Item 1. BUSINESS
OVERVIEW
Citizens, Inc. ("Citizens" or the "Company") is an insurance holding company incorporated in Colorado serving the life insurance needs of individuals in the United States since 1969 and internationally since 1975. Through our insurance subsidiaries, we provide insurance benefits to residents in 31 U.S. states and more than 75 different countries. We pursue a strategy of offering traditional insurance products in niche markets where we believe we are able to achieve competitive advantages. We had approximately $1.8 billion of assets at December 31, 2020 and approximately $4.1 billion of insurance in force. We operate in two business segments:
•Life Insurance segment - U.S. dollar-denominated ordinary whole life insurance and endowment policies predominantly sold to non-U.S. residents, located principally in Latin America and the Pacific Rim, sold through independent consultants in various countries; and
•Home Service Insurance segment - final expense life insurance and limited liability property insurance policies marketed to middle- and lower-income households in Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas, and sold through independent agents and through funeral homes.
As an insurance provider, we collect premiums on an ongoing basis from our policyholders and invest the majority of the premiums to pay future benefits, including claims, surrenders and policyholder dividends. Accordingly, the Company derives its revenues principally from: (1) life insurance premiums earned for insurance coverages provided to insureds; and (2) net investment income. In addition to paying and reserving for insurance benefits that we pay to our policyholders, our expenses consist primarily of the costs of selling our insurance products (e.g., commissions, underwriting, marketing expenses), operating expenses and income taxes.
Because collection of premiums is the primary source of our revenues, our overall financial performance depends primarily upon the pricing of our insurance products and the accuracy of our pricing assumptions. The Company seeks to price our insurance policies such that insurance premiums and future net investment income earned on premiums received will cover our expenses and the ultimate cost of paying claims reported on the policies and provide for a profit margin. Pricing adequacy depends on a number of factors, including proper evaluation of underwriting risks, the ability to project future losses based on historical loss experience adjusted for known trends, the Company’s response to competitors, the ability to obtain regulatory approval for rate changes if applicable, expectations about regulatory and legal developments and expense levels.
In order to manage the risks related to pricing, we employ medical underwriting procedures to assess and quantify risks before we issue policies. Insurance applications are reviewed to determine eligibility based on underwriting guidelines we establish, as well as to determine the applicable premium. We periodically review our underwriting requirements and may make changes as needed.
We also seek to manage pricing risk through:
•favorable risk selection and diversification;
•management of claims;
•use of reinsurance;
•careful monitoring of our mortality and morbidity experience; and
•management of our expense ratio.
In addition to insurance premiums, the investment return, or yield, on invested assets is an important element of the Company’s earnings since insurance products are priced with the assumption that premiums received can be invested for a period of time before benefits are paid. Most of the Company’s invested assets have been held in available for sale ("AFS") fixed maturity securities, primarily in asset classes of corporate bonds, municipal bonds, and government obligation bonds. The interest rate environment has a significant impact on the determination of insurance contract liabilities, our investment rates and yields, and our asset/liability management. The profitability
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of fixed annuities, riders and other "spread-based" product features depends largely on the Company’s ability to earn target spreads between earned investment rates on assets and interest credited to policyholders.
The primary investment objective for the Company is to maximize economic value, consistent with acceptable risk parameters, including the management of credit risk and interest rate sensitivity of invested assets, while generating sufficient after-tax income to meet policyholder and corporate obligations. The Company maintains a prudent investment strategy that may vary based on a variety of factors including business needs, regulatory requirements and tax considerations.
CHANGE IN CONTROL; AGREEMENT TO PURCHASE THE CLASS B SHARES; ANTICIPATED DIVESTITURE OF CONTROL
On July 29, 2020, the Harold E. Riley Foundation (the “Foundation”) became the owner of 100% of the Company’s outstanding Class B common stock (the “Class B Shares”). Because the Company’s Restated and Amended Articles of Incorporation provide that the holders of the Class B Shares shall have the exclusive right to elect a simple majority of the members of the Board of Directors (the “Board”) of the Company, as of such date, the Foundation controlled the Company (the “change in control”).
Following the change in control, several material events occurred that impacted us:
•On August 5, 2020, Geoffrey M. Kolander, our President and Chief Executive Officer and a member of the Board, resigned, triggering the change in control severance provision in his employment agreement with the Company;
•On the same date, Gerald W. Shields, our Vice Chairman of the Board, was appointed as the Interim Chief Executive Officer and President of the Company, to serve in such position while the Board conducted a search to find a permanent replacement for Mr. Kolander;
•On August 13, 2020, the Foundation delivered an Action by Written Consent of the Foundation to the Company, purporting to remove the Company’s directors elected by the Class B Shares ("Class B directors") and add five director nominees to the Company’s Board;
•The Board disputed the Foundation's action, on the basis that the Foundation did not follow the required procedures for director appointments mandated by the Company's Corporate Governance Guidelines and Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee charter;
•As described in Item 3. Legal Proceedings, on September 2, 2020, the Foundation filed suit against the Company and its eight directors in the District Court for Arapahoe County, Colorado (the “Colorado Litigation”,
•and on September 28, 2020, the Foundation and the Company entered into a mutually agreed Status Quo Stipulation, whereby the Board and its committees agreed not to direct or permit anyone on their or the Company’s behalf to take any significant action that is outside the ordinary course of business without the consent of the Foundation;
•The two sole charitable beneficiaries of the Foundation, Baylor University and Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary (the “Foundation Beneficiaries”), subsequently filed a lawsuit against the Foundation and its Chief Executive Officer / President, Michael C. Hughes (who was also one of the purported nominees submitted to the Company by the Foundation), claiming, among other things, that the Foundation’s board of trustees breached their fiduciary duties to the Foundation and misused Foundation monies for personal benefit, including the litigation against the Company in an attempt to seat themselves on the Company’s board (the “Texas Third-Party Litigation”);
•The Texas Attorney General intervened on behalf of the Foundation Beneficiaries in the Texas Third-Party Litigation; and
•On December 7, 2020, the Company filed counterclaims and third-party claims in the Colorado Litigation against the Foundation and two of its officers or trustees, Charles W. Hott and Michael C. Hughes alleging that Mr. Hughes and Mr. Hott, as trustees or officers of the Foundation, among other things: (i) defrauded state insurance regulators in order to seize control of the Company, (ii) breached their fiduciary duties to all of the Company’s shareholders, and (iii) violated the Colorado Consumer Protection Act (collectively, the “Counterclaims").
On February 6, 2021, the Foundation Beneficiaries settled the Texas Third-Party Litigation with the Foundation in which they alleged that the Foundation trustees, including Mr. Hughes and Mr. Hott, breached their fiduciary duties
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to the Foundation and misused Foundation monies for personal benefit, including the filing of the Colorado Litigation (see Item 3, Legal Proceedings - “Texas Suit filed by the Foundation’s Beneficiaries against the Foundation”). As a result of their settlement, Mr. Hughes and Mr. Hott were removed as trustees from the Foundation. The Foundation Beneficiaries, upon gaining control of the Foundation through their appointed trustees to the Foundation, agreed to dismiss the Colorado Litigation and entered into a Mutual Agreement for Compromise, Settlement and Release with the Company and its individual directors (the “Foundation Settlement Agreement”).
As a result of the Foundation Settlement Agreement:
•The Company, its directors and the Foundation dismissed all claims at issue in the Colorado Litigation and the parties agreed to mutual releases for conduct prior to February 5, 2021;
•The Company: (a) restored its Board to its form as of August 12, 2020 consisting of a nine-seat Board comprised of four directors elected by the Company's Class A common stock (Christopher W. Claus, J.D. Davis, Jr., Gerald W. Shields, and Frank A. Keating II), four Class B directors (E. Dean Gage, Robert B. Sloan, Terry S. Maness, and Constance K. Weaver), and one Class B vacancy; and (b) restored the Company’s Amended and Restated Bylaws to the form in which they existed on August 12, 2020;
•The Foundation withdrew the Foundation nominees who had been submitted pursuant to the August 13, 2020 Action by Written Consent of the Foundation and approved the restoration of the four Class B directors named above; and
•The Foundation agreed to sell, and the Company agreed to purchase, 100% of the Company’s Class B Shares from the Foundation for $9.1 million.
On February 6, 2021, pursuant to the Foundation Settlement Agreement, the Company entered into an agreement with the Foundation to purchase all of the Class B Shares for a purchase price of $9.1 million (the “B Share Transaction”). As required by the insurance holding company systems laws that govern our insurance subsidiaries, the Company and the Foundation are in the process of acquiring the necessary regulatory approvals to consummate the B Share Transaction. On March 5, 2021, the Company paid the purchase price to the Foundation to hold in escrow until the regulatory approval has been obtained. As of the date that all such required regulatory approvals are obtained, the Foundation will deliver the Class B Shares to the Company and divest its control of the Company. In accordance with Colorado law, the Class B Shares will then be classified as authorized, but unissued shares. Once the Class B Shares are classified as unissued shares:
•the Company will only have one class of stock outstanding: the Class A common stock, which is registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and listed on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”); and
•the Class B Shares will not have any voting rights; and
•the holders of the Class A shares will be entitled to elect all of the directors at the Company’s annual meetings (after any annual meeting for which the record date has already occurred); and
•the Company will no longer be a “controlled” company as defined under the NYSE rules and therefore will be obligated to comply with certain additional listing standards.
Due to the settlement of the Colorado Litigation and the B Share Transaction, the Company believes that it will be better positioned to hire a new Chief Executive Officer and offer stability to our management team, employees and independent sales force in order to move forward with our business and Strategic Initiatives, as described below.
STRATEGIC INITIATIVES
During 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic shifted customer, agent and employee needs, habits and expectations and forced virtualization of our operations. When the pandemic emerged, we took immediate steps to ensure business continuity and stability. Towards the end of 2020 and as we head into 2021, we accelerated longer-term recovery efforts and pivoted to reemphasize growth in order to cultivate enduring value for our key stakeholders.
We entered 2021 with clearly defined priorities in order to set a course for long-term profitable growth. Our growth strategy consists of focusing on our customers’ needs, our sales force, and use of technology to improve our processes:
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•Customers. We are focusing on our customer needs by making changes to enhance existing products, repricing products and introducing new offerings.
•Sales Force. We are focused on implementing sales promotions and campaigns in order to align our sales consultant compensation opportunities with our premium revenue goals and growth initiatives.
•Technology. We are implementing process improvements and new technologies in order to get products to our customers faster, help our sales force by promoting safe, yet effective sales practices, and help our employees work more effectively and efficiently.
We believe this 3-prong growth strategy will help us grow premium revenues in existing markets and allow us to expand into new markets. We are executing on this strategy as follows:
Expansion of Life Insurance Segment into Hispanic US Market in 2021. Because we have developed the ability to complete insurance transactions end-to-end in Spanish and Portuguese and understand the needs of the Hispanic market due to over 45 years of doing business in Latin America, we have expanded our Life Insurance segment to the Hispanic market in the U.S. and expect to begin selling in this market during early 2021. We have developed a whole life insurance product for this expansion that has already been approved in the state of Florida and are partnering with a marketing agency to build out a sales force to sell this product.
Transformation of our Home Service Insurance Segment. The Home Service Insurance business is a focus of transformation to drive sales growth for the Company in 2021. Prior to mid-2020, the focus of this segment was collections, i.e. renewal premiums. We reorganized our sales force, hired a new director of sales in 2020 and expect to update our product portfolio, to bring attractive and highly competitive offerings to market in early 2021.
Launched New Marketing Campaigns. In 2020, we recognized the value that having different sales campaigns throughout the year had on our sales force and launched sales campaigns throughout 2020 that incentivized agents at all levels of seniority. The incentives were different depending on the campaign, however they all created competition within the sales force, which we believe drove more sales per independent consultant / agent. In 2020:
•In our Life Insurance segment, we created a sales campaign that helped lead to 75% higher first year premiums in the fourth quarter of 2020 as compared to the third quarter of 2020 and 15% higher first year premiums when compared to the fourth quarter of 2019. The amount of first year premiums in our Life Insurance segment in the fourth quarter of 2020 were the highest since the fourth quarter of 2017. We believe the reason this campaign worked so well was because of the various levels of detail included in the incentives, as well as our execution of the campaign.
•In the Home Service Insurance segment, we launched a sales campaign with incentives to our independent agents that resulted in an increase in the amount of in-force insurance for our current customer base.
Multiple campaigns are scheduled to occur during 2021 in order to continue incentivizing and motivating our sales force.
Implemented Operational Improvements. As the world became more digital in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, we implemented technological improvements to make our operations more effective and efficient. We updated our underwriting processes and introduced a revised policy application for our international business in order to remove barriers to sales with a more frictionless process for agents and applicants and to reduce underwriting expense. We enhanced our policyholder and agent self-services with new capabilities to make it easier to do business with us including expanding our alternative payment methods for our Home Service Insurance segment to accept credit card and debit card payments. We also focused on training our sales force to sell our policies and service our policyholders virtually.
As we seek to optimize value for the Company, its customers and its distributors, we believe our efforts to develop and enhance our products, incentivize our sales force and make process and technology improvements will continue to put the Company on a stronger financial footing and drive sustainable growth.
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LIFE INSURANCE
Our Life Insurance segment primarily operates through CICA Life Ltd. ("CICA Ltd."), a Bermuda company, which issues ordinary whole life insurance in U.S. dollar-denominated amounts to non-U.S. residents. These products are designed to provide a fixed amount of insurance coverage over the life of the insured and can include rider benefits to provide additional coverage and annuity benefits to enhance accumulations. Additionally, CICA Ltd. issues endowment contracts, which are principally accumulation contracts that incorporate an element of life insurance protection.
INTERNATIONAL SALES
We focus our international sales of U.S. dollar-denominated ordinary whole life insurance and endowment policies to residents in Latin America and the Pacific Rim.
As of December 31, 2020, we had insurance policies in force in more than 75 foreign countries, with Colombia, Venezuela, Taiwan, Ecuador and Argentina as our top producing countries. International direct premiums comprised approximately 96% of total direct premiums in the Life Insurance segment and 71% of our total direct premiums in 2020.
We believe positive attributes of our international insurance business typically include:
•larger face amount policies issued when compared to our U.S. operations, which results in lower underwriting and administrative costs per dollar of coverage;
•high persistency and low mortality charges due to our customer demographics; and
•premiums paid annually at the beginning of each policy year rather than monthly or quarterly, which reduces our administrative expenses, accelerates cash flow and results in lower policy lapse rates than premium payment options with more frequently scheduled payments.
Our international sales force consists of independent marketing agencies and consultants who specialize in marketing life insurance products and generally have several years of insurance marketing experience. We enter into contracts with the independent marketing agencies pursuant to which they recruit, train and supervise their managers and associates in the sales and service of our products. These agencies receive commissions for products they sell, as well as commission overrides on the business that their agents produce and in return for the override, they guarantee any debt their agents owe to us. Their sales agents also contract directly with us as independent consultants and receive commission compensation directly from us. This allows us to develop a relationship with their associates so if an agency contract is terminated for any reason, we may seek to continue the existing independent consultant marketing arrangements with the associates of such agency. Our agreements typically provide that the agencies and their agents are independent consultants responsible for their own operational expenses and are the representative of the prospective insured. Our contracts require the independent marketing agencies and consultants to understand and comply with all laws applicable to sales of our products in their country.
INTERNATIONAL PRODUCTS
We offer several ordinary whole life insurance and endowment products designed to meet the needs of our non-U.S. policyowners. These products have premium rates that are competitive with most foreign local companies and have been structured to provide the policyowners with:
•U.S. dollar-denominated cash values that accumulate, beginning in the first policy year, throughout a policyholder’s lifetime;
•protection against devaluation of the policyowners' local currency;
•capital investment in a more secure economic environment (i.e., the U.S.); and
•lifetime income guarantees for an insured or for surviving beneficiaries.
Our international products have both living and death benefit features. Most policies contain guaranteed cash values and are participating (i.e., provide for cash dividends as apportioned by our Board of Directors). Once a
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policyowner pays the annual premium and the policy is issued, the owner becomes entitled to policy cash dividends as well as annual premium benefits if the annual premium benefit is elected. The policyowner has several options with regards to the policy dividends and annual premium benefits, which include, among other things, electing to receive cash, crediting such amounts towards the payment of premiums on the policy, leaving such amounts on deposit with the Company to accumulate at a defined interest rate or assigning them to a third-party. Under the "assigned to a third-party" provision, the Company has historically allowed policyowners, after receiving a copy of the Citizens, Inc. Stock Investment Plan (the "CISIP") prospectus and acknowledging their understanding of the risks of investing in Citizens Class A common stock, the right to assign policy values outside of the policy to the CISIP, which is administered in the United States by Computershare Trust Company, N.A., our plan administrator and an affiliate of Computershare, Inc., our transfer agent. The CISIP is a direct stock purchase plan available to policyowners, shareholders, our employees and directors, independent consultants, and other potential investors through the Computershare website. The Company has registered the shares of Class A common stock issuable to participants under the CISIP on a registration statement under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "Securities Act") that is on file with the SEC. Computershare administers the CISIP in accordance with the terms and conditions of the CISIP, a copy of which is available on the Computershare website and as part of the Company’s registration statement on file with the SEC.
INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION
The life insurance business is highly competitive. We compete with a number of stock and mutual life insurance companies internationally and domestically, as well as with financial institutions that offer insurance products.
We face competition primarily from other insurance companies that operate in the same manner as we do, as well as companies formed and operated in the country in which an insured resides, and from companies foreign to the countries in which their products are sold, but issue insurance policies denominated in the local currency of those countries. Some companies may have a competitive advantage over us due to their significantly greater financial resources, histories of successful operations and larger marketing forces.
Because premiums on our international policies are paid in U.S. dollars and we pay claims and benefits in U.S. dollars, we provide life insurance solutions that we believe are different from and superior to those offered by foreign-domiciled companies. We believe our international products are usually purchased by individuals in the upper-middle class in their respective countries and those with significant net worth and earnings that place them in the upper income brackets of their respective countries. The policies sold by our foreign competitors are generally offered broadly and are priced using the mortality of the entire population of the geographic region. Our mortality charges are typically lower due to our customer demographics, which provides a competitive advantage. Additionally, the assets backing the reserves for our foreign competitors' policies must be substantially invested in their respective foreign countries and, therefore, are exposed to the inflationary risks and social or economic crises that have been more common in these foreign countries.
DOMESTIC SALES
Domestic whole life insurance policies are sold to U.S. citizens and certain U.S. visa holders through our CICA Life Insurance Company of America ("CICA") and Citizens National Life Insurance Company ("CNLIC") insurance subsidiaries. In 2020, domestic direct premiums comprised approximately 4% of total direct premiums in the Life Insurance segment and 3% of our total direct premiums overall. The majority of our domestic in force business results from blocks of business of insurance companies we have acquired over the years. CICA and CNLIC issued ordinary whole life, credit life and disability and accident and health related policies throughout the Midwest and Southern U.S. until they ceased most domestic sales beginning January 1, 2017. As discussed above under “Strategic Initiatives”, we plan to begin marketing our products again domestically in early 2021, beginning in Florida. We believe that our experience in developing and selling products in Latin America will help us expand into the large Hispanic market in the U.S.
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DOMESTIC LIFE INSURANCE PRODUCTS
Our domestic life insurance products have historically focused primarily on living needs and providing benefits focused toward accumulating financial benefits for the policyowner. The features of our domestic life insurance products include:
•cash accumulation/living benefits;
•tax-deferred interest earnings;
•guaranteed lifetime income options;
•monthly income for surviving family members;
•accidental death benefit coverage options; and
•an option to waive premium payments in the event of disability.
Our life insurance products have historically been designed to address the insured's concern about outliving his or her monthly income, while at the same time providing death benefits. The primary purpose of our current product portfolio is to help the insured create capital for needs such as retirement income, children's higher education, business opportunities, emergencies and health care needs. In addition, our insurance products offer financial benefits like savings protection and immediate funds in event of the insured's death.
Through detailed research and analysis, the Company has recognized the opportunity to re-enter the domestic life insurance market. We believe that we hold a strong competitive edge in the fast-growing Latin American and Hispanic segments because of our insights and expertise from doing business for over 45 years in Latin America. We have developed competitive and attractive products that we believe will allow us to succeed in the domestic market.
HOME SERVICE INSURANCE
We operate our domestic Home Service Insurance segment only in the U.S. through our subsidiaries Security Plan Life Insurance Company ("SPLIC"), Magnolia Guaranty Life Insurance Company ("MGLIC") and Security Plan Fire Insurance Company ("SPFIC"). These companies focus on final expense life insurance needs of middle- and lower-income markets, primarily in Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas. Our policies are sold and serviced through a home service marketing distribution system of about 240 independent agents as of December 31, 2020, who work on a route system and through over 175 funeral homes, all of whom sell policies, collect premiums and service policyholders. We also sell limited liability, named peril property policies covering dwelling and contents through SPFIC. In 2020, our Home Service Insurance segment comprised 27% of our total consolidated direct premiums.
HOME SERVICE PRODUCTS AND COMPETITION
Our Home Service Insurance products consist primarily of small face amount ordinary whole life and pre-need policies, which are designed to fund final expenses for the insured (e.g. funeral and burial costs). The average life insurance policy face amount issued in 2020 was approximately $5,400 per policy. Due to the lower risk associated with small face amount polices, the underwriting performed on these applications is limited. To a much lesser extent, our Home Service Insurance segment sells limited liability named-peril property policies covering dwellings and content. We provide $30,000 maximum coverage on any one dwelling and contents, while content-only coverage and dwelling-only coverage are both limited to $20,000.
We provide final expense ordinary life insurance and annuity products primarily to middle- and lower-income individuals and families in Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas, a demographic that has been disproportionally impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.
We face competition in Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas from other companies specializing in final expense insurance. We seek to compete based upon our emphasis on personal service to our customers. We intend to continue premium growth within this segment via direct sales.
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REINSURANCE
We follow the industry practice of reinsuring a portion of our insurance risks with unaffiliated reinsurers. In a reinsurance transaction, a reinsurer agrees to indemnify another insurer for part or all of its liability under a policy or policies it has issued for an agreed upon premium. We participate in reinsurance activities in order to minimize exposure to significant risks, limit losses, and provide additional capacity for future growth. We enter into various agreements with reinsurers that cover individual risks, group risks or defined blocks of business, primarily on a coinsurance, yearly renewable term, excess of loss or catastrophe excess basis. These reinsurance agreements spread risk and minimize the effect of losses. For the majority of our business, we retain the first $100,000 of risk on any one life and reinsure the remainder of the risk. Therefore, under the terms of the reinsurance agreements, the reinsurers agree to reimburse us for the ceded amount (i.e., the death benefit amount less our retained risk) in the event a claim is paid. Cessions under reinsurance agreements do not discharge our obligations as the primary insurer. In the event reinsurers do not meet their obligations under the terms of the reinsurance agreements, reinsurance recoverable balances could become uncollectible. Our amounts recoverable from reinsurers represent receivables from and/or reserves ceded to reinsurers. The amounts recoverable from reinsurers were $5.8 million as of December 31, 2020.
We focus on obtaining reinsurance from a diverse group of well-established reinsurers. We have restructured our reinsurance relationships as of January 1, 2021 and reinsure our international business with three different reinsurers and our domestic business with two reinsurers. We regularly evaluate the financial condition of our reinsurers and monitor concentration risk with our reinsurers.
OTHER NON-INSURANCE ENTERPRISES
Other Non-Insurance Enterprises includes the results of the parent company, Citizens, Inc. and our non-insurance subsidiary, Computing Technology, Inc., which entities primarily provide the Company's information technology and corporate-support functions to the insurance operations.
OPERATIONS AND TECHNOLOGY
Our administrative operations principally serve our Life Insurance segment and are conducted primarily at our executive offices in Austin, Texas where our administrative, operating and underwriting personnel are located. Our executive offices are also the base for our policy design, marketing oversight, underwriting, accounting and reporting, actuarial, customer service, legal, human resources, claims processing, administrative and investing activities. Our Home Service Insurance segment is conducted, to a large degree, from our district offices in Louisiana, Arkansas and Mississippi, as well as our service center in Donaldsonville, Louisiana. At our Bermuda office, we perform underwriting, policy issuance, claims processing, accounting and reporting related to CICA Ltd.'s policies.
We have a single integrated information technology system for our entire Company, which is a centrally-controlled, mainframe-based administrative system. Functions of our policy administrative system include policy set-up, administration, billing and collections, commission calculation, valuation, automated data edits, storage backup, image management and other related functions. Each company and block of business we have acquired has been converted onto our administrative system. This system has been in place for more than 30 years and has been updated on an ongoing basis as technology has evolved.
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ENTERPRISE RISK MANAGEMENT
The Company has an enterprise risk management function ("ERM") that analyzes the Company’s risks on an individual and aggregated basis and is responsible for ensuring that the Company’s risks remain within its risk appetite and tolerances as determined by management with oversight from the Audit Committee. The Company's focus on ERM strengthens its risk management culture and discipline. The mission of ERM is to support the Company in achieving its strategic priorities by:
•providing a comprehensive view of the risks facing the Company, including risk concentrations and correlations;
•helping management define the Company’s overall capacity and appetite for risk by evaluating the risk return profile of the business relative to the Company’s strategic intent and financial underpinning;
•assisting management in setting specific risk tolerances and limits that are measurable, actionable, and comply with the Company’s overall risk philosophy;
•communicating and monitoring the Company’s risk exposures relative to set limits and recommending, or implementing as appropriate, mitigating strategies; and
•providing insight to assist in growing the businesses and achieving optimal risk-adjusted returns within established guidelines.
ENTERPRISE RISK MANAGEMENT STRUCTURE AND GOVERNANCE
Effective risk oversight is an important priority for the Company’s Board and senior management team. While it is the job of the Chief Executive Officer and senior management to assess and manage the Company’s risk exposure through ERM, the Audit Committee of the Board is charged with discussing guidelines and policies to govern the process by which ERM is handled. The Audit Committee periodically discusses the Company’s major financial risk exposures and the steps management has taken to monitor and control such exposures.
The four broad categories of risk exposures assessed and managed by senior management include, but are not limited to:
•Strategic risk, including international business risks;
•Insurance risk, including those arising out of unforeseen events (such as the COVID-19 pandemic), catastrophes and acts of terrorism;
•Financial risk, including market, credit and liquidity risks; and
•Operational risk, including cybersecurity risk and legal and regulatory compliance risks.
In addition, any other risk that poses a material threat to the operational and/or strategic viability of the Company is immediately reviewed and assessed.
In addition to the Audit Committee, the Compensation Committee considers the risks that may be presented by our executive compensation philosophy and programs, and the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee oversees the Company’s governance practices, director succession and committee composition and leadership to manage risks associated with corporate governance. Although risk oversight is conducted primarily through committees of the Board, the full Board has retained responsibility for general oversight of risks. The Board satisfies this responsibility through full reports by each committee chair regarding the committees’ considerations and actions, as well as through regular reports directly from officers responsible for oversight of particular risks within the Company.
REGULATION
The insurance industry is heavily regulated and both Citizens and our insurance subsidiaries are subject to regulation and supervision by the U.S. states in which they do business and for CICA Ltd., by Bermuda.
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U.S. REGULATION
Our U.S. insurance operations are subject to a wide variety of laws and regulations. State insurance laws establish supervisory agencies with broad regulatory authority to regulate most aspects of our U.S. insurance businesses, and our insurance subsidiaries are regulated by the insurance departments of each state in which they are licensed. In addition to insurance-specific laws, U.S. laws, such as the USA Patriot Act of 2001, the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999, the International Money Laundering Abatement and Financial Anti-Terrorism Act of 2001, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act and the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, are examples of U.S. laws that affect our business. We are subject to comprehensive regulations under the USA Patriot Act and the U.S. Bank Secrecy Act with respect to money laundering, as well as federal regulations regarding privacy and confidentiality. Our U.S.-based insurance products and thus our businesses also are affected by U.S. federal, state and local tax laws.
The laws and regulations that affect our insurance business are enacted primarily to protect our insureds and not our stockholders. Many of the laws and regulations to which we are subject are regularly re-examined, and existing or future laws and regulations may become more restrictive or otherwise adversely affect our operations. In addition, insurance regulatory authorities (including state law enforcement agencies and attorneys general) periodically make inquiries and regularly conduct examinations regarding compliance by us and our subsidiaries with insurance, and other laws and regulations regarding the conduct of our insurance businesses. It is our practice to fully and consistently cooperate with such inquiries and examinations and take corrective action when warranted.
Our U.S. insurance subsidiaries are collectively licensed to transact business in 31 states and in the District of Columbia. We have insurance subsidiaries domiciled in the states of Colorado, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas. Our U.S. insurance subsidiaries are licensed and regulated in all U.S. jurisdictions in which they conduct insurance business. The extent of this regulation varies, but most jurisdictions have laws and regulations based upon the National Association of Insurance Commissioners ("NAIC") model rules governing the financial condition of insurers, including standards of solvency, types and concentration of investments, establishment and maintenance of reserves, credit for reinsurance and requirements of capital adequacy, and the business conduct of insurers, including marketing and sales practices and claims handling. In addition, statutes and regulations usually require the licensing of insurers and their agents, the approval of policy forms and related materials and the approval of rates for certain types of insurance products.
All U.S. jurisdictions in which our U.S. insurance subsidiaries conduct insurance business have enacted legislation that requires each U.S. insurance company in a holding company system, except captive insurance companies, to register with the insurance regulatory authority of its jurisdiction of domicile and to furnish that regulatory authority with financial and other information concerning the operations of, and the interrelationships and transactions among, companies within its holding company system that may materially affect the operations, management or financial condition of the insurers within the system. These laws and regulations also regulate transactions between insurance companies and their parents and affiliates. Generally, these laws and regulations require that all transactions within a holding company system between an insurer and its affiliates be fair and reasonable and that the insurer's statutory capital and surplus following any transaction with an affiliate be both reasonable in relation to its outstanding liabilities and adequate to its financial needs. For certain types of agreements and transactions between an insurer and its affiliates, these laws and regulations require prior notification to, and non-disapproval or approval by, the insurance regulatory authority of the insurer's jurisdiction of domicile.
The payment of dividends or other distributions to us by our insurance subsidiaries is regulated by the insurance laws and regulations of their respective state or jurisdiction of domicile. The laws and regulations of some of these jurisdictions also prohibit an insurer from declaring or paying a dividend except out of its earned surplus or require the insurer to obtain regulatory approval before it may do so. In addition, insurance regulators may prohibit the payment of ordinary dividends or other payments by our insurance subsidiaries to us (such as a payment under a tax sharing agreement or for employee or other services) if they determine such payment could be adverse to policyholders or insurance contract holders of the subsidiary.
The laws and regulations of the jurisdictions in which our U.S. insurance subsidiaries are domiciled require that a controlling party obtain the approval of the insurance commissioner of the insurance company's jurisdiction of domicile prior to acquiring or divesting control of the insurer and may delay, deter or prevent a transaction our
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shareholders might consider desirable. As described above, the Company and the Foundation are in the process of obtaining such regulatory approval in order for the Company to purchase the Class B common stock from the Foundation.
Risk-based capital ("RBC") requirements are imposed on life and property and casualty insurance companies. The NAIC has established minimum capital requirements in the form of RBC. RBC requirements weight the type of business underwritten by an insurance company, the quality of its assets, and various other aspects of an insurance company's business to develop a minimum level of capital called "authorized control level risk-based capital" and compares this level to adjusted statutory capital that includes capital and surplus as reported under statutory accounting principles, plus certain investment reserves. Should the ratio of adjusted statutory capital to control level risk-based capital fall below 200%, a series of actions would be required by the affected company, including submitting a capital plan to the Department of Insurance in the insurance company's state of domicile.
INTERNATIONAL REGULATION
Bermuda
CICA Ltd., our Bermuda domiciled subsidiary, is subject to regulation and supervision by the Bermuda Monetary Authority (the "BMA") and compliance with all applicable Bermuda laws and insurance statutes and regulations, including but not limited to Bermuda’s Insurance Act of 1978 (the "Insurance Act").
CICA Ltd., which is incorporated to conduct long-term business, is registered as a Class E insurer, which is the license class for long-term insurers and reinsurers with total assets of more than $500 million that are not registrable as a single-parent or multi-owner long-term captive insurer or reinsurer. CICA Ltd. is not licensed to conduct any business other than life insurance business. The Insurance Act regulates the insurance business of CICA Ltd. and provides that no person may conduct any insurance business in or within Bermuda unless registered as an insurer under the Insurance Act by the BMA.
The Insurance Act imposes solvency and liquidity standards as well as auditing and reporting requirements and confers on the BMA powers to supervise, investigate and intervene in the affairs of insurance companies. Certain requirements of the Insurance Act include: the filing of annual statutory financial returns; the filing of annual U.S. GAAP financial statements; the filing of an annual capital and solvency return; the delivery of a declaration of compliance; compliance with minimum enhanced capital requirements; compliance with the BMA’s Insurance Code of Conduct; compliance with minimum solvency margins; limitations on dividends and distributions that CICA Ltd. may make to Citizens, its parent company; preparation of an annual Financial Condition Report providing details of measures governing the business operations, corporate governance framework, solvency and financial performance; preparation of an assessment of an insurer's own risk and solvency requirements, referred to as a Commercial Insurer’s Solvency Self-Assessment; the establishment and maintenance of a head and principal office in Bermuda; appointment of an independent auditor; and appointment of an actuary approved by the BMA.
The BMA measures an insurer’s risk and determines appropriate levels of capitalization by using a risk-based capital model called the Bermuda Solvency Capital Requirement (“BSCR”), which CICA Ltd. uses to calculate its solvency requirements. The BSCR employs a standard mathematical model that correlates the risk underwritten by Bermuda insurers to their capital.
In order to minimize the risk of a shortfall in capital arising from an unexpected adverse deviation or excess risk, the BMA has established a threshold capital level (termed the Target Capital Level ("TCL")), which is set at 120% of a company’s enhanced capital requirement. The TCL serves as an early warning tool for the BMA. For the quarter ended March 31, 2020, because of the disruption that the COVID-19 pandemic had on the worldwide economy, the fair value of our assets decreased and interest rates also decreased, which increased the fair value of our statutory economic insurance liabilities. As a result, CICA Ltd.’s statutory economic capital and surplus at March 31, 2020 was below the TCL by $8.9 million. While the failure to meet the minimum threshold was rectified as of April 30, 2020, the BMA conducted a review of CICA Ltd. in the third and fourth quarter of 2020 in order to assess CICA Ltd.’s compliance with the Insurance Act and other relevant rules applicable to CICA Ltd. (the “Prudential Review”). As a result of the 2020 Prudential Review by the BMA, on January 14, 2021, the BMA issued a letter to CICA Ltd. that, among other things, requires Citizens to enter into a “Keepwell Agreement” by September 30, 2021. A Keepwell Agreement is a contract between a parent company and its subsidiary to maintain solvency and financial
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backing throughout the term set in the agreement. The Keepwell Agreement should include a specific target solvency level at which a capital injection would be required to be made into CICA Ltd. to ensure compliance with the Insurance Act and related rules.
Bermuda law distinguishes between those companies that are at least 60% owned and controlled by Bermudians, which are "local companies", and those which are owned and controlled by non-Bermudians, which are "exempted companies". Exempted companies may be resident in Bermuda and conduct business from Bermuda in connection with transactions and activities which are external to Bermuda or with other exempted companies, and exempted companies must obtain a license to conduct business activities within Bermuda from the Minister of Finance of Bermuda. Generally, it is not permitted without a special license granted by the Minister of Finance of Bermuda to insure Bermuda domestic risks or risks of persons of, in or based in Bermuda.
In December 2018, the Economic Substance Act (the "ES Act") came into force. The ES Act, as amended, and the regulations promulgated thereunder (collectively, "ES Law"), apply to any "relevant entity" that conducts any "relevant activity" in a "relevant financial period". Under the ES Law, insurance and holding entities are each defined as a "relevant activity" and thus the ES Act applies to CICA Ltd. Under the provisions of the ES Law, a relevant entity that conducts a relevant activity must satisfy the economic substance requirements under the ES Law (the "ES Requirements") in relation to the relevant activity and where a relevant entity is conducting more than one relevant activity, it must meet the ES Requirements with respect to each relevant activity that it conducts. A relevant entity complies with the ES Requirements if: (a) the relevant entity is managed and directed from Bermuda; (b) the core income-generating activities are undertaken in Bermuda with respect to each relevant activity; (c) the relevant entity maintains adequate physical presence in Bermuda; (d) there are adequate full-time employees in Bermuda with suitable qualifications; and (e) there is adequate operating expenditure incurred in Bermuda in relation to each relevant activity.
CICA Ltd. is required to demonstrate compliance with the ES Requirements by filing an annual economic substance declaration with the Registrar of Companies in Bermuda no later than six months after the last day of the relevant financial period. Companies that conduct insurance as a relevant activity are deemed to comply with the ES Requirements, with respect to their insurance business, if they comply with the existing regulatory requirements under the Insurance Act and the corporate governance provisions of the Companies Act 1981. CICA Ltd. is in compliance with these requirements as of December 31, 2020.
Other International Regulation
Generally, all foreign countries in which we offer insurance products require a license or other authority to conduct insurance business in that country. Some of these countries also require that local regulatory authorities approve the terms of any insurance product sold to residents of that country. We have never qualified to do business in any foreign country or jurisdiction and have never submitted our insurance policies issued to residents of foreign countries for approval by any foreign or domestic insurance regulatory agency. As described above, we sell our policies to residents of foreign countries through independent marketing agencies and independent consultants located in those countries, and we rely on our independent consultants to comply with laws applicable to them in marketing our insurance products in their respective countries.
We have undertaken a comprehensive compliance review of risks associated with the potential application of foreign laws to our sales of insurance policies in foreign countries. The application of foreign laws to our sales of insurance policies in foreign countries varies by country. There is a lack of uniform regulation, lack of clarity in certain regulations and lack of legal precedent in addressing circumstances similar to ours. Our compliance review has confirmed certain risks related to foreign insurance laws associated with our current business model, at least in certain jurisdictions, as described in detail in Item 1A. Risk Factors.
HUMAN CAPITAL RESOURCES
Our employees and independent consultants are critical to selling our insurance products and providing services to our global base of policyholders. As of December 31, 2020, we had 245 employees. We currently do not utilize captive employee agents to distribute our products and thus contract with almost 1,000 independent consultants internationally and 415 independent agencies and agents domestically to sell and service our insurance products. Independent agents work for themselves and may sell insurance policies for a variety of insurers and make most of
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their money through sales commissions and bonuses. None of our employees are subject to a collective bargaining agreement.
In order to continue to develop, administer and sell our products, it is crucial that we continue to attract and retain both experienced employees and independent agents.
Compensation and Benefits Program. Our compensation program is designed to attract and reward talented individuals who possess the skills necessary to support our business objectives, assist in the achievement of our strategic goals and create long-term value for our stockholders. We provide employees with compensation packages that include base salary, annual incentive bonuses, and long-term equity awards ("RSUs") for certain employees tied to the value of our stock price. We believe that a compensation program with both short-term and long-term awards provides fair and competitive compensation and aligns employee and stockholder interests, including by incentivizing business and individual performance (pay for performance), motivating based on long-term company performance and integrating compensation with our business plans. In addition to cash and equity compensation, we also offer standard employee benefits such as life and health (medical, dental & vision) insurance, paid parental leave, and a 401(k) plan.
We attract and retain our independent agent sales force through the use of our commission structure and agent campaigns and promotions. We believe that our standard commission structure is attractive and competitive in the market. In our Life Insurance segment, our campaigns and promotions provide an extra incentive to agents that not only promote first year premium growth, but also create improvements within policyholder retention. In our Home Service Insurance segment, our agent campaigns and promotions are critical in attracting and retaining our independent agent sales force. This business contains a large block of existing in force policies. To ensure we maintain this book of business, the agent campaigns and promotions provide an extra incentive to not only grow the business but to collect on the existing policies. We believe that providing agent campaigns and promotions with additional incentives that provide long-term value creates an advantage for Citizens over our competition.
Diversity and Inclusion. We derive a great deal of strength from our diverse workforce. We believe that an equitable and inclusive environment with diverse teams produces more creative solutions, results in better, more innovative products and services and is crucial to our efforts to attract and retain key talent. We are focused on building on the existing executive team's work to foster diversity and inclusion in the workplace.
Health and Safety. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, we implemented significant operating environment changes that we determined were in the best interest of the health of our employees and independent agents, as well as the communities in which we operate, and which comply with government regulations. These changes included having the vast majority of our employees work from home, while implementing additional safety measures for employees continuing critical on-site work. We also created training programs to assist our independent agents with online sales efforts in order to minimize face-to-face interactions with potential customers and our policyholders.
Item 1A. RISK FACTORS
Because of the following factors, as well as other factors affecting the Company’s financial condition and operating results, past financial performance should not be considered to be a reliable indicator of future performance, and investors should not use historical trends to anticipate results or trends in future periods.
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A SUBSTANTIAL PORTION OF OUR REVENUE IS GENERATED FROM INSURANCE PRODUCTS SOLD OUTSIDE OF THE UNITED STATES. WHILE OUR PRODUCTS ARE PRICED AND PAID FOR IN U.S. DOLLARS, OUR FOREIGN OPERATIONS MAY SUBJECT US TO SEVERAL RISKS, SET FORTH BELOW.
Our sales to residents of foreign countries expose us to unknown risks related to foreign economies and governments. A significant loss of sales in these foreign markets would have a material adverse effect on our results of operations and financial condition.
A substantial majority of our direct insurance premiums, approximately 71% at December 31, 2020, are from policyholders in foreign countries, primarily those in Latin America and the Pacific Rim. These policies are issued by our Bermuda subsidiary, CICA Ltd. and are sold by independent consultants who are located in these foreign countries.
Our Company’s sales and financial results depend upon the ability of our independent consultants in foreign countries to effectively distribute our products and the ability of residents of such countries to purchase our products using U.S. dollars. While we have undertaken a comprehensive compliance review of risks associated with the potential application of foreign laws, which vary by country, to our sales of insurance policies in foreign countries, there is a lack of uniform regulation and lack of clarity in certain regulations and thus we face various risks associated with the application of foreign laws to these sales.
Generally, all foreign countries in which we offer insurance products require either CICA Ltd. and/or our independent consultants to obtain a license or other authority to conduct insurance business in that country. Some of these countries also require that local regulatory authorities approve the terms of any insurance product sold to residents of that country. We have never sought to qualify to do business in any foreign country or jurisdiction, except Bermuda, in which CICA Ltd. is domiciled, and have never submitted the insurance policies that we issue to residents of foreign countries for approval by any foreign or domestic insurance regulatory agency. Some foreign governments have determined under their existing laws that their residents may not purchase life insurance from us unless we become qualified to do business in that country or unless our policies purchased by their residents receive prior approval from its insurance regulators. There is a risk that additional foreign governments will enact additional legislation that may render our existing insurance products either illegal or less attractive to potential customers. There is the further risk that regulators may become more aggressive in enforcing any perceived violations of their laws and seek to impose monetary fines, criminal penalties, and/or order us to cease our sales in that jurisdiction. There is no assurance that, if a foreign country were to require that we qualify to do business in that country or submit our policies for approval by that country’s regulatory authorities, we would be able to, or would conclude that it is advisable to, comply with those requirements. Any determination by a foreign country that we or our policy sales are subject to regulation under their laws, or any actions by a foreign country to enforce such laws more aggressively, could therefore have a material adverse effect on our ability to sell policies in that country and, in turn, on our results of operations and financial condition.
Traditionally, we have sought to mitigate risks associated with the potential application of foreign laws to our sales of insurance policies in our foreign markets by, among other things, not locating any of our offices or assets in foreign countries or jurisdictions, selling policies only through independent consultants rather than our own employees, requiring that all applications for insurance be submitted to and accepted only in our offices in the U.S. or, following the novation of our international policies to CICA Ltd. in Bermuda effective July 1, 2018, in our offices in Bermuda, and requiring that policy premiums be paid to us only in U.S. dollars. We rely on our independent consultants to comply with laws applicable to them in marketing our insurance products in their respective countries. There is no assurance that the precautionary measures, practices and policies discussed above will partially or entirely mitigate the risk associated with the potential application of foreign laws to our sales of insurance policies in our foreign markets. From time to time, insurance regulators in the foreign countries in which we operate have sought to exercise regulatory authority over the Company, including through the imposition of fines and we have chosen not to do business in certain countries, such as Brazil, due to these actions. Although the Company believes that these foreign regulators do not have jurisdiction over the Company and that any actions, including fines, may be unenforceable against the Company, any regulatory action could otherwise absorb Company time and resources away from its business operations or the Company may choose to pay such fines in order to do business in a particular country. The Company may determine that the risks associated with a particular market and its regulatory environment outweigh the benefits of conducting further business in that market. We are exploring alternatives to our current business model in one or more jurisdictions.
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Any disruption to the marketing and sale of our policies to residents of foreign countries, resulting from the actions of foreign regulatory authorities, the withdrawal from Brazil or other markets, the implementation of new Bermuda regulatory obligations or otherwise, could have a material adverse effect on our premium revenue and our costs and expenses and thus on our results of operations and financial condition.
Additionally, currency control laws, other currency exchange restrictions or tax laws in foreign countries could materially adversely affect our revenues by imposing restrictions or additional fees, costs or taxes on asset transfers outside of a country where our policyowners reside. Difficulties in transferring funds from or converting currencies to U.S. dollars in certain countries or any increase in fees, costs or taxes associated therewith could prevent our policyowners in those countries from purchasing or paying premiums on our policies and/or make our products less attractive to such policyowners. As such, existing or future laws and regulations, and the manner in which they are interpreted or applied, may become more restrictive or otherwise adversely affect our operations.
Many of the countries in which we operate have a history of political instability, including regime changes, political uprisings, currency fluctuations and anti-democratic or anti-U.S. policies. The ability of people living in these countries to purchase and continue to make premium payments on our insurance policies and our ability to sell our policies in those countries through our independent consultants or otherwise may be adversely affected by political instability. Given the nature of our products, in an economic environment characterized by higher unemployment, lower personal income and reduced consumer spending, new product sales may be adversely affected. During such periods, we may also experience higher claims incidence, longer claims duration, increase in policy lapses and/or increase in surrenders, any of which could have a material adverse effect on our results of operations or financial condition. In addition, the imposition of U.S. sanctions against foreign countries where our policyholders reside could make it difficult for us to continue to issue new policies and receive premiums from policyholders in those countries.
We face significant competition in our international markets. If we are unable to compete effectively in our markets, our business, results of operations and profitability may be adversely affected.
Our international marketing plan focuses on offering U.S. dollar-denominated life insurance products to individuals residing in foreign countries. We experience considerable competition primarily from the following sources, many of which have substantially greater financial, marketing and other resources than we have:
•Foreign companies with U.S. dollar-denominated policies. We face direct competition from companies that operate in the same manner as we do in our international markets, including from a company recently formed by some of our former employees and independent consultants;
•Foreign companies with locally operated subsidiaries that offer both local jurisdiction-regulated products in local currency and off-shore U.S. dollar-denominated policies. This arrangement creates competition in that the U.S. dollar-denominated policies are offered in conjunction with high-need local insurance policies such as health insurance; and
•Locally operated companies with local currency policies. We compete with companies formed and operated in the country in which our foreign insureds reside.
In addition, from time to time, companies enter and exit the markets in which we operate, thereby increasing competition at times when there are new entrants. We may lose business to competitors offering competitive products at lower prices, or for other reasons.
Since we rely on independent consultants for distribution of our products in foreign markets, regulation and licensing requirements imposed upon our Company may impact on our ability to attract and retain effective sales representatives, who may choose to distribute products of our competitors.
There can be no assurance that we will be able to compete effectively in any of our markets. If we do not, our business, results of operations and financial condition will be materially adversely affected.
We face a greater risk of money laundering activity associated with sales derived from residents of certain foreign countries.
Some of our top international markets are in countries identified by the U.S. Department of State as jurisdictions of high risk for money laundering. As required by the U.S. Bank Secrecy Act regulations, the Bermuda Proceeds of
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Crime Act 1997 and the Proceeds of Crime (Anti-Money Laundering and Anti-Terrorist Financing) Regulations 2008 applicable to insurance companies, we have developed and implemented an anti-money laundering, anti-terrorist financing and sanctions program (“AML/ATF and Sanctions Program”) that includes policies, procedures, controls, independent testing, reporting and recordkeeping requirements for deterring, preventing and detecting potential money laundering, terrorist financing, fraud and other criminal activity in order to comply with U.S. and Bermuda laws. We have an enhanced AML/ATF and Sanctions Program with additional controls, such as watch-list screening beyond sanctions screening required by the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control ("OFAC") and the Financial Sanctions Implementation Unit of Bermuda, enhanced payment due diligence and transaction controls. However, there can be no assurance that these enhanced controls will entirely mitigate money laundering risk associated with these jurisdictions.
BECAUSE MOST OF OUR REVENUE DERIVES FROM COLLECTION OF PREMIUMS ON OUR PRODUCTS, OUR OVERALL FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE DEPENDS PRIMARILY UPON THE PRICING OF OUR INSURANCE PRODUCTS AND THE ACCURACY OF OUR PRICING ASSUMPTIONS. CHANGES IN ACTUAL EXPERIENCE, IMPROPER EVALUATION OF UNDERWRITING RISK AND MISMANAGEMENT OF CLAIMS HANDLING COULD SIGNIFICANTLY INCREASE OUR BENEFIT AND EXPENSE COSTS AND THUS NEGATIVELY AFFECT OUR PROFITABILITY AND FINANCIAL CONDITION.
The Company’s success depends on its ability to accurately underwrite risks and to charge adequate premiums to policyholders.
The Company’s financial condition, liquidity and results of operations largely depend on the Company’s ability to underwrite and set premiums accurately for the risks it faces. Premium rate adequacy is necessary to generate sufficient premiums to offset losses, loss adjustment expenses, underwriting expenses, and to earn a profit. In order to price its products accurately, the Company must implement and modify, as needed, underwriting standards that analyze a substantial volume of data; develop and apply appropriate morbidity and mortality estimates; closely monitor and timely recognize changes in trends; and project both severity and frequency of losses with reasonable accuracy. The Company must also review and properly underwrite applications for life insurance in order to charge a sufficient premium to its policyholders. The Company’s ability to undertake these efforts successfully is subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, including, without limitation:
•availability of sufficient reliable data;
•incorrect or incomplete analysis of available data;
•uncertainties inherent in estimates and assumptions;
•selection and application of appropriate rating formulae or other pricing methodologies;
•adoption of successful pricing strategies;
•prediction of policyholder retention (e.g., policy life expectancy);
•unanticipated court decisions, legislation or regulatory action;
•changes in the Company’s claim settlement practices; or
•unexpected inflation.
Such risks may result in the Company’s pricing being based on outdated, inadequate, or inaccurate data, or inappropriate analyses, assumptions, or methodologies, and may cause the Company to estimate incorrectly future changes in the frequency or severity of claims. As a result, the Company could underprice risks, which would negatively affect the Company’s margins, or it could overprice risks, which could reduce the Company’s volume and competitiveness. The Company’s ability to accurately underwrite risks in insurance products depends in part on its ability to forecast such changes and trends. If it is not successful in doing so, the Company’s operating results, financial condition, and cash flow could be materially adversely affected.
Pricing adequacy depends upon our ability to project future losses based on historical loss experience, including policyholder retention. Unanticipated increases in early policyholder withdrawals or surrenders or elections by policyholders to receive lump sum payouts at maturity could negatively impact liquidity.
A primary liquidity concern is the risk of unanticipated or extraordinary early policyholder withdrawals or surrenders. Our insurance policies include provisions, such as surrender charges, that help limit and discourage early withdrawals. We also track and manage liabilities and align our investment portfolio to maintain sufficient liquidity to support anticipated withdrawal demands. However, early withdrawal and surrender levels may differ from anticipated levels for a variety of reasons, including changes in economic conditions, changes in policyholder
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behavior or financial needs, changes in relationships with our independent consultants, efforts by foreign governments to tax policyholders or increases in surrenders among policies that have been in force for more than fifteen years and are no longer subject to surrender charges.
In addition, we face potential liquidity risks if policyholders with mature policies elect to receive lump sum distributions at greater levels than anticipated. Our whole life and endowment products provide the policyholder with alternatives once the policy matures. The policyholder can choose to take a lump sum payout or leave the money on deposit at interest with the Company. The Company has a significant amount of aging endowment products that have begun reaching their maturities and policyholder election behavior is not known. It is uncertain how policyholders will react in response to these maturities. If a large number of policyholders elect lump sum distributions, the Company could be exposed to liquidity risk in years of high maturities.
If we experience unanticipated early withdrawal or surrender activity or greater than expected lump sum distributions of endowment maturities and we do not have sufficient cash flow from our insurance operations to support payment of these benefits, we may have to sell our investments in order to meet our cash needs or be forced to obtain third-party financing. The availability of such financing will depend on a variety of factors, such as market conditions, the availability of credit in general or more specifically in the insurance industry, the strength or weakness of the capital markets, the volume of trading activities, our credit capacity, and the perception of our long- or short-term financial prospects if we incur large realized or unrealized investment losses or if the level of business activity declines due to a market downturn. Therefore, if we are forced to sell our investments on unfavorable terms or obtain financing with unfavorable terms, it could have an adverse effect on our liquidity, results of operations and financial condition.
Our largest expense is payments of claims and surrenders to our policyholders. Mismanagement of claims handling or increased fraudulent claims could negatively impact our costs and financial condition.
Proper claims handling is critical to managing our benefit expenses. Many factors can affect the Company’s ability to pay claims accurately, including the following:
•the training, experience, and skill of the Company’s claims representatives;
•the extent of fraudulent claims and the Company’s ability to recognize and respond to such claims;
•the claims organization’s culture and the effectiveness of its management, and
•the Company’s ability to develop or select and implement appropriate procedures, technologies, and systems to support claims functions.
The Company’s failure to pay claims fairly, accurately, and in a timely manner, or to deploy claims resources appropriately, could result in unanticipated costs, lead to material litigation, undermine customer goodwill and the Company’s reputation in the marketplace, impair its brand image and, as a result, materially adversely affect its competitiveness, financial results, prospects, and liquidity.
Higher than expected policyholder claims related to unforeseen events may increase our benefits and expense costs, increase our reinsurance costs and negatively affect our financial condition.
Our insurance operations are exposed to the risk of catastrophic events. The extent of losses from a catastrophe is a function of both the total amount of insured exposure in the area affected by the event and the severity of the event. Most catastrophes are restricted to small geographic areas; however, hurricanes, earthquakes, tsunamis and man-made catastrophes may produce significant damage or loss of life in larger areas, especially those that are heavily populated. Claims resulting from catastrophic events could cause substantial volatility in our financial results for any fiscal quarter or year and could materially reduce our profitability or harm our financial condition. In 2020, three major hurricanes caused significant damage in Louisiana, for which we paid a total of $1.2 million in claims, net of reinsurance. Additionally, we had to pay to increase our reinsurance coverage to cover an additional storm. These storms negatively impacted the results of operations in our Home Services Insurance segment during the second half of 2020. In addition, catastrophic events could harm the financial condition of issuers of obligations we hold in our investment portfolio, resulting in impairments to these investments, and the financial condition of our reinsurers, thereby increasing the probability of default on reinsurance recoveries. Large-scale catastrophes may also reduce the overall level of economic activity in affected countries, which could hurt our business and the value of our investments or our ability to sell new policies.
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The COVID-19 Pandemic is negatively impacting certain aspects of our business and, depending on severity and duration, could have a material adverse effect on our financial condition, results of operations and overall business operations.
The prolonged COVID-19 pandemic has caused significant disruption to the global economy and business operations and has resulted in unfavorable impacts to our Company as well as the insurance industry. Due to the unprecedented nature of these events and the uncertainty surrounding the virus and its impacts, we cannot fully estimate the duration or full impact of the COVID-19 pandemic at this time. However, we have identified several areas where the COVID-19 pandemic impacted our business during the year ended December 31, 2020. Events that we are unable to control, such as the spread of a new, more contagious strain of the coronavirus, spikes in the number of cases of COVID-19, slower than expected roll-out of the coronavirus vaccine and the related responses by government authorities and businesses, may continue to present unforeseen risks to our business. We are closely monitoring developments related to the COVID-19 pandemic to assess its impacts on our business.
As discussed in Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations – Liquidity and Capital Resources, our liquidity requirements are met primarily by funds generated by our insurance subsidiaries and invested assets. In 2020, we experienced declines in premium income resulting from lower sales. Increased economic uncertainty or continued unemployment resulting from the economic impacts of the COVID-19 virus could continue to affect our premium revenues as policyholders may not be able to pay premiums on existing policies and potential customers may not purchase new policies in order to conserve cash. We have offered relief to policyholders (e.g. extending grace periods), which may negatively impact our operating cash flow. Historically, many of our policies have been sold via in-person meetings. Due to stay-at-home orders and limitations on interpersonal interactions, the lack of face-to-face meetings has negatively impacted sales and may continue to do so if the measures that we have put in place to encourage virtual selling prove to be ineffective. Additionally, due to these limitations as well as disruptions to international mail delivery to and from the United States, policyholders that mail in their premiums have had, and may continue to have, difficulty paying premiums. Unfavorable developments in any of these factors may adversely affect our liquidity and capital position.
The COVID-19 pandemic has increased death claim benefits in our Home Service Insurance segment. We may experience continued increased claims, thus increasing our expected death benefits, if there continues to be an unusually large number of deaths.
During 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic, and its effect on financial markets, adversely affected our investment portfolio (and, specifically, increased the risk of defaults, downgrades and volatility in the value of the investments we hold and lowered investment income) and may continue to do so. Extreme market volatility may continue to leave us unable to react to market events consistent with our historical practices in dealing with more stable markets. To the extent that we need to sell our investments to fund liquidity needs in the current financial markets, we may not receive the prices we seek, and may sell at a price lower than our carrying value.
Our risk management, contingency and business continuity plans may not adequately protect our operations. Extended periods of remote work arrangements and other unusual business conditions and circumstances as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic could strain our business continuity plans, introduce operational risk, increase our cybersecurity risks, and impair our ability to manage our business. The frequency and sophistication of attempts at unauthorized access to our technology systems and fraud may increase, and COVID-19 conditions may impair our cybersecurity efforts and risk management. Our efforts to prevent money-laundering or other fraud, whether due to limited abilities to "know our customers" or otherwise, may increase our compliance costs and risk of violations.
While governmental and non-governmental organizations are continuing to engage in efforts to combat the spread and severity of the COVID-19 pandemic and related public health issues, these measures may not be effective. We also cannot predict how legal and regulatory responses to concerns about the COVID-19 pandemic and related public health issues will impact our business. Such events or conditions could result in additional regulation or restrictions affecting the conduct of our business in the future.
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Our actual claims losses may exceed our reserves for claims, and we may be required to establish additional reserves, which in turn may adversely impact our results of operations and financial condition.
We maintain reserves to cover our estimated exposure for claims relating to our issued insurance policies. Reserves do not represent an exact calculation of exposure, but instead represent our best estimates using actuarial and statistical procedures. Reserve estimates are refined as experience develops, and adjustments to reserves are reflected in our statements of operations for the period in which such estimates are updated. Because establishing reserves is an inherently uncertain process involving estimates of future losses, future developments may require us to increase policy benefit reserves, which may have a material adverse effect on our results of operations and financial condition in the periods in which such increases occur.
We may be required to accelerate the amortization of deferred acquisition costs, which would increase our expenses and adversely affect our results of operations and financial condition.
At December 31, 2020, we had $104.9 million of deferred policy acquisition costs, or DAC. DAC represents costs that vary with and are directly related to the successful sale and issuance of our insurance policies and are deferred and amortized over the estimated life of the related insurance policies. These costs include commissions in excess of ultimate renewal commissions, solicitation and printing costs, sales material costs and some support costs, such as underwriting and contract and policy issuance expenses. Under U.S. GAAP for our type of insurance products, DAC is amortized over the premium-paying period of the policies.
The amortization of DAC is subject to acceleration and generally depends upon anticipated profits from investments, surrender and other policy charges, mortality, morbidity, persistency and maintenance expense margins. For example, if our insurance policies lapse and surrender rates were to exceed the assumptions upon which we priced our insurance policies, or if actual persistency proves to be less than our persistency assumptions, especially in the early years of a policy, we might be required to accelerate the amortization of expenses we deferred in connection with the issuance of the policy. We regularly review the quality of our DAC to determine if it is recoverable from future income. If these costs are not recoverable, the amount that is not recoverable is charged to expenses in the financial period in which we make this determination.
Unfavorable experience with regards to expected expenses, investment returns, surrender and other policy charges, mortality, morbidity, lapses or persistency may cause us to increase the amortization of DAC or to record a current period expense to increase benefit reserves, any of which could have a material adverse effect on our results of operations and financial condition.
THE DISTRIBUTION OF OUR PRODUCTS THROUGH INDEPENDENT CONSULTANTS REDUCES OUR CONTROL OVER SALES AND DISTRIBUTION AND THUS SUBJECTS US TO CERTAIN RISKS THAT COULD NEGATIVELY IMPACT OUR REVENUES, OUR IN-FORCE BUSINESS, AND OUR BENEFITS AND EXPENSE COSTS.
Sales of our insurance products could decline if we are unable to establish and maintain relationships with independent marketing agencies and independent consultants and agents.
We depend almost exclusively on the services of independent marketing agencies and independent consultants and agents for the distribution of our products. These agencies, agents and consultants are key to the development and maintenance of our relationships with our policyholders. Significant competition exists among insurers in attracting and maintaining marketers of demonstrated ability. Some of our competitors may offer better compensation packages or commissions for marketing firms, independent consultants and agents or induce agents to sell their products through a broader product offering, more distribution resources, better brand recognition, more competitive pricing, lower cost structures and greater financial strength or claims paying ratings than we have. We compete with other insurers for marketing agencies, agents and independent consultants primarily on the basis of our compensation, products and support services. Any reduction in our ability to attract and retain effective sales representatives could materially adversely affect our revenues, results of operations and financial condition.
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There may be adverse tax, legal or financial consequences if our sales representatives are determined not to be independent consultants.
Our sales representatives are independent consultants who operate their own businesses. Although we believe that we have properly classified our representatives as independent consultants, there is nevertheless a risk that the IRS, a foreign agency, a court or other authority will take the different view that our sales representatives should be classified as employees. The tests governing the determination of whether an individual is considered to be an independent consultant or an employee are typically fact-sensitive and vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. Laws and regulations that govern the status and misclassification of independent sales representatives are subject to change or interpretation.
If there is a change in the manner in which our independent consultants are classified or an adverse determination with respect to some or all of our independent consultants by a court or governmental agency, we could incur significant costs in complying with such laws and regulations, including in respect of tax withholding, social security payments, government and private pension plan contributions and recordkeeping, or we may be required to modify our business model, any of which could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations. In addition, there is the risk that we may be subject to significant monetary liabilities arising from fines or judgments as a result of any such actual or alleged non-compliance with applicable federal, state, local or foreign laws.
INSURANCE IS A HIGHLY REGULATED BUSINESS. REGULATIONS VARY FROM JURISDICTION TO JURISDICTION AND MAY CHANGE FROM TIME TO TIME. THESE REGULATIONS AFFECT OUR OPERATIONS AND CHANGES COULD NEGATIVELY IMPACT OUR CASH FLOW, THE RESULTS OF OUR OPERATIONS, OUR LIQUIDITY AND OUR FINANCIAL CONDITIONS.
LEGAL REGULATION AND RISKS
Citizens is a holding company that has minimal operations of its own and depends on the ability of our insurance subsidiaries to make payments to us in sufficient amounts to fund our operations. Our insurance subsidiaries are restricted by applicable laws and regulations in the amounts of payments they may make to us and their ability to transfer funds to us may be impaired by adverse financial results or a change in capital requirements. Accordingly, internal sources of capital and liquidity may not always be sufficient. If we need to seek external capital, adverse market conditions may affect our access to capital or our cost of capital.
As a holding company, our assets consist of the capital stock of our subsidiaries, cash and investments. We rely primarily on statutorily permissible payments from our insurance company subsidiaries, principally through service agreements we have with our subsidiaries, to meet our working capital needs. The ability of our insurance company subsidiaries to make payments to us is subject to regulation by the states and jurisdictions in which they are domiciled, and these payments depend primarily on approved service agreements between us and these subsidiaries and, to a lesser extent, the statutory surplus (which is the excess of assets over liabilities as determined under statutory accounting practices prescribed by an insurance company's state of domicile), future statutory earnings (which are earnings as determined in accordance with statutory accounting practices) and regulatory restrictions.
Except to the extent that we are a creditor with recognized claims against our subsidiaries, claims of our subsidiaries' creditors, including policyholders, have priority with respect to the assets and earnings of the subsidiaries over the claims of creditors (including us) and shareholders. If any of our subsidiaries becomes insolvent, liquidates or otherwise reorganizes, our policyholders will have a priority to receive the assets of such subsidiary and we may have no rights with respect to the liquidation, bankruptcy or winding-up of the subsidiary under applicable laws.
If our financial results are unfavorable, we may need to increase our capital in order to satisfy regulatory requirements. Maintaining appropriate levels of statutory surplus is considered important not only by us but by insurance regulatory authorities in the U.S. and Bermuda. Failure to maintain certain levels of statutory surplus could result in increased regulatory scrutiny or action by regulatory authorities. The need for additional capital may limit a subsidiary's ability to distribute funds to us.
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Additionally, any change in demand for our insurance subsidiaries’ products or an increase in the incidence of new claims or the duration of existing claims could negatively impact their cash flows from operations. Deterioration in the credit market, which could delay our and our insurance subsidiaries’ ability to sell positions in certain fixed maturity securities in a timely manner, could also negatively impact our and our insurance subsidiaries’ cash flows. Regulatory changes such as those discussed herein in this Item 1A may impose higher capital or reserve requirements on our insurance subsidiaries and/or implement other requirements which could unfavorably affect our liquidity. Without sufficient liquidity, our ability to maintain and grow our operations would be limited. If our internal sources of liquidity prove to be insufficient, we may be unable to successfully obtain additional financing and capital on favorable terms, or at all, which may adversely affect us.
Obtaining financing for even a small amount of capital could be challenging in unfavorable market conditions and during periods of economic uncertainty. The markets may exert downward pressure on availability of liquidity and credit capacity for certain issuers. The availability of financing will depend on a variety of factors such as market conditions, the general availability of credit, the overall availability of credit to the financial services industry, and the possibility that customers or lenders could develop a negative perception of our financial prospects. Similarly, our access to funds may be impaired if regulatory authorities take negative actions against us. Raising capital in unfavorable market conditions could increase our interest expense or negatively impact our shareholders through increased dilution of their common stock in the Company.
Our insurance subsidiaries are subject to minimum capital and surplus requirements, and any failure to meet these requirements could subject us to regulatory action.
Our insurance subsidiaries are subject to minimum capital and surplus requirements in both the U.S. and internationally, as described below. If we fail to meet these standards and requirements, our various regulators may require specified actions to be taken, which could have a material and adverse impact on the Company’s competitiveness, operational flexibility, financial condition, and results of operations.
CICA Ltd. is subject to extensive supervision and regulation by the BMA and the Ministry of Finance of Bermuda (“MOF”). Failure to comply with regulation by the BMA and the MOF may increase our costs of doing business, restrict the conduct of our business and negatively impact our financial position or results of operations.
CICA Ltd. was registered in Bermuda under the Insurance Act as a Class E insurer in February 2018 and is now subject to the provisions of the Insurance Act and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder. We have limited experience with regulation by the BMA and the MOF, including compliance with common reporting standard regulations imposed by the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development, administered by the MOF, the jurisdiction's competent authority. Failure to comply with laws and regulations in Bermuda could subject us to monetary penalties imposed by the BMA and the MOF, increased regulatory supervision, unanticipated costs associated with remedying such failure or other claims, harm to our reputation and interruption of our operations, which may have a material adverse impact on our financial position or results of operations.
Additionally, as discussed in Item 1. Business – International Regulation – Bermuda, due to the Prudential Review, the BMA is requiring Citizens and CICA Ltd. to enter into a “Keepwell Agreement”, which would encumber certain assets of the Company. The Keepwell Agreement will include a specific target solvency level at which the Company would be required to make a capital injection into CICA Ltd. Both the Keepwell Agreement and any capital injection could negatively impact the Company’s capital resources and liquidity.
We and our domestic insurance subsidiaries are subject to extensive governmental regulation in the U.S. which is subject to change and may increase our costs of doing business, restrict the conduct of our business, increase capital requirements for our insurance subsidiaries and negatively impact our results of operations, liquidity and financial condition.
We and our domestic insurance subsidiaries are subject to extensive regulation and supervision in U.S. jurisdictions where we do business, including state insurance regulations and U.S. federal securities, tax, financial services, privacy, anti-money laundering, bank secrecy, anti-corruption and foreign asset control laws. Insurance company regulation is generally designed to protect the interests of policyholders, with substantially lesser protections to shareholders of the regulated insurance companies. To that end, all the U.S. states in which we do business have insurance regulatory agencies with broad legal powers with respect to licensing companies to transact business;
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mandating capital and surplus requirements; regulating trade and claims practices; approving policy forms; restricting companies' ability to enter and exit markets; and restricting or prohibiting the payment of dividends by our subsidiaries to us.
The capacity for an insurance company's growth in premiums is partially a function of its required statutory surplus. Maintaining appropriate levels of statutory surplus, as measured by statutory accounting practices prescribed or permitted by a company's state of domicile, is considered important by all U.S. state insurance regulatory authorities. Failure to maintain required levels of statutory surplus could result in increased regulatory scrutiny and enforcement action by regulatory authorities.
Most U.S. insurance regulatory authorities have broad discretion to grant, renew, suspend and revoke licenses and approvals, and could preclude or temporarily suspend us from carrying on some or all of our activities, including acquisitions of other insurance companies, require us to add capital to our insurance company subsidiaries, or fine us. If we are unable to maintain all required licenses and approvals, or if our insurance business is determined not to comply fully with the wide variety of applicable laws and regulations and their interpretations, including the USA Patriot Act, our revenues, results of operations and financial condition could be materially adversely affected.
FINANCIAL REGULATION AND RISKS
Our financial condition and results of operations may be affected if the liabilities actually incurred differ, or if our estimates of those liabilities change, from the amounts we have reserved for in connection with missed tax reporting or noncompliance of some of our products with the Internal Revenue Code.
We have previously reported that a portion of the life insurance policies issued by our subsidiary insurance companies failed to qualify for the favorable U.S. federal income tax treatment afforded by Sections 7702/72(s) of the Internal Revenue Code ("IRC") of 1986. We have determined the structure of our policies sold to non-U.S. persons, which were novated to CICA Ltd. effective July 1, 2018, may have inadvertently generated U.S. source income over time, which caused tax withholding and information reporting requirements for the Company under Chapters 3 and 4 of the IRC.
Accruals for loss contingencies are recorded when it is probable that a liability has been incurred and the amount can be reasonably estimated. The process of determining our best estimate and the estimated range for probable liabilities and expenses related to these tax issues was a complex undertaking including insight from external consultants and involved management’s judgment based upon a variety of factors known at the time. The amount of our liabilities and expenses depends on a number of uncertainties, including the number of prior tax years for which we may be liable to the IRS and the methodology applicable to the calculation of the tax liabilities for policies. Given the range of potential outcomes and the significant variables assumed in establishing our estimates, actual amounts incurred may exceed our reserve and could exceed the high end of our estimated range of liabilities and expenses. To the extent the amount reserved by the Company is insufficient to meet the actual amount of our liabilities and expenses, or if our estimates of those liabilities and expenses change in the future, our financial condition and results of operations may be materially adversely affected. See Note 7. Commitment and Contingencies in the notes to our consolidated financial statements for further discussion of such tax issues.
Changes in accounting standards may adversely affect our reported results of operations and financial condition.
Our consolidated financial statements are subject to the application of GAAP in the U.S. and Bermuda which are periodically revised and/or expanded. Accordingly, we are required to adopt new or revised accounting standards issued by recognized authoritative bodies, including the FASB, the BMA and the NAIC. Future accounting standards we adopt, including the FASB’s Accounting Standard Update related to long-duration insurance contracts, will change current accounting and disclosure requirements applicable to our consolidated financial statements. Such changes may have a material effect on our reported results of operations or financial condition. In addition, the required adoption of new accounting standards may result in significant incremental costs associated with initial implementation and ongoing compliance. See Note 1. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies in the notes to our consolidated financial statements contained herein for additional information regarding accounting updates.
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Unexpected losses in future reporting periods may require us to record a valuation allowance against our deferred tax assets.
Under U.S. GAAP, we are required to evaluate our deferred tax assets ("DTA") quarterly for recoverability based on available evidence. This process involves management's judgment about assumptions, which are subject to change from period to period due to tax rate changes or variances between our projected operating performance and our actual results. Ultimately, future adjustments to the DTA valuation allowance, if any, will be determined based upon changes in the expected realization of the net deferred tax assets. The realization of the deferred tax assets depends on the existence of sufficient taxable income in either the carry back or carry forward periods under applicable tax law. Due to significant estimates utilized in establishing the valuation allowance and the potential for changes in facts and circumstances, it is reasonably possible that we may be required to record a valuation allowance in future reporting periods. Such an adjustment could have a material adverse effect on our results of operation, financial condition and capital position.
APPROXIMATELY 25% OF OUR TOTAL REVENUES FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2020 CONSISTED OF INVESTMENT INCOME. THE INVESTMENT RETURN, OR YIELD, ON INVESTED ASSETS IS AN IMPORTANT ELEMENT OF OUR EARNINGS SINCE INSURANCE PRODUCTS ARE PRICED WITH THE ASSUMPTION THAT PREMIUMS RECEIVED CAN BE INVESTED FOR A PERIOD OF TIME BEFORE BENEFITS ARE PAID. CHANGES IN THE GLOBAL OR U.S. INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT, OR MARKET DISRUPTIONS THAT AFFECT INTEREST RATES AND INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES, AS WELL AS DECLINES IN THE VALUE OF OUR INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO, MAY ADVERSELY AFFECT OUR RESULTS OF OPERATION AND FINANCIAL CONDITION.
Sustained periods of low interest rates in the long-term investment market may adversely affect our reported net investment income and the discount rates used in reserving for our insurance products, which may adversely affect our results of operations or financial condition.
The low interest rate environment continues to limit increases in profit margins for insurers, including us. We have been impacted by the historically low interest rate environment over the past several years as our fixed maturity investment portfolio, primarily invested in callable securities, has generally been reinvested at lower yields, leading to lower net investment income than assumed in the pricing and reserving for our insurance products. An interest or discount rate is used in calculating reserves for our insurance products. We set our reserve discount rate assumptions based on our current and expected future investment yield for assets supporting the reserves, considering current and expected future market conditions. Spread compression and related effects to profitability caused by lower interest rates affect the valuation of in-force business more significantly than the valuation of new business, as new business pricing assumptions reflect the current and anticipated future interest rate environment. Estimates of fair value are inherently uncertain and represent management’s reasonable expectations regarding future developments. If the discount rate assumed in our reserve calculations is higher than our future investment returns, our invested assets will not earn enough investment income to support our future benefit payments. In that case, we may be required to amortize any remaining DAC, record additional liabilities and/or increase our capital contributions to our insurance subsidiaries in the period this occurs, which could have a material adverse effect on our results of operations or financial condition.
Changes in market interest rates may significantly affect our profitability.
We are exposed to significant capital market risk related to changes in interest rates. Our investment performance, including yields and realization of gains and losses, may vary depending on economic and market conditions. Substantial and sustained changes, up or down, in market interest rate levels can materially affect the profitability of our products.
If interest rates decrease or remain at low levels, we may be forced to reinvest proceeds from investments that have matured, prepaid, been sold, or called at lower yields, reducing our investment margin. We have experienced significant call activity on our fixed maturity portfolio over the years due to the low interest rate environment. Our fixed maturity bond portfolio is exposed to interest rate risk as approximately 50% of the portfolio is callable as of December 31, 2020, with 5% that could be called within the next year. If subject to increased call activity, the Company would have to reinvest the resulting investment portfolio cash proceeds from calls as well as from maturities in lower yielding instruments, further reducing our investment income. Some of our products, principally traditional whole life insurance with annuity riders, expose us to the risk that changes in interest rates will reduce our
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"spread," or the difference between the amounts we are required to pay under our contracts to policyholders and the rate of return we are able to earn on our investments intended to support obligations under the contracts. As a key component of profitability, a narrowing of our “spread” may have a material adverse effect on our results of operations or financial condition. Lowering our interest crediting rates can help offset decreases in investment margins on some of our products. However, our ability to lower these rates could be limited by competition or contractually guaranteed minimum rates and may not match the timing or magnitude of changes in asset yields.
An increase in interest rates will decrease the net unrealized gain position of our investment portfolio and may subject us to disintermediation risk. Disintermediation risk is the risk that in a change from a low interest rate period to a significantly higher and increasing interest rate period, policyholders may surrender their policies or make early withdrawals to increase their returns, requiring us to liquidate investments in an unrealized loss position (i.e. the market value less the carrying value of the investments).
Our investment portfolio is subject to various risks that may result in realized investment losses. In particular, decreases in the fair value of fixed maturities may significantly reduce the value of our investments, and as a result, our financial condition may suffer.
We are subject to credit risk in our investment portfolio. Defaults by third parties in the payment or performance of their obligations under these securities could reduce our investment income and realized investment gains or result in the recognition of investment losses. The value of our investments may be materially adversely affected by increases in interest rates, downgrades in the bonds included in our portfolio and by other factors that may result in the recognition of credit related allowances. Each of these events may cause us to reduce the carrying value of our investment portfolio.
In particular, at December 31, 2020, fixed maturities represented $1.5 billion or 91.7% of our total investments of $1.6 billion. The fair value of fixed maturities and the related investment income fluctuates depending on general economic and market conditions. The fair value of these investments generally increases or decreases in an inverse relationship with fluctuations in interest rates, while net investment income realized by us will generally increase or decrease in line with changes in market interest rates. In addition, actual net investment income and/or cash flows from investments that carry prepayment risk, such as mortgage-backed and other asset-backed securities, may differ from those anticipated at the time of investment as a result of interest rate fluctuations. An investment has prepayment risk when there is a risk that the timing of cash flows resulting from the repayment of principal might occur earlier than anticipated because of declining interest rates or later than anticipated because of rising interest rates. The impact of value fluctuations affects our consolidated financial statements, as all of our fixed maturities are classified as available-for-sale, with changes in fair value reflected in our stockholders' equity (accumulated other comprehensive income or loss). No similar adjustment is made for liabilities to reflect a change in interest rates. Therefore, interest rate fluctuations and economic conditions could adversely affect our stockholders' equity, total comprehensive income and/or cash flows. Although at December 31, 2020, 98.5% of our fixed maturities were investment grade with 62.7% rated A or above, all of our fixed maturities are subject to credit risk. If any of the issuers of our fixed maturities suffer financial setbacks, the ratings on the fixed maturities could be downgraded (with a concurrent decrease in fair value) and, in a worst-case scenario, the issuer could default on its financial obligations. If the issuer defaults, we could have realized losses associated with the impairment of the securities.
The determination of valuation and impairments of our investments include estimations and assumptions that are subjective and prone to differing interpretations and could materially impact our results of operations or financial condition.
The Company makes assumptions regarding the fair value and expected performance of its fixed maturity securities and other investments. Valuations may include inputs and assumptions that are less observable or require greater estimation, particularly during periods of market disruption, resulting in values which may be less than the value at which the investments may ultimately be sold. Further, rapidly changing and/or unprecedented credit and equity market conditions could materially impact the valuation of investments as reported in our consolidated financial statements, and the period to period changes in value could vary significantly. Decreases in value may have a material adverse effect on our results of operations or financial condition.
The decision of whether to record a credit impairment is determined by our assessment of the financial condition and prospects of a particular issuer, projections of future cash flows and recoverability as well as our ability and intent to hold the securities to recovery or maturity. We evaluate our investment portfolio for impairments. There can
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be no assurance that we have accurately assessed the level of impairments taken. Additional impairments may need to be taken in the future, and historical trends may not be indicative of future impairments. Any event reducing the value of our securities other than on a temporary basis may have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations, or financial condition.
FROM TIME TO TIME, WE HAVE EXPANDED OUR BUSINESS BY PURCHASING OTHER INSURANCE COMPANIES OR BLOCKS OF BUSINESS. SUCH ACQUISITIONS SUBJECT US TO POTENTIAL RISKS THAT COULD MATERIALLY NEGATIVELY AFFECT OUR RESULTS OF OPERATIONS OR FINANCIAL CONDITION.
We may be required to recognize an impairment on the value of our goodwill, which would increase our expenses and materially adversely affect our results of operations and financial condition.
Goodwill represents the excess of the amount paid by us to acquire various life insurance companies over the fair value of their net assets at the date of the acquisition. Under U.S. GAAP, we test the carrying value of goodwill for impairment at least annually at the "reporting unit" level, which is either an operating segment or a business that is one level below the operating segment. Goodwill is impaired if its carrying value exceeds its implied fair value. This may occur for various reasons, including changes in actual or expected earnings or cash flows of a reporting unit, changes in interest rates, generation of earnings by a reporting unit at a lower rate than similar businesses, declines in market prices for publicly traded businesses similar to our reporting units or increases in the carrying value of the segment caused by recognition of uncertain tax benefits. If any portion of our goodwill becomes impaired, we would be required to recognize the amount of the impairment as a current-period expense, which could have a material adverse effect on our results of operations and financial condition. Goodwill in our consolidated financial statements related to our Life Insurance segment was $12.6 million as of December 31, 2020.
Management’s determination of the fair value of each reporting unit incorporates multiple inputs including qualitative and quantitative factors such as discounted cash flow calculations based on assumptions that market participants would make in valuing the reporting unit. Other assumptions can include levels of economic capital, future business growth, and earnings projections and trends.
We may be required to accelerate the costs of insurance acquired, which would increase our expenses and adversely affect our results of operations and financial condition.
When we acquire a block of insurance policies, we assign a portion of the purchase price to the right to receive future net cash flows from existing insurance and investment contracts and policies. This intangible asset, called the cost of insurance acquired, or COIA, represents the actuarially estimated present value of future cash flows from the acquired policies. At December 31, 2020, we had $11.5 million of COIA.
We amortize the value of this intangible asset in a manner similar to the amortization of DAC; it is subject to acceleration and generally depends upon anticipated profits from investments, surrender and other policy charges, mortality, morbidity, persistency and maintenance expense margins. If actual experience was not as expected when the policies were acquired, we might be required to accelerate the amortization of expenses we deferred in connection with the acquisition of the policy. We regularly review the quality of our COIA to determine if it is recoverable from future income. If these costs are not recoverable, the amount that is not recoverable is charged to expenses in the financial period in which we make this determination.
Unfavorable experience with regards to expected expenses, investment returns, surrender and other policy charges, mortality, morbidity, lapses or persistency may cause us to increase the amortization of COIA, or to record a current period expense to increase benefit reserves, any of which could have a material adverse effect on our results of operations and financial condition.
THE COMPANY RELIES ON OUR INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY SYSTEMS, AND THE DATA MAINTAINED WITHIN THOSE SYSTEMS, TO MANAGE MANY ASPECTS OF OUR BUSINESS. CYBERSECURITY RISKS, THE FAILURE OF OUR SYSTEMS TO OPERATE PROPERLY AND/OR THE FAILURE TO MAINTAIN THE CONFIDENTIALITY, INTEGRITY, AND AVAILABILITY OF POLICYHOLDER AND CLAIMS DATA, INCLUDING PERSONAL IDENTIFYING INFORMATION, COULD RESULT IN A MATERIALLY ADVERSE EFFECT ON OUR BUSINESS, REPUTATION, FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS.
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Our failure to maintain effective information systems could adversely affect our business.
We must maintain and enhance our existing information systems and develop and integrate new information systems to keep pace with continuing changes in information processing technology, evolving industry and regulatory standards and changing customer preferences in a cost-effective manner. If we do not maintain adequate systems, we could experience adverse consequences, including inadequate information on which to base pricing, underwriting and reserve decisions, regulatory problems, failure to meet prompt payment obligations, increases in administrative expenses and loss of customers. Our failure to maintain effective and efficient information systems, or our failure to consolidate our existing systems could have a material adverse effect on our results of operations and financial condition.
Some of our information technology systems and software are mainframe-based, legacy-type systems that require an ongoing commitment of resources to maintain current standards. Our systems utilize proprietary code requiring highly skilled personnel. Due to the unique nature of our proprietary operating environment, we could have difficulty finding personnel with the skills required to provide ongoing system maintenance and development as we seek to keep pace with changes in our products and business models, information processing technology, evolving industry and regulatory standards and policyholder needs.
We are continuously evaluating and enhancing systems and creating new systems and processes as our business depends on our ability to maintain and improve our technology. Due to the complexity and interconnectedness of our systems and processes, these changes, as well as changes designed to update and enhance our protective measures to address new threats, increase the risk of a system or process failure or the creation of a gap in our security measures. Any such failure or gap could adversely affect our business operations and results of operations.
A cyber attack or other security breach could disrupt our operations, result in the unauthorized disclosure or loss of confidential data, damage our reputation or relationships, and expose us to significant financial and legal liability, which may adversely affect our business, results of operations, or financial condition.
We store confidential information about our business and our policyholders, independent marketing firms, and independent agents, consultants and others on our information technology systems, including proprietary and personally identifiable information. As part of our normal business operations, we use this information and engage third-party providers, including outsourcing, cloud computing, and other business partners, that store, access, process, and transmit such information on our behalf. We devote significant resources and employ security measures to help protect our information technology systems and confidential information, and we have programs in place to detect, contain, and respond to information security incidents. However, because the techniques used to obtain unauthorized access, disable or degrade service, or sabotage systems change frequently and may be difficult to detect for long periods of time, we and our third-party providers may be unable to anticipate these techniques or implement adequate preventative measures. In addition, hardware, software, or applications we develop or procure from third parties or through open source solutions may contain defects in design or manufacture or other problems that could unexpectedly compromise our information security. Unauthorized parties, whether within or outside our company, may disrupt or gain access to our systems, or those of third parties with whom we do business, through human error, misfeasance, fraud, trickery, or other forms of deceit, including break-ins, use of stolen credentials, social engineering, phishing, or other cyber attacks, computer viruses, malicious codes, and similar means of unauthorized and destructive tampering.
We and our third-party providers experience information security incidents from time to time. There is no assurance that our security systems and measures will be able to prevent, mitigate, or remediate future incidents. A successful penetration or circumvention of the security of our information technology systems, or those of third parties with whom we do business, could cause serious negative consequences for us, including significant disruption of our operations, unauthorized disclosure or loss of confidential information, harm to our brand or reputation, loss of customers and revenues, violations of privacy and other laws, and exposure to litigation, monetary damages, regulatory enforcement proceedings, fines, and potentially criminal proceedings and penalties. If we are unaware of the incident for some time after it occurs, our exposure could increase. In addition, the costs to address or remediate systems disruptions or security threats or vulnerabilities, whether before or after an incident, could be significant. As we continue to build our digital capabilities and focus on enhancing the customer experience, the amount of information that we retain and share with third parties is likely to grow, increasing the cost to prevent data security breaches and the cost and potential consequences of such breaches. An information technology systems
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failure could also interfere with our ability to comply with financial reporting and other regulatory requirements, exposing us to potential disciplinary action by regulators.
Although we have insurance against some cyber risks and attacks, we may be subject to litigation and financial losses that exceed our policy limits, are subject to deductibles or are not covered under any of our current insurance policies.
The failure of our business recovery and incident management processes to resume our business operations in the event of a catastrophe, cyber attack, or other event could adversely affect our profitability, results of operations, or financial condition.
In the event of a disaster such as a catastrophe, an epidemic, a cyber attack, cyber security breach or other information technology systems failure, a terrorist attack, or war, unanticipated problems with our disaster recovery systems could have a material adverse impact on our ability to conduct business and on our results of operations and financial condition, particularly if those problems affect our information technology systems and destroy valuable data or result in a significant failure of our internal control environment. In addition, in the event that a significant number of our employees were unavailable in the event of a disaster, our ability to effectively conduct business could be severely compromised.
The failure of our information technology and/or disaster recovery systems for any reason could cause significant interruptions or malfunctions in our or our customers’ operations and result in the loss, theft, or failure to maintain the security, confidentiality or privacy of sensitive data, including personal information relating to our customers. Such a failure could harm our reputation, subject us to regulatory sanctions, legal claims, and increased expenses, and lead to a loss of customers and revenues.
RISKS RELATED TO OUR HOLDING SECURITIES
If our foreign policyholders reduced or ceased participation in our CISIP or if a foreign securities regulatory authority were to deem the CISIP's operation contrary to such country's securities laws, the volume of Class A common stock purchased on the open market through the CISIP, and the price of our Class A common stock, could fall.
A significant portion of our Class A common stock has been purchased under the CISIP by foreign holders of life insurance policies (or related brokers). The CISIP is registered with the SEC pursuant to a registration statement under the Securities Act of 1933, but is not registered under the laws of any foreign jurisdiction. If a foreign securities regulatory authority were to determine the offer and sale of our Class A common stock under the CISIP was not allowed under applicable laws and regulations of its jurisdiction, such authority may issue or assert a fine, penalty or cease and desist order against our offer and sale of Class A common stock in that foreign jurisdiction. There is a risk our Class A common stock price could be negatively impacted by a decrease in participation in the CISIP. If fewer policyholders are eligible to or elect to participate in the CISIP, the trading volume of our Class A common stock may decline from its present levels, the demand for our Class A common stock could be negatively impacted and the price of our Class A common stock could fall.
Our Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation and Amended and Restated Bylaws, as well as applicable insurance laws in the jurisdictions where our insurance subsidiaries are domiciled, may discourage takeovers and business combinations that our shareholders might consider to be in their best interests.
Our Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation and Amended and Restated Bylaws, as well as insurance laws in the jurisdictions in which our insurance subsidiaries are domiciled, may delay, deter, render more difficult or prevent a takeover attempt or a change in control that our shareholders might consider in their best interests. As a result, our shareholders may be prevented from receiving the benefit from any premium to the market price of our Class A common stock that may be offered by a bidder in a takeover context or the Company may not be able to reissue the Class B common stock in order to provide capital to the Company.
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The following provisions in our Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation and Amended and Restated Bylaws make it difficult for our Class A shareholders to replace or remove our directors and have other anti-takeover effects that may delay, deter or prevent a takeover attempt:
•holders of shares of our Class B common stock elect a simple majority of our Board, and
•our Board may issue one or more series of preferred stock without the approval of our shareholders.
Insurance laws generally require prior approval of a change in control of an insurance company. Generally, such laws provide that control over an insurer is presumed to exist if any person, directly or indirectly, owns, controls, holds with the power to vote, or holds proxies representing 10% or more of the voting securities of the insurer. In considering an application to acquire control of an insurer, an insurance commissioner generally will consider such factors as the experience, competence and financial strength of the proposed acquirer, the integrity of the proposed acquirer's board of directors and executive officers, the proposed acquirer's plans for the management and operation of the insurer, and any anti-competitive results that may arise from the acquisition. These insurance requirements may delay, deter or prevent our ability to complete an acquisition or sell the Class B common stock in order to raise capital.
GENERAL RISK FACTORS
Litigation and regulatory actions and investigations are common in our businesses and may result in financial losses and/or harm to our reputation.
From time to time we are, and have been, subject to a variety of legal and regulatory actions and investigations relating to our business operations. We are, and in the future may be, parties in various litigation matters. An adverse outcome in one or more of these actions, investigations or litigation matters may, depending on the nature, scope and amount of the ruling, materially and adversely affect our results of operations or financial condition, encourage other litigation, and limit our ability to write new business, particularly if the adverse outcomes negatively impact our reputation.
In the absence of countervailing considerations, we would expect to defend any such actions, investigations or litigation matters vigorously. However, in doing so, we could incur significant defense costs, including attorneys' fees, other direct litigation costs and the expenditure of substantial amounts of management time that otherwise would be devoted to our business. Further, if we suffer an adverse judgment as a result of any claim, it could have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations and financial condition.
Reinsurance may not be available or affordable, or reinsurers may be unwilling or unable to meet their obligations under our reinsurance contracts, which may adversely affect our results of operations or financial condition.
As part of our overall risk management and capital management strategies, we purchase reinsurance for certain risks underwritten by our various insurance subsidiaries. Market conditions beyond our control determine the availability and cost of reinsurance. Any decrease in the amount of reinsurance will increase our risk of loss and may impact the level of capital requirements for our insurance subsidiaries, and any increase in the cost of reinsurance will, absent a decrease in the amount of reinsurance, reduce our results of operations. Accordingly, we may be forced to incur additional expenses for reinsurance or may be unable to obtain sufficient reinsurance on acceptable terms, which may adversely affect our ability to write future business, result in the assumption of more risk with respect to the policies we issue, and increase our capital requirements. The collectability of our reinsurance recoverable is primarily a function of the solvency of the individual reinsurers. We cannot provide assurance that our reinsurers will pay the reinsurance recoverable owed to us or that they will pay these recoverables on a timely basis. The insolvency of a reinsurer or the inability or unwillingness of a reinsurer to comply with the terms of a reinsurance contract may have an adverse effect on our results of operations or financial condition.
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Events that damage our reputation may adversely affect our business, results of operations, or financial condition.
There are many events which may harm our reputation, including, but not limited to, those discussed in this Item 1A regarding regulatory investigations, legal proceedings, cyber or other information security incidents and disputes with our independent agents and consultants.
In addition, as an insurance company, we are paid to accept certain risks. Those who conduct our business, including executive officers and members of management, and to some extent, independent agents and consultants, do so in part by making decisions that involve exposing us to risk. These include decisions such as maintaining effective underwriting and pricing discipline, maintaining effective claim management and customer service performance, managing our investment portfolio, delivering effective technology solutions, complying with established sales practices, executing our capital management strategy, exiting a line of business and/or pursuing strategic growth initiatives, and other decisions. Although we have a risk management framework and employ controls and procedures designed to monitor business decisions and prevent us from taking excessive risks or unintentionally failing to comply with internal policies and practices such that errors occur, there can be no assurance that these controls and procedures will be effective. If our employees and independent agents and consultants take excessive risks and/or fail to comply with internal policies and practices, the impact of those events may damage our market position and reputation.
Depending on the severity of the damage to our reputation, we may be unable to effectively compete for new products or retain our existing business, which could adversely affect our results of operations or financial condition. Damage to our reputation may also hinder our ability to raise new capital and/or increase our cost of capital.
Item 3. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
The following are material pending legal proceedings in which we or any of our subsidiaries is a party or in which any of our or their property is the subject.
Trade Secret Suit filed by the Company against Former Executives, Citizens American Life, LLC and Citizens American Life, Inc. (collectively, “CALI”) and First Trinity.
As previously disclosed, on November 7, 2018, Citizens, CICA Ltd. and CICA filed a lawsuit in the District Court of Travis County, Texas (the “District Court”) against (i) Randall Riley (“Riley”), a former Citizens executive and son of Citizens’ founder Harold E. Riley, (ii) CALI, copycat companies formed by Riley and (iii) Alexis Enrique Delgado, Carlos Nalsen Landa, Enrique Pinzon Ruiz, Johan Emilio Mikuski Silva and Esperanza Peralta de Delgado (collectively, the “Los Raudales Defendants,” and together with Riley and CALI, collectively the “Defendants”), former independent consultants of Citizens, for unfair competition, misappropriation of Citizens’ trade secrets, tortious interference with Citizens’ existing contracts with its independent consultants and, with respect to the Los Raudales Defendants, breach of their independent consultant contracts with Citizens. The lawsuit sought (i) a declaration that Citizens had grounds to terminate the Los Raudales Defendants for cause under their independent consultant contracts with Citizens and that the Los Raudales Defendants are not entitled to future commissions under such contracts, (ii) injunctive relief, (iii) damages and (iv) attorneys’ fees and costs. Among other things, the suit alleges that Riley formed CALI and misappropriated trade secrets during the time he was employed by Citizens, in violation of his contractual and other duties to Citizens, and that the Los Raudales defendants breached their
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independent consultant contracts with Citizens by inducing or attempting to induce other independent consultants to terminate or reduce service to Citizens and disclosing confidential information.
On January 25, 2019, the Defendants filed a motion to dismiss certain claims alleged in the suit, and on April 11, 2019, the District Court denied the Defendants’ motion in its entirety. On May 29, 2019, Citizens, CICA Ltd. and CICA filed a motion for a preliminary injunction to bar the Defendants from continuing to engage in unfair competition and misappropriation of Citizens’ trade secrets and tortious interference with Citizens’ existing contracts with its independent consultants. A hearing for the preliminary injunction was held on August 12, 2019. On August 13, 2019, the District Court denied the application for a temporary injunction, and on August 31, 2020, the Third Court of Appeals in Austin, Texas affirmed the District Court’s decision.
On September 10, 2019, Citizens, CICA Ltd. and CICA filed an amended complaint and added additional defendants to the lawsuit, including (i) Michael P. Buchweitz, Jonathan M. Pollio, Jeffrey J. Wood and Steven A. Rekedal, former Citizens executives and employees and, in the case of Steven A. Rekedal, a former Citizens independent consultant, (ii) First Trinity Financial Corporation, and Trinity American, Inc. (collectively, “First Trinity”) and International Marketing Group S.A., LLC, entities that have founded a business on the exploitation of Citizens’ trade secrets and goodwill, and (iii) Gregg E. Zahn, a First Trinity executive. The amended complaint asserted additional claims for breach of contract, conspiracy and unjust enrichment. The lawsuit is currently in discovery and, depending on the District Court's scheduling in light of the COVID-19 pandemic, is expected to proceed to trial in the second quarter of 2021.
Colorado Litigation filed by the Foundation against the Company and the Board.
On September 2, 2020, the Company and its eight directors, Christopher W. Clause, J.D. Davis, Jr., Gerald W. Shields, Frank A. Keating II, Terry S. Maness, E. Dean Gage, Robert B. Sloan, Jr. and Constance K. Weaver, were named as defendants in a lawsuit (the “Colorado Litigation”) filed by the Foundation, which at the time was the sole holder of the Class B common stock of the Company, in the District Court of Arapahoe County of Colorado (the “Colorado Court”). The Foundation’s complaint requested: (i) a declaration by the Colorado Court that the Action by Written Consent of the Foundation (the “Written Consent”) to add director nominees to the Company’s board of directors ("Board"), which was delivered on August 13, 2020, was valid and enforceable; (ii) a declaration by the Colorado Court that the actions of the Board taken after the receipt of the Written Consent, including expanding the size of the Board and amending the Third Amended and Restated Bylaws of the Company, was void and unenforceable; and (iii) immediate injunctive relief against the Board from taking certain actions outside the ordinary course of business. Additionally, the Foundation’s complaint requested: (i) the Company and the Board to indemnify the Foundation and its director nominees for any expenses incurred related to lawsuit; (ii) the existing Board members to reimburse the Company for any (A) Board fees received on or since August 13, 2020 and (B) reimbursements received for acquiring legal representation relating to the litigation; and (iii) the Colorado Court award the Foundation all fees and expenses incurred in pursuit of the litigation, including attorney fees.
The Board believed the dispute between the parties was essentially whether the Foundation could unilaterally appoint members to the Board without regard to the process mandated in the Corporate Governance Guidelines of the Company, namely that the Board’s Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee (the "Committee") is responsible for identifying, recruiting, interviewing, vetting and recommending potential director candidates and evaluating their qualifications, independence, potential conflicts of interest and other important considerations. The Board believed the Foundation had to first engage the Committee and provide the Committee with a chance to assess the candidates’ qualifications in accordance with the criteria adopted by the Committee.
On September 28, 2020, the Colorado Court entered a mutually agreed Status Quo Stipulation (the “Stipulation”). Pursuant to the Stipulation, the Board and its committees agreed not to direct or, to their knowledge after reasonable investigation, permit anyone on their or the Company’s behalf to take any significant action that is outside the ordinary course of business without the consent of the Foundation (each, a “Material Action”) until the Colorado Court made a determination on the merits or otherwise ruled on the Foundation’s motion for a preliminary injunction, if filed, whichever came first (the “Expiration Date”). Material Actions were outlined in the Stipulation and included, among other things: (i) creating or disbanding any committee of the Board or changing the composition of any such committee; (ii) forming any subsidiary or entering into any partnership or joint venture; (iii) issuing any equity securities of the Company or any of its subsidiaries, other than as required pursuant to the Company’s Stock Investment Plan and pursuant to the vesting, settlement or exercise of equity-linked awards outstanding as of September 2, 2020; (iv) acquiring, encumbering, pledging, disposing of or otherwise transferring any assets,
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properties or rights of the Company or its controlled affiliates with a value in excess of ten percent of total assets in each case or twenty percent of assets in the aggregate (excluding any assets of the Company’s insurance subsidiaries backing reserves); (v) entering into any agreements involving a material change in the business operations of the Company; (vi) granting, providing or accelerating compensation payments or arrangements to any current or former employee, director, officer or other service provider, subject to certain exceptions; (vii) incurring, assuming, guaranteeing or otherwise becoming responsible for any debt in excess of ten percent of total liabilities (excluding contingent liabilities owed to any policyholders of insurance subsidiaries of the Company); (viii) authorizing, declaring or issuing any dividends or “poison pill” rights to the Company’s stockholders, officers, or directors; (ix) amending, modifying or repealing Board committee charters or the Company’s core governing documents; and (x) entering into any transactions involving a change in control of the Company.
On December 7, 2020, the Company filed counterclaims and third-party claims in the Colorado Litigation against the Foundation and two of its officers / trustees, Charles W. Hott and Michael C. Hughes, alleging that Mr. Hughes and Mr. Hott, as trustees or officers of the Foundation, among other things: (i) defrauded state insurance regulators in order to seize control of the Company, (ii) breached their fiduciary duties to all of the Company’s shareholders, and (iii) violated the Colorado Consumer Protection Act (collectively, the “Counterclaims”).
On February 6, 2021, Baylor University and Southwestern Theological Seminary, as the two sole charitable beneficiaries of the Foundation (the “Foundation Beneficiaries”), resolved their litigation with the Foundation in which they alleged that the Foundation trustees, including Mr. Hughes and Mr. Hott, breached their fiduciary duties to the Foundation and misused Foundation monies for personal benefit, including the filing of the Colorado Litigation (see below, “Texas Third-Party Litigation filed by the Foundation’s Beneficiaries against the Foundation”). As a result of their settlement, Mr. Hughes and Mr. Hott were removed as trustees from the Foundation. The Foundation Beneficiaries, upon regaining control of the Foundation, entered into a Mutual Agreement for Compromise, Settlement and Release with the Company, its individual directors and the Foundation (the “Foundation Settlement Agreement”) to resolve the Colorado Litigation.
The Foundation Settlement Agreement, among other things, provided for the following terms:
•The Company, its directors and the Foundation dismissed, all claims at issue in the Colorado Litigation and the parties mutually released each other for conduct prior to February 5, 2021;
•The Company agreed to: (a) restore its Board to its form as of August 12, 2020 consisting of a nine-seat Board comprised of four directors appointed by the Company's Class A common stockholders (Christopher W. Claus, J.D. Davis, Jr., Gerald W. Shields, and Frank A. Keating II), four directors appointed by the Company's Class B common stockholders (E. Dean Gage, Robert B. Sloan, Terry S. Maness, and Constance K. Weaver (the "Class B directors:)), and one vacancy eligible to be filled by the holders of Class B common stock; and (b) restore the Company’s Amended and Restated Bylaws to the form in which they existed on August 12, 2020;
•The Foundation was obligated to cooperate with the Company in such restoration of the Board and take all steps necessary or requested by the Company, including withdrawal of the Foundation Nominees who were previously submitted to the Company’s Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee for review and consideration and approval of the restoration of the four Class B directors named above;
•While in possession of the Class B Shares, the Foundation was obligated to comply with certain director qualification standards and a nomination process when nominating individuals to serve on the Board, including: (a) not permitting the Foundation’s trustees or officers to serve as directors, officers, employees or agents of the Company; (b) engaging with the Company’s Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee when developing a Class B director slate or filling vacancies in the Class B directorship and (c) communicating and coordinating with the Committee in developing a slate of Class B directors; and
•The Foundation would sell, and the Company would purchase, 100% of the Company’s Class B Shares from the Foundation.
On February 5, 2021, the Company also entered into a Mutual Agreement for Compromise, Settlement and Release with Michael C. Hughes, Charles W. Hott and David A. Boto as officers or trustees of the Foundation (the “Hughes-Hott-Boto Settlement Agreement”). The Hughes-Hott-Boto Settlement Agreement settled all controversies between the parties thereto, including dismissal of the Counterclaims.
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Texas Third-Party Litigation filed by the Foundation’s Beneficiaries against the Foundation.
As previously disclosed, on September 8, 2020, the Foundation Beneficiaries filed a lawsuit in the 67th District Court of Tarrant County, Texas (the “Texas Court”) against the Foundation and its CEO/President, Michael C. Hughes alleging that the Foundation trustees, including Mr. Hughes and Mr. Hott, breached their fiduciary duties to the Foundation and misused Foundation monies for personal benefit, including filing the Colorado Litigation against the Company and its Board, in an attempt to seat themselves on the Company’s board. In December 2020, the Texas Attorney General intervened in the Texas Third-Party Litigation on behalf of the Foundation Beneficiaries. On February 6, 2021, the parties to the Texas Third-Party Litigation entered into a settlement agreement to, among other things, dismiss the Texas Third-Party Litigation, cause the resignation of Mr. Hughes, Mr. Hott and Mr. Boto as trustees of the Foundation, and allow the Foundation Beneficiaries to appoint their own trustees to control the Foundation. Neither the Company nor any member of the Board was a party to the Texas Third-Party Litigation.