Gallagher Gets Okay to Accept Contingent Commisions
and New York Proposes New Compensation Disclosure
Rules
By Tony Roehl
Two recent developments have thrust broker
compensation back into the national spotlight.
The most recent news on this issue was on
July 28, when broker Arthur J. Gallagher &
Co. (“Gallagher”) announced that it reached
a nationwide agreement with the Illinois Attorney General
and Illinois Department of Insurance permitting it to once
again accept contingent commissions. Gallagher’s agreement
with the Illinois regulators does not encompass Marsh, Aon or
Willis, the remaining brokers who also agreed to end taking
commissions in the aftermath of the 2004 investigation led by
then New York Attorney General Elliot Spitzer.
While the net effect to Gallagher’s balance sheet from
accepting contingent commissions is expected to be modest
(estimated at $10 million to the firm’s earnings in 2011), the
broader implication is more striking – that the results of the
2004 investigation, which turned up evidence at some of the
larger brokers that contingent commissions were negotiated
as a reward for steering business to certain insurers and bid
rigging, may have run its course.
Marsh and Aon were quoted as reacting positively to the
Gallagher news primarily because it vindicates their argument
that there are dual systems of regulation for commissions in
effect. Only the four largest public brokers agreed to give
up contingent commissions and take on greater disclosure
obligations while smaller brokers were free to continue their
business practices generally unmodified. Willis continues to
assert that contingent commissions create an inherent conflict
that cannot be corrected by more transparency and disclosure.
It is unclear whether Gallagher will voluntarily continue the
disclosure obligations it was previously required to make in its
previous settlement with the Illinois regulators.
While Gallagher will be relieved of its disclosure obligations
under the former agreement with the Illinois regulators, the
New York Insurance Department is moving in the opposite
direction and has proposed a new producer compensation
disclosure regulation. The proposed regulation, which is
still in draft form and subject to additional revision, would
require all insurance producers (including brokers) to disclose,
before binding any insurance contract: (1) whether the
insurance producer represents the purchaser or the insurer
for purposes of the sale, (2) that the insurance producer will
receive compensation from the selling insurer based on the
insurance contract the producer sells (if applicable), (3) that
the compensation insurers pay to insurance producers varies
from company to company and from insurance contract
to insurance contract, and (4) that at any time during the
relationship, the purchaser may obtain detailed information
about the source and the amount of compensation expected to
be received by the producer for the sale and, in the alternative, quotes obtained or considered by the producer by requesting such
information from the producer.
If the purchaser requests more information about the producer’s
compensation or alternative quotes, the producer must disclose in
writing before the issuance of the insurance contract: (1) a detailed
description of the nature, amount and source of any compensation
to be received by the producer or its affiliates based in whole or in
part on the sale, (2) a detailed description of any alternative quotes
obtained or considered by the producer including the coverage,
the premium and the compensation that the insurance producer
would have received in connection with those alternative quotes,
(3) a description of any material ownership interest the insurance
producer or its affiliates have in the insurer issuing the insurance
contract, (4) a description of any material ownership interest the
insurer issuing the insurance contract or its affiliates have in the
insurance producer, and (5) an explanation that the insurance
producer is prohibited by law from accepting a commission rate
that is less than the filed commission rate.
The additional disclosures must be made if the amount of
compensation to be received by the producer is not known at
the time that the initial disclosure is required to be made. In
such an instance, the producer has to disclose a description of
the circumstances that will determine the receipt and amount
in value of such compensation and a reasonable estimate of the
amount or value. The draft regulations, which are expected to
be finalized by the end of the year, exempt out wholesale brokers
and managing general agents from its scope, and any violation
or contravention of the proposed rule would be deemed to be a
violation of the New York Insurance Unfair Trade Practices Act.
The dichotomy between the Illinois and New York actions is clear.
One state is moving to relax restrictions on broker compensation
while the other is imposing additional disclosure requirements.
What is unclear is which initiative will pick up momentum and be
followed by other states.
Anthony C. Roehl is an Associate in the firm’s Insurance and Reinsurance
and Corporate Practices. Mr. Roehl’s principle areas of concentration
are insurance regulation and corporate matters involving entities within
the insurance industry. Mr. Roehl received his bachelor’s degree from the
University of Florida and his law degree from the University of Michigan.
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