The New Zealand Herald

RBNZ explains action on CBL Insurance

CBL Insurance breached central bank’s orders

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The Reserve Bank of New Zealand says it asked for CBL Insurance (CBLI) to be put into an interim liquidatio­n after the company paid $55 million to overseas companies, breaching the central bank’s orders.

Parent company CBL Corp, an Auckland-based credit surety and financial insurance risk firm, had its stock suspended from the NZX on February 8 amid concerns from NZX Regulation about the informatio­n it had given the market, following engagement between it, CBL, the Financial Markets Authority (FMA), the Reserve Bank, and a number of overseas regulators with prudential oversight of CBL’s internatio­nal insurance business. On February 20, CBL Insurance told the Reserve Bank it was continuing to operate despite being below the minimum regulatory solvency level.

I nterim l i quidators were appointed by the Auckland High Court last week, and yesterday the Reserve Bank’s deputy governor and head of financial stability Geoff Bascand said the payments had been the cause. The central bank’s concerns about CBL I nsurance’s reserving policies and regulatory solvency were being reviewed with the company and through an independen­t investigat­ion, and the bank had told CBL it needed approval to make any significan­t transactio­ns.

“CBL Insurance did not have our approval but neverthele­ss paid a total of $55 million to two other entities,” Bascand said. “The payments may provide some creditors of CBL Insurance with an advantage over other creditors.”

In an affidavit released alongside Bascand’s statement, the bank’s head of prudential supervisio­n Tony Fiennes said the bank believes CBLI has $750m in assets, mainly in cash and insurance receivable­s, and there is serious risk the directors could further dispose of those or that overseas creditors could ask for freezing orders.

CBLI paid 25 million euro, or around $42m, to Alpha Insurance of Denmark for reinsuranc­e claims on February 16, despite the bank declining permission and ordering it not to make the payment, the affidavit says. Between Feb 8 and Feb 20, it also made other payments, with the total including the Alpha Insurance payment worth $55m. Fiennes said the company’s chair, John Wells, had acknowledg­ed the breach for the Alpha Insurance payment, but had offered no explanatio­n for the other payments.

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