Reuters: German regulator fires warning shot over insurance rules

03 August 2013

Germany could quit talks on new risk rules for Europe's insurance industry if regulators try to impose a 'one size fits all' deadline for insurers to adapt to them, a senior official at financial watchdog BaFin said.

"If someone forces us to stick with an inflexible timeframe for the phase-in because of some purist ideal ... we would in the worst case just say goodbye", Felix Hufeld, BaFin's head of insurance supervision told the Wall Street Journal Deutschland in an interview published on its website on Saturday.

He echoed concerns voiced by German insurance trade body GDV, which has said a proposal to give insurers seven years to adapt to the new rules - called Solvency II - was insufficient. "We shouldn't forget that all these regulatory changes are taking place in a low interest rate environment. Every now and then you have to ask how big of a burden a company can even shoulder", Hufeld said.

Hufeld said it should be decided on a company-by-company basis how much time insurers will get to adapt to the rules. "Of course, no insurer can just say it needs 20 years to adapt if we can see in its numbers that it's really only 10 years. We will monitor that, of course. But we also want to avoid an insurer toppling just because it complies with new regulation", he said.

Hufeld said it still appeared "absolutely realistic" that Solvency II will launch on January 1, 2016, as now planned. In January, BaFin head Elke König had said she saw January 1, 2017 as a more realistic start date.

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