New Jersey Automobile Insurance Risk Exchange (NJAIRE) Answers to Commonly Asked Questions

 

A. "I Don't Understand NJAIRE" Operations

To help you understand NJAIRE, you can contact Insurance Services Office, Inc. (ISO), the central processor for NJAIRE. They will provide you with an overview of NJAIRE, and can answer specific questions you may have about how NJAIRE operates, and member requirements.  They can help make sure you have the necessary material to properly report data, such as NJAIRE Call for Statistics Forms and Claim Determination Forms. On the NJAIRE web site you can also refer to the current version of the Plan of Operations and Procedure Manual, as well as other important documentation (i.e., Annual Letters and other news) to assist you in submitting accurate and timely data.

 B. Data Reporting Questions

1. General Questions:

Q1: How do I submit data?

A1: First, fill out the NJAIRE Call for Statistics sheets. A different sheet must be used for each accident year within each account quarter.  Form #4 applies to accident years 1999 and subsequent for policies in force after July 1, 1999 (As of 1st quarter 2011, only accident years 2002 - present are open for reporting).  Forms #1, 2 and 3 are no longer being used.

Then, send all Form #4 submissions (and resubmissions) to:

ISO

Attn: Mr. Michael McAuley (17-2)

545 Washington Boulevard

Jersey City, NJ 07310-1686

You may also e-mail submissions to NJAIRECentralProcessor@iso.com, or fax them to 201-748-1494.

Q2: When is my quarterly data submission due?

A2: The table below shows the due dates for each quarterly submission:

Account Quarter

Due Date

First Quarter

May 15

Second Quarter

August 15

Third Quarter

November 15

Fourth Quarter

February 15

Q3: Can I resubmit data if I find that I have made a mistake?

A3: Yes. In fact, you are required to resubmit.

Q4: How do I resubmit data?

A4: Fill out the NJAIRE Call for Statistics sheet with correct data for the account quarters and accident years in error, and send them to the address given in Answer 1, unless you are asked to send it elsewhere.

For each account quarter/accident year combination being corrected, the entire Call form must be filled out.

Since a resubmission for a particular account quarter/accident year combination supersedes any previous submission, you must include the revised data as well as the originally submitted data on each call form. For example, suppose your original submission for account quarter 03/00, accident year 2000 reflected 100 exposures and 10 BI Claims. An audit in the following year found that 2 of those claims were invalid. You must resubmit a call form for that same account quarter/accident year combination lowering the claim count from 10 to 8, but leaving the exposure count at 100. If you left the exposure column blank, the system would count that as 0 exposures.

Q5: I want to send my data submission via express mail so it is not late, but I need the name of someone to send it to. What name should I use?

A5: You may use the mailing address in Answer 1.  If you need a phone number, it is 201-469-2323.  Note that you can avoid the postage costs by faxing or e-mailing your data submissions.

Q6: I can't find my Compiled Figures Report. Could I have an additional copy?

A6: Yes. Copies of all Compiled Figures Reports (and most other NJAIRE mailings) are easily accessible from ISO. Be sure to keep ISO informed if your company’s contact person changes or if your company’s mailing address changes so our mailings don’t get lost.

Q7: Can negative loss or claim amounts be reported?

A7: Yes. In cases of recovered losses, negative claims and losses may be reported. Any negative claim or loss must correspond to a previously reported claim or loss.

Q8: We cannot correct a problem in our data. What should we do? Can we submit estimated data?

A8: There are two kinds of data estimate procedures available to companies. The first kind is temporary. This estimate is performed by ISO and results in a penalty charge of $250. Such an estimate would be acceptable when a company's data problems cannot be corrected in time for a quarterly financial transaction or an Annual Cash Settlement, but will be corrected shortly thereafter. The second kind of estimate is called a Permanent Data Estimate (PDE). A PDE will be granted to your company if, after making every effort to do so, you are unable to submit correct data for a particular account quarter or quarters. If you want a PDE done, you must send us a letter explaining the problem and requesting permission to submit estimated data. Your company or ISO can perform these data estimates. If your company performs it, ISO will review the procedure used. Permanent Data Estimates are subject to the standard resubmission charge of $250. Furthermore, as stated in the Plan of Operations, the estimation procedure reflects a 10% overestimation of zero threshold exposures or claims and a 10% underestimation of verbal exposures or claims.

Q9: Has my company’s submission been received? Was it on time? Will there be a penalty?

A9: Check with ISO to see if and when your submission was received. If it was not received, you can either mail or fax another copy of your submission to ISO. Late submissions will be assessed a penalty of $50 per working day late. Resubmissions will be assessed a flat charge of $250. Every quarter, ISO sends out "Data Quality Assessments" reflecting penalties assessed for late submissions and/or resubmissions of data from the previous quarter.

2. Reporting of Specific Data Elements

A. Exposures:

Q10: What types of exposures do I report?

A10: There are two columns of exposures to report: One column is the earned car years of exposure for Private Passenger Automobiles written at the zero dollar tort threshold. The other column is the earned car years of exposure for Private Passenger Automobiles written at the verbal threshold.

Q11: Isn't NJAIRE just for Personal Automobile Insurance?

A11: No. NJAIRE deals with insurance on Private Passenger Automobiles. These automobiles may be insured on a commercial auto policy. For example, a company car for personal use should be reported if the user is the named insured on the commercial policy.

Q12: Should I report data for motorcycles?

A12: No. NJAIRE reporting applies only to Automobiles (see the definition in the NJAIRE Plan of Operations).

B. BI Paid Claimants:

Q13: "Claimants" are supposed to be reported. What is a "claimant"?

A13: A claimant is each individual who submits a claim for an occurrence.

Q14: Do I report claimants closed without payment?

A14: No! Only paid BI claimants should be reported.

Q15: Do I report claimants for PIP, UM or UIM?

A15: No! Claimant and loss data reported to NJAIRE should be limited to Bodily Injury (BI) coverage only.

Q16: Do I report BI claimants if the accident occurs out of state or the claimants are from a state other than New Jersey?

A16: Such claimants may be included in the total BI paid claimants reported to NJAIRE

Q17: What is an "Intra-Family" claim?

A17: It is a claim made by a person against a policy under which he/she is insured.

Q18: Do I report Intra-Family claims as part of my NJAIRE BI claim count?

A18: Such claimants may be included in the total BI paid claimants reported to NJAIRE.

Q19: Do I report claims involving only economic losses as part of my NJAIRE BI claim count?

A19: Such claimants may be included in the total BI paid claimants reported to NJAIRE.

C. Reportable Claimants:

Q20: What is a reportable claimant?

A20: It is a closed BI paid claimant where:

a. The claimant has the zero dollar tort threshold, the insured has the verbal threshold, AND

b. The kinds of injuries are not those described by the definition of the verbal threshold.

NJAIRE developed a Reportable Claim Determination Form to help you identify which BI paid claimants are also reportable claimants. Be sure you are using the form for accident years 1999 and subsequent for policies in force after July 1, 1999.

Q21: What are the injuries that qualify under the revised (1999) definition of the verbal threshold?

A21: The types of injuries that qualify are considered serious. Such conditions include: death; dismemberment; significant disfigurement or significant scarring; displaced fractures; loss of fetus; and permanent injury within a reasonable degree of medical probability other than significant scarring.

Q22: Do I report Reportable claimants if the insured is from a state other than New Jersey?

A22: No.

Q23: Do I report Reportable Claims if the accident occurs out-of-state or the claimants are from a state other than New Jersey?

A23: No.

Q24: Do I report Intra-Family Claims as part of my Reportable Claim count?

A24: Such claimants may be included in the total Reportable claimants reported to NJAIRE (provided it meets the other criteria on the Reportable Claim Determination form).

Q25: Do I report claims involving only economic losses as part of my NJAIRE Reportable Claim count?

A25: No. NJAIRE is intended to reimburse companies only for their non-economic losses.

D. Reportable Losses:

Q26: What is a reportable loss?

A26: It is the Bodily Injury Liability loss (non-economic loss only) amount paid on the reportable claim.

E. Allocated & Unallocated Loss Adjustment Expenses:

Q27: Should Loss Adjustment Expenses be reported for all BI paid claims?

A27: No. They should only be reported for Reportable claims.

Q28: What if I am unable to separate the Allocated and Unallocated Loss Adjustment Expenses?

A28: There is a column on the Call for Statistics form in which to report the Combined Loss Adjustment Expense amounts. Note that if this column is filled out, the other LAE columns should be left blank, and vice versa.

Q29: Can I report Reportable ALAE, ULAE, for claims without payment?

A29: Yes, ALAE and ULAE should be reported to NJAIRE even if the associated Reportable claims are closed without payment.

Q30: What expenses fall under the Allocated and Unallocated categories?

A30: Typically, Allocated Loss Adjustment Expenses are those that can be directly assigned to the settlement of a particular claim. One example is an insurance company hiring outside legal counsel to handle a particular claim.

Unallocated Loss Adjustment Expenses are those costs indirectly involved in the settlement of a claim. Such expenses include overhead costs of the claims department and the use of staff attorneys.

F. Data Reporting for accident year 2008 and subsequent:

      Q31: For accident years 2008 and subsequent, will there be a new call form?  How do I report the statewide totals on the call form?

A31:  No.  Companies should submit their data for accident years 2008 and subsequent via Form # 4.  Companies have 3 options when it comes to reporting their data for these accident years (Exhibit 17a of Procedure Manual Exhibits):

                        1)  Report only the statewide totals in either the TOTAL row or in both Territory 001 and the TOTAL row.

                        2)  Report their data by the standard territory definitions (Exhibit 17) as well as the statewide totals in the TOTAL row.

3)  Report their data by the company defined territories as well as the statewide totals in the TOTAL row.  This will vary among insurers, but only the statewide totals will be recorded by NJAIRE.  Territory numbers are not limited to what is on Form # 4  The territory numbers can be the company's territories in which the facsimile form can be used to reflect this.

Regardless of how the company opts to report their data, all reports generated (including Compiled Figures Reports) will contain the statewide totals in Territory 001.

C. Provisional Financial Transaction Questions

1. Monthly Payments:

Q1: How are my company’s quarterly assessments calculated?

A1: Using the data your company submits each quarter, we produce a report called the "Compiled Figures Report":

Form #4 (accident years 2008 and subsequent)

Calculated Assessment Charges on Form #4 Compiled Figures Reports are calculated by taking the statewide number of zero dollar threshold earned exposures, multiplied by the assessment per exposure for that accident year. 

Form #4 (accident years 1999 - 2007 for policies in force after 7/1/1999)

Calculated Assessment Charges on Form #4 Compiled Figures Reports are calculated by taking the number of zero dollar threshold earned exposures in each territory, multiplied by the base rate for that territory, multiplied by the assessment percentage for that accident year. The sum of all the territory assessments is your total calculated assessment.

Note: Verbal threshold earned exposures must also be reported (as discussed later, these will be used to determine your company’s provisional reimbursement, not your provisional assessment).

Q2: How are the Monthly Payments calculated and what are they based on?

A2: The monthly payments for a given account quarter are determined by dividing the Calculated Assessment Charge shown on the Compiled Figures Report from two quarters prior by three and rounding to the nearest dollar. For example, monthly payments for the third quarter of 2001 are based on the calculated assessment from the first quarter of 2001.

Q3: Will I receive an invoice for the monthly payments due?

A3: No. Companies are responsible for sending their monthly payments in on time as noted in the cover letter accompanying the Compiled Figures Reports (see due dates listed in Section C, Answer 7). No separate notice or invoice will be sent to your company by NJAIRE. Penalties will be assessed for monthly payments not received on time.

Q4: Where do the territory base rates come from?

A4: For accident years 2007 and prior, the territory base rates are typically the zero dollar base rates used by the NJ PAIP.  For accident years 2008 and subsequent, territory base rates will no longer be used.  Instead, an assessment per exposure will replace the territory base rates and assessment percentages.

Q5: How are the assessment percentages determined?

A5: For accident years 2007 and prior, the NJAIRE Actuarial Committee determines the assessment percentage to be used in the Compiled Figures Reports for the Monthly Payments. This is based on the expected Reportable losses for that year.  For accident years 2008 and subsequent, assessment percentages will no longer be used.  Instead, an assessment per exposure will replace the assessment percentages and territory base rates.

Q6: How are the assessments per exposure determined?

A6: For accident years 2008 and subsequent, the NJAIRE Actuarial Committee determines the assessments per exposure to be used in the Compiled Figures Reports for the Monthly Payments.

2. Quarterly Reimbursements:

Q7: How are the Quarterly Reimbursements calculated?

A7: After we have collected the Monthly Payments for a given account quarter, we redistribute those funds (along with the investment income earned on those funds while held by NJAIRE during the quarter) to each company:

Provisional reimbursements for a given transaction quarter will be calculated by multiplying your company’s percentage of the industrywide total verbal threshold earned exposures in the account quarter two quarters prior by the total assessments collected (via the monthly payments) in the transaction quarter.

 

The table below shows key dates for the Monthly Payments and Quarterly Reimbursements:

Account Quarters & Provisional Transaction Dates

 Transaction Quarter

Account Quarter of Data Used

First Monthly Payment*

Second Monthly Payment*

Third Monthly Payment*

Quarterly Provisional Reimbursement

09/00

03/00

08/15/00

09/15/00

10/15/00

11/15/00

12/00

06/00

11/15/00

12/15/00

01/15/01*

02/15/00

03/01

09/00

02/15/01

03/15/01

04/15/01

05/15/01

06/01

12/00

05/15/01

06/15/01

07/15/01

08/15/01

*As the chart indicates, not all payments for the account quarters in a given calendar year are made in that calendar year (December’s payment is actually made in January of the following year).

D. Annual Cash Settlement (ACS) Questions

1. General:

Q1: I can't find my Annual Cash Settlement package. Could I have an additional copy?

A1: Yes. Please contact ISO at the address in the answer in Section B, question 1., at the beginning of this document.

 Q2: Why is the Annual Cash Settlement performed?

A2: Basically, the Annual Cash Settlement evaluates the provisional assessments and reimbursements performed in the previous calendar year and re-evaluates assessment and reimbursement calculations for all other prior years (i.e., the provisional transactions from 1999 are evaluated for the first time in the 2000 Annual Cash Settlement. That evaluation is then re-evaluated in the next Annual Cash Settlement, and so on). The idea is that the calculations for each subsequent Annual Cash Settlement use an additional 12 months of loss and claim data and therefore will more accurately reflect the ultimate loss experience for each company.

2. Annual Cash Settlement Calculations:

Q3: How do all the pieces of the Annual Cash Settlement package fit together?

A3: In the package of information you receive, there are two types of reports that combine to determine the net Annual Cash Settlement amount due from or owed to your company. These are the Statewide Company Annual Cash Settlement Report and the Annual Cash Settlement True-up Report.

A. The Statewide Company Annual Cash Settlement Report

Q4: What are the calculations on this report and where does the data come from?

A4: To perform the Annual Cash Settlement, we first run the "Annual Cash Settlement Reimbursement Report".  For each company, this report generates output called the "Statewide Annual Cash Settlement Report", which is enclosed as part of the Annual Cash Settlement mailing.

Ultimately, the assessment and reimbursement formulas will use only claims (the "Pure Claims" method). However, it will take some time (i.e., a few years) for BI claims to develop and become credible enough to be used as the basis for an accident year’s assessments and reimbursements. As a result, until BI claim credibility is high enough, we will be assessing and reimbursing companies based on the "Pure Exposure" method:

The "Pure Exposure" method (to be used for the first few evaluations of an accident year)

Companies will be assessed based on their zero dollar threshold earned exposures, and will be reimbursed based on their verbal threshold earned exposures.

When BI claim credibility is high enough, the ACS will use the "Pure Claims" method:

The "Pure Claims" method (to be used when claim credibility for an accident year is high enough)

Companies will be assessed based on their BI claims against zero dollar threshold policies and will be reimbursed based on their BI claims against verbal threshold policies.

For each accident year, the method used is shown in the documentation that accompanies the Annual Cash Settlement.

The following describes the layout of the Statewide Company Annual Cash Settlement report for Form #4:

Column

Output shown on Statewide Company Annual Cash Settlement Report

Column (1)

Lists, for each accident year, your company’s statewide (the sum of all territories) BI claims against zero dollar threshold policies.

Column (2)

Lists, for each accident year, your company’s statewide (the sum of all territories) BI claims against verbal threshold policies.

Column (3)

Lists, for each accident year, your company’s statewide (the sum of all territories) zero dollar earned exposures.

Column (4)

Lists, for each accident year, your company’s statewide (the sum of all territories) verbal threshold earned exposures.

Column (5)

Reflects assessments calculated as follows:

For accident years that use the “Pure Exposure” method:

a) If the accident year is 2007 or prior, these assessments will be calculated, on a territory basis, by taking your company’s zero dollar threshold earned exposures in that territory multiplied by the appropriate base rate for that territory then multiplied by the assessment percentage for that accident year. The sum of the territory assessments will be your assessments at present rate for that year.

b) If the accident year is 2008 or subsequent, these assessments will be calculated, on a territory basis, by taking your company's zero dollar threshold earned exposures in that territory multiplied by the assessment per exposure for that accident year. The sum of the territory assessments will be your assessments at present rate for that year.

For accident years that use the “Pure Claims” method, the assessments will be calculated, on a territory basis, by taking your company’s percentage of the industrywide BI paid claimants against zero dollar threshold policies, multiplied by the assessment fund generated for that territory (this assessment fund will be determined by the NJAIRE Actuarial Committee and may change from one Annual Cash Settlement evaluation to the next based on the loss development for that year). The sum of each territory assessment for an accident year will be your total assessment that year.

Column (6)

Reflects assessment allocations (reimbursements) calculated as follows:

For accident years that use the “Pure Exposure” method, these assessment allocations will be calculated, on a territory basis, by taking your company’s percentage of the industrywide verbal threshold earned exposures for that territory, multiplied by the total assessments for that territory (as described in the first paragraph explaining Column (5) above). The sum of the territory assessment allocations will be your total assessment allocation for that accident year.

For accident years that use the “Pure Claims” method, the assessment allocations will be calculated, on a territory basis, by taking your company’s percentage of the industrywide BI paid claimants against verbal threshold policies, multiplied by the total assessments for that territory (as described in the second paragraph explaining Column (5) above). The sum of each territory assessment allocation for an accident year will be your total assessment allocation for that year.

Column (7)

Will represent previous financial action. For each accident year, these figures reflect the assessments minus the reimbursements as calculated in the previous years’ Statewide Company Annual Cash Settlement Report.

Columns (8) & (9)

Will represent the amount due from/owed to your company. For each accident year, calculate column (5) minus column (6) minus column (7). If the result is positive, your company owes this amount and it will be shown in column (8). If the result is negative, this amount is owed to your company and it will be shown in column (9).

Columns (10) & (11)

Will represent the interest on the amount due from/owed to your company. Prior to running the Annual Cash Settlement Reimbursement Report, we calculate interest factors for each accident year. These factors are applied to the amounts in columns (8) & (9) to generate the amounts shown here.

Sum totals for each column (adding up all the accident years) are computed. A total Annual Cash Settlement amount is then calculated by summing columns (8) through (11) (note that columns (9) and (11) are amounts owed to your company and therefore are viewed as negative numbers in this calculation).

B. The Annual Cash Settlement True-up Report

Q6: What calculations are being done on this report and where do the numbers come from?

A6: There are three parts to the Annual Cash Settlement True-up Report, Part (A) generates a net amount due from or owed to your company. It does this by comparing what you actually paid and received in the quarterly provisional transactions to what your assessments & reimbursements should be at this point in time (it also accounts for the interest on the difference between these amounts). Note that Part (A) does not take into account the investment income from the quarterly reimbursements; this is taken care of in Part (B). The second portion of the True-up Report, Part (B), recalculates the investment income for all accident years in the Annual Cash Settlement.  Part (C) indicates your company’s share of administrative expenses for the upcoming calendar year.


Part (A) - Annual Cash Settlement True-Up

The following table explains where the numbers come from and what calculations are being performed on Part (A) of your Annual Cash Settlement True-up Report.

Column

Output shown on True-Up Report:

Column (1)

This column represents the sum of the Annual Cash Settlement amounts that appear on the Form #4 Statewide Company Annual Cash Settlement Report for your company.

Column (2)

There are two numbers shown here. One represents the actual dollar amount your company paid in the previous calendar year’s monthly payments (the year being evaluated for the first time in this Annual Cash Settlement). The second number represents the actual dollar amount your company received in the previous calendar year’s quarterly reimbursements. The net amount is the reimbursements minus the monthly payments. Any negative amounts will be shown in parentheses, meaning you paid more than you received in the quarterly provisional transactions.

Column (3)

This represents the interest amount accrued on the net amount from Column (2). It is calculated by multiplying the interest factor for the previous year by the net amount in Column (2).

Column (4)

This represents the difference between what you actually paid and received in the provisional transactions from the previous calendar year and what your assessments & reimbursements should have been (as calculated in the Statewide Company Annual Cash Settlement Reports). It is calculated by adding Columns (1), (2) & (3).

Part (B) - Investment Income Redistribution

Page 2 of the True-up Report calculates the redistribution of your company’s share of the investment income for all accident years (Column (2)). For the latest year, the redistribution compares the investment income you actually received in the quarterly disbursements to what you should have received based on more up-to-date claims data used in the Annual Cash Settlement reports. For prior years, the redistribution is the difference between the investment income allocation for that year based on the current data and the investment income allocation for that year from the previous ACS.

For each year, interest income on the difference between the old share and the new share is calculated using that years’ interest factor (Column (3)) and is then added to the difference to generate a net amount due from or owed to your company (Column (4)).

Part (C) - Administrative Expense

By statute, NJAIRE is empowered to raise sufficient money to pay its operating expenses. Each year, the NJAIRE Board approves the budget for the upcoming year. Each participating company's share of the total Administrative Expense is the projected administrative budget times that company's share of the latest year's zero dollar tort threshold assessments (with the inclusion of specialty vehicle exception exposures). For example, the Sixteenth Annual Cash Settlement (evaluation date 3/01) collected 2002 budgetary amount based on the assessments collected for calendar/accident year 2000.

The sum of Column (4) from Parts (A) and (B) plus the amount listed in Part (C) is your company’s Annual Cash Settlement balance. A positive number means that you owe this amount and a negative number means that this amount is owed to you.

3. Additional Annual Cash Settlement Questions

Q7: Why don't the Monthly Payment and Quarterly Reimbursement figures on the Annual Cash Settlement True-up Report agree with mine?

A7: There are several possible answers:

·         You are using the data quarter, rather than the transaction quarter, to determine which monthly payments and quarterly reimbursements should be included. For example, the 2009 Annual Cash Settlement evaluates the 2008 provisional transactions that are actually based on third quarter 2007 through second quarter 2008 data.

·         As mentioned earlier, the Quarterly Reimbursements in the Annual Cash Settlement True-up do not include investment income. You may be including investment income.

·         You may be using monthly payments actually paid in the calendar year rather than those paid for each month in the calendar year. As mentioned earlier (see the chart above showing provisional transaction dates that follows the answer to Section C Answer 7), the payments for each month are actually made 15 days after end of the month. That means December’s payment is actually made in January of the following year. For example, the Sixteenth Annual Cash Settlement True-up (latest year, 2000) includes your payments from 2/15/00 (January’s payment) through 1/15/01 (December’s payment).

Q8: Why, after being reimbursed in the quarterly disbursements, is our company paying an Annual Cash Settlement bill?

A8: Quarterly transactions are meant to approximate the latest year’s Annual Cash Settlement results. Your company’s net reimbursements from the quarterly transactions are fully reflected in the Annual Cash Settlement True-up Report.

The differences between the procedures used for the quarterly transactions and the Annual cash Settlement are as follows:

Differences in the Latest Accident Year

The quarterly transactions for an accident year are performed using exposures that, for operational reasons, lag behind the actual year’s exposures by two quarters.  The Annual Cash Settlement (Pure Exposure Method) uses the actual year’s exposures.

Differences due to the Reevaluation of Prior Accident Years

For years where the Pure Claims method is used, only claims are involved.  Depending on how your company’s claim experience differs from that of other companies, your results for an accident year are subject to change.

In all cases, should the estimate of the ultimate Reportable losses change, the Annual Cash Settlement results will also change.

Q9: What does the interest calculation in the Annual Cash Settlement represent?

A9: The financial transactions for each accident year are provisional, and will change as assessment amounts are finalized, data is corrected and BI paid claimants develop.

Interest amounts are charged against companies for use of funds that, through a later Annual Cash Settlement, get allocated to another company. The contrary also holds. A company will earn interest that accrued on funds while being held by other companies after an earlier evaluation.

Q10: Why are BI claims, rather than reportable claims, used to determine reimbursements?

A10: There are several reasons:

·         Reportable Claims are unique to NJAIRE, while BI Claims are a standard data element. Therefore, it is easier for companies to report BI Claimants accurately.

·         BI Paid Claims are more numerous, and therefore more credible.

·         The use of BI Paid Claims rather than Reportable Claims rests on the assumption that since a company has no control over the claimant's tort threshold or medical expenses, all companies will have nearly the same ratio of Reportable Claims to BI Claims. The NJAIRE data support the reasonability of this assumption.

Q11: If my company is no longer writing auto insurance in New Jersey, how could we owe money in an Annual Cash Settlement?

A11: Because the Annual Cash Settlement re-evaluates all accident years to date, you would owe money if other companies have increased their number of Verbal BI claims for prior years faster than you have, making your share of Verbal BI claims smaller.

Also, you could owe money if the assessments per exposure are increased.

Q12: If we had no data for a particular accident year (say, 1999) how could we owe investment income we received for that accident year?

A12: There is a two-quarter lag in the provisional assessments and reimbursements. Since 2008 monthly payments and quarterly disbursements are actually based on data for third quarter 2007 through second quarter 2008, you may owe money if you had data in the last two quarters of 2007 (to reverse the previous transactions based on these quarters data).


Q13: What does it mean if the amount owed on my Annual Cash Settlement Report is in parentheses?

A13: It means your company is owed this amount by NJAIRE.

Q14: How can we verify our assessments for a particular accident year?

A14: For each accident year, depending on which method was used (i.e., "Pure Exposure" or "Pure Claims") follow the procedures outlined in Question 4.

Q15: How do I estimate for budgetary purposes next year's Annual Cash Settlement bill and/or financial transactions in the upcoming year?

A15: It is difficult to accurately estimate future Annual Cash Settlements because there are many factors that can affect the results, such as:

·         For accident years 2008 and subsequent, the assessments per exposure are subject to change by the NJAIRE Actuarial Committee.

·         Your company’s share of prior year assessments/reimbursements may change significantly due to company resubmissions.

·         For the latest year, your company’s share as reflected in the provisional transactions may differ from your share in the Annual Cash Settlement due to claim development patterns.

Q16: How do I handle the Excess Profits filing mandated by the New Jersey Insurance Department?

A16: ISO, as the NJAIRE central processor, cannot instruct you on such matters. Please contact the New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance for assistance.