Luxembourg's creditor protection system or "triangle of security": one of the great advantages of the life insurance contract.
Following the introduction of the European life insurance directives, which established the single market and the free provision of services based on a single authorisation for insurance companies, it became necessary to protect insurance creditors through the implementation of common EU rules.
The Luxembourg Triangle of Security
The Luxembourg asset protection system is based on two pillars:
- the grant of an absolute privilege to insurance creditors;
- the segregation of assets.
The term "Triangle of Security" refers to the tripartite relationship between the Insurance Company, the custodian bank and the Commissariat aux Assurances, materialised by a custody agreement.
Role and obligations of each party
The Insurance Company receives the premiums from its policyholders of which it then becomes the owner, with the policyholders holding in exchange a receivable from the insurance company. This receivable from policyholders triggers the implementation of the asset protection system. The Insurance Company has an obligation to:
- set up technical reserves on the liabilities side of its balance sheet to guarantee the commitments made by the policyholders;
- establish a permanent inventory of the representative assets in order to create a separate fund of assets;
- demonstrate that it has a sufficient solvency margin.
The Commissariat aux Assurances has a supervisory and control role. In the event of default, it can block the company's accounts with the custodian bank.
The role of the custodian bank is to hold the assets representing the commitments of insurance companies.
Protection further strengthened by the Law of 10 August 2018
When the Insurance Distribution Directive was being transposed, Luxembourg took this opportunity to further strengthen the regime for the protection of insurance claims by clarifying the procedures for applying the Triangle of Security and by individualising protection at the level of the policyholder.
This is how the Triangle of Security contributes to Luxembourg's reputation as a financial centre, particularly for the marketing of life insurance policies.