The Standard Formula Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
-
- Business
From Skadden, The Standard Formula is a Solvency Two podcast for UK and European insurance professionals.
Join us as Skadden Partner Robert Chaplin leads conversations with industry practitioners and explores Solvency Two developments that matter to you.
If you’re enjoying The Standard Formula, be sure to subscribe in your favorite podcast app so you don’t miss any future episodes.
Additional information about Skadden can be found at Skadden.com.
The Standard Formula is a podcast by Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, and Affiliates. Skadden is recognized for its deep experience in representing insurance and reinsurance companies and their advisers on a wide variety of transactional and regulatory matters. This podcast is provided for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended and should not be construed as legal advice. This podcast is considered advertising under applicable state laws.
-
Using an Internal Model to Calculate Solvency Capital Requirements
“Insurers are expected to hold eligible owned funds in excess of the Solvency Capital Requirement. There are two main methods of calculating the SCR under Solvency II, the standard formula and internal model methods.”
In this episode of “The Standard Formula” podcast, Rob Chaplin, host and head of Skadden’s Europe Financial Institutions Group is joined by colleague George Belcher to discuss Solvency II’s internal models (IM). Despite a higher cost of development, IMs offer numerous benefits, such as more accurate risk sensitivity, more flexibility and more available data. Rob and George also explore partial IMs, changes to existing models, the PRA approval process and implications of the U.K.'s move away from EU Solvency II standards.
💡 Meet Your Host 💡Name: Robert Chaplin
Title: Partner, Insurance at Skadden
Specialty: Rob is the head of Skadden’s Financial Institutions Group in Europe. He primarily focuses on transactional and advisory work in the insurance sector. He advises on mergers and acquisitions, disposals, joint ventures and strategic reinsurances. He also counsels on regulatory issues, with an emphasis on Solvency II.
Connect: LinkedIn
💡 Featured Guest 💡Name: George Belcher
What he does: George is European Counsel in the Financial Institutions and Insurance Groups at Skadden. He focuses on insurance-related public and private acquisitions and private equity investments, as well as regulatory issues in the insurance sector. He also frequently advises on matters related to Lloyd’s of London.
Organization: Skadden
Words of wisdom: “A firm may choose a partial IM where a particular aspect of its business does not fit well within the standard formula.”
Connect with Skadden☑️ Follow us on Twitter & LinkedIn.
☑️ Subscribe to The Standard Formula on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app.
The Standard Formula is a podcast by Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, and Affiliates. This podcast is provided for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended and should not be construed as legal advice. This podcast is considered advertising under applicable state laws. -
Dissecting the Solvency Capital Requirement
“The Solvency Capital Requirement, or SCR, is designed to protect policyholders by helping to make sure that insurers can survive difficult periods and pay claims as they fall due.”
In this episode of "The Standard Formula" podcast, Rob Chaplin, host and head of Skadden’s Europe Financial Institutions Group, is joined by colleague Will Adams as they take an in-depth look at the Solvency Capital Requirement, one of Solvency II’s most important and complex provisions. The discussion covers the SCR’s key features, risk modules, how it’s calculated and its relationship with the Minimum Capital Requirement (MCR). They also discuss the standard formula (for an in-depth discussion of technical provisions, listen to the previous episode).
💡 Meet Your Host 💡Name: Robert Chaplin
Title: Partner, Insurance at Skadden
Specialty: Rob is the head of Skadden’s Financial Institutions Group in Europe. He primarily focuses on transactional and advisory work in the insurance sector. He advises on mergers and acquisitions, disposals, joint ventures and strategic reinsurances. He also counsels on regulatory issues, with an emphasis on Solvency II.
Connect: LinkedIn
💡 Featured Guest 💡Name: Will Adams
What he does: Will is a trainee solicitor in the Financial Institutions Group at Skadden.
Organization: Skadden
Words of wisdom: “The SCR can be calculated by either using the standard formula prescribed by the PRA rulebook and Solvency II, or by using a PRA-approved internal model bespoke to the company concerned.”
Connect with Skadden☑️ Follow us on Twitter & LinkedIn.
☑️ Subscribe to The Standard Formula on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app.
The Standard Formula is a podcast by Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, and Affiliates. This podcast is provided for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended and should not be construed as legal advice. This podcast is considered advertising under applicable state laws. -
Solvency II Back to Basics: Technical Provisions
“Technical provisions are crucial, as they form the fundamental basis for assessing the financial stability of insurance and reinsurance plans.”
In this episode of “The Standard Formula” podcast, Rob Chaplin, host and head of Skadden’s Europe Financial Institutions Group, is joined by colleague Mary Bonsu. Rob and Mary delve into the complexities of technical provisions under Solvency II, shedding light on crucial elements such as best estimate of liabilities and risk margins. They discuss factors influencing these elements, such as financial guarantees, future management actions and risk-free interest rate term structures.The conversation also touches on methods to mitigate short-term volatility, and contrasts Solvency II with IFRS 17.
💡 Meet Your Host 💡Name: Robert Chaplin
Title: Partner, Insurance at Skadden
Specialty: Rob is the head of the Financial Institutions Group in Europe primarily focuses on transactional and advisory work in the insurance sector. He advises on mergers and acquisitions, disposals, joint ventures and strategic reinsurances. He also counsels on regulatory issues, with an emphasis on Solvency II.
Connect: LinkedIn
💡 Featured Guest 💡Name: Mary Bonsu
What she does: Mary is a trainee solicitor in the Financial Institutions Group at Skadden.
Organization: Skadden
Words of wisdom: “Technical provisions can be seen as an insurer's main reserves.”
Connect with Skadden☑️ Follow us on Twitter & LinkedIn.
☑️ Subscribe to The Standard Formula on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app.
The Standard Formula is a podcast by Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, and Affiliates. This podcast is provided for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended and should not be construed as legal advice. This podcast is considered advertising under applicable state laws. -
Investment Rules for Insurers and Reinsurers
The U.K.’s investment rules for insurers and reinsurers have become particularly interesting due to recent proposals for reform relating to U.K. sovereignty and the ESG movement.
In this episode of “The Standard Formula” podcast, host and Skadden partner Rob Chaplin is joined by colleagues Ben Lyon and Verena Mengis. Tune in as Ben and Verena delve into a wealth of topics, including the prudent person principle (PPP) in the context of the U.K.'s Solvency II investment rules. Discover the key aspects of PPP and how it applies to insurers' and reinsurers' asset portfolios. Learn about investment rules specific to derivatives, securitizations and assets held to cover linked policies, along with related regulatory changes and their impact on the insurance sector. The episode concludes with a critical discussion on sustainability risks and the integration of ESG concerns into investment rules.
💡 Meet Your Host 💡Name: Robert Chaplin
Title: Partner, Insurance at Skadden
Specialty: Rob primarily focuses on transactional and advisory work in the insurance sector. He advises on mergers and acquisitions, disposals, joint ventures, and strategic reinsurances. He also counsels on regulatory issues, with an emphasis on Solvency II.
Connect: LinkedIn
💡 Featured Guest 💡Name: Ben Lyon
What he does: Ben is a counsel in the Financial Institutions Group at Skadden, where he focuses his practice primarily on transactional and advisory work in the insurance sector. He has extensive experience working on insurance and asset management-related public and private mergers, acquisitions and joint ventures, reinsurance transactions, regulatory matters and investigations, corporate governance issues, debt and equity capital markets transactions and other corporate matters in the U.K. and internationally.
Organization: Skadden
Words of wisdom: “The PRA expects that an insurer's response to financial risks from climate change be proportionate to the nature, scale, and complexity of their business, and that their approach to managing the financial risks from climate change will mature and will develop over time.”
Connect: LinkedIn
Name: Verena Mengis
What she does: Verena is a trainee solicitor in the Financial Institutions Group at Skadden.
Organization: Skadden
Words of wisdom: “Since Solvency II came into force, a less prescriptive, but more market favored regime applies to investment rules, to which the prudent person principle is central.”
Connect: LinkedIn
Connect with Skadden☑️ Follow us on a href="https://twitter.com/SkaddenArps?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor"... -
Understanding the UK’s Matching Adjustment Regime
In September 2023, the U.K.'s Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) released its second consultation paper on reforms to the Solvency II regime for U.K. insurers. These reforms relate to the use of the Matching Adjustment, a mechanism that adjusts the discount rate that can be applied to the valuation of an insurer’s insurance and reinsurance obligations.
In this episode of the “The Standard Formula” podcast, host and Skadden partner Rob Chaplin is joined by colleague Theo Charalambous to discuss the intricacies of the U.K.'s Matching Adjustment regime for insurers, including the rationale behind it, which liabilities are eligible, existing conditions and how it’s calculated.
In case you missed it, be sure to listen to the last episode, which covered groups, and stay tuned as our next installment will focus on investment rules.
💡 Meet Your Host 💡Name: Robert Chaplin
Title: Partner, Insurance at Skadden
Specialty: Rob primarily focuses on transactional and advisory work in the insurance sector. He advises on mergers and acquisitions, disposals, joint ventures, and strategic reinsurances. He also counsels on regulatory issues, with an emphasis on Solvency II.
Connect: LinkedIn
💡 Featured Guest 💡Name: Theodoulos Charalambous
What he does: Theo is an associate in the Financial Institutions Group at Skadden where he counsels insurers, brokers and private equity sponsors on mergers and acquisitions, disposals, investments, reorganizations, alternative transaction structures and multijurisdictional regulatory matters.
Organization: Skadden
Words of wisdom: “The Matching Adjustment is an adjustment to the discount rate that can be applied to the valuation of an insurer's insurance and reinsurance applications in certain specific conditions.”
Connect: LinkedIn
Connect with Skadden☑️ Follow us on Twitter & LinkedIn.
☑️ Subscribe to The Standard Formula on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app.
The Standard Formula is a podcast by Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, and Affiliates. This podcast is provided for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended and should not be construed as legal advice. This podcast is considered advertising under applicable state laws. -
Group Supervision Under Solvency II
This episode of the “The Standard Formula” podcast is the fourth in the “Back to Basics” series focusing on developments in the Solvency II regime. Skadden partner Rob Chaplin is joined by colleague Feargal Ryan to explore the complexities of group supervision under Solvency II.
Rob and Feargal begin with a discussion of the circumstances under which the U.K. Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) rules on group supervision will apply to a group, followed by a look at methods for calculating group solvency. They also cover how own funds requirements operate at a group level, and conclude the discussion by considering the application of group supervision at group level under various scenarios.
💡 Meet Your Host 💡Name: Robert Chaplin
Title: Partner, Insurance at Skadden
Specialty: Rob primarily focuses on transactional and advisory work in the insurance sector. He advises on mergers and acquisitions, disposals, joint ventures, and strategic reinsurances. He also counsels on regulatory issues, with an emphasis on Solvency II.
Connect: LinkedIn
💡 Featured Guest 💡Name: Feargal Ryan
What he does: Feargal is an associate in the Financial Institutions Group at Skadden where he advises on a wide range of insurance-related transactions, as well as regulatory issues in the insurance sector.
Organization: Skadden
Words of wisdom: “For group supervision purposes and group solvency purposes, only Switzerland, Bermuda and the member states of the European Union are deemed equivalent to the U.K. However, it is important to note that no reciprocal determinations have been made by the European Union, which means that member states of the European Union cannot rely on group supervision exercised by the PRA in respect of European Union Solvency II groups that have an ultimate U.K. parent company.”
Connect: LinkedIn
Connect with Skadden☑️ Follow us on Twitter & LinkedIn.
☑️ Subscribe to The Standard Formula on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, or your favorite podcast app.
The Standard Formula is a podcast by Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, and Affiliates. This podcast is provided for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended and should not be construed as legal advice. This podcast is considered advertising under applicable state laws.