Ghana: Major Insurance Companies to lose Licenses

Commissioner of Insurance at the NIC Lydia Lariba Bawa
Commissioner of Insurance at the NIC Lydia Lariba Bawa

10 indigenous insurance companies are of risk losing their licenses if they fail to meet the new minimum recapitalization requirement set by the Nation Insurance Commission (NIC).

According to information available to this website, about 10 out of 46 insurance companies are yet to meet the new recapitalization requirement. Most of the 10 insurance companies are domestically owned, while three re – insurance companies are yet to meet the deadline.

The NIC it has fixed September 30, 2016 as the deadline for the remaining 10 insurance companies to recapitalize or they risk losing their licenses.

The Deputy Commissioner at the National Insurance Commission, Simon Nerro Davor insisted that the commission would crack the whip if the 10 companies fail to meet the recapitalization requirement.

“As at now we are of the view that any insurance company who is not able to meet the minimum requirement which was issued in our solvency framework last year by the end of the third quarter of this year, we will have to take action against.

Everything we do is according to the dictates of the insurance law. The insurance law is so clear that if you are not able to meet the minimum capitalization requirement then meaning a certain regulatory actions has to be taken against you”, he told Citi FM, an Accra-based radio station.

Davor further stated that “when we start the regulatory process it could lead to liquidation, it can lead to transfer of assets or lead to anything. So we are saying that all the insurances companies have up to the end of the third quarter to capitalize or all the measures recommended in the insurance law will be followed to have them taken out.

The NIC, last year, raised the minimum capitalization requirement for insurance companies to 15 million cedis and 40 million cedis for re – insurance companies. This formed part of moves to build the capacity of the local insurance industry to be able to underwrite big ticketing transactions like insuring the petroleum upstream activities such as the insuring of the Floating Production Storage and offloading vessels in the country.

African Eye Report

Leave a Reply

*