Tag: NAICOM

  • ARIAN, NAICOM train 300 agents

    ARIAN, NAICOM train 300 agents

    The Association of Registered Insurance Agents of Nigeria (ARIAN) and the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) have trained over 300 insurance agents.

    ARIAN President, Gbadebo Olamerun, who made this known in Lagos, said the training was sponsored by NAICOM to increase insurance penetration and it is the first of its kind in the industry.

    According to him, the Commission realise that it is better to train the foot soldiers – insurance agents.

    He said the agents trained represents agent managers, regional managers, unit managers and agency controllers from over 15 firms.

    He noted that the agents would further drive the agenda of the Commission on the Market Development Restructuring Initiative (MDRI)

    He stressed that the Commission expected them to increase  penetration, demystify the urban transactions common in the industry to urban rural.

    The training will help the agents to reach the nooks and crannies of the country. “There is no way we can achieve the goals without adequate knowledge,” he added.

  • NAICOM okays Staco 2014 accounts

    Staco Insurance has joined the few insurance companies that have received the nod for their 2014 International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)-based accounts by the regulatory body, the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM).

    Managing Director of the company, Sakiru Oyefeso broke the news to the board and management of the company.

    He said the NAICOM approved our 2014 full year financial accounts, adding: ‘’We are happy about it that we are able to beat the June 30 deadline given to insurance companies to submit their audited full year accounts as stipulated in the Insurance Act 2003.’’

    He said the company recorded a gross premium income of N5.96 billion last year, as against N5.91 billion achieved the previous year.

    He said all genuine claims were paid to its affected policyholders during the outgone year, noting that the company’s priority is prompt settlement of genuine insurance claims.

  • NAICOM okays LASACO 2014 account

    NAICOM okays LASACO 2014 account

    The National Insurance Commission has approved the 2014 reports of LASACO Assurance Plc.

    The firm’s Group Managing Director, Olusola Ladipo-Ajayi, made this known in a statement.

    He said the company recorded a gross premium income of N5.6 billion, as  against N4.9 billion in 2013.

    It said: “The company grossed a profit before tax of N525million, as  against N412million made in 2013. Its profit after tax rose to N445million against N275million recorded in 2013. The Company grew its earning per share from N00.4 in 2013 to N00.6 in the year under review.

    “The company settled N1.8billion in claims and insurance benefits in 2014 and its Operating expenses for the year 2014, amounted to N1.54billion representing a decrease of N211million compared to prior year of N1.75billion”.

    Ladipo-Ajayi explained that the company’s performance in the 2014 financial year was a reflection of team work and strategic deployment of resources, points out that the recent restructuring by the Company is paying up.

    He added that NAICOM lived up to its commitment of giving speedy approval for accounts that are well-presented in compliance with International Financial Reporting Standard (IFRS).

     

  • Naicom takes over International Energy Insurance

    •Appoints interim management

    The National Insurance Commission (Naicom), the apex regulator for the insurance industry, has sacked the management and board of International Energy Insurance (IEI)Plc, a publicly quoted insurance company on the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE).

    Naicom stated that the intervention in the management of the company was done to protect the customers and shareholders of the company.

    The interim management board was inaugurated by the deputy commissioner, technical, National Insurance Commission (Naicom), Mohammed Kari and included Mr Muhammad Ahmad as chairman, Ms. Daisy Ekineh and Mrs. Bridget Akintola.

    To also assist the interim board in its functions, Mr. Peter Irene was appointed as the interim managing director to lead the executive management of the company. The appointment of took effect last week and it is expected to be for an initial period of six months.

    Kari explained that the intervention became necessary in order to protect the policyholders and shareholders of the Company.

    He however pointed out that notwithstanding Naicom’s intervention; the company still remains a going concern with the capacity to underwrite all types of general insurance businesses.

    IEI had in 2013 restructured its share capital. The company restructured its previous outstanding shares of 6.42 billion ordinary shares of 50 kobo each to 1.284 billion ordinary shares of 50 kobo each. The post-consolidation shares were listed at N2.50 per share, making IEI the highest-priced stock in the insurance sector then. IEI has since fallen to 53 kobo per share.

    IEI emerged in June 2003 when a group of investors and management acquired 70 per cent majority equity stake in Global Assurance Company Limited. Ironically, Global Assurance was then 34 years old and under the technical management of Naicom.

    The new owners had then redirected the company changing the core business focus to energy insurance. The company was subsequently recapitalised to N500 million to meet with the challenges of its new business focus.

  • NAICOM gets Takaful Advisory Council

    NAICOM gets Takaful Advisory Council

    The Federal Ministry of Finance has inaugurated the National Insurance Commission’s (NAICOM) Takaful Advisory Council (TAC) in Abuja.

    The TAC comprises four dons. They are Prof Dawud Olatokonbo Shittu Noibi, who will serve as its Chairman, Dr. Bashir Umar Aliyu, Dr Abdulrazak Abdulmajeed Alaro and Dr. Abubakar Mohammed Sani.

    The Minister of State for Finance, Federal Ministry of Finance, Ambassador Bashir Yuguda, said the event was coming at a time the industry is geared towards moving  the economy forward to beat other the developing nations.

    He said the development of the  guidelines for the regulation of Takaful insurance business in Nigeria by NAICOM heralded an important financial inclusion platform.

    He said: “Accordingly, the necessity for Shariah Governance in islamic financial supervision, regulation and operation is indispensable for the fulfillment of stakeholders’ expectations and the maintenance of confidence in the overall financial service system.

    “Shariah Governance is, therefore, an important and a unique feature that makes Islamic financial services easier for self-regulation. This is clearly manifested in the requirement that all Islamic financial service operators must have an in-house Shariah body referred to as the Advisory Council of Experts (ACE) which ensures the establishment of sound Shariah compliant transactions for each of the registered business entity.”

    He told the members that their role as advisory council for the regulator is to serve as an additional layer for addressing issues that may arise from Takaful operators’ ACE regarding Shariah compliance in Takaful undertakings.

    He also said that in the era of risk management and risk based approach to financial service regulation, they should appreciate that Shariah non-compliance is identified as the top most in the ranking of risks in Islamic Finance.

    “Additionally, it is important to highlight that the role of Shariah scholars who are in the field of Islamic financial services requires constant monitoring and review of Shariah rulings in the global Islamic financial industry. This is necessary to follow the trend towards harmonisation and convergence of Shariah principles and on-going developments on new products as encouraged by the international standard setting bodies like the Accounting and Auditing Organisation for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI) Bahrain, the General Council for Islamic Banks and Financial Institutions (CIBAFI) Bahrain and the Islamic Financial Services Board (IFSB) Malaysia.

    “It is the expectation of the present administration, that this endeavour will further our resolve to deepen insurance penetration and acceptance in Nigeria. Therefore, your role as advisory council for the Takaful regulator is highly sensitive and requires critical decision making for safeguarding and advancing public good for all stakeholders.

    “As Shariah scholars, it is universally acknowledged that the status you are occupying in the society is an exalted one which is difficult to handle without vast knowledge and sincerity of purpose. I believe your choice as members of the council resulted from consideration of your rich profiles, knowledge and individual contributions towards the development of Islamic finance in your various capacities,” he said.  Commissioner for Insurance, Fola Daniel said that in consonance with their objective, the Commission established the framework to exploit the viable Takaful insurance sector. This led to the rolling out of the Takaful Insurance Operational Guidelines in 2013.

    He, however, said that in order for the Commission to ensure an all-inclusive regulatory role, the guidelines provide for the establishment of the TAC by the Commission to serve as a second layer of governance for the Takaful operators Advisory Council of Experts (ACE).

    He explained that the TAC is also established to advise and guide the Commission on all Shariah matters on the Takaful undertakings, adding that it is his conviction that the inauguration of the TAC is another step towards the implementation of the Takaful guidelines.

  • ‘NAICOM‘ll protect policyholders’

    One of the prudential and supervisory powers of the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) is about helping to protect the people from the failure of any insurance institution by ensuring the institution is adequately run, the Commission’s Director, Inspectorate, Barineka Thompson, has said.

    He made this known while speaking to reporters on the Roadmap for Transforming the Insurance Sector in Nigeria, which requires NAICOM identifying risks and ensuring that appropriate supervisory action, is taken to keep the risks, which an institution is exposed, at an acceptable level.

    Thompson stated that Section 40 of NAICOM Act requires appropriate steps to be taken for the purpose of protecting policy-holders or potential policy-holders of an insurance institution against the risk that the insurance institution may be unable to meet its liabilities or fulfill the reasonable expectation of policyholders or potential policy-holders.

    He said NAICOM’s role is to facilitate the orderly conduct of insurance business through appropriate regulation, noting that the commission has historically implemented the requirements of the law as it concerns minimum capital requirements for operation of insurance companies, consumer protection, solvency and orderly exit of companies.

    He noted that the pillars of the commission’s strategy have been to deepen insurance penetration; strengthen insurance institutions through effective regulatory framework; improve communication with all stakeholders to ensure transparency, public trust and confidence; transform the commission’s processes, people and systems, and optimise revenue collection and effective management of assets.

    NAICOM’s regulatory and supervisory practices were subjected to loan IMF/World FSAP review in 2013.

    He said: “The current transformation agenda is offering the industry the opportunity to readjust its governance, operational structures and leverage on the interest and support provided in the policy direction of the Commission.

    “It is expected that companies will begin to review their strategic business and operating models, overhaul product portfolios and distribution strategy, enhance ICT capability and other elements that can stimulate the growth of their overall business.

    “NAICOM will remain focused on the issues relevant to the protection of policyholders, growth of the insurance sector and promote financial stability.”

    Insurers, he said, must keep pace with evolving regulations, which are becoming more stringent, affecting everything from capital requirements, to commission rates and customer care.

  • E-regulation coming,  says NAICOM

    E-regulation coming, says NAICOM

    The National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) is gearing up to deploy its electronic platform in the regulation of the insurance industry by middle of this year, Director Research Strategy and Information Technology, Adamu Balanti has said.

    He made this known while outlining efforts of the commission to reposition the insurance industry in an interview with reporters.

    According to him, insurance operators will file their 2014 accounts through the e-platform that is presently being test-run while the e-platform would also kick-start the issuing of unique identification number to all insurance policyholders in the country.

    Highlighting the uniqueness of the policy, he said the identification system is to monitor and account for all policies issued.

    He said: “This system is to build an integration point for the various stakeholders involved in insurance policy issuance, generate and provide a unique identification number for every policy issued in order to track and provide relevant statistics on them.

    “It would help develop capacity in NAICOM to record all policies issued by Nigerian insurance companies, ensure proper accountability of all premium returns by insurance companies, capture all businesses done by every broker through the underwriter, ensure proper accountability of all insurance levies received from brokers, provide easy access to data regarding policies issued, and support analysis and policy based decision making.”

    “The portal provides a single point of access for all NAICOM services, validate the authenticity of insurance policies and accessible from any location within Nigeria.”

    Balanti emphasised that the system should be able to interact or communicate with other systems or users such as the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), the Nigeria Police Force, and the Vehicle Inspection Officers (VIO).

    “We want to identify each individual insurance policy issued in the country; this is why we are developing, what we call – Unique Policy Identifier (UPI).  With it, each insurance policy document issued in the country will have a unique identification number. The Unique number will be used to identify that document,’’ he added.

  • New IGI boss calls for review of insurance regulations

    New IGI boss calls for review of insurance regulations

    The  Group Managing Director, Industrial and General Insurance Plc (IGI), Rotimi Fashola, has called for a review of some of the regulations by the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM), saying such a measure would lead to a greater contribution of insurance products to the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    Fashola, who has just been appointed CEO of IGI, said a re-examination of some of these policies  would determine their effectiveness and ensure they are not counter-productive to the industry.

    He listed the ‘No Premium No Cover’, Inadmissible foreign investment; Restriction on insurance investments and recognition of offshore investments; Insurance of oil and gas imports; Cabotage Act 2003; Amendment of Companies Income Tax (Amendment) Act 2007 and Multiple taxation of insurance companies by different tiers of government as some of the issues begging for review.

    He urged the Commission to also look into government’s patronage of insurance services and the need for prompt payment of premium, Brokers’ yearly renewal of license and Investment in properties and the encroachment on insurance business by government agencies  which try to provide insurance protection to aviation passengers and public liability for nuclear risks.

    Fashola also argued for the need by the government to support the quest for accelerated insurance penetration in Nigeria through micro insurance and takaful insurance, saying that NAICOM under the leadership of the current Commissioner, Fola Daniel and his deputies, has done well in stabilising the industry.

    He said: “The Commission deserves applause for introducing the Market Development and Restructuring Initiative (MDRI) designed to promote compulsory insurances, the rejuvenated policy of No Premium No Cover; the regulation on micro-insurance and the exposure of the draft on market conduct guideline, that focuses regulation on ethics and best practice principles. NAICOM must be commended for always making it a point of duty to put the industry on notice early enough before full implementation and application.

    “However, for an industry that still needs to grow and contribute to the nation’s GDP, it is imperative that some of the current regulatory interventions are re-examined thoroughly to determine their effectiveness and to ensure that they are not counter-productive,” he stated.

    On ‘No Premium No Cover’, Fashola explained that it is true that many government Ministries, Agencies and Departments (MDA) were no longer insuring their assets because of the delay experienced in the approval of their budget, adding that based on this, operators are advocating for these agencies to be exempted from No Premium No Cover, as this would encourage them to embrace Insurance.

    He said allowance should be made for this category since their receivables are always collected even when there’s  delay.

    On investment in properties, he said the Insurance Act 2003, pegs investment in landed properties at 25 per cent and 35 per cent for General Business and Life Business respectively, arguing that this needs to be reviewed in the face of the crash in the stock market which led to some insurance companies losing much of their investment in the past.

    “The encroachment on insurance business by government agencies  which try to provide insurance protection to aviation passengers and public liability for nuclear risks, is also an issue. The Federal Government in 2007 divested its interest in Insurance business when it sold NICON and Nigeria Re, on the understanding that such concerns are better managed by the private sector. But ironically, the same Government extracted workmen’s compensation insurance business and transferred it to NSITF as Employee Compensation Scheme,” Fashola said.

    “In similar vein, the Federal Government transferred pension business from the insurance industry to the Pension Fund Administrators; while it also moved health insurance from the insurance industry to the Nigeria Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS). It is my hope that the income from both sides are credited to the Insurance industry in determining its true contribution to GDP, as the income should have been earned by insurance companies if not for government intervention and operation of the law.

    He said feelers from official quarters indicate that the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), under the Ministry of Aviation, is planning to establish insurance fund for aviation passengers’ liability. All over the world, aviation passengers’ liability is subject to international conventions and the risks are covered by conventional insurance policies; Nigeria cannot be an exception. Similarly, the Nuclear Agency wants to establish fund for nuclear damage insurance, instead of seeking conventional Insurance cover for the risks which are covered in international insurance market.

    He continued: “Government and its agencies have been paying lip service to the importance and benefits of insurance, without serious patronage and support. There is hardly sufficient budget provision for payment of insurance premium by government and its agencies. Therefore, when insurance services are patronised, payment of the premium becomes an issue, a clear negation of the provisions of the law on “No premium, No cover”. Some government parastatals or enterprises are funded without allocation for insurance. Many insurance policies contracted by the MDAs in the past were not renewed, thus leaving the assets exposed to risk, damage and losses without insurance protection.

    “Many of the parastatals are no longer contracting insurance, certainly in breach of some of the compulsory insurances, because of the government budget system. It is my considered opinion that exemption be granted to Government in the strict application of Section 50, ‘No Premium No Cover’. The reason is that government debt is a statutory, sovereign debt which will be paid by succeeding administration.”

  • NAICOM warns CEOs against paying  unethical commission

    NAICOM warns CEOs against paying unethical commission

    • Fines firm N62m for default

    The National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) has warned Chief Executive Officers (CEOs) of insurance firms to desist from paying overriding commission to brokers or face the wrath of the law.

    Overriding commission is an extra commission paid by insurance firms to brokers against what the law prescribes to gain undue advantage over competitors.

    Commissioner for Insurance, Fola Daniel, who gave this warning at a briefing, said the Commission would increase fines against  defaulters from N200,000 to N10 million.

    He said the commission recently fined an insurance firm N62 million, adding that it is enough for shareholders of such firm to query and sack the chief executive officer of the firm for the misdemeanour.

    Daniel said: “The issue of overriding commission is like the Ten Commandments God gave to mankind. There is no how hard a preacher preaches about it, there are people who will still want to break the laws and the same is what we are experiencing in the industry.

    “But we are deterring them from breaking these rules. Some shareholders at their annual general meetings complain that NAICOM is just pilling penalties on them and it was also reechoed in the press. In one of the meetings I had with industry, I said though we have been slamming you with penalties, it has not stopped you from misbehaving. I promised them that the penalties will get bigger.”

    He stressed that since inception, NAICOM has not fined any insurance company N10 million but this year, a company paid N62 million.

    He said: “As we speak, the N62 million is a shouting figure for the banking sector, it is not a common fine. But as people are becoming hardened, we must also restrategise on how to effectively deal with them. So, for any insurance company that may be complaining of N500,000 or N200,000 fines, we have promised them that we will not do it again; rather, they will get N5 million, N10 million even multiple of that as fines so much that some managing directors will lose their jobs, because if I am a shareholder and you make me pay N200 million to a regulator; not tax, there will be trouble.

    “One of the complaints we receive from the industry last year was incessant inspection of their books because some significant companies were inspected up to six times. This is because we want to know exactly what they are doing. if we see an expenditure of N5 million at a time, you got big business, we interrogate to know what they might have done with the money and we will want to know its recipient.”

  • Micro-insurance workshop holds April 7

    Micro-insurance workshop holds April 7

    Greenfocus Global Services will hold workshops between April 7 and 8, in Ibadan, Oyo State for Small Medium Enterprises, Micro and Small business, small scale industries and small scale and cottage farmers on insuring their businesses and investments.

    The workshops are being held with All Farmers Association of Nigeria, Tradesmen and Artisans Association of Nigeria, Association of Commodity Market Women and Men, from the Oyo State Chapter.

    The firm’s Managing Director, Adeola Adessy, in a statement, said the workshops are geared toward making them see insurance  as risk management.

    According to him, the event is expected to complement the effort of the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) to deepen the awareness of micro insurance.

    He noted that they are, however, soliciting the support of NAICOM to enable them get the attention of the insurance firms, government agencies, commercial banks, and other stakeholders.