Captive Resources Presentation – June 13, 2012
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Transcript of Captive Resources Presentation – June 13, 2012
Introduction to Micro Captives & the 831(b) Election
Presenters:
• Tom Ullrich – Captive Resources• Ernie Achtien – Captive Resources• Matthew Howard – Moore, Ingram, Johnson & Steele• Doug Butler – Moore, Ingram, Johnson & Steele• Bill Johnson – Moore, Ingram, Johnson & Steele• Joe Herbers – Pinnacle Actuarial Resources• Rob Walling – Pinnacle Actuarial Resources
Today’s WebinarToday’s Webinar
Overview of 831(b) Election Captive Structure Flow of Operations Premium Funding Financial Requirements Next Steps
831(b) Election831(b) Election
Under Section 831(b) of the Internal RevenueCode, insurance companies that write $1.2 million or less
in annual premium only pay income tax on investment income. This means that
underwriting profits can accumulate in the insurance company on a
tax-deferred basis.
Qualifying FactorsQualifying Factors
First & foremost : this is an insurance company $1.2 million ceiling on annual premium income Design the insurance to fit individual needs Pre-Tax earnings of at least $1.5 million Viable for closely held or public companies
How does thecaptive work?
Micro CaptivesMicro Captives
7
Captive Insurance Companies
Presented by: MATTHEW J. HOWARD, JD, LL.M.MOORE INGRAM JOHNSON & STEELE, LLP
Emerson Overlook326 Roswell St Marietta GA 30060(770) 795-5022; (850) 231-5995; cell: (404) 771-0202 [email protected]
88
Captive vs. Small Companies
“Captive” means the insureds of insurance company are affiliated with the owners of the insured company(ies)
“Small” means the insurance company falls under one of the sections of the tax code controlling small insurance companies. We will focus here on IRC Sec. 831(b).
IRC Sec. 831(b) 831(b) Alternative tax for certain small companies (1) In general In lieu of the tax otherwise applicable under subsection (a), there is hereby
imposed for each taxable year on the income of every insurance company to which this subsection applies a tax computed by multiplying the taxable investment income of such company for such taxable year by the rates provided in section 11 (b).
(2) Companies to which this subsection applies (A) In general This subsection shall apply to every insurance company other than life (including
interinsurers and reciprocal underwriters) if— (i) the net written premiums (or, if greater, direct written premiums) for the
taxable year do not exceed $1,200,000, and (ii) such company elects the application of this subsection for such taxable year. The election under clause (ii) shall apply to the taxable year for which made and
for all subsequent taxable years for which the requirements of clause (i) are met. Such an election, once made, may be revoked only with the consent of the Secretary.
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CIC Taxation
IRC 831(b) provides that: Insurance companies with less than $1.2
million of annual premium pay $0 income tax on insurance profits.
Investment income is taxed as income to C-corporation
831(b) must be timely elected and cannot be revoked without the permission of the Secretary
1111
Profitable business pays up to $1,200,000 in premiums each year
Premiums may be deductible under sec. 162
ProfitableBusiness
Tax Treatment of Premiums
CIC
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Captive Insurance Company – 831(b)
Provides insurance coverage for various
risks
$500k* to $1.2 million of annual insurance
premiums
* Practical not statutory
Business CIC
BusinessOwners
BusinessOwners
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Economic Family Doctrine
Adopted by the IRS in 1977 (Rev. Rul. 77-316) Parent corporations and their subsidiaries form an
economic family. If the ultimate burden of loss is retained in the family, there
is no risk shifting or risk distribution (requirements to be considered insurance as set forth by the Supreme Court in Helvering v. LeGierse, 312 U.S. 531 (1941))
Therefore, premium payments are treated as capital contributions or dividends and are not deductible under Sec. 162
14
Economic Family Doctrine
IRS’ economic family doctrine was not accepted by the courts (See Humana Inc., 881 F. 2d 247)
IRS abandoned doctrine in Rev. Rul. 2001-31 Adopted instead a facts and circumstances approach
for determining if transactions constitute insurance (See Malone & Hyde, Inc., 62 F.3d 835, 76 AFTR2d 95-5962 (CA-6, 1995), rev’g TCM 1993-585)
IRS continued to apply facts and circumstances test (See TAM 200149003, FSA 200202002, Notice 2002-70)
15
Risk Distribution
Risk Distribution – does the insurance company distribute its risk to other insureds? Rev. Ruls. 2002-89 (50%); 2002-90 (12 subs or no more than 15%
of total premium); 2002-91 (Group Captive-7 unrelated insureds) Harper Group and Includable Subsidiaries v. Commissioner, 96
T.C. 45 (1991): Because the CIC had at least 30% unrelated third party risk, the arrangement constituted insurance
Rev. Rul. 2005-40: risk distribution requirement is met if CIC has 12 or more insureds (10% risk distribution insufficient; DRE disregarded for RD) Affiliated companies count, but not single-member LLCs Compare to Humana, Inc. v. Commissioner, 881 F.2d 247 (6th
Cir. 1989) in which sums paid to parent company’s Captive Insurance subsidiary, on behalf of several dozen parent company subsidiaries was sufficient risk distribution to constitute insurance
15
Achieving Risk Distribution under Revenue Ruling 2002-89
OperatingBusiness A
TerrorismInsurance
Provider (“Pool”)
OperatingBusiness A’s
Captive
Operating Business B
Operating Business B’s
Captive
OperatingBusiness C’s
Captive
Operating Business C
Operating Business D
OperatingBusiness D’s
Captive
• Each Operating Business will pay 50%+ of its captive premium to the Pool in return for terrorism coverage.• The Pool then reinsures its risk with each Operating Business Captive in the same percentage that the Operatingbusiness’s premium represents. •Example: Assume Operating Business A pays $200k to the Pool and that $200k premium represents 2% of all premiums received by the Pool. The Pool will then pay Operating Business A’s Captive $200k to reinsure 2% of the Pool’s total risk (i.e. 2% of all of the other participating Operating Business’s risk).
Achieving Risk Distribution under Revenue Ruling 2002-90
RelatedEntity 2*
Related Entity 4*
Related Entity 3*
Related Entity 1* Related
Entity 5*
Related Entity 6*
Related Entity 7*
Captive InsuranceCompany (“Captive”)
•Related entities pay premiums directly to the Captive for various lines of P&C insurance. •Each Related Entities premium cannot be less than 5% nor more than 15% of the total premiums received by the Captive.
*Related entity must not beconsidered a disregarded entity
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Recent IRS Guidance December 31, 2004 - IRS releases rulings
showing non-sham, bona fide captive insurance companies (TAMs 200453012 & 200453013)
Rev. Rul. 2005-40, 2005-2 CB 4. A company that insures a single corporation cannot be an “insurance company”, even if the insurer is unrelated to the insured, premiums are arm’s length and the insurer is adequately capitalized, since there is no risk distribution.
Recent IRS Guidance (cont) Ltr. Rul. 200644047. An insurance subsidiary insured the risks of
its parent. Although various physicians performing work for the parent were also insured, the Service concluded that the risks insured were essentially that of the parent. (Rev. Rul. 2005-40)
TAM 200816029. For purposes of applying Rev. Rul. 2005-40, the common GP of several ltd. partnerships is treated as one insured.
PLR 200907006. Service concluded that there was adequate risk distribution to warrant the company being treated as an insurance company. (Rev. Rul. 2002-91)
Recent IRS Guidance (cont) PLR’s 200950016 & 200950017. Service finds reinsurance pools
adequately satisfy risk distribution requirements as provided in Rev. Rul. 2002-90.
PLR 201030014. Service finds that a Small Captive (831(b)) is recognized as a valid insurance company. “Risk distribution incorporates the statistical phenomenon known as the law of large numbers. Distributing risk allows the insurer to reduce the possibility that a single costly claim will exceed the amount taken in as premiums and set aside for the payment of such a claim.”
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Why Own a Small Insurance Company?
Estate Planning Best practice: CIC owned by dynastic trust for heirs Jurisdiction shopping for unlimited Rule Against Perpetuities:
AK,DE,FL(360 yrs) Can structure to allow client shared access to investments
Buy-out Retirement Planning CIC can tie into a business buy-out/retirement plan/employee
benefits More tax efficient than traditional methods
Tax Planning Premiums can be tax deductible Benefit to family can be estate/gift tax free Profit can be accessed at lower tax rates
2222
Risk Management ConceptEach business or practice has risks that it currently does
not insure against, including: Deductibles & co-payments in existing policies:
Medical malpractice Excess Liability Environmental Liability E&O, D&O, and others
Liability risks for which there is no coverage Employee claims, partnership liability, government liability, etc.
Economic risks for which there is no coverage Loss of income, revenue cutbacks, loss of key person, loss of a
key contract, etc.
2323
CIC with Advanced Planning
Insurance coverage
$500k to $1.2 million premiums
Business CIC
Owned byDynastic Trust for
Heirs Business Owners
Can be structured for efficient estate planning, retirement access and partner buy outs, etc.
Investment LLC for CIC Assets
Shareholder
2424
Buy-Out and Retirement ConceptBusiness owners and employees are always looking for tax
efficient ways to transfer wealth during buy-ins of younger partners and buy-outs of older ones.
A business can create an internal buy-out plan using the CIC reserves.
With particular structures, funds can be accessed by senior (retiring) partners during their lifetime in a tax-favored manner.
The total retirement benefit from such arrangements can be significant.
Operating business or practice will pay tax deductible premiums to the CIC owned by the senior partners so funds will accrue to older owners’ for their retirement.
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Tax Planning Benefits1. Deductibility of premiums §162/§212
Assuming premiums are market comparable or can be valued by an actuary
2. Taxation of CIC’s profits 831(b) provides tax exemption from premium tax and from
underwriting profit. 831 (b) must be elected timely and cannot be revoked
without permission of Secretary Federal Tax on investment income only
3. Retirement Certain investments and structures could allow client to
access CIC invested funds tax efficiently. 4. Estate/Gift Taxes
Could transfer millions to heirs tax efficiently.
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Premiums and policies must be market-comparable Actuarial support needed Insurance formalities complied with Risk distribution must be present Initial Capitalization required
4:1 (premiums to capital) with certain minimums Gift tax return Form 709
The Ground Rules
27
Domicile Considerations
Form CIC in US Domicile, which would include several states such as KY, DE, HI, UT or MT.
Favorable Captive legislation regarding fees and investment options
Minimize Premium Taxes and Ongoing Fees.
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Captive Insurance Company Policies
Everything a business currently self-insures: Deductibles Excess losses above coverage limits Environmental Liability
Loss of income as a result of: Losing key employee/salesperson Loss of license/professional risks (professionals) Loss of a key contract (Gov’t. contractors) Weather, terrorism, etc.
Liability defense expenses: Employee lawsuits – sexual harassment, wrongful termination,
discrimination, etc. Environmental issues Professional claims
Suggest Focus on First Party Liability
Examples of Captive Insurance Policies Written
Professional liability Gap Coverage HIPAA/Billing Audit Liability Contractual Liability Cyber Liability Environmental Liability Excess Environmental Liability Labor Shortage/Strike Loss
Reimbursement Employment Practices Employee Dishonesty Patent Infringement/Intellectual Property
General Liability Gap Property Management Professional Professional Misconduct Product Recall FDA Administrative Actions Liability Product Liability Gap Directors and Officers Liability Punitive Damages Loss of Key Employee Wind Deductibles on Property
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Greater Leverage for Larger Clients
Clients’ children (or trusts) can own CICs Each child (or trust) can own one CIC (children
under age 21 are attributed to their parent) Client can still be the manager of the CIC and
control the investments of CIC Effectively, this option saves current income taxes
(35%-47%) to client and future estate taxes (35%) on net proceeds
Children will only pay capital gains or dividend tax rates (currently 15% federal) in future
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Highly Profitable Business
InsuranceCompany #1
Trust for Child #1or for Childrenof Owner #1
InsuranceCompany #2
Trust for Child #2or for Childrenof Owner #2
InsuranceCompany #3
Trust for Child #3or for Childrenof Owner #3
Parent’s Business could pay up to $1.2 million per year into EACH child’s CIC or into a CIC for each owner’s children. §1563 attribution rules apply . Children under age 21 are attributed to the parent.
Multiple CIC Structure
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Real Life Example – ResultsDo Nothing with $1.2M
No risk management, profit, asset protection, buy-out/retirement benefits of CIC
Earn money, income taxes Taxable/tax deferred
investments Die, pay estate taxes
CAPTIVE 831(B)Risk management, profit,
asset protection, buy-out/retirement benefits of CIC Create dynastic trust to
own CIC CIC invests in tax
deferred investments Tax efficient
withdrawals from LLC
Income Tax with No CaptiveFiling Status Joint Joint JointPersonal Exemptions 2 2 2
------------------------------------------------------
Ordinary Income 1,200,000 1,200,000 1,200,000------------------------------------------------------
Adjusted Gross Income 1,200,000 1,200,000 1,200,000------------------------------------------------------
Standard Deduction 11,600 11,600 9,650------------------------------------------------------
Taxable Income 1,181,000 1,181,000 1,190,350------------------------------------------------------
AMTI Net of Exemption 1,200,000 1,200,000 1,200,000------------------------------------------------------
Schedule or Table Tax 383,222 383,222 435,439Tentative Minimum Tax 332,500 332,500 332,500
------------------------------------------------------Net Federal Tax 383,222 383,222 435,439
------------------------------------------------------State Tax 71,560 71,560 71,560
------------------------------------------------------Total Net Tax Liability 454,782 454,782 506,999
Income Tax Benefits with Captive Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Cash Non-Captive Scenario
Premiums 1,200,000 1,200,000 1,200,000 3,600,000 3,600,000 No Premium paid
Savings Tax (tab 2) 460,000 460,000 510,000 1,430,000 (1,430,000) Tax Costs
Mgmt Fees (90,100) (83,500) (83,500) (257,100) Tax benefit 36,040 33,400 33,400 102,840
Net Savings 405,940 409,900 459,900 1,275,740
Projected Earnings @ 3% 36,000 36,000 - 72,000 151,900 Earning @ 7% on after tax dollars
Projected Cash Balance Prior to liquidation 3,517,740
Capital Gain Tax on Liquidation (703,548)
Net Cash Available 2,814,192 2,321,900
Estate Tax Obligation - (812,665)
Net Cash After All Taxes 2,814,192 1,509,235
Increase in net worth after all expenses 1,304,957
3535
MIJS Implementation Team
MIJS Captive Management, LLC, KY LLC Matthew J. Howard, JD, LL.M., Senior Tax Partner, Moore
Ingram Johnson & Steele, LLP Bill Johnson, JD, liability attorney; Moore Ingram Johnson
& Steele, LLP Alec Galloway, JD, liability attorney; Moore Ingram
Johnson & Steele, LLP Douglas W. Butler, Jr, JD, corporate/trusts and estate
attorney, Moore Ingram Johnson & Steele, LLP
Matthew J. Howard, JD, LL.M,MIJS, LLP Partner
Matthew has been practicing law since 1989 and working with Micro Captives since 2004. He heads up the firm's tax section. Matthew's team insures all IRS rules are complied with in setting up and managing their micro captives.
William R. JohnsonMIJS, LLP Partner
Bill has been a practicing attorney since 1983 and involved with insurance coverage and captive insurance companies since that time. He has been directly involved in micro captives since 2006.
Alexander T. (“Alec”) Galloway IIIMIJS, LLP Partner
Alec has been a practicing attorney since 1993 and involved with insurance coverage and captive insurance companies since that time. He has been directly involved in micro captives since 2006.
Doug W. Butler
Doug worked in the life insurance industry before becoming an attorney in 2009. Since that time he has worked in MIJS’s corporate and tax departments and has been involved in formation and management of all of MIJS’s micro captive insurance companies.
Adon J. Solomon
Adon has been practicing law since 2008 and joined Moore Ingram Johnson & Steele in 2010 focusing his practice in the areas of trusts and estates, tax and asset protection planning, along with assisting clients in the formation and management of micro captive insurance companies.
Bram L. Scharf
Bram was admitted to practice law in Florida on January 5, 1995. As part of the Captive Insurance Team at MIJS, Bram prepares insurance policies and declaration pages to suit the individual needs of the client.
Insured
Captive ResourcesCaptive Resources
Independent consultant to the captive Coordinate/oversee all activities and service providers Underwriting coordination and assist in pricing development Financial services- oversee financial process and tax
reporting Board meeting facilitation Develop and implement program enhancements Legislative oversight
Captive FlowCaptive Flow
Broker Oversees insurance program Provides Current Policies to MIJS Bills premiums Prospect development
Insured
Pinnacle Actuarial Resources Leading U.S. Property & Casualty Actuarial Consulting Firm Actuary to all Captive Resources/Kensington group captives Key Personnel
Joe Herbers Rob WallingManaging Principal Principal
Microcaptive/831(b) Services Funding Studies to 831(b) and Pooling Mechanism Loss Reserve Analyses Statement of Actuarial Opinion and Other Regulatory Compliance
what is myinvestment?
CapitalizationCapitalization
CapitalizationCapitalization
Capitalization
Cash or Letter of Credit (“LOC”)Minimum 4:1 Ratio$1,000,000 Premium
$250,000 Capital*
*State Requirements Vary
About the CaptiveAbout the Captive
Annual Board meeting conducted via teleconference Focusing on DE as common domicile Owner of captive need not be insured corporation Investments individually managed, but must meet
regulatory guidelines Utilizing Ernst & Young for 831(b) tax preparation Utilizing Pinnacle Actuarial Resources for premium
support
what’snext?
Underwriting ProcessUnderwriting Process
Copies of All Current Policies Complete MIJS Application Company Brochures Current Financial Statements
(With Current Clients’ Consent we can have these forwarded by John Flanagan)
Data needed:Data needed:
Underwriting ProcessUnderwriting Process
Capitalization check received
Captivedecision completed
Policies issued
831(b) Funded
Premium SupportPresented
Actuarial Review Policies ReviewedData collected
ExpensesExpenses
Initial feasibility study at no charge Implementation costs: $85,000 to $90,000 Annual costs: $80,000 to $85,000 No additional fees for tax or estate planning work with
MIJS.
yourquestions?
Micro Captive
53
Captive Insurance Companies:Frequently Asked Questions
Presented By:
Matthew J. Howard, JD, LLMMoore, Ingram, Johnson & Steele, LLP
5454
Frequently Asked Questions Q: What is the minimum number of affiliated entities
I need to have to achieve adequate risk distribution? What happens if I do not have enough affiliated entities? Can I still utilize a Micro-Captive?
A: An insured with at least 7 entities can achieve adequate risk distribution without invoving the risks of other unrelated businesses. Most of our clients do not have this structure and enter into our risk pool with other companies. Only our clients participate in our pool which allows us to maintain control.
5555
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Can my Micro-Captive insure the risks of unaffiliated entities or entities affiliated with a Group Captive program I participate in? Could this help me achieve adequate risk distribution, if allowed?
A: Yes. Most of our Captives enter into a reinsurance agreement whereby they agree to insure the risks of unrelated businesses under a policy of insurance which we have written.
5656
Frequently Asked Questions Q: Does my company need to pay the full $1.2M in premiums
a year to the Micro-Captive? What is the minimum amount my company can pay for the Micro-Captive planning to make sense? What if my company can pay over $1.2M in premiums?
A: The election under IRC Sec 831(b), which permits premium income to be tax free, requires that the annual net premiums be $1.2M or less. The commitment is year to year under a 12 month policy of insurance. Therefore the amount paid by the operating company, as well as the insurance coverage can change from year to year. There is no minimum and a business can take up to three years grace period of paying zero premium and keep the captive in place. We believe over time that an average of $500K per year or more makes the most economical sense.
5757
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Are there any requirements as to what type of entity the Insured must be (C-Corp, Partnership, LLC)? Does the Micro-Captive have to be a C-Corp?
A: No. The insured can be any type of entity. C Corp, S-Corp, LLC tax as a partnership, LLC taxed as a corp and even a sole proprietorship. The Captive must be a C-Corp.
5858
Frequently Asked Questions Q: Who can be the owner of the Micro-Captive? Is
the Insured the owner? Can the Shareholders of the Insured be the owners? Can key employees or other individuals or entities be an owner?
A: Anyone can own the Captive. Most of our clients have their captive owned partially or entirely in a dynasty trust for their heirs to take advantage of the tremendous benefits in avoiding estate and gift tax laws. A captive owned by an LLC with the key employees as members of the LLC allows the employer to create golden handcuffs for key employees on a discriminatory basis.
5959
Frequently Asked Questions Q: Can an ESOP be used in connection with a
Micro-Captive? Can the Micro-Captive be owned by the ESOP?
A: Yes. It makes the most sense for a company that is partially owned by an ESOP. Most ESOP owned companies are S Corps and an S Corp owned 100% by an ESOP is not subject to tax so the 831(b) benefits are lost. The best way to structure ownership of the captive is in a brother-sister arrangement rather than parent-subsidiary.
6060
Frequently Asked Questions Q: Are there any limitations as to the type of
insurance risks or liabilities the Micro-Captive can insure? Are there any types of businesses of an Insured that would disqualify it from setting up a Micro-Captive?
A: A captive can insure any uninsured risk of any operating business. As long as there exists a “fortuity of loss” than such loss can be insured. Fortuity, a contingency or uncertainty with respect to the risk insured, is a requirement of all insurance contracts.
6161
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Can a Micro-Captive write policies to insure fines levied by the state or Federal government (such as OSHA or EPA fines)? Can the policies insure punitive damages?
A: Yes. These are all insurable and types of policies we have written.
6262
Frequently Asked Questions Q: Can health insurance premiums be included in the
Micro-Captive planning? Would it be appropriate for the Micro-Captive to provide Umbrella coverage or excess Umbrella coverages?
A: No, primarily for two reasons: 1. State laws require certain regulations that would prohibit a micro captive from insuring this risk; and 2. the micro captive is too small to take on this much risk. A micro Captive is also too small to take on umbrella coverage, at least in the early years.
6363
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is the role of an agent or broker when setting up a Micro-Captive?
A: They play a helpful role in helping us identify uninsured risks of the business and ongoing helping us coordinate the captive with the commercial coveragees.
6464
Frequently Asked Questions Q: What can be done with the premiums received by
the Micro-Captive? Can these funds be invested? Are their limitations as to the investments? How are investments taxes to the Micro-Captive?
A: The premiums received by the Captive are invested by the Captive owners. We do not provide investment advice but can certainly make needed introductions to investment experts. The States we work in, like Delaware, are very liberal in what the captive can invest. The Captive does have to pay income tax on investment income so tax free and tax deferred investment are very popular.
6565
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What happens if I sell my company and I have a Micro-Captive set up? What happens to the Micro-Captive? Can a publicly traded company set up a Micro-Captive?
A: The Captive usually just ceases to be a licensed insurer and is then a regular corporation with investments. The Captive can be liquidated or can acquire another business. Yes, a public company can form a captive.
6666
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Who are the other members of the reinsurance pool? Do we have the opportunity to exclude members if we feel they are too great a risk?
A: Our other Captive clients who need risk distribution. Yes, every participant gets basic information about the other participants and you can refuse to insure certain companies.
6767
Frequently Asked Questions Q: What is the difference between a Micro-Captive
domiciled in a US jurisdiction (such as Delaware) versus a company domiciled offshore (such as in the Cayman Island)
A: The main difference is the State domiciles are more strict and have more regulations to follow. There is the opportunity for abuse with a micro captive (unlike the large group Captives) and therefore we like the idea of more regulation for a micro captive.
6868
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Who handles the insurance claims made against the Micro-Captive? Who manages the Micro-Captive and ensure it functions correctly and remains in compliance with all state and federal laws?
A: Our management company, MIJS Captive Management handles all claims and administration. Captive Resources assists us with Board Meetings and financial accounting. We coordinate the actuarial and financial audits along with all State filings.
6969
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Are there additional capital contributions required beyond the $250,000.00 initial capital?
A: No.
7070
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is an estimate of the typical ongoing fees to maintain the Micro-Captive?
A: $76,000/yr for everything including the annual tax return and State premium tax.