Glossary
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
B-SHARE
VARIABLE ANNUITY
A form of variable annuity contract with no initial sales charge
but if the contract is cancelled the holder pays deferred sales
charges (usually from 5 to 7 percent the first year, declining
to zero after from 5 to 7 years). The most common form of annuity
contract.
BALANCE SHEET
Provides a snapshot of a company’s financial condition
at one point in time. It shows assets, including investments
and reinsurance, and liabilities, such as loss reserves to pay
claims in the future, as of a certain date. It also states a
company’s equity, known as policyholder surplus. Changes
in that surplus are one indicator of an insurer’s financial
standing.
BANK HOLDING COMPANY
A company that owns or controls one or more banks. The Federal
Reserve has responsibility for regulating and supervising bank
holding company activities, such as approving acquisitions and
mergers and inspecting the operations of such companies. This
authority applies even though a bank owned by a holding company
may be under the primary supervision of the Comptroller of the
Currency or the FDIC.
BASIS POINT
0.01 percent of the yield of a mortgage, bond or note. The smallest
measure used.
BEACH AND WINDSTORM PLANS
State-sponsored insurance pools that sell property coverage
for the peril of windstorm to people unable to buy it in the
voluntary market because of their high exposure to risk. Seven
states (AL, FL, LA, MS, NC, SC, TX) offer these plans to cover
residential and commercial properties against hurricanes and
other windstorms. Georgia and New York provide this kind of
coverage for windstorm and hail in certain coastal communities
through other property pools. Insurance companies that sell
property insurance in the state are required to participate
in these plans. Insurers share in profits and losses. (See Fair
access to insurance requirements plans / FAIR plans; Residual
market)
BINDER
Temporary authorization of coverage issued prior to the actual
insurance policy.
BLANKET INSURANCE
Coverage for more than one type of property at one location
or one type of property at more than one location. Example:
chain stores.
BODILY INJURY LIABILITY COVERAGE
Portion of an auto insurance policy that covers injuries the
policyholder causes to someone else.
BOILER AND MACHINERY INSURANCE
Often called Equipment Breakdown, or Systems Breakdown insurance.
Commercial insurance that covers damage caused by the malfunction
or breakdown of boilers, and a vast array of other equipment
including air conditioners, heating, electrical, telephone,
and computer systems.
BOND
A security that obligates the issuer to pay interest at specified
intervals and to repay the principal amount of the loan at maturity.
In insurance, a form of suretyship. Bonds of various types guarantee
a payment or a reimbursement for financial losses resulting
from dishonesty, failure to perform and other acts.
BOND RATING
An evaluation of a bond’s financial strength, conducted
by such major ratings agencies as Standard & Poor’s
and Moody’s Investors Service.
BOOK OF BUSINESS
Total amount of insurance on an insurer's books at a particular
point in time.
BROKER
An intermediary between a customer and an insurance company.
Brokers typically search the market for coverage appropriate
to their clients. They work on commission and usually sell commercial,
not personal, insurance. In life insurance, agents must be licensed
as securities brokers/dealers to sell variable annuities, which
are similar to stock market-based investments.
BURGLARY AND THEFT INSURANCE
Insurance for the loss of property due to burglary, robbery
or larceny. It is provided in a standard homeowners policy and
in a business multiple peril policy.
BUSINESS INCOME INSURANCE (also known as BUSINESS INTERRUPTION
INSURANCE)
Commercial coverage that reimburses a business owner for lost
profits and continuing fixed expenses during the time that a
business must stay closed while the premises are being restored
because of physical damage from a covered peril, such as a fire.
Business interruption insurance also may cover financial losses
that may occur if civil authorities limit access to an area
after a disaster and their actions prevent customers from reaching
the business premises. Depending on the policy, civil authorities
coverage may start after a waiting period and last for two or
more weeks.
BUSINESSOWNERS POLICY / BOP
A policy that combines property, liability and business interruption
coverages for small- to medium-sized businesses. Coverage is
generally cheaper than if purchased through separate insurance
policies.
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