APRA points to group life structural issues

6 January 2015
| By Mike |
image
image
expand image

The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) has warned life companies that simply lifting group insurance premiums will not succeed in addressing the core structural issues impacting the industry.

In its latest APRA Insight publication, the regulator has pointed to events in the group insurance sector and the manner in which the major insurers had failed to heed warnings about the manner in which significant price reductions combined with softer underwriting practices and enhancements to benefits would ultimately affect profitability.

The APRA analysis said that in the resultant fall-out, the immediate response of affected life insurers

had been to lift premiums sharply to redress losses.

"Not only has this led to adverse outcomes for superannuation fund members, it does not address the structural problems that caused the situation," it said.

The regulator said that it was in these circumstances that APRA supervisors were coordinating closely across the life insurance and superannuation sectors to ensure that life insurers, reinsurers and superannuation fund trustees were "working together to identify and resolve the underlying causes of the strains in the group risk insurance market".

"Throughout, APRA's message to life insurers and reinsurers has been that boards must ensure they understand adequately the risks they incur in group insurance business, and that risk management processes are adequate for the uncertainties in this line of business," it said.

Read more about:

AUTHOR

Add new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Recommended for you

sub-bgsidebar subscription

Never miss the latest developments in Super Review! Anytime, Anywhere!

Grant Banner

From my perspective, 40- 50% of people are likely going to be deeply unhappy about how long they actually live. ...

4 months 4 weeks ago
Kevin Gorman

Super director remuneration ...

5 months ago
Anthony Asher

No doubt true, but most of it is still because over 45’s have been upgrading their houses with 30 year mortgages. Money ...

5 months ago

Iress has issued an update denying the validity of “certain statements” made today by an alleged threat actor....

6 hours ago

The research house has offered a silver lining after super fund returns saw the end of a five-month streak last month....

1 day 5 hours ago

A survey of almost 6,000 fund members has identified weakening retirement confidence, particularly among those under 55 years of age, signalling an opportunity for super ...

1 day 6 hours ago

TOP PERFORMING FUNDS

ACS FIXED INT - AUSTRALIA/GLOBAL BOND