technical
reserves, minimum capital reserves or minimum paid-in capital stock of a
Mexican insurance company does not comply with the requirements set forth by
the Insurance Law, the Mexican insurance company will have to submit a plan to
the CNSF with the steps to reconstitute the deficiencies mentioned herein. Once
the plan is approved by the CNSF, the Mexican insurance company must
reconstitute its deficiencies within a specific period set forth in the plan.
If the insurance company fails to comply with the plan within the period set
forth therein, the CNSF will give a notice to the SHCP of the failure of the
Mexican insurance company to comply with the plan.
Upon
receiving the notice from the CNSF, the SHCP may no longer grant the Mexican
insurance company another period of 30 (thirty) to 60 (sixty) days to
reconstitute its deficiencies, as it did prior to the Bill. Instead, the SHCP
will initiate a proceeding to revoke the license of the insurance company.21
In addition,
if the Mexican insurance company fails to reconstitute its financial
deficiencies during the periods set forth under the Insurance Law or fails to
comply with any other requirement set forth under the Insurance Law, the CNSF
may now enforce any of the following sanctions: (i)
refrain from registering new insurance products for that insurance company; (ii)
suspend the distribution of profits to the shareholders’ of the Mexican
insurance company, (iii) totally or partially decrease the issuance or
retention of premiums and the acceptance of reinsurance operations; (iv) call
to a General Shareholders’ Meeting or a Board of Directors Meeting of the
insurance company to discuss the financial situation of the insurance company,
in which an officer of the CNSF may participate to take note on the financial
situation of the insurance company, or (v) differ the payment of the principal
and/or interests of the securities issued by the insurance company or, in its
case, order the acceleration on the conversion of debentures into shares.
8. Assistance
and Legal Services Provided by the CNSF
The CNSF
will be now required to provide assistance and legal services to its officers,
members of its Governing Board and auditors in connection with liabilities
arising from their duties. The legal assistance services will be provided with
funds allocated by the CNSF for such purposes pursuant to General Guidelines to
be approved by the Governing Board of the CNSF.22
9. Unlawful
Transfer of Shares
The
Amendments prohibit Mexican insurance companies from registering in their Stock
Registry Book (Libro de Registro
de Acciones) any transfer of shares (i) of entities acquiring shares that are considered an "authority"; and (ii) of acquiring entities that fail to observe the
regulations of the Insurance Law in connection with transfer of shares.23
If the
aforementioned prohibition is not observed (i) any
party that is affected by the unlawful transfer of shares may request the annulment
of such transfer before a competent court, in which case the parties that
unlawfully acquired such shares may not exercise the corporate or economic
rights conferred thereunder; (ii) the Mexican
insurance company must inform the foregoing to the CNSF and in case the Mexican
insurance company failed to inform the CNSF of the foregoing, it would be
subject to a fine of up to $486,700 Pesos (approximately US$45,250 Dollars);
and (iii) the foreign entities that acquired the shares of the Mexican insurance
company in breach of the prohibit referred to herein may not exercise any
rights, corporate or others, granted thereunder and
would be subject to a fine of up to $973,400 Pesos (approximately US$90,500
Dollars).
10. Fines
The CNSF may
now fine the persons that provide false information regarding the capacity
(i.e. shareholder, attorney-in-fact, trustee, etc.) in which they represent a
Shareholder in a Shareholders’ Meeting of (i) a
Mexican insurance company, (ii) the holding company of a Mexican insurance
company, or (iii) the entity that controls a Mexican insurance company. The
fine amounts to 15% of the value of the shares with which the above-mentioned
persons participated in the Shareholders’ Meeting.
Likewise,
the CNSF may now fine Mexican insurance companies that grant additional
benefits or any other benefits before the term provided for in a pension
agreement to persons that in the future may become insured parties or
beneficiaries under such agreement.
11. Claims
Made
Article 145 Bis of the Insurance Contract Law was amended in 2002 to
include the "claims made" concept; however, the final text of Article
145 Bis did not accomplish the goals for which it was
created.
The Bill
amends Article 45 Bis of the Insurance Contract Law
to improve the legal framework for claims made and occurrence made in civil
liability and permits Mexican insurance companies to take responsibility in
civil liability insurance policies: (i) for events
occurred during the life of the respective insurance policy or the year before,
provided that the insured or Mexican insurance company receives a claim for the
first time and in writing during the life of the policy, or (ii) for events
occurred during the life of the insurance policy, provided that the insured or
Mexican insurance company receives the claim for the first time and in writing
during the life of the policy or within one year following its termination. The
amendment provides that the one year periods set forth therein may be extended
but not reduced.
Furthermore,
the Bill provides that the temporary limitation on coverage may be opposed
before the insured and third party suffering the damage even in case they do
not know about the existence of the insurance, the occurrence of the casualty
or the materialization of the damage.
Finally, the
Bill expressly provides that the accumulation of amounts insured will be
subject to the general regulations on accumulation of amounts insured under the
Insurance Contract
Law.
Should you
have any question or would like to receive additional information in connection
with the Amendment to the Mexican Insurance and Insurance Contract Laws, please
do not hesitate to contact any of the partners of the Insurance and Reinsurance
Practice of Jáuregui, Navarrete y Nader.
Footnotes
1 Article 7, Section III of the Insurance Law.
2 The
general rules referred to herein have not yet been published by the SHCP.
3 Please
note that if prior to the date in which the amendments become effective a
Mexican insurance company was authorized by the SHCP to operate in the credit
insurance line of business and simultaneously in other insurance lines of
business, it may continue to operate in the lines of business for which it is
authorized to operate.
4 Article 7, Section III of the Insurance Law.
5 Article 8, Sections XI Bis and XI Bis-1, of
the Insurance Law.
6 Article 62, Section XIV, of the Insurance Law.
7 Article 29, Section I Bis, of the
Insurance Law.
8Article 75, Section III, of the Insurance Law.
9 Articles
138 Bis and 139, Section III, of the Insurance Law.
10 Article 139, Section III Bis, of the
Insurance Law.
11 Article
138 Bis of the Insurance Law.
12 Article 41 of the Insurance Law.
13 Article 42, Section I, Item (a), of the Insurance Law.
14 Article 42, Section I, Item (b), of the Insurance Law.
15 Article 41, Section II, of the Insurance Law. The CNSF has
not yet issued these general rules.
16 Article 41, Section II, Item (a), of the Insurance Law.
17 Article 41, Section II, Item (b), of the Insurance Law.
18 Article 47, Section II Bis, Item (a), of
the Insurance Law.
The CNSF has not yet published this general rules.
19 Article 57 of the Insurance Law.
20 Article 62 of the Insurance Law. The CNSF has not yet issued
these general rules.
21 Article 74 of the Insurance Law.
23 Article 138 of the Insurance Law.