Definition:Annual statement
📋 Annual statement is the comprehensive financial report that every licensed insurance carrier in the United States must file with state regulators, providing a detailed snapshot of the company's financial condition at year-end. Often called the "statutory annual statement" or simply the "blank" (after the standardized form templates), it follows statutory accounting principles (SAP) prescribed by the NAIC rather than GAAP, because SAP is designed to prioritize solvency assessment and policyholder protection over earnings presentation.
📑 The statement is composed of numerous schedules and exhibits—covering premiums written and earned, loss reserves, reinsurance recoverables, investment holdings, risk-based capital calculations, and management discussion—that together give regulators a multidimensional view of the insurer's health. Property and casualty filers use the "yellow blank," while life and health companies use the "blue blank," each tailored to the risk profiles of those lines. Carriers must submit the filing electronically through the NAIC's Financial Data Repository, typically by March 1 for the preceding calendar year, and the data becomes the foundation for the NAIC's financial-analysis solvency tools and IRIS ratio tests.
🔎 For anyone analyzing an insurer—whether a reinsurance broker evaluating counterparty strength, a MGA selecting capacity partners, or a rating agency assigning a financial strength rating—the annual statement is the single most authoritative public document available. Its granular detail enables trend analysis of loss ratios, reserve adequacy, and capital sufficiency that consolidated GAAP filings simply do not provide. Failure to file on time—or material misstatements within the filing—can trigger regulatory action ranging from heightened surveillance to license suspension, underscoring how central this document is to the supervisory framework.
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