Florida's chief insurance regulator said today in an exclusive interview that he hopes to put a final rule in place by April allowing foreign reinsurers to operate without necessarily posting any collateral.

However, “you can anticipate there may be a challenge to the rule,” according to Florida Insurance Commissioner Kevin McCarty, raising the possibility of court action by domestic insurance and reinsurance groups, which have voiced angry opposition to such a change.

In addition to Mr. McCarty in Florida, New York Insurance Superintendent Eric Dinallo had earlier proposed a regulation to reassess and possibly eliminate collateral requirements without waiting for a model for the change to be crafted by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners.

In an interview at the National Underwriter headquarters office in Hoboken, N.J., Mr. McCarty said the moves by the two regulators were not “rogue” actions. “We've been abundantly patient,” he said, and were prepared to go along with a proposal that had been crafted, but then wound up being sent back to an NAIC study committee for further examination.

“We were disappointed the NAIC” went back to study “something we had studied for seven years,” he said.

Mr. McCarty said he was looking at a 60-to-90 day time frame to get his collateral rule approved by the state's Financial Services Commission, made up of members of the governor's cabinet, and has just begun a review of industry comments that have been submitted.

Both states would require reinsurers to have top rankings by financial rating firms in order to operate without collateral.

He said he is working very closely with New York so that the rules they come up with will be very much alike. “At the end of the day, if not similar, the differences between the two regulations will be minimal,” he added.

The current system, allowing U.S. reinsurance firms to do business without having to post any collateral, but requiring alien insurers with a solid financial keel to post 100 percent of their potential liabilities, “doesn't survive analysis,” Mr. McCarty said.

Florida's legislature gave approval for the reinsurance change last January as part of broad-based legislation designed to improve insurance availability.

That legislation also expanded the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund to help insurers reduce their costs by offering them discount reinsurance based on a requirement that carrier savings were to be passed on to customers.

Last month, Florida Gov. Charlie Crist revealed he has lined up three major law firms to bring a class-action suit against property insurers, who he says are violating that law by not bringing down rates.

Mr. McCarty said the governor is “deeply concerned that many companies, not all”–some of them large insurers–”have failed to pass savings on.” He said the insurers, including Allstate, when asked what was needed to improve the Florida marketplace for them, had said “the solution is expansion of the Florida cat fund.”

“We didn't' see that in their filing,” he said. Allstate has been called by his Office of Insurance Regulation to appear for a hearing next week. His office hit the insurance giant with a wide-ranging subpoena seeking cartloads of information about claims-handling practices and other business operations.

“They objected to areas of interest,” including their communications and dealing with rating organizations, risk modelers and trade associations, said Mr. McCarty, adding that, if necessary, “we will go to court to enforce the subpoena.”

Despite tussles with some insurers, Mr. McCarty noted the state has seen some new insurer capital coming into Florida, while one carrier was recently upgraded, and some have been assuming business from the state insurer of last resort, Citizens.

Mr. McCarty also spoke of what he sees as the need for federal supports for a catastrophe insurance plan. At some point, he said, “there is going to be a storm out there that is going to require the federal government” to step in, adding that it was more “rational” to have a national catastrophe program in place than to deal with such crises on an ad hoc basis.

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