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STATUTORY INFORMATION AND DIVIDEND RESTRICTIONS
12 Months Ended
Dec. 31, 2013
STATUTORY INFORMATION AND DIVIDEND RESTRICTIONS  
STATUTORY INFORMATION AND DIVIDEND RESTRICTIONS

9. STATUTORY INFORMATION AND DIVIDEND RESTRICTIONS

 

The statutory financial statements of our four insurance companies are presented on the basis of accounting practices prescribed or permitted by the insurance regulatory authority of their respective states of domicile, which are the Illinois Department of Insurance and the Washington State Office of the Insurance Commissioner. Each of those domiciliary states has adopted the NAIC statutory accounting practices as the basis of its statutory accounting practices. We do not use any permitted statutory accounting practices that differ from NAIC prescribed statutory accounting practices. In converting from statutory to GAAP, typical adjustments include deferral of policy acquisition costs, the inclusion of statutory non-admitted assets and the inclusion of net unrealized holding gains or losses in shareholders’ equity relating to fixed maturities.

 

The NAIC has RBC requirements that require insurance companies to calculate and report information under a risk-based formula, which measures statutory capital and surplus needs based upon a regulatory definition of risk relative to the company’s balance sheet and mix of products. As of December 31, 2013, each of our insurance subsidiaries had an RBC amount in excess of the authorized control level RBC, as defined by the NAIC. RLI Insurance Company (RLI Ins.), our principal insurance company subsidiary, had an authorized control level RBC of $90.6 million, $90.4 million and $89.3 million as of December 31, 2013, 2012 and 2011, respectively, compared to actual statutory capital and surplus of $859.2 million, $684.1 million and $710.2 million, respectively, for these same periods.

 

Year-end statutory surplus for 2013 presented in the table below includes $64.0 million of RLI stock (cost basis of $64.6 million) held by Mt. Hawley Insurance Company, compared to $9.1 million and $14.7 million in 2012 and 2011, respectively. The Securities Valuation Office provides specific guidance for valuing this investment, which is eliminated in our GAAP consolidated financial statements.

 

The following table includes selected information for our insurance subsidiaries for the year ending and as of December 31:

 

(in thousands)

 

2013

 

2012

 

2011

 

Consolidated net income, statutory basis

 

$

122,550

 

$

125,672

 

$

118,922

 

Consolidated surplus, statutory basis

 

$

859,221

 

$

684,072

 

$

710,186

 

 

As discussed in note 1.A., our insurance subsidiaries are organized in a vertical structure with RLI Ins. as the first-level, or principal, insurance subsidiary of RLI Corp. At the holding company (RLI Corp.) level, we rely largely on dividends from our insurance company subsidiaries to meet our obligations for paying principal and interest on outstanding debt, corporate expenses and dividends to RLI Corp. shareholders. As discussed further below, dividend payments to RLI Corp. from our principal insurance subsidiary are restricted by state insurance laws as to the amount that may be paid without prior approval of the insurance regulatory authorities of Illinois. As a result, we may not be able to receive dividends from such subsidiary at times and in amounts necessary to pay desired dividends to RLI Corp. shareholders. On a GAAP basis, as of December 31, 2013, our holding company had $829.0 million in equity. This includes amounts related to the equity of our insurance subsidiaries, which is subject to regulatory restrictions under state insurance laws. The unrestricted portion of holding company net assets is comprised primarily of investments and cash, including $32.0 million in liquid assets, which approximate annual holding company expenditures. Unrestricted funds at the holding company are available to fund debt interest, general corporate obligations and dividend payments to our shareholders. If necessary, the holding company also has other potential sources of liquidity that could provide for additional funding to meet corporate obligations or pay shareholder dividends, which include a revolving line of credit, as well as issuances of common stock and debt.

 

Ordinary dividends, which may be paid by our principal insurance subsidiary without prior regulatory approval, are subject to certain limitations based upon statutory income, surplus and earned surplus. The maximum ordinary dividend distribution from our principal insurance subsidiary in a rolling 12-month period is limited by Illinois law to the greater of 10 percent of RLI Ins. policyholder surplus, as of December 31 of the preceding year, or the net income of RLI Ins. for the 12-month period ending December 31 of the preceding year. Ordinary dividends are further restricted by the requirement that they be paid from earned surplus. In 2013 and 2012, our principal insurance subsidiary paid ordinary dividends totaling $40.0 million and $13.0 million, respectively, to RLI Corp. No ordinary dividends were paid in 2011. Any dividend distribution in excess of the ordinary dividend limits is deemed extraordinary and requires prior approval from the Illinois Department of Insurance. While no extraordinary dividends were paid in 2013, our principal insurance subsidiary sought and received regulatory approval in 2012 and 2011, prior to the payment of extraordinary dividends totaling $125.0 million and $150.0 million, respectively. As of December 31, 2013, $92.7 million of the net assets of our principal insurance subsidiary are not restricted and could be distributed to RLI Corp. as ordinary dividends. As of December 31, 2012 and 2011, as a result of extraordinary dividends distributed, the net assets of our principal insurance subsidiary were restricted and prior approval from the Illinois Department of Insurance was required for all dividends to RLI Corp. Because the limitations are based upon a rolling 12-month period, the presence, amount and impact of these restrictions vary over time.