
Nonadmitted Balance
A non-admitted balance is an item on an insurer’s balance sheet that represents reinsured liabilities for which the reinsurer has not provided collateral. The non-admitted balance represents the portion of unearned premiums and loss reserves that do not count on the insurer’s statutory statements, which is where the insurer accounts for any capital and surplus required to maintain its license to conduct insurance business. Because the balance is non-admitted, the insurer cannot count the balance toward its solvency ratio or any regulatory required reserve level, meaning that the loss reserve associated with the non-admitted balance cannot count toward the general loss reserve. If the ceding insurance company does not require the reinsurer to provide collateral to cover the non-admitted balance and the reinsurer becomes insolvent, the insurance company will treat the non-admitted balance as the loss reserve and write the balance off. A non-admitted balance is an item on an insurer’s balance sheet that represents reinsured liabilities for which the reinsurer has not provided collateral. A non-admitted balance is an item on an insurer’s balance sheet that represents reinsured liabilities for which the reinsurer has not provided collateral.

What Is a Non-Admitted Balance?
A non-admitted balance is an item on an insurer’s balance sheet that represents reinsured liabilities for which the reinsurer has not provided collateral. Nonadmitted balance entries reduce the policyholders’ surplus because they represent a liability.




Understanding Non-Admitted Balances
Insurance companies cede risk to reinsurers in order to reduce their exposure to the risks associated with the policies that they underwrite. In exchange for taking on some of the insurer’s risk, the reinsurer is provided a fee, often a portion of the premium. The reinsurer is thus responsible for claims made up to a certain level and is required to demonstrate that it will be able to handle those claims if losses do arise.
Insurers may require a reinsurance company to provide assets as collateral as proof that the reinsurer will be able to cover a risk if a claim is made against the policy. If the reinsurer is required to provide collateral then this will reduce the non-admitted balance, and thus increase the insurer’s surplus.
Reinsurers and other captive insurance companies typically use a letter of credit (LOC) as the source of collateral. The letter of credit is issued by a bank. If the ceding insurance company does not require the reinsurer to provide collateral to cover the non-admitted balance and the reinsurer becomes insolvent, the insurance company will treat the non-admitted balance as the loss reserve and write the balance off.
The non-admitted balance represents the portion of unearned premiums and loss reserves that do not count on the insurer’s statutory statements, which is where the insurer accounts for any capital and surplus required to maintain its license to conduct insurance business.
Because the balance is non-admitted, the insurer cannot count the balance toward its solvency ratio or any regulatory required reserve level, meaning that the loss reserve associated with the non-admitted balance cannot count toward the general loss reserve. For this reason, insurance companies have an incentive to require reinsurers to provide collateral.
Examples of Non-Admitted Assets
Some examples of non-admitted assets include assets consisting of goodwill, furniture and fixtures, automobiles, agent debt balances, accrued income on investments in default, and other items. They are excluded in order to present a balance sheet that is as conservative as possible.
However, a rise in the proportion of non-admitted assets to admitted assets is an indication that a company may be investing in nonproductive or risky assets. However, this isn't always this case.
To determine one way or another, an insurance company's financial's must be closely scrutinized to determine if the proportion of non-admitted assets on the balance sheet is truly an indicator of nonproductive or risky assets.
Related terms:
Accounting
Accounting is the process of recording, summarizing, analyzing, and reporting financial transactions of a business to oversight agencies, regulators, and the IRS. read more
Balance Sheet : Formula & Examples
A balance sheet is a financial statement that reports a company's assets, liabilities and shareholder equity at a specific point in time. read more
Captive Insurance Company
A captive insurance company is an entity that offers risk-mitigation services for its parent company or for a set of related companies. read more
Catastrophe Reinsurance
Catastrophe reinsurance protects catastrophe insurers from financial ruin in the event of a large-scale natural or human-made disaster. read more
Clash Reinsurance
Clash reinsurance provides risk management for primary insurers who may receive multiple claims from policyholders resulting from a single event. read more
Co-Reinsurance
Co-reinsurance is a contract to indemnify an insurer that is shared by multiple companies in order to reduce the potential cost of claims. read more
Excess Limits Premium
Excess limits premium is the amount paid for coverage beyond the basic liability limits in an insurance contract. read more
Letter of Credit
A letter of credit is a letter from a bank guaranteeing that a buyer's payment to a seller will be received on time and for the correct amount. read more
Quota Share Treaty
A quota share treaty is a pro rata reinsurance contract in which the insurer and reinsurer share premiums and losses according to a fixed percentage. read more