Business and Powers – Information respecting a customer
Information
Table of contents
Note:
Advisories describe how OSFI administers and interprets provisions of existing legislation, regulations or guidelines, or provide OSFI's position regarding certain policy issues. Advisories are not law; readers should refer to the relevant provisions of the legislation, regulation or guideline, including any amendments that came into effect subsequent to the Advisory's publication, when considering the relevancy of the Advisory.
Introduction:
The Insurance Business Regulations
Legislative References
Section 6 of the Insurance Business (Authorized Foreign Banks) Regulations
Section 8 of the Insurance Business (Banks) Regulations
Section 8 of the Insurance Business (Trust and Loan Companies) Regulations
Interpretation:
These regulations govern the extent to which a DTI may undertake the business of insurance and the relations between DTIs and insurance companies, agents or brokers. In particular, they:
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specify when a DTI may provide advice in respect of an insurance policy or services in respect thereof;
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restrict the promotion of an insurance company, agent, broker or insurance policy by a DTI; and
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limit the flow of information from a DTI to an insurance company, agent or broker.
Several inquiries have raised an interpretation issue specifically with regard to the flow of information between a DTI and an insurance company, agent or broker in the context of an arrangement that, on the one hand, allows a DTI to gain additional business, and on the other hand, permits the insurance company, agent or broker to offer a broader spectrum of financial products or services to its clients. Under such an arrangement, where a client of an insurance company, agent or broker is interested in a particular product or service offered by a DTI, a representative of the insurance company, agent or broker would collect the personal and financial information necessary to forward the client’s application to the DTI for processing. Further to its review of the application, the DTI would communicate to the representative of the insurance company, agent or broker whether it is willing to supply the requested service or product to the applicant, and if so, under which terms and conditions it is prepared to do so. Lastly, the client would either accept or reject the DTI’s proposed terms and conditions.
These queries involved two issues:
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when does a client of an insurance company, agent or broker become a customer of a DTI; and
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what constitutes “information respecting a customer” of a DTI.
In its assessment of whether such arrangements are subject to the Insurance Business Regulations, OSFI will consider the following:
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whether the DTI would provide any information to an insurance company, agent or broker for the purpose of identifying potential clients for the insurance company, agent or broker (it should rather be the insurance company, agent or broker that would promote the products and services of the DTI to its clients);
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with respect to a product or service that a client of an insurance company, agent or broker is seeking from the DTI, when would the client become a customer of the DTI (it should not be until the DTI is notified of the acceptance of its terms and conditions for the product or service by the client of the insurance company, agent or broker);
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whether the only information provided by the DTI to an insurance company, agent or broker would be information respecting the DTI (information that is acceptable would include general information regarding the DTI’s services and products, and the terms and conditions under which the DTI is prepared to enter into a specific transaction with a client of the insurance company, agent or broker); and
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whether the DTI would provide to an insurance company, agent or broker, information pertaining to the credit worthiness of a client of that insurance company, agent or broker (the DTI should not provide such information).