ASIC demands life insurer data
ASIC will soon request claims outcome data from life insurers as part of their 2017 industry review, according to the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC).
Speaking at Money Management’s Life Insurance Claims Handling Breakfast earlier today, deputy chair, Peter Kell said there was clear demand from consumers for better reporting of the claims process.
“We need consistent public reporting of data from claims outcomes, dispute levels, and timeframes across the different policy parts… [across both] an industry and individual insurer basis,” he said.
A joint initiative between ASIC and the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA), the regulators’ aim was to facilitate an informed public discussion about the performance of the life insurance industry.
Kell said this would “allow for meaning comparisons of insurers’ performance as well as providing sufficient context to allow consumers to understand their material”.
“The objective here is to improve confidence in the life insurance sector by using enhanced transparency around this information, which we think will help drive accountability and improve performance.”
According to Kell, however, lack of transparency around claims outcomes and a paucity of high-quality, transparent data from insurers was hampering the aggregation and analysis process.
“Data limitations make it difficult to assess industry claims performance and make comparisons difficult at this stage, which is one of the reasons why we didn’t go out and name or provide lead tables in our initial report,” Kell said.
ASIC would therefore only make the data publicly available once it was deemed “credible, reliable and comparable,” he said.
“That’s going to be a challenge, requiring systems changes, some agreements across the industry on particular ways of categorising things, so this is not something that’s going to be out there next week,” Kell said.
Nevertheless, Kell remained confident in regulators’ data collection objectives.
“Discussions with industry to date have indicated a real commitment to work with us on this issue, and we’re very well aware of concerns data is comparable and reliable, so we look forward to continued cooperation of this important project,” he said.
Recommended for you
Policy and advocacy specialist Benjamin Marshan has left the Council of Australian Life Insurers after less than a year, having joined in March from the Financial Planning Association of Australia.
The declining volume of risk advisers meant KPMG has found a rising lapse rate for insurance policies arranged by independent financial advisers, particularly in the TPD and death cover space.
The Life Insurance Code of Practice has transferred from the Financial Services Council to the Council of Australian Life Insurers.
The firm has announced it will no longer be writing new life insurance policies in the retail advised and corporate group insurance channels, citing a declining market and risk adviser numbers.