Public Act 90-0418 of the 90th General Assembly

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Public Act 90-0418

SB801 Enrolled                                 LRB9002421JSmg

    AN  ACT  concerning  investment  practices  of  insurance
companies.

    Be it enacted by the People of  the  State  of  Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:

    Section  5.  The  Illinois  Insurance  Code is amended by
adding Sections 126.1, 126.2,  126.3,  126.4,  126.5,  126.6,
126.7,  126.8, 126.9, 126.10, 126.11, 126.12, 126.13, 126.14,
126.15,  126.16,  126.17,  126.18,  126.19,  126.20,  126.21,
126.22,  126.23,  126.24,  126.25,  126.26,  126.27,  126.28,
126.29, 126.30, 126.31, and 126.32 and headings for Parts  1,
2, and 3 of Article VIII as follows:

    (215 ILCS 5/Art. VIII, Part 1, heading new)
                    1. GENERAL PROVISIONS

    (215 ILCS 5/126.1 new)
    Sec. 126.1.  Purpose and scope.
    A.  Purpose.  The  purpose  of this Article is to protect
the interests of insureds by promoting insurer  solvency  and
financial  strength.  This  will  be accomplished through the
application  of  investment  standards  that   facilitate   a
reasonable balance of the following objectives:
    (1)  To preserve principal;
    (2)  To  assure  reasonable diversification as to type of
investment, issuer and credit quality; and
    (3)  To allow  insurers  to  allocate  investments  in  a
manner  consistent  with  principles  of  prudent  investment
management  to achieve an adequate return so that obligations
to insureds are adequately  met  and  financial  strength  is
sufficient to cover reasonably foreseeable contingencies.
    B.  Scope.  This  Article shall apply only to investments
and investment practices  of  domestic  insurers  and  United
States branches of alien insurers entered through this State.
This  Article  shall  not  apply  to  separate accounts of an
insurer except to the extent that the provisions  of  Article
XIV 1/2 so provide.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.2 new)
    Sec. 126.2.  Definitions. For purposes of this Article:
    A.  "Acceptable collateral" means:
    (1)  As  to  securities lending transactions, and for the
purpose of calculating counterparty  exposure  amount,  cash,
cash  equivalents,  letters of credit, direct obligations of,
or securities that are fully guaranteed as to  principal  and
interest  by,  the  government  of  the  United States or any
agency of the United  States,  or  by  the  Federal  National
Mortgage  Association  or  the  Federal  Home  Loan  Mortgage
Corporation,  and as to lending foreign securities, sovereign
debt rated 1 by the SVO;
    (2)  As   to   repurchase   transactions,   cash,    cash
equivalents and direct obligations of, or securities that are
fully  guaranteed  as  to  principal  and  interest  by,  the
government  of  the  United States or an agency of the United
States, or by the Federal National  Mortgage  Association  or
the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation; and
    (3)  As to reverse repurchase transactions, cash and cash
equivalents.
    B.  "Acceptable   private   mortgage   insurance"   means
insurance  written by a private insurer protecting a mortgage
lender against loss occasioned by a mortgage loan default and
issued by a licensed mortgage insurance company, with an  SVO
1  designation  or a rating issued by a nationally recognized
statistical  rating  organization  equivalent  to  an  SVO  1
designation, that  covers  losses  to  an  80%  loan-to-value
ratio.
    C.  "Accident  and  health  insurance"  means  protection
which  provides  payment  of benefits for covered sickness or
accidental injury,  excluding  credit  insurance,  disability
insurance,  accidental  death and dismemberment insurance and
long-term care insurance.
    D.  "Accident and health insurer" means a  licensed  life
or   health  insurer  or  health  service  corporation  whose
insurance  premiums  and  required  statutory  reserves   for
accident  and  health  insurance  constitute  at least 95% of
total premium  considerations  or  total  statutory  required
reserves, respectively.
    E.  "Admitted assets" means assets defined by Section 3.1
of  this  Code permitted to be reported as admitted assets on
the  statutory  financial  statement  of  the  insurer   most
recently   required  to  be  filed  with  the  Director,  but
excluding assets of separate  accounts,  the  investments  of
which  are  not  subject  to  the  provisions of this Article
except to the extent that the provisions of Article  XIV  1/2
so provide.
    F.  "Affiliate"  means,  as to any person, another person
that,  directly   or   indirectly   through   one   or   more
intermediaries,  controls,  is  controlled  by,  or  is under
common control with the person.
    G.  "Asset-backed security" means  a  security  or  other
instrument,  excluding shares in a mutual fund, evidencing an
interest in, or  the  right  to  receive  payments  from,  or
payable  from distributions on, an asset, a pool of assets or
specifically  divisible  cash   flows   which   are   legally
transferred   to   a   trust   or   another  special  purpose
bankruptcy-remote   business   entity,   on   the   following
conditions:
    (1)  The trust or other business  entity  is  established
solely  for the purpose of acquiring specific types of assets
or  rights  to  cash  flows,  issuing  securities  and  other
instruments representing an interest in or right  to  receive
cash  flows  from  those  assets  or  rights, and engaging in
activities required to service the assets or rights  and  any
credit  enhancement  or support features held by the trust or
other business entity; and
    (2)  The assets of the trust  or  other  business  entity
consist  solely  of  interest  bearing  obligations  or other
contractual obligations representing  the  right  to  receive
payment  from  the  cash  flows  from  the  assets or rights.
However,  the  existence  of  credit  enhancements,  such  as
letters of credit or guarantees, or support features such  as
swap   agreements,  shall  not  cause  a  security  or  other
instrument to be ineligible as an asset-backed security.
    H.  "Business entity"  includes  a  sole  proprietorship,
corporation,    limited   liability   company,   association,
partnership, joint stock company, joint venture, mutual fund,
trust, joint  tenancy  or  other  similar  form  of  business
organization, whether organized for profit or not for profit.
    I.  "Cap"  means  an  agreement  obligating the seller to
make payments to the buyer, with each payment  based  on  the
amount by which a reference price or level or the performance
or  value  of  one  or  more  underlying  interests exceeds a
predetermined number, sometimes called  the  strike  rate  or
strike price.
    J.  "Capital  and  surplus"  means the sum of the capital
and surplus of the  insurer  required  to  be  shown  on  the
statutory  financial  statement  of the insurer most recently
required to be filed with the Director.
    K.  "Cash equivalents" means short-term, highly rated and
highly liquid investments or securities  readily  convertible
to known amounts of cash without penalty and so near maturity
that they present insignificant risk of change in value. Cash
equivalents  include government money market mutual funds and
class one money market mutual funds.  For  purposes  of  this
definition:
    (1)  "Short-term" means investments with a remaining term
to maturity of 90 days or less; and
    (2)  "Highly  rated"  means  an investment rated "P-1" by
Moody's Investors Service, Inc., or  "A-1"  by  Standard  and
Poor's  division  of  The  McGraw Hill Companies, Inc. or its
equivalent rating  by  a  nationally  recognized  statistical
rating organization recognized by the SVO.
    L.  "Class one bond mutual fund" means a mutual fund that
at  all  times  qualifies for investment using the bond class
one reserve factor under the Purposes and Procedures  of  the
Securities Valuation Office or any successor publication.
    M.  "Class  one  money  market mutual fund" means a money
market mutual fund that at all times qualifies for investment
using the bond class one reserve factor  under  the  Purposes
and  Procedures  of  the  Securities  Valuation Office or any
successor publication.
    N.  "Code" means the Illinois Insurance Code.
    O.  "Collar" means an agreement to  receive  payments  as
the  buyer of an option, cap or floor and to make payments as
the seller of a different option, cap or floor.
    P.  "Commercial mortgage loan"  means  a  mortgage  loan,
other than a residential mortgage loan.
    Q.  "Construction loan" means a loan of less than 3 years
in  term,  made  for  financing the cost of construction of a
building or other improvement to real estate, that is secured
by the real estate.
    R.  "Control"   means   the   possession,   directly   or
indirectly, of the power to direct or cause the direction  of
the  management and policies of a person, whether through the
ownership of voting securities, by  contract  (other  than  a
commercial  contract for goods or nonmanagement services), or
otherwise, unless the power is  the  result  of  an  official
position with or corporate office held by the person. Control
shall   be  presumed  to  exist  if  a  person,  directly  or
indirectly, owns, controls, holds with the power to  vote  or
holds   proxies  representing  10%  or  more  of  the  voting
securities  of  another  person.  This  presumption  may   be
rebutted  by  a  showing that control does not exist in fact.
The Director may determine, after furnishing  all  interested
persons  notice  and  an  opportunity  to be heard and making
specific findings of fact to support the determination,  that
control  exists  in  fact,  notwithstanding  the absence of a
presumption to that effect.
    S.  "Counterparty exposure amount" means:
    (1)  The  amount  of  credit  risk  attributable   to   a
derivative  instrument  entered  into  with a business entity
other than through a qualified  exchange,  qualified  foreign
exchange,   or  cleared  through  a  qualified  clearinghouse
("over-the-counter derivative  instrument").  The  amount  of
credit risk equals:
    (a)  The  market value of the over-the-counter derivative
instrument if the liquidation of  the  derivative  instrument
would result in a final cash payment to the insurer; or
    (b)  Zero if the liquidation of the derivative instrument
would not result in a final cash payment to the insurer.
    (2)  If   over-the-counter   derivative  instruments  are
entered into under a written master agreement which  provides
for  netting  of payments owed by the respective parties, and
the domicile of the counterparty is either within the  United
States  or  if not within the United States, within a foreign
jurisdiction listed in the Purposes  and  Procedures  of  the
Securities  Valuation Office as eligible for netting, the net
amount of credit risk shall be the greater of zero or the net
sum of:
    (a)  The market value of the over-the-counter  derivative
instruments entered into under the agreement, the liquidation
of which would result in a final cash payment to the insurer;
and
    (b)  The  market value of the over-the-counter derivative
instruments entered into under the agreement, the liquidation
of which would result in a final cash payment by the  insurer
to the business entity.
    (3)  For   open   transactions,  market  value  shall  be
determined at the end of  the  most  recent  quarter  of  the
insurer's  fiscal  year  and  shall  be reduced by the market
value of acceptable collateral held by the insurer or  placed
in escrow by one or both parties.
    T.  "Covered"   means   that   an  insurer  owns  or  can
immediately  acquire,  through  the  exercise   of   options,
warrants  or  conversion rights already owned, the underlying
interest in order to fulfill or secure its obligations  under
a call option, cap or floor it has written, or has set aside,
pursuant  to  a  custodial  or escrow agreement, cash or cash
equivalents with a market value equal to the amount  required
to fulfill its obligations under a put option it has written,
in an income generation transaction.
    U.  "Credit  tenant  loan" means a mortgage loan which is
made primarily in reliance on the credit standing of a  major
tenant,  structured with an assignment of the rental payments
to the lender with real estate pledged as collateral  in  the
form of a first lien.
    V. (1)  "Derivative   instrument"   means  an  agreement,
option, instrument or a series or combination thereof:
    (a)  To  make  or  take  delivery  of,   or   assume   or
relinquish,  a  specified  amount  of  one or more underlying
interests, or to make a cash settlement in lieu thereof; or
    (b)  That has a price, performance, value  or  cash  flow
based  primarily  upon  the  actual or expected price, level,
performance, value or cash flow of  one  or  more  underlying
interests.
    (2)  Derivative  instruments  include  options,  warrants
used  in  a  hedging  transaction and not attached to another
financial instrument, caps, floors, collars, swaps, forwards,
futures and any  other  agreements,  options  or  instruments
substantially  similar  thereto  or any series or combination
thereof and any agreements, options or instruments  permitted
under   rules   adopted   under  Section  126.8.   Derivative
instruments shall not include  an  investment  authorized  by
Sections  126.11  through  126.17,  126.19 and 126.24 through
126.30.
    W.  "Derivative   transaction"   means   a    transaction
involving the use of one or more derivative instruments.
    X.  "Direct"  or "directly," when used in connection with
an obligation, means  the  designated  obligor  is  primarily
liable on the instrument representing the obligation.
    Y.  "Dollar   roll   transaction"  means  2  simultaneous
transactions with settlement  dates  no  more  than  96  days
apart,  so  that  in  one  transaction  an insurer sells to a
business entity, and in the other transaction the insurer  is
obligated   to   purchase  from  the  same  business  entity,
substantially similar securities of the following types:
    (1)  Asset-backed   securities   issued,    assumed    or
guaranteed  by  the Government National Mortgage Association,
the Federal National Mortgage Association or the Federal Home
Loan Mortgage Corporation or their respective successors; and
    (2)  Other asset-backed securities referred to in Section
106 of Title I of the Secondary Mortgage  Market  Enhancement
Act of 1984 (15 U.S.C.  77r1), as amended.
    Z.  "Domestic  jurisdiction"  means  the  United  States,
Canada,  any  state,  any province of Canada or any political
subdivision of any of the foregoing.
    AA.  "Equity interest" means any of  the  following  that
are  not  rated  credit  instruments: common stock; preferred
stock; trust certificate; equity investment in an  investment
company  other than a money market mutual fund or a class one
bond mutual fund; investment in a common trust fund of a bank
regulated by a federal or state agency; an ownership interest
in minerals, oil or  gas,  the  rights  to  which  have  been
separated from the underlying fee interest in the real estate
where the minerals, oil or gas are located; instruments which
are  mandatorily, or at the option of the issuer, convertible
to equity; limited partnership interests  and  those  general
partnership  interests  authorized  under  Section  126.5(D);
member  interests in limited liability companies; warrants or
other rights to acquire equity interests that are created  by
the  person  that  owns  or  would  issue  the  equity  to be
acquired;  or  instruments  that  would   be   rated   credit
instruments except for the provisions of subsection RRR(2) of
this Section.
    BB.  "Equivalent securities" means:
    (1)  In a securities lending transaction, securities that
are  identical  to  the  loaned  securities  in  all features
including the amount of the loaned securities, except  as  to
certificate  number  if  held  in  physical  form, but if any
different security shall be exchanged for a  loaned  security
by recapitalization, merger, consolidation or other corporate
action,  the  different  security  shall  be deemed to be the
loaned security;
    (2)  In a repurchase  transaction,  securities  that  are
identical   to  the  purchased  securities  in  all  features
including the amount of the purchased securities,  except  as
to the certificate number if held in physical form; or
    (3)  In a reverse repurchase transaction, securities that
are   identical  to  the  sold  securities  in  all  features
including the amount of the sold securities, except as to the
certificate number if held in physical form.
    CC.  "Floor" means an agreement obligating the seller  to
make  payments to the buyer in which each payment is based on
the amount by which a predetermined number, sometimes  called
the  floor rate or price, exceeds a reference price, a level,
or the  performance  or  value  of  one  or  more  underlying
interests.
    DD.  "Foreign  currency" means a currency other than that
of a domestic jurisdiction.
    EE.  (1)  "Foreign investment" means an investment  in  a
foreign  jurisdiction,  or  an  investment  in a person, real
estate or asset domiciled in a foreign jurisdiction, that  is
substantially   of  the  same  type  as  those  eligible  for
investment under this  Article,  other  than  under  Sections
126.17  and  126.30.  An investment shall not be deemed to be
foreign if  the  issuing  person,  qualified  primary  credit
source or qualified guarantor is a domestic jurisdiction or a
person domiciled in a domestic jurisdiction, unless:
    (a)  The issuing person is a shell business entity; and
    (b)  The investment is not assumed, accepted, guaranteed,
or  insured or otherwise backed by a domestic jurisdiction or
a person, that is not a shell business entity, domiciled in a
domestic jurisdiction.
    (2)  For purposes of this definition:
    (a)  "Shell business  entity"  means  a  business  entity
having  no economic substance, except as a vehicle for owning
interests in assets issued, owned or previously  owned  by  a
person domiciled in a foreign jurisdiction;
    (b)  "Qualified  guarantor"  means  a  guarantor  against
which  an  insurer  has  a  direct  claim for full and timely
payment, evidenced  by  a  contractual  right  for  which  an
enforcement action can be brought in a domestic jurisdiction;
and
    (c)  "Qualified  primary  credit source" means the credit
source to which  an  insurer  looks  for  payment  as  to  an
investment  and  against  which an insurer has a direct claim
for full and timely payment, evidenced by a contractual right
for which an enforcement action can be brought in a  domestic
jurisdiction.
    FF.  "Foreign  jurisdiction"  means  a jurisdiction other
than a domestic jurisdiction.
    GG.  "Forward" means an agreement (other than  a  future)
to  make  or  take  delivery  of, or effect a cash settlement
based on the actual or expected price, level, performance  or
value of, one or more underlying interests.
    HH.  "Future"  means  an agreement, traded on a qualified
exchange or qualified  foreign  exchange,  to  make  or  take
delivery  of, or effect a cash settlement based on the actual
or expected price, level, performance or  value  of,  one  or
more underlying interests and includes an insurance future.
    II.  "Government  money market mutual fund" means a money
market mutual fund that at all times:
    (1)  Invests only in obligations issued,  guaranteed,  or
insured  by  the  federal  government of the United States or
collateralized  repurchase  agreements  composed   of   these
obligations; and
    (2)  Qualifies for investment without a reserve under the
Purposes and Procedures of the Securities Valuation Office or
any successor publication.
    JJ.  "Government sponsored enterprise" means a:
    (1)  Governmental agency; or
    (2)  Corporation, limited liability company, association,
partnership,  joint  stock  company,  joint venture, trust or
other entity or instrumentality organized under the  laws  of
any  domestic  jurisdiction  to accomplish a public policy or
other governmental purpose.
    KK.  "Guaranteed or insured,"  when  used  in  connection
with  an  obligation  acquired  under this Article, means the
guarantor or insurer has agreed to:
    (1)  Perform or insure the obligation of the  obligor  or
purchase the obligation; or
    (2)  Be unconditionally obligated until the obligation is
repaid  to maintain in the obligor a minimum net worth, fixed
charge coverage, stockholders' equity or sufficient liquidity
to enable the obligor to pay the obligation in full.
    LL.  "Hedging transaction" means:
    (1)  A derivative transaction that is  entered  into  and
maintained to reduce:
         (a)  the  risk  of  a  change  in  the value, yield,
    price, cash flow, or quantity of  assets  or  liabilities
    that  the insurer has acquired or incurred or anticipates
    acquiring or incurring; or
         (b)  the currency exchange rate risk or  the  degree
    of  exposure as to assets or liabilities that the insurer
    has acquired or incurred or  anticipates  acquiring    or
    incurring; or
    (2)  Such   other   derivative  transactions  as  may  be
specified to constitute hedging transactions in rules adopted
pursuant to Section 126.8.
    MM.  "High  grade  investment"  means  a   rated   credit
instrument; rated 1, 2, P1, P2, PSF1 or PSF2 by the SVO.
    NN.  "Income"  means, as to a security, interest, accrual
of  discount,  dividends  or  other  distributions,  such  as
rights, tax or assessment credits, warrants and distributions
in kind.
    OO.  "Income  generation   transaction"   means   (1)   a
derivative  transaction involving the writing of covered call
options, covered put options, covered caps or covered  floors
that is intended to generate income or enhance return, or (2)
such  other  derivative  transactions  as may be specified to
constitute income generation transactions  in  rules  adopted
pursuant to Section 126.8.
    PP.  "Initial   margin"   means   the   amount  of  cash,
securities or other consideration initially  required  to  be
deposited to establish a futures position.
    QQ.  "Insurance  future"  means  a  future relating to an
index or pool that is based on insurance-related items.
    RR.  "Insurance futures option" means  an  option  on  an
insurance future.
    SS.  "Investment  company" means an investment company as
defined in Section 3(a) of the Investment Company Act of 1940
(15  U.S.C.   80a-1  et  seq.),  as  amended,  and  a  person
described in Section 3(c) of that Act.
    TT.  "Investment  company  series"  means  an  investment
portfolio of an investment company that  is  organized  as  a
series  company and to which assets of the investment company
have been specifically allocated.
    UU.  "Investment practices"  means  transactions  of  the
types described in Section 126.16, 126.18, 126.29 or 126.31.
    VV.  "Investment  subsidiary"  means  a  subsidiary of an
insurer engaged or organized to  engage  exclusively  in  the
ownership  and management of assets authorized as investments
for the insurer  if  such  subsidiary  agrees  to  limit  its
investment  in  any  asset  so  that its investments will not
cause the amount of the total investment of  the  insurer  to
exceed  any  of the investment limitations or avoid any other
provisions of this Article applicable to the insurer. As used
in this subsection, the total investment of the insurer shall
include:
    (1)  Direct investment by the insurer in an asset; and
    (2)  The insurer's proportionate share of  an  investment
in an asset by an investment subsidiary of the insurer, which
shall   be  calculated  by  multiplying  the  amount  of  the
subsidiary's investment by the percentage  of  the  insurer's
ownership interest in the subsidiary.
    WW.  "Investment   strategy"  means  the  techniques  and
methods used by an insurer to meet its investment objectives,
such  as  active  bond  portfolio  management,  passive  bond
portfolio  management,  interest  rate  anticipation,  growth
investing and value investing.
    XX.  "Letter of credit" means a  clean,  irrevocable  and
unconditional  letter  of  credit issued or confirmed by, and
payable and presentable at, a financial  institution  on  the
list  of  financial  institutions  meeting  the standards for
issuing letters of credit under the Purposes  and  Procedures
of   the   Securities   Valuation  Office  or  any  successor
publication. To  constitute  acceptable  collateral  for  the
purposes  of  Sections  126.16 and 126.29, a letter of credit
must have an expiration date beyond the term of  the  subject
transaction.
    YY.  "Limited   liability   company"   means  a  business
organization, excluding partnerships  and  ordinary  business
corporations,  organized  or  operating under the laws of the
United States or any state thereof that limits  the  personal
liability  of  investors  to  the  equity  investment  of the
investor in the business entity.
    ZZ.  "Lower  grade  investment"  means  a  rated   credit
instrument  rated 4, 5, 6, P4, P5, P6, PSF4, PSF5, or PSF6 by
the SVO.
    AAA.  "Market value" means:
    (1)  As to  cash  and  letters  of  credit,  the  amounts
thereof; and
    (2)  As  to  a security as of any date, the price for the
security on that date obtained from  a  generally  recognized
source or the most recent quotation from such a source or, to
the  extent  no generally recognized source exists, the price
for the security as determined in good faith by the  insurer,
plus  accrued  but  unpaid  income  thereon to the extent not
included in the price as of that date.
    BBB.  "Medium grade  investment"  means  a  rated  credit
instrument rated 3, P3, or PSF 3 by the SVO.
    CCC.  "Money market mutual fund" means a mutual fund that
meets  the  conditions of 17 Code of Federal Regulations Par.
270.2a-7, under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C.
80a-1 et seq.), as amended or renumbered.
    DDD.  "Mortgage loan" means an obligation  secured  by  a
mortgage,  deed of trust, trust deed or other consensual lien
on real estate.
    EEE.  "Multilateral   development    bank"    means    an
international  development  organization  of which the United
States is a member.
    FFF.  "Mutual fund" means an investment  company  or,  in
the  case  of  an  investment  company that is organized as a
series company, an investment company series, that, in either
case, is registered with the  United  States  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission under the Investment Company Act of 1940
(15 U.S.C. 80a-1 et seq.), as amended.
    GGG.  "NAIC" means the National Association of  Insurance
Commissioners.
    HHH.  "Obligation"  means  a bond, note, debenture, trust
certificate  including  an   equipment   trust   certificate,
production  payment,  negotiable bank certificate of deposit,
bankers' acceptance, credit  tenant  loan,  loan  secured  by
financing  net  leases and other evidence of indebtedness for
the payment of  money  (or  participations,  certificates  or
other  evidences  of  an  interest  in any of the foregoing),
whether constituting a general obligation of  the  issuer  or
payable only out of certain revenues or certain funds pledged
or otherwise dedicated for payment.
    III.  "Option"  means  an  agreement giving the buyer the
right to buy or receive (a "call option"), sell or deliver (a
"put option"), enter into, extend or terminate  or  effect  a
cash settlement based on the actual or expected price, level,
performance  or value of one or more underlying interests and
includes an insurance futures option.
    JJJ.  "Person" means an individual, a business entity,  a
multilateral  development  bank  or  a  government  or  quasi
governmental  body,  such  as  a  political  subdivision or a
government sponsored enterprise.
    KKK.  "Potential exposure" means the amount determined in
accordance with the NAIC Annual Statement Instructions.
    LLL.  "Preferred stock" means  preferred,  preference  or
guaranteed stock of a business entity authorized to issue the
stock,  that  has a preference in liquidation over the common
stock of the business entity.
    MMM.  "Qualified bank" means:
    (1)  A national bank, state bank or trust company that at
all  times  is  no  less  than  adequately   capitalized   as
determined  by  standards  adopted  by  United States banking
regulators and that either is regulated by state banking laws
or is a member of the Federal Reserve System; or
    (2)  A bank or trust company  incorporated  or  organized
under the laws of a country other than the United States that
is  regulated  as  a  bank or trust company by that country's
government or an agency thereof and that at all times  is  no
less   than  adequately  capitalized  as  determined  by  the
standards adopted by international banking authorities.
    NNN.  "Qualified business entity" means a business entity
that is:
    (1)  An issuer of obligations or preferred stock that are
rated 1 or  2  by  the  SVO  or  an  issuer  of  obligations,
preferred  stock or derivative instruments that are rated the
equivalent of 1 or 2 by the SVO or by a nationally recognized
statistical rating organization recognized by the SVO; or
    (2)  A  primary  dealer  in  United   States   government
securities,  recognized  by  the  Federal Reserve Bank of New
York.
    OOO.  "Qualified  clearinghouse"  means  a  clearinghouse
for, and subject to the rules of, a qualified exchange  or  a
qualified foreign exchange, which provides clearing services,
including  acting as a counterparty to each of the parties to
a transaction such that the parties  no  longer  have  credit
risk as to each other.
    PPP.  "Qualified exchange" means:
    (1)  A  securities  exchange  registered  as  a  national
securities  exchange,  or a securities market regulated under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C.  78 et  seq.),
as amended;
    (2)  A  board of trade or commodities exchange designated
as  a  contract  market  by  the  Commodity  Futures  Trading
Commission or any successor thereof;
    (3)  Private  Offerings,  Resales  and  Trading   through
Automated Linkages (PORTAL);
    (4)  A  designated  offshore securities market as defined
in Securities Exchange Commission  Regulation  S,  17  C.F.R.
Part 230, as amended; or
    (5)  A qualified foreign exchange.
    QQQ.  "Qualified   foreign   exchange"  means  a  foreign
exchange, board of trade or contract market  located  outside
the United States, its territories or possessions:
    (1)  That  has  received  regulatory comparability relief
under Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) Rule  30.10
(as  set  forth  in  Appendix  C  to  Part  30  of the CFTC's
Regulations, 17 C.F.R. Part 30);
    (2)  That  is,  or  its  members  are,  subject  to   the
jurisdiction of a foreign futures authority that has received
regulatory comparability relief under CFTC Rule 30.10 (as set
forth  in Appendix C to Part 30 of the CFTC's Regulations, 17
C.F.R.  Part  30)  as  to   futures   transactions   in   the
jurisdiction  where  the exchange, board of trade or contract
market is located; or
    (3)  Upon which foreign stock index futures contracts are
listed that are the subject of no-action relief issued by the
CFTC's Office of General Counsel, provided that an  exchange,
board  of  trade  or  contract  market  that  qualifies  as a
"qualified foreign exchange" only under this subsection shall
only be a "qualified foreign exchange" as  to  foreign  stock
index  futures  contracts  that  are the subject of no-action
relief.
    RRR.  (1)  "Rated credit instrument" means an  obligation
or  other  instrument  which  gives  its holder a contractual
right to receive cash or another rated credit instrument from
another entity, if the instrument:
    (a)  Is rated or required to be rated by the SVO;
    (b)  In the case of an instrument with a maturity of  397
days  or less, is issued, guaranteed, or insured by an entity
that is rated by, or another instrument  of  such  entity  is
rated  by,  the SVO or by a nationally recognized statistical
rating organization recognized by the SVO;
    (c)  In the case of an instrument with a maturity  of  90
days  or  less,  the  instrument  has  been  issued, assumed,
accepted, guaranteed, or insured by a qualified bank;
    (d)  Is a share of a class one bond mutual fund; or
    (e)  Is a share of a money market mutual fund.
    (2)  However, "rated credit instrument" does not mean:
    (a)  An instrument that is mandatorily, or at the  option
of the issuer, convertible to an equity interest; or
    (b)  A  security  that  has  a  par value and whose terms
provide that the issuer's net obligation to repay all or part
of the security's par value is determined by reference to the
performance of an equity, a commodity, a foreign currency  or
an  index  of  equities,  commodities,  foreign currencies or
combinations thereof.
    SSS.  "Real estate" means:
    (1)  (a)  Real property;
    (b)  Interests in  real  property,  such  as  leaseholds,
minerals  and  oil  and gas that have not been separated from
the underlying fee interest;
    (c)  Improvements and fixtures  located  on  or  in  real
property; and
    (d)  The  seller's  equity  in a contract providing for a
deed of real estate.
    (2)  As to a mortgage on a leasehold estate, real  estate
shall  include  the  leasehold  estate  only  if  it  has  an
unexpired  term (including renewal options exercisable at the
option of the lessee) extending beyond the scheduled maturity
date of the obligation that is secured by a mortgage  on  the
leasehold  estate  by  a  period equal to at least 20% of the
original term of the obligation or  10  years,  whichever  is
greater.
    TTT.  "Replication   transaction"   means   a  derivative
transaction that is intended to replicate the performance  of
one  or  more assets that an insurer is authorized to acquire
under this Article. A derivative transaction that is  entered
into  as  a  hedging  transaction  shall  not be considered a
replication transaction.
    UUU.  "Repurchase transaction"  means  a  transaction  in
which  an insurer purchases securities from a business entity
that is obligated to repurchase the purchased  securities  or
equivalent  securities from the insurer at a specified price,
either within a specified period of time or upon demand.
    VVV.  "Required  liabilities"  means  total   liabilities
required  to be reported on the statutory financial statement
of the insurer most recently required to be  filed  with  the
Director.
    WWW.  "Residential  mortgage loan" means a loan primarily
secured by a mortgage on real estate improved with a  one  to
four family residence.
    XXX.  "Reverse    repurchase    transaction"    means   a
transaction  in  which  an  insurer  sells  securities  to  a
business entity and  is  obligated  to  repurchase  the  sold
securities  or equivalent securities from the business entity
at a specified price, either within  a  specified  period  of
time or upon demand.
    YYY.  "Secured location" means the contiguous real estate
owned by one person.
    ZZZ.  "Securities    lending    transaction"    means   a
transaction in which securities are loaned by an insurer to a
business entity  that  is  obligated  to  return  the  loaned
securities  or  equivalent  securities to the insurer, either
within a specified period of time or upon demand.
    AAAA.  "Series company" means an investment company  that
is organized as a series company, as defined in Rule 18f-2(a)
adopted  under  the Investment Company Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C.
80a-1 et seq.), as amended.
    BBBB.  "Sinking fund stock" means preferred stock that:
    (1)  Is subject to a mandatory sinking  fund  or  similar
arrangement  that  will  provide  for the redemption (or open
market purchase) of the entire issue over a period not longer
than 40 years from the date of acquisition; and
    (2)  Provides for mandatory sinking fund installments (or
open market purchases) commencing not more  than  10.5  years
from  the  date  of issue, with the sinking fund installments
providing for the purchase or  redemption,  on  a  cumulative
basis commencing 10 years from the date of issue, of at least
2.5%  per year of the original number of shares of that issue
of preferred stock.
    CCCC.  "Special rated credit instrument"  means  a  rated
credit instrument that is:
    (1)  An  instrument  that is structured so that, if it is
held until retired by or on behalf of the issuer, its rate of
return, based on its purchase cost and any cash  flow  stream
possible  under  the structure of the transaction, may become
negative due to reasons other than the credit risk associated
with the issuer of the instrument; however,  a  rated  credit
instrument  shall  not  be  a special rated credit instrument
under this subsection if it is:
    (a)  A share in a class one bond mutual fund;
    (b)  An instrument, other than an asset-backed  security,
with  payments of par value fixed as to amount and timing, or
callable but in any event payable only at par or greater, and
interest or dividend cash flows that are based  on  either  a
fixed or variable rate determined by reference to a specified
rate or index;
    (c)  An  instrument, other than an asset-backed security,
that has a par value and is purchased at a price  no  greater
than 110% of par;
    (d)  An  instrument,  including an asset-backed security,
whose rate of return would become negative only as  a  result
of  a  prepayment  due  to casualty, condemnation or economic
obsolescence of collateral or change of law;
    (e)  An asset-backed security that relies  on  collateral
that  meets  the  requirements  of  subparagraph  (b) of this
paragraph, the par value of which collateral:
    (i)  Is not permitted to be paid sooner than one half  of
the remaining term to maturity from the date of acquisition;
    (ii)  Is permitted to be paid prior to maturity only at a
premium  sufficient  to  provide  a yield to maturity for the
investment, considering the amount prepaid  and  reinvestment
rates  at  the time of early repayment, at least equal to the
yield to maturity of the initial investment; or
    (iii)  Is permitted to be paid prior  to  maturity  at  a
premium  at  least  equal to the yield of a treasury issue of
comparable remaining life; or
    (f)  An asset-backed security that relies on  cash  flows
from  assets  that are not prepayable at any time at par, but
is  not  otherwise  governed  by  subparagraph  (e)  of  this
paragraph, if the  asset-backed  security  has  a  par  value
reflecting  principal  payments  to be received if held until
retired by or on behalf of the issuer and is purchased  at  a
price no greater than 105% of such par amount.
    (2)  An asset-backed security that:
    (a)  Relies on cash flows from assets that are prepayable
at par at any time;
    (b)  Does  not  make payments of par that are fixed as to
amount and timing; and
    (c)  Has a  negative  rate  of  return  at  the  time  of
acquisition if a prepayment threshold assumption is used with
such prepayment threshold assumption defined as either:
    (i)  Two (2) times the prepayment expectation reported by
a  recognized,  publicly available source as being the median
of  expectations  contributed  by  broker  dealers  or  other
entities, except insurers, engaged in the business of selling
or evaluating  such  securities  or  assets.  The  prepayment
expectation  used  in  this  calculation  shall  be,  at  the
insurer's    election,   the   prepayment   expectation   for
pass-through securities  of  the  Federal  National  Mortgage
Association,  the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, the
Government National Mortgage Association, or for other assets
of the same type as  the  assets  that  underlie  the  asset-
backed security, in either case with a gross weighted average
coupon comparable to the gross weighted average coupon of the
assets that underlie the asset-backed security; or
    (ii)  Another  prepayment  threshold assumption specified
by the Director by rule promulgated under Section 126.8.
    (3)  For purposes of subparagraph 2 of  this  subsection,
if the asset-backed security is purchased in combination with
one  or more other asset-backed securities that are supported
by identical underlying collateral, the insurer may calculate
the rate of return for these specific  combined  asset-backed
securities   in   combination.   The  insurer  must  maintain
documentation  demonstrating  that   such   securities   were
acquired and are continuing to be held in combination.
    DDDD.  "State"  means a state, territory or possession of
the United States of America, the District of Columbia or the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
    EEEE.  "Substantially    similar    securities"     means
securities  that  meet all criteria for substantially similar
specified in the NAIC  Accounting  Practices  and  Procedures
Manual,  as  amended,  and in an amount that constitutes good
delivery form as determined from time to time by the PSA  The
Bond Market Trade Association.
    FFFF.  "Subsidiary" means, as to any person, an affiliate
controlled by such person, directly or indirectly through one
or more intermediaries.
    GGGG.  "SVO" means the Securities Valuation Office of the
NAIC or any successor office established by the NAIC.
    HHHH.  "Swap"  means  an  agreement to exchange or to net
payments at one or more times based on the actual or expected
price, level, performance or value of one or more  underlying
interests.
    IIII.  "Underlying    interest"    means    the   assets,
liabilities,  other  interests  or  a   combination   thereof
underlying  a  derivative instrument, such as any one or more
securities,  currencies,  rates,  indices,   commodities   or
derivative instruments.
    JJJJ.  "Unrestricted  surplus"  means the amount by which
total admitted assets exceed 125% of the  insurer's  required
liabilities.
    KKKK.  "Warrant"  means  an  instrument  that  gives  the
holder   the   right  to  purchase  an  underlying  financial
instrument at a given price and time or at a series of prices
and times outlined in the warrant agreement. Warrants may  be
issued  alone  or  in  connection  with  the  sale  of  other
securities,   for   example,   as   part   of   a  merger  or
recapitalization agreement, or to facilitate  divestiture  of
the securities of another business entity.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.3 new)
    Sec. 126.3.  General investment qualifications.
    A.  Insurers  may  acquire, hold or invest in investments
or engage in  investment  practices  as  set  forth  in  this
Article.   Insurers  may  also  acquire,  hold  or  invest in
investments  not  conforming  to  the  requirements  of  this
Article that are  not  otherwise  prohibited  by  this  Code.
Investments  not  conforming  to  this  Article  shall not be
admitted  assets  unless  they  are  acquired   under   other
authority of this Code.
    B.  Subject  to  subsection C of this Section, an insurer
shall not acquire or hold an investment as an admitted  asset
unless at the time of acquisition it is:
    (1)  Eligible  for  the payment or accrual of interest or
discount (whether  in  cash  or  other  forms  of  income  or
securities),   eligible   to   receive   dividends  or  other
distributions or is otherwise income producing; or
    (2)  Acquired under  Section  126.15B,  126.15C,  126.16,
126.18,  126.20,  126.28C, 126.29, 126.31, or 126.32 or under
the authority  of  Sections  of  the  Code  other  than  this
Article.
    C.  An  insurer  may  acquire  or hold as admitted assets
investments that do not otherwise qualify as provided in this
Article if the insurer has not acquired them for the  purpose
of  circumventing  any limitations contained in this Article,
if the insurer acquires  the  investments  in  the  following
circumstances and the insurer complies with the provisions of
Sections 126.5 and 126.7 as to the investments:
    (1)  As payment on account of existing indebtedness or in
connection  with the refinancing, restructuring or workout of
existing indebtedness, if  taken  to  protect  the  insurer's
interest in that investment;
    (2)  As realization on collateral for indebtedness;
    (3)  In connection with an otherwise qualified investment
or investment practice, as interest on or a dividend or other
distribution related to the investment or investment practice
or  in  connection with the refinancing of the investment, in
each case for no additional or only nominal consideration;
    (4)  Under  a  lawful  and   bona   fide   agreement   of
recapitalization  or  voluntary or involuntary reorganization
in connection with an investment held by the insurer; or
    (5)  Under a bulk reinsurance,  merger  or  consolidation
transaction approved by the Director if the assets constitute
admissible investments for the ceding, merged or consolidated
companies.
    D.  An investment or portion of an investment acquired by
an  insurer under subsection C of this Section shall become a
nonadmitted asset 3 years (or 5 years in the case of mortgage
loans and real estate) from  the  date  of  its  acquisition,
unless  within  that  period  the  investment  has  become  a
qualified  investment  under  a Section of this Article other
than subsection C of this Section, but an investment acquired
under  an  agreement   of   bulk   reinsurance,   merger   or
consolidation  may  be  qualified  for  a longer period if so
provided in the plan for reinsurance, merger or consolidation
as approved by the Director. Upon application by the  insurer
and  a  showing  that the nonadmission of an asset held under
subsection C of this Section would injure  the  interests  of
the   insurer,   the  Director  may  extend  the  period  for
admissibility for an additional reasonable period of time.
    E.  Except as provided in subsections F  and  H  of  this
Section,  an  investment shall qualify under this Article if,
on the date the insurer committed to acquire  the  investment
or  on  the  date of its acquisition, it would have qualified
under  this  Article.  For  the   purposes   of   determining
limitations  contained in this Article, an insurer shall give
appropriate  recognition  to  any  commitments   to   acquire
investments.
    F.  (1)  An  investment  held  as an admitted asset by an
insurer on the effective date of this amendatory Act of  1997
which   qualified  immediately prior to  the  effective  date
of this amendatory Act of 1997 shall remain qualified  as  an
admitted asset under this Article.
    (2)  Each specific transaction constituting an investment
practice  of  the  type described in this Article immediately
prior to the effective date of this amendatory  Act  of  1997
that  was  lawfully  entered  into  by  an insurer and was in
effect on the effective date of this amendatory Act  of  1997
shall  continue  to be permitted under this Article until its
expiration or termination under its terms.
    G.  Unless otherwise specified, an investment  limitation
computed  on  the  basis  of  an insurer's admitted assets or
capital and surplus shall relate to the amount required to be
shown on the statutory balance  sheet  of  the  insurer  most
recently  required  to be filed (annual or last quarter) with
the Director. Solely for purposes of computing any limitation
under this Article based upon admitted  assets,  the  insurer
shall  deduct  from  the  amount  of  its admitted assets the
amount of the liability recorded on  such  statutory  balance
sheet for:
    (1)  The  return  of  acceptable collateral received in a
reverse  repurchase  transaction  or  a  securities   lending
transaction;
    (2)  Cash received in a dollar roll transaction; and
    (3)  The  amount  reported  as  borrowed  money  in  such
statutory  balance  sheet  to  the  extent  not  included  in
paragraphs (1) and (2) of this subsection.
    H.  An  investment  qualified,  in  whole or in part, for
acquisition or holding as an admitted asset may be  qualified
or requalified at the time of acquisition or a later date, in
whole  or  in  part, under any other Section, if the relevant
conditions contained in the other Section  are  satisfied  at
the time of qualification or requalification.
    I.  An insurer shall maintain documentation demonstrating
that  investments  were  acquired  in  accordance  with  this
Article,  and  specifying  the  Section of this Article under
which they were acquired.
    J.  An insurer shall  not  enter  into  an  agreement  to
purchase  securities  in advance of their issuance for resale
to the public as part of a distribution of the securities  by
the  issuer  or  otherwise guarantee the distribution, except
that an insurer may acquire privately placed securities  with
registration rights.
    K.  Notwithstanding  the  provisions of this Article, the
Director, for good cause, may order an insurer  to  nonadmit,
limit, dispose of, withdraw from or discontinue an investment
or  investment  practice in accordance with Article XXIV. The
authority  of  the  Director  under  this  subsection  is  in
addition to any other authority of the Director.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.4 new)
    Sec. 126.4.  Authorization of investments by the board of
directors.
    A.  Within 3 months after  the  effective  date  of  this
amendatory Act of 1997, an insurer's board of directors shall
adopt  a  written  plan for acquiring and holding investments
and for  engaging  in  investment  practices  that  specifies
guidelines as to the quality, maturity and diversification of
investments  and  other  specifications  including investment
strategies  intended  to  assure  that  the  investments  and
investment  practices  are  appropriate  for   the   business
conducted by the insurer, its liquidity needs and its capital
and  surplus. The board shall review and assess the insurer's
technical  investment  and  administrative  capabilities  and
expertise  before  adopting  a  written  plan  concerning  an
investment strategy or investment practice.
    B.  Investments acquired  and  held  under  this  Article
shall   be  acquired  and  held  under  the  supervision  and
direction of the board of directors of the insurer. The board
of directors shall evidence by formal  resolution,  at  least
annually, that it has determined whether all investments have
been   made   in   accordance  with  delegations,  standards,
limitations and investment objectives prescribed by the board
or a committee of the board charged with  the  responsibility
to direct its investments.
    C.  On  no less than a quarterly basis, and more often if
deemed  appropriate,  an  insurer's  board  of  directors  or
committee of the board of directors shall:
    (1)  Receive and review a summary report on the insurer's
investment   portfolio,   its   investment   activities   and
investment practices engaged in under delegated authority, in
order to determine whether the  investment  activity  of  the
insurer is consistent with its written plan; and
    (2)  Review and revise, as appropriate, the written plan.
    D.  In  discharging  its  duties  under this Section, the
board  of  directors  shall  require  that  records  of   any
authorizations or approvals, other documentation as the board
may  require  and reports of any action taken under authority
delegated under the plan referred to in subsection A of  this
Section  shall  be  made  available on a regular basis to the
board of directors.
    E.  In discharging their duties under this  Section,  the
directors  of  an  insurer shall perform their duties in good
faith and with that degree of care  that  ordinarily  prudent
individuals   in  like  positions  would  use  under  similar
circumstances.
    F.  If an insurer does not have a board of directors, all
references to the board of directors in this Article shall be
deemed to be references to the governing body of the  insurer
having authority equivalent to that of a board of directors.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.5 new)
    Sec.  126.5.  Prohibited  investments.  An  insurer shall
not, directly or indirectly:
    A.  Invest  in  an  obligation  or  security  or  make  a
guarantee for the benefit of or in favor  of  an  officer  or
director of the insurer, except as provided in Section 126.6;
    B.  Invest in an obligation or security, make a guarantee
for  the benefit of or in favor of, or make other investments
in a business entity of which  10%  or  more  of  the  voting
securities   or   equity  interests  are  owned  directly  or
indirectly by or for the benefit of one or more  officers  or
directors  of  the  insurer, except pursuant to a transaction
entered into in compliance with Section 131.20a of this  Code
or provided in Section 126.6;
    C.  Engage  on  its  own  behalf  or  through one or more
affiliates  in  a  transaction  or  series  of   transactions
designed to evade the prohibitions of this Article;
    D.  (1)  Invest  in  a  partnership as a general partner,
except that an insurer may make an investment  as  a  general
partner:
    (a)  If   all  other  partners  in  the  partnership  are
subsidiaries  of  the  insurer  or  other  insurance  company
affiliates of the insurer;
    (b)  For the purpose of:
    (i)  Meeting  cash  calls  committed  to  prior  to   the
effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997;
    (ii)  Completing those specific projects or activities of
the partnership in which the insurer was a general partner as
of the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997 that had
been undertaken as of that date; or
    (iii)  Making  capital  improvements to property owned by
the partnership on the effective date of this amendatory  Act
of 1997 if the insurer was a general partner as of that date;
or
    (c)  In accordance with Section 126.3C;
    (2)  This  subsection  shall not prohibit a subsidiary or
other affiliate  of  the  insurer  from  becoming  a  general
partner; or
    E.  Invest  in  or  lend  its  funds upon the security of
shares of its  own  stock,  except  as  authorized  by  other
provisions  of  this  Code.  However, no such shares shall be
admitted assets of the insurer.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.6 new)
    Sec. 126.6.  Loans to officers and directors.
    A.  (1)  Except as provided in Section 126.6B, an insurer
shall not directly or indirectly, unless it has notified  the
Director  in  writing  of  its  intention  to  enter into the
transaction at least 30 days prior thereto,  or  any  shorter
period  as  the Director may permit, and the Director has not
disapproved it within that period:
    (a)  Make a loan to or other investment in an officer  or
director  of  the insurer or a person in which the officer or
director has any direct or indirect financial interest;
    (b)  Make a guarantee for the benefit of or in  favor  of
an  officer  or  director of the insurer or a person in which
the officer or director has any direct or indirect  financial
interest; or
    (c)  Enter  into an agreement for the purchase or sale of
property from or to an officer or director of the insurer  or
a  person  in which the officer or director has any direct or
indirect financial interest.
    (2)  For purposes of this Section, an officer or director
shall not be deemed to have a financial interest by reason of
an interest that is held directly or indirectly  through  the
ownership  of  equity  interests representing less than 2% of
all outstanding equity interests issued by a person that is a
party to  the  transaction,  or  solely  by  reason  of  that
individual's  position  as  a director or officer of a person
that is a party to the transaction.
    (3)  This subsection does not permit an  investment  that
is prohibited by Section 126.5.
    (4)  This  subsection  does  not  apply  to a transaction
between an insurer and any of its subsidiaries or  affiliates
that  is  entered  into in compliance with Section 131.20a of
this Code, other than a transaction between  an  insurer  and
its officer or director.
    B.  An  insurer  may  make,  without  the  prior  written
approval of the Director:
    (1)  Policy  loans  in  accordance  with the terms of the
policy or contract and Section 126.19;
    (2)  Advances  to  officers  or  directors  for  expenses
reasonably expected to be incurred in the ordinary course  of
the  insurer's  business or guarantees associated with credit
or charge cards issued or credit extended for the purpose  of
financing these expenses;
    (3)  Loans  secured  by  the  principal  residence  of an
existing or new officer of the  insurer  made  in  connection
with  the  officer's  relocation at the insurer's request, if
the loans comply with the requirements of Section  126.15  or
126.28 and the terms and conditions otherwise are the same as
those generally available from unaffiliated third parties;
    (4)  Secured  loans  to an existing or new officer of the
insurer made in connection with the officer's  relocation  at
the insurer's request, if the loans:
    (a)  Do not have a term exceeding 2 years;
    (b)  Are  required  to finance mortgage loans outstanding
at the same time on the  prior  and  new  residences  of  the
officer;
    (c)  Do  not  exceed an amount equal to the equity of the
officer in the prior residence; and
    (d)  Are required to be fully repaid upon the earlier  of
the  end  of  the  2  year  period  or  the sale of the prior
residence; and
    (5)  Loans and advances to officers or directors made  in
compliance  with state or federal law specifically related to
the  loans  and  advances  by   a   regulated   non-insurance
subsidiary or affiliate of the insurer in the ordinary course
of  business and on terms no more favorable than available to
other customers of the entity.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.7 new)
    Sec. 126.7.  Valuation of investments. For  the  purposes
of  this  Article,  the  value  or  amount  of  an investment
acquired or held, or an investment practice engaged in, under
this Article, unless otherwise specified in this Code,  shall
be the value at which assets of an insurer are required to be
reported  for  statutory accounting purposes as determined in
accordance with procedures prescribed in published accounting
and valuation standards of the NAIC, including  the  Purposes
and  Procedures  of  the  Securities  Valuation  Office,  the
Valuation  of Securities manual, the Accounting Practices and
Procedures manual, the Annual Statement Instructions  or  any
successor  valuation  procedures  officially  adopted  by the
NAIC.  The Director shall promulgate  rules  for  determining
and  calculating  values  to  be used in financial statements
submitted to the Department for investments  not  subject  to
published  National  Association  of  Insurance Commissioners
valuation standards.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.8 new)
    Sec. 126.8.  Rules. The Director may, in accordance  with
Section  401  of this Code, promulgate rules implementing the
provisions of this Article.

    (215 ILCS 5/Art. VIII, Part 2 heading new)
                 2. LIFE AND HEALTH INSURERS
    (215 ILCS 5/126.9 new)
    Sec. 126.9.  Applicability. This Part shall apply to  the
investments  and investment practices of companies authorized
to transact business under Class 1 of Section 4 of this  Code
and   other   companies   whose  investments  and  investment
practices are regulated as life  insurers  under  this  Code,
subject to the provisions of Section 126.1B.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.10 new)
    Sec.  126.10.  General  3%  diversification,  medium  and
lower grade investments, and Canadian investments.
    A.  General 3% diversification.
    (1)  Except  as  otherwise  specified in this Article, an
insurer shall not acquire, directly or indirectly through  an
investment  subsidiary,  an investment under this Article if,
as a result of and after giving effect to the investment, the
insurer would hold more than 3% of  its  admitted  assets  in
investments   of   all   kinds   issued,  assumed,  accepted,
guaranteed, or insured by a single person.
    (2)  This 3% limitation shall not apply to the  aggregate
amounts  insured  by a single financial guaranty insurer with
the highest generic rating issued by a nationally  recognized
statistical rating organization.
    (3)  Asset-backed  securities shall not be subject to the
limitations of paragraph (1)  of  this  subsection,  however,
except  as  permitted  by subsection A(4) of this Section, an
insurer shall not acquire an asset-backed security if,  as  a
result  of  and  after  giving  effect to the investment, the
aggregate amount of asset-backed  securities  secured  by  or
evidencing  an  interest  in a single asset or single pool of
assets held by a trust or other business entity, then held by
the insurer would exceed 3% of its admitted assets.
    (4)  A  company's   investments   in   mortgage   related
securities,  as  defined  by  the  Secondary  Mortgage Market
Enhancement Act of 1984 (United States Public Law 98-440) [12
U.S.C. 24, 1451, 1454 et seq.], that are backed by any single
pool of mortgages and made pursuant to the authority of  that
Act, shall not exceed 5% of its admitted assets.
    B.  Medium and lower grade investments.
    (1)  An insurer shall not acquire, directly or indirectly
through   an   investment  subsidiary,  an  investment  under
Sections 126.11, 126.14, and 126.17 or counterparty  exposure
under  Section  126.18D  if,  as a result of and after giving
effect to the investment:
    (a)  The aggregate  amount  of  medium  and  lower  grade
investments  then held by the insurer would exceed 20% of its
admitted assets;
    (b)  The aggregate amount of lower grade investments then
held by the insurer would exceed 10% of its admitted assets;
    (c)  The aggregate amount of investments rated 5 or 6  by
the  SVO  then  held  by  the  insurer would exceed 3% of its
admitted assets;
    (d)  The aggregate amount of investments rated 6  by  the
SVO  then held by the insurer would exceed 1% of its admitted
assets; or
    (e)  The aggregate amount of lower grade investments then
held by the insurer that receive as cash income less than the
equivalent yield  for  Treasury  issues  with  a  comparative
average life, would exceed 1% of its admitted assets.
    (2)  An insurer shall not acquire, directly or indirectly
through   an   investment  subsidiary,  an  investment  under
Sections 126.11, 126.14, and 126.17 or counterparty  exposure
under  Section  126.18D  if,  as a result of and after giving
effect to the investment:
    (a)  The aggregate  amount  of  medium  and  lower  grade
investments issued, assumed, accepted, guaranteed, or insured
by  any  one person or, as to asset-backed securities secured
by or evidencing an interest in a single  asset  or  pool  of
assets,  then  held  by  the  insurer  would exceed 1% of its
admitted assets; or
    (b)  The aggregate  amount  of  lower  grade  investments
issued,  assumed, accepted, guaranteed, or insured by any one
person or,  as  to  asset-backed  securities  secured  by  or
evidencing  an  interest in a single asset or pool of assets,
then held by the insurer would exceed 0.5%  of  its  admitted
assets.
    (3)  If  an  insurer  attains or exceeds the limit of any
one rating category  referred  to  in  this  subsection,  the
insurer   shall  not  thereby  be  precluded  from  acquiring
investments  in  other  rating  categories  subject  to   the
specific   and  multi-category  limits  applicable  to  those
investments.
    C.  Canadian investments.
    (1)  An insurer shall not acquire, directly or indirectly
through  an  investment  subsidiary,  a  Canadian  investment
authorized by this Article, if  as  a  result  of  and  after
giving  effect  to  the  investment,  the aggregate amount of
these investments then held by the insurer would  exceed  40%
of  its  admitted  assets,  or  if  the  aggregate  amount of
Canadian investments not acquired under Section 126.11B  then
held by the insurer would exceed 25% of its admitted assets.
    (2)  However,  as  to an insurer that is authorized to do
business in Canada or that has outstanding insurance, annuity
or reinsurance  contracts  on  lives  or  risks  resident  or
located  in  Canada and denominated in Canadian currency, the
limitations of paragraph (1)  of  this  subsection  shall  be
increased by the greater of:
    (a)  The  amount  the insurer is required by Canadian law
to  invest  in  Canada  or  to  be  denominated  in  Canadian
currency; or
    (b)  115%  of  the  amount  of  its  reserves  and  other
obligations under contracts on lives  or  risks  resident  or
located in Canada.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.11 new)
    Sec.  126.11.  Rated  credit  instruments. Subject to the
limitations of subsection F of this Section, an  insurer  may
acquire rated credit instruments:
    A.  Subject  to  the  limitations of Section 126.10B, but
not to the limitations of Section 126.10A, except for that of
subsection (4) of Section 126.10A,  an  insurer  may  acquire
rated  credit  instruments  issued,  assumed,  guaranteed, or
insured by:
    (1)  The United States; or
    (2)  A government  sponsored  enterprise  of  the  United
States,  if  the  instruments  of  the  government  sponsored
enterprise  are assumed, guaranteed, or insured by the United
States or are otherwise backed or supported by the full faith
and credit of the United States.
    B.  (1)  Subject to the limitations of  Section  126.10B,
but not to the limitations of Section 126.10A, an insurer may
acquire rated credit instruments issued, assumed, guaranteed,
or insured by:
    (a)  Canada; or
    (b)  A  government sponsored enterprise of Canada, if the
instruments  of  the  government  sponsored  enterprise   are
assumed,  guaranteed,  or  insured by Canada or are otherwise
backed or supported by the full faith and credit of Canada;
    (2)  However, an insurer shall not acquire an  instrument
under  this  subsection  if,  as a result of and after giving
effect to the investment, the aggregate amount of investments
then held by the insurer under this subsection  would  exceed
40% of its admitted assets.
    C.  (1)  Subject  to  the limitations of Section 126.10B,
but not to the limitations of Section 126.10A, an insurer may
acquire  rated  credit  instruments,  excluding  asset-backed
securities:
    (a)  Issued by a government money market mutual  fund,  a
class one money market mutual fund or a class one bond mutual
fund;
    (b)  Issued,   assumed,   guaranteed,  or  insured  by  a
government sponsored enterprise of the  United  States  other
than those eligible under subsection A of this Section;
    (c)  Issued,  assumed, guaranteed, or insured by a state,
if the instruments are general obligations of the state; or
    (d)  Issued by a multilateral development bank;
    (2)  However, an insurer shall not acquire an  instrument
of  any  one  fund,  any  one enterprise or entity or any one
state under this subsection if, as  a  result  of  and  after
giving  effect  to  the  investment,  the aggregate amount of
investments then  held  by  the  insurer  in  any  one  fund,
enterprise,  entity,  or  state  under  this subsection would
exceed 10% of its admitted assets.
    D.  Subject to the  limitations  of  Section  126.10,  an
insurer  may  acquire  preferred  stocks that are not foreign
investments and that meet the requirements  of  rated  credit
instruments if, as a result of and after giving effect to the
investment:
    (1)  The  aggregate  amount of preferred stocks then held
by the insurer under this subsection does not exceed  33 1/3%
of its admitted assets; and
    (2)  The  aggregate  amount of preferred stocks then held
by the insurer under this subsection which  are  not  sinking
fund  stocks or rated P1 or P2 by the SVO does not exceed 15%
of its admitted assets.
    E.  Subject to the  limitations  of  Section  126.10,  in
addition  to  those investments eligible under subsections A,
B, C and D of this Section,  an  insurer  may  acquire  rated
credit instruments that are not foreign investments.
    F.  An  insurer  shall  not  acquire special rated credit
instruments under this Section if, as a result of  and  after
giving  effect  to  the  investment,  the aggregate amount of
special rated credit instruments then  held  by  the  insurer
would exceed 5% of its admitted assets.  The Director may, by
rule,  identify certain special rated credit instruments that
will  be  exempt  from  the  limitation   imposed   by   this
subsection.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.12 new)
    Sec. 126.12.  Insurer investment pools.
    A.  An  insurer  may  acquire  investments  in investment
pools that:
    (1)  Invest only in:
    (a)  Obligations that are rated 1 or 2 by the SVO or have
an equivalent of an SVO 1 or 2 rating (or, in the absence  of
a  1  or  2  rating  or  equivalent  rating,  the  issuer has
outstanding obligations with an SVO  1  or  2  or  equivalent
rating)   by   a  nationally  recognized  statistical  rating
organization recognized by the SVO and have:
    (i)  A remaining maturity of 397 days or less  or  a  put
that  entitles  the holder to receive the principal amount of
the obligation which put may be exercised through maturity at
specified intervals not exceeding 397 days; or
    (ii)  A remaining maturity of  3  years  or  less  and  a
floating  interest  rate  that resets no less frequently than
quarterly on the basis of a current short-term index (federal
funds, prime rate, treasury bills, London  InterBank  Offered
Rate  (LIBOR)  or  commercial  paper)  and  is  subject to no
maximum limit, if the obligations do  not  have  an  interest
rate that varies inversely to market interest rate changes;
    (b)  Government  money  market  mutual funds or class one
money market mutual funds; or
    (c)  Securities   lending,   repurchase,   and    reverse
repurchase  transactions  that  meet  all the requirements of
Section  126.16,  except  the  quantitative  limitations   of
Section 126.16D; or
    (2)  Invest  only  in  investments  which  an insurer may
acquire under this Article, if  the  insurer's  proportionate
interest  in  the  amount  invested in these investments when
combined with amount of such  investments  made  directly  or
indirectly  through an investment subsidiary or other insurer
investment pool permitted under this subsection A(2) does not
exceed  the  applicable  limits  of  this  Article  for  such
investments.
    B.  For  an  investment  in  an  investment  pool  to  be
qualified under this Article, the investment pool shall not:
    (1)  Acquire securities issued,  assumed,  guaranteed  or
insured by the insurer or an affiliate of the insurer;
    (2)  Borrow or incur any indebtedness for borrowed money,
except   for   securities   lending  and  reverse  repurchase
transactions that meet the  requirements  of  Section  126.16
except the quantitative limitations of Section 126.16D; or
    (3)  Acquire  an  investment  if,  as  a  result  of such
transaction, the aggregate value of securities then loaned or
sold to, purchased from  or  invested  in  any  one  business
entity  under  this  Section  would  exceed  10% of the total
assets of the investment pool.
    C.  The limitations of Section 126.10A shall not apply to
an insurer's investment in an  investment  pool,  however  an
insurer shall not acquire an investment in an investment pool
under this Section if, as a result of and after giving effect
to  the  investment, the aggregate amount of investments then
held by the insurer under this Section:
    (1)  In all investment  pools  investing  in  investments
permitted  under subsection A(2) of this Section would exceed
25% of its admitted assets; or
    (2)  In all investment pools  would  exceed  35%  of  its
admitted assets.
    D.  For  an  investment  in  an  investment  pool  to  be
qualified  under  this Article, the manager of the investment
pool shall:
    (1)  Be organized under the laws of the United States  or
a  state  and  designated  as  the  pool manager in a pooling
agreement;
    (2)  Be the insurer, an affiliated insurer or a  business
entity  affiliated  with  the  insurer,  a  qualified bank, a
business entity registered under the Investment Advisors  Act
of  1940  (15  U.S.C.   80a-1 et seq.), as amended or, in the
case of a reciprocal insurer or interinsurance exchange,  its
attorney-in-fact, or in the case of a United States branch of
an  alien  insurer, its United States manager or an affiliate
or subsidiary of its United States manager;
    (3)  Be responsible for the compilation  and  maintenance
of detailed accounting records setting forth:
    (a)  The  cash receipts and disbursements reflecting each
participant's  proportionate  investment  in  the  investment
pool;
    (b)  A complete description of all underlying  assets  of
the   investment   pool  (including  amount,  interest  rate,
maturity date (if any) and other  appropriate  designations);
and
    (c)  Other  records  which, on a daily basis, allow third
parties  to  verify  each  participant's  investment  in  the
investment pool; and
    (4)  Maintain the assets of the investment pool in one or
more accounts, in the name of or on behalf of the  investment
pool,  under  a  custody agreement with a qualified bank. The
custody agreement shall:
    (a)  State and recognize the claims and  rights  of  each
participant;
    (b)  Acknowledge   that  the  underlying  assets  of  the
investment pool are held  solely  for  the  benefit  of  each
participant  in  proportion  to  the  aggregate amount of its
investments in the investment pool; and
    (c)  Contain an agreement that the underlying  assets  of
the  investment pool shall not be commingled with the general
assets of the custodian qualified bank or any other person.
    E.  The pooling agreement for each investment pool  shall
be in writing and shall provide that:
    (1)  An  insurer  and  its affiliated insurers or, in the
case of an investment pool investing  solely  in  investments
permitted  under subsection A(1) of this Section, the insurer
and its subsidiaries, affiliates or  any  pension  or  profit
sharing  plan of the insurer, its subsidiaries and affiliates
or, in the case  of  a  United  States  branch  of  an  alien
insurer,  affiliates  or  subsidiaries  of  its United States
manager, shall, at all times, hold 100% of the  interests  in
the investment pool;
    (2)  The  underlying  assets of the investment pool shall
not be commingled with the general assets of the pool manager
or any other person;
    (3)  In proportion to the aggregate amount of  each  pool
participant's interest in the investment pool:
    (a)  Each  participant  owns an undivided interest in the
underlying assets of the investment pool; and
    (b)  The underlying assets of  the  investment  pool  are
held solely for the benefit of each participant;
    (4)  A  participant, or in the event of the participant's
insolvency, bankruptcy or receivership, its trustee, receiver
or other  successor-in-interest,  may  withdraw  all  or  any
portion  of its investment from the investment pool under the
terms of the pooling agreement;
    (5)  Withdrawals may be made on demand without penalty or
other assessment on any business day, but settlement of funds
shall  occur  within  a  reasonable  and   customary   period
thereafter  not  to  exceed  10  business days. Distributions
under this paragraph shall be calculated in each case net  of
all then applicable fees and expenses of the investment pool.
The  pooling  agreement  shall  provide that the pool manager
shall distribute to a participant, at the discretion  of  the
pool manager:
    (a)  In   cash,   the  then  fair  market  value  of  the
participant's pro rata share of each underlying asset of  the
investment pool;
    (b)  In  kind, a pro rata share of each underlying asset;
or
    (c)  In a combination of cash and in kind  distributions,
a pro rata share in each underlying asset; and
    (6)  The  pool  manager  shall  make  the  records of the
investment pool available for inspection by the Director.
    F.  Except for the  formation  of  the  investment  pool,
transactions and between a domestic insurer and an affiliated
insurer   investment   pool  shall  not  be  subject  to  the
requirements of Section 131.20a of this Code.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.13 new)
    Sec. 126.13.  Equity interests.
    A.  Subject to the  limitations  of  Section  126.10,  an
insurer   may  acquire  directly  or  indirectly  through  an
investment subsidiary, equity interests in business  entities
organized under the laws of any domestic jurisdiction.
    B.  An  insurer  shall not acquire directly or indirectly
through an investment subsidiary  an  investment  under  this
Section  if,  as  a  result of and after giving effect to the
investment, the aggregate amount of investments then held  by
the  insurer  under  this  Section  would  exceed  20% of its
admitted assets or, except for mutual funds,  the  amount  of
equity interests then held by the insurer that are not listed
on  a  qualified  exchange  would  exceed  5% of its admitted
assets. An accident and health insurer shall not  be  subject
to  this  Section  but shall be subject to the same aggregate
limitation on equity interests as  a  property  and  casualty
insurer  under  Section  126.26 and also to the provisions of
Section 126.22 of this Article.
    C.  An insurer shall not acquire under this  Section  any
investments  that  the  insurer  may  acquire  under  Section
126.15.
    D.  An  insurer  shall  not  short  sell equity interests
unless the insurer covers the short sale by owning the equity
interest or an unrestricted  right  to  the  equity  interest
exercisable within 6 months of the short sale.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.14 new)
    Sec. 126.14.  Tangible personal property under lease.
    A.  (1)  Subject to the limitations of Section 126.10, an
insurer  may  acquire  tangible  personal  property or equity
interests therein located or used wholly or in part within  a
domestic  jurisdiction  either directly or indirectly through
limited  partnership  interests   and   general   partnership
interests  not  otherwise prohibited by Section 126.5D, joint
ventures, stock of an  investment  subsidiary  or  membership
interests in a limited liability company, trust certificates,
or other similar instruments.
    (2)  Investments  acquired  under  paragraph  (1) of this
subsection shall be eligible only if:
    (a)  The  property  is  subject  to  a  lease  or   other
agreement with a person whose rated credit instruments in the
amount  of  the  purchase  price of the personal property the
insurer could then acquire under Section 126.11; and
    (b)  The lease or other agreement  provides  the  insurer
the right to receive rental, purchase or other fixed payments
for  the  use  or purchase of the property, and the aggregate
value of the payments, together with the  estimated  residual
value  of  the property at the end of its useful life and the
estimated  tax  benefits  to  the  insurer   resulting   from
ownership  of  the  property, shall be adequate to return the
cost of the insurer's investment  in  the  property,  plus  a
return deemed adequate by the insurer.
    B.  The   insurer   shall  compute  the  amount  of  each
investment under this Section on the  basis  of  the  out  of
pocket purchase price and applicable related expenses paid by
the insurer for the investment, net of each borrowing made to
finance  the  purchase  price and expenses, to the extent the
borrowing is without recourse to the insurer.
    C.  An insurer shall not acquire directly  or  indirectly
through  an  investment  subsidiary  an investment under this
Section if, as a result of and after  giving  effect  to  the
investment, the aggregate amount of all investments then held
by the insurer under this Section would exceed:
    (1)  2% of its admitted assets; or
    (2)  0.5% of its admitted assets as to any single item of
tangible personal property.
    D.  For  purposes  of  determining  compliance  with  the
limitations  of  Section  126.10,  investments acquired by an
insurer under this Section shall  be  aggregated  with  those
acquired  under  Section  126.11,  and  each  lessee  of  the
property  under  a lease referred to in this Section shall be
deemed the issuer of an  obligation  in  the  amount  of  the
investment  of  the  insurer  in  the  property determined as
provided in subsection B of this Section.
    E.  Nothing in this Section  is  applicable  to  tangible
personal  property  lease arrangements between an insurer and
its  subsidiaries  and  affiliates  under  a   cost   sharing
arrangement    or    agreement    permitted   under   Section
131.20a(1)(a)(iv).

    (215 ILCS 5/126.15 new)
    Sec. 126.15.  Mortgage loans and real estate.
    A.  Mortgage loans.
    (l)  Subject to the limitations  of  Section  126.10,  an
insurer  may  acquire,  either directly or indirectly through
limited  partnership  interests   and   general   partnership
interests  not  otherwise prohibited by Section 126.5D, joint
ventures, stock of an  investment  subsidiary  or  membership
interests in a limited liability company, trust certificates,
or   other   similar   instruments,  obligations  secured  by
mortgages  on  real  estate  situated   within   a   domestic
jurisdiction,  but  a mortgage loan which is secured by other
than a first lien shall not be acquired under this subsection
(1) unless the insurer is the holder of the first  lien.  The
obligations  held  by the insurer and any obligations with an
equal lien priority, shall not, at the time of acquisition of
the obligation, exceed:
    (a)  90% of the fair market value of the real estate,  if
the  mortgage loan is secured by a purchase money mortgage or
like security received by the insurer upon disposition of the
real estate;
    (b)  80% of the fair market value of the real estate,  if
the  mortgage  loan  requires  immediate scheduled payment in
periodic installments  of  principal  and  interest,  has  an
amortization period of 30 years or less and periodic payments
made  no less frequently than annually. Each periodic payment
shall  be  sufficient  to  assure  that  at  all  times   the
outstanding  principal  balance of the mortgage loan shall be
not greater than the outstanding principal balance that would
be outstanding under a mortgage loan with the  same  original
principal  balance, with the same interest rate and requiring
equal payments  of  principal  and  interest  with  the  same
frequency  over  the same amortization period. Mortgage loans
permitted under this subsection are permitted notwithstanding
the fact that they provide for a  payment  of  the  principal
balance prior to the end of the period of amortization of the
loan.  For residential mortgage loans, the 80% limitation may
be increased to 97% if acceptable private mortgage  insurance
has been obtained; or
    (c)  75%  of the fair market value of the real estate for
mortgage  loans  that  do  not  meet  the   requirements   of
subparagraph (a) or (b) of this paragraph.
    (2)  For  purposes  of  paragraph (1) of this subsection,
the amount of an obligation required to be  included  in  the
calculation  of the loan-to-value ratio may be reduced to the
extent the obligation  is  insured  by  the  Federal  Housing
Administration or guaranteed by the Administrator of Veterans
Affairs, or their successors.
    (3)  Subject  to  the  limitations  of Section 126.10, an
insurer may acquire, either directly  or  indirectly  through
limited   partnership   interests   and  general  partnership
interests not otherwise prohibited by Section  126.5D,  joint
ventures,  stock  of  an  investment subsidiary or membership
interests in a limited liability company, trust certificates,
or other similar instruments, obligations secured by a second
mortgage  on  real  estate   situated   within   a   domestic
jurisdiction,  other  than as authorized in subsection (1) of
this Section 126.15.  The  obligation  held  by  the  insurer
shall  be  the sole second lien priority obligation and shall
not, at the time of acquisition of the obligation, exceed 70%
of the amount by which the fair  market  value  of  the  real
estate   exceeds  the  amount  outstanding  under  the  first
mortgage.
    (4)  A mortgage loan that is held  by  an  insurer  under
Section   126.3F  or  acquired  under  this  Section  and  is
restructured in a manner that meets  the  requirements  of  a
restructured  mortgage  loan  in  accordance  with  the  NAIC
Accounting  Practices  and  Procedures  Manual  or  successor
publication  shall  continue  to  qualify  as a mortgage loan
under this Article.
    (5)  Subject to the limitations of Section 126.10, credit
lease transactions that do not qualify for  investment  under
Section  126.11  with  the following characteristics shall be
exempt  from  the  provisions  of  paragraph  (1)   of   this
subsection:
    (a)  The loan amortizes over the initial fixed lease term
at  least in an amount sufficient so that the loan balance at
the end of the  lease  term  does  not  exceed  the  original
appraised value of the real estate;
    (b)  The  lease  payments  cover or exceed the total debt
service over the life of the loan;
    (c)  A tenant  or  its  affiliated  entity,  whose  rated
credit  instruments  have  a  SVO  1  or  2  designation or a
comparable rating from a  nationally  recognized  statistical
rating  organization  recognized by the SVO, has a full faith
and credit obligation to make the lease payments;
    (d)  The insurer holds or is the beneficial holder  of  a
first lien mortgage on the real estate;
    (e)  The  expenses  of the real estate are passed through
to the tenant, excluding exterior,  structural,  parking  and
heating,   ventilation   and   air  conditioning  replacement
expenses, unless annual escrow contributions, from cash flows
derived from the lease payments, cover the expense shortfall;
and
    (f)  There is a perfected assignment  of  the  rents  due
pursuant to the lease to, or for the benefit of, the insurer.
    B.  Income producing real estate.
    (1)  An  insurer  may acquire, manage and dispose of real
estate situated in a domestic jurisdiction either directly or
indirectly through limited partnership interests and  general
partnership  interests  not  otherwise  prohibited by Section
126.5D, joint ventures, stock of an investment subsidiary  or
membership  interests  in  a limited liability company, trust
certificates, or other similar instruments. The  real  estate
shall  be  income  producing  or  intended for improvement or
development for investment purposes under an existing program
(in which case the real estate shall be deemed to  be  income
producing).
    (2)  The  real  estate may be subject to mortgages, liens
or other encumbrances, the amount  of  which  shall,  to  the
extent  that  the obligations secured by the mortgages, liens
or encumbrances are  without  recourse  to  the  insurer,  be
deducted  from the amount of the investment of the insurer in
the real estate for purposes of determining  compliance  with
subsections D(2) and D(3) of this Section.
    C.  Real estate for the accommodation of business.
    An  insurer  may  acquire,  manage,  and  dispose of real
estate for the  convenient  accommodation  of  the  insurer's
(which  may  include  its  affiliates)  business  operations,
including   home  office,  branch  office  and  field  office
operations.
    (1)   Real estate  acquired  under  this  subsection  may
include excess space for rent to others, if the excess space,
valued  at  its  fair  market  value,  would  otherwise  be a
permitted investment under subsection B of this  Section  and
is so qualified by the insurer;
    (2)  The  real  estate acquired under this subsection may
be  subject  to  one  or  more  mortgages,  liens  or   other
encumbrances,  the  amount of which shall, to the extent that
the  obligations  secured  by   the   mortgages,   liens   or
encumbrances are without recourse to the insurer, be deducted
from  the amount of the investment of the insurer in the real
estate for purposes of determining compliance with subsection
D(4) of this Section; and
    (3)  For purposes of this subsection, business operations
shall not include that portion of real estate  used  for  the
direct  provision  of health care services by an accident and
health insurer for its insureds. An insurer may acquire  real
estate  used  for  these  purposes under subsection B of this
Section.
    D.  Quantitative limitations.
    (1)  An insurer shall not  acquire  an  investment  under
subsection  A  of  this  Section if, as a result of and after
giving effect to the investment, the aggregate amount of  all
investments  then  held  by the insurer under subsection A of
this Section would exceed:
    (a)  1% of its admitted assets in mortgage loans covering
any one secured location;
    (b)  0.25% of its admitted assets in  construction  loans
covering any one secured location; or
    (c)  2%  of  its admitted assets in construction loans in
the aggregate.
    (2)  An insurer shall not  acquire  an  investment  under
subsection  B  of  this  Section if, as a result of and after
giving  effect  to  the  investment   and   any   outstanding
guarantees  made  by  the  insurer  in  connection  with  the
investment,  the aggregate amount of investments then held by
the insurer under subsection  B  of  this  Section  plus  the
guarantees then outstanding would exceed:
    (a)  1%  of its admitted assets in one parcel or group of
contiguous  parcels  of  real  estate,   except   that   this
limitation  shall  not  apply  to that portion of real estate
used for the direct provision of health care services  by  an
accident  and  health  insurer  for  its  insureds,  such  as
hospitals, medical clinics, medical professional buildings or
other  health  facilities  used  for the purpose of providing
health services; or
    (b)  15% of its admitted assets in the aggregate, but not
more than 5% of its admitted assets  in  real  estate  to  be
improved or developed.
    (3)  An  insurer  shall  not  acquire an investment under
subsections A or B of this Section if, as  a  result  of  and
after giving effect to the investment and any guarantees made
by  the  insurer  in  connection  with  the  investment,  the
aggregate  amount of all investments then held by the insurer
under subsections A and B of this Section plus the guarantees
then outstanding would exceed 45%  of  its  admitted  assets.
However,  an  insurer  may  exceed this limitation by no more
than 30% of its admitted assets if:
    (a)  This  increased   amount   is   invested   only   in
residential mortgage loans;
    (b)  The  insurer  has  no  more than 10% of its admitted
assets invested in  mortgage  loans  other  than  residential
mortgage loans;
    (c)  The loan-to-value ratio of each residential mortgage
loan  does  not  exceed  60% at the time the mortgage loan is
qualified under this increased authority, and the fair market
value is supported by an appraisal no more than 2 years  old,
prepared by an independent appraiser;
    (d)  A   single   mortgage   loan  qualified  under  this
increased authority shall not exceed  0.5%  of  its  admitted
assets;
    (e)  The  insurer  files  with the Director, and receives
approval from the Director for, a plan that  is  designed  to
result  in  a portfolio of residential mortgage loans that is
sufficiently geographically diversified; and
    (f)  The  insurer  agrees  to  file  annually  with   the
Director  records  that  demonstrate  that  its  portfolio of
residential mortgage loans is geographically  diversified  in
accordance with the plan.
    (4)  The limitations of Section 126.10 shall not apply to
an insurer's acquisition of real estate under subsection C of
this  Section. An insurer shall not acquire real estate under
subsection C of this Section if, as a  result  of  and  after
giving  effect  to  the  acquisition, the aggregate amount of
real estate then held by the insurer under  subsection  C  of
this  Section  would  exceed 10% of its admitted assets. With
the permission of the Director, additional  amounts  of  real
estate may be acquired under subsection C of this Section.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.16 new)
    Sec.  126.16.  Securities lending and repurchase, reverse
repurchase, and dollar  roll  transactions.  An  insurer  may
enter    into   securities   lending,   repurchase,   reverse
repurchase,  and  dollar  roll  transactions  with   business
entities, subject to the following requirements:
    A.  The  insurer's  board  of  directors  shall  adopt  a
written  plan that is consistent with the requirements of the
written plan in Section 126.4A that specifies guidelines  and
objectives to be followed, such as:
    (1)  A  description of how cash received will be invested
or used for general corporate purposes of the insurer;
    (2)  Operational procedures to manage interest rate risk,
counterparty  default  risk,  the  conditions   under   which
proceeds  from reverse repurchase transactions may be used in
the ordinary course of business and  the  use  of  acceptable
collateral  in  a manner that reflects the liquidity needs of
the transaction; and
    (3)  The extent to which the insurer may engage in  these
transactions.
    B.  The  insurer shall enter into a written agreement for
all transactions authorized in this Section other than dollar
roll transactions. The written agreement shall  require  that
each  transaction  terminate  no  more than one year from its
inception or upon the earlier  demand  of  the  insurer.  The
agreement shall be with the business entity counterparty, but
for  securities  lending  transactions,  the agreement may be
with an agent acting on behalf of the insurer, if  the  agent
is a qualified business entity, and if the agreement:
    (1)  Requires the agent to enter into separate agreements
with   each   counterparty   that  are  consistent  with  the
requirements of this Section; and
    (2)  Prohibits securities lending  transactions  pursuant
to the agreement with the agent or its affiliates.
    C.  Cash  received  in  a  transaction under this Section
shall be invested in accordance with this Article  and  in  a
manner that recognizes the liquidity needs of the transaction
or  used  by  the insurer for its general corporate purposes.
For so long  as  the  transaction  remains  outstanding,  the
insurer,  its  agent  or  custodian  shall  maintain,  as  to
acceptable  collateral  received  in a transaction under this
Section, either physically or through the book entry  systems
of   the   Federal   Reserve,   Depository   Trust   Company,
Participants  Trust  Company or other securities depositories
approved by the Director:
    (1)  Possession of the acceptable collateral;
    (2)  A perfected  security  interest  in  the  acceptable
collateral; or
    (3)  In  the case of a jurisdiction outside of the United
States, title to, or rights of a  secured  creditor  to,  the
acceptable collateral.
    D.  The  limitations  of Sections 126.10 and 126.17 shall
not  apply  to  the  business  entity  counterparty  exposure
created by transactions under this Section. For  purposes  of
calculations   made   to   determine   compliance  with  this
subsection, no effect will be given to the  insurer's  future
obligation  to resell securities, in the case of a repurchase
transaction, or to repurchase securities, in the  case  of  a
reverse  repurchase  transaction.  An insurer shall not enter
into a transaction under this Section if, as a result of  and
after giving effect to the transaction:
    (1)  The  aggregate  amount  of securities then loaned or
sold  to,  or  purchased  from,  any  one   business   entity
counterparty  under  this  Section  would  exceed  5%  of its
admitted  assets.  In  calculating  the  amount  sold  to  or
purchased  from  a   business   entity   counterparty   under
repurchase  or reverse repurchase transactions, effect may be
given to netting provisions under a master written agreement;
or
    (2)  The aggregate amount of all securities then  loaned,
sold  to  or  purchased from all business entities under this
Section would exceed 40% of its admitted assets.
    E.  In a  dollar  roll  transaction,  the  insurer  shall
receive  cash in an amount at least equal to the market value
of  the  securities  transferred  by  the  insurer   in   the
transaction as of the transaction date.
    F.  The  Director  may  promulgate  reasonable  rules for
investments and transactions under  this  Section  including,
but  not  limited  to,  rules which impose financial solvency
standards, valuation standards, and reporting requirements.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.17 new)
    Sec. 126.17.  Foreign investments  and  foreign  currency
exposure.
    A.  Subject  to  the  limitations  of  Section 126.10, an
insurer  may  acquire  directly  or  indirectly  through   an
investment  subsidiary,  foreign  investments,  or  engage in
investment  practices  with  persons   of   or   in   foreign
jurisdictions,  of substantially the same types as those that
an insurer is permitted to acquire under this Article,  other
than  of  the  type  permitted under Section 126.12, if, as a
result and after giving effect to the investment:
    (1)  The aggregate amount  of  foreign  investments  then
held by the insurer under this subsection does not exceed 20%
of its admitted assets; and
    (2)  The  aggregate  amount  of  foreign investments then
held by the insurer under this subsection in a single foreign
jurisdiction does not exceed 10% of its admitted assets as to
a foreign jurisdiction that has a sovereign  debt  rating  of
SVO  1  or  3% of its admitted assets as to any other foreign
jurisdiction.
    B.  Subject to the  limitations  of  Section  126.10,  an
insurer  may  acquire  investments,  or  engage in investment
practices denominated in foreign currencies, whether  or  not
they  are  foreign investments acquired under subsection A of
this Section, or additional foreign currency  exposure  as  a
result   of  the  termination  or  expiration  of  a  hedging
transaction with respect  to  investments  denominated  in  a
foreign  currency, if, as a result of and after giving effect
to the transaction:
    (1)  The aggregate amount of investments then held by the
insurer  under  this  subsection   denominated   in   foreign
currencies does not exceed 10% of its admitted assets; and
    (2)  The aggregate amount of investments then held by the
insurer  under  this  subsection  denominated  in the foreign
currency of a single foreign jurisdiction does not exceed 10%
of its admitted assets as to a foreign jurisdiction that  has
a sovereign debt rating of SVO 1 or 3% of its admitted assets
as to any other foreign jurisdiction.
    (3)  However,  an  investment  shall  not  be  considered
denominated  in  a  foreign currency if the acquiring insurer
enters into one or more contracts in  transactions  permitted
under   Section   126.18   in   which   the  business  entity
counterparty agrees to exchange, or grants to the insurer the
option to exchange, all payments made on the foreign currency
denominated investment (or amounts equivalent to the payments
that are or will be due to the insurer in accordance with the
terms of such investment) for United States  currency  during
the  period  the  contract  or  contracts  are  in  effect to
insulate the insurer against loss caused by diminution of the
value of payments owed to the insurer due to  future  changes
in currency exchange rates.
    C.  In    addition   to   investments   permitted   under
subsections A and B of  this  Section,  an  insurer  that  is
authorized to do business in a foreign jurisdiction, and that
has  outstanding  insurance, annuity or reinsurance contracts
on lives  or  risks  resident  or  located  in  that  foreign
jurisdiction  and  denominated  in  foreign  currency of that
jurisdiction, may acquire foreign investments respecting that
foreign jurisdiction, and may acquire investments denominated
in  the  currency  of  that  jurisdiction,  subject  to   the
limitations  of  Section  126.10.   However, investments made
under this subsection in obligations of foreign  governments,
their   political   subdivisions   and  government  sponsored
enterprises shall  not  be  subject  to  the  limitations  of
Section  126.10 if those investments carry an SVO rating of 1
or 2. The aggregate amount of  investments  acquired  by  the
insurer  under  this  subsection shall not exceed the greater
of:
    (1)  The amount the insurer is required by the law of the
foreign jurisdiction to invest in the  foreign  jurisdiction;
or
    (2)  115%   of   the  amount  of  its  reserves,  net  of
reinsurance, and other obligations  under  the  contracts  on
lives   or   risks   resident   or  located  in  the  foreign
jurisdiction.
    D.  In   addition   to   investments   permitted    under
subsections  A  and B of this Section, an insurer that is not
authorized to do business  in  a  foreign  jurisdiction,  but
which  has  outstanding  insurance,  annuity  or  reinsurance
contracts  on  lives  or  risks  resident  or located in that
foreign jurisdiction and denominated in foreign  currency  of
that jurisdiction, may acquire foreign investments respecting
that   foreign  jurisdiction,  and  may  acquire  investments
denominated in the currency of that jurisdiction  subject  to
the limitations of Section 126.10.  However, investments made
under  this subsection in obligations of foreign governments,
their  political  subdivisions   and   government   sponsored
enterprises  shall  not  be  subject  to  the  limitations of
Section 126.10 if those investments carry an SVO rating of  1
or  2.   The  aggregate amount of investments acquired by the
insurer under this subsection shall not exceed  105%  of  the
amount  of  its  reserves,  net  of  reinsurance,  and  other
obligations under the contracts on lives or risks resident or
located in the foreign jurisdiction.
    E.  Investments  acquired  under  this  Section  shall be
aggregated with investments of the same types made under  all
other  Sections of this Article, and in a similar manner, for
purposes of determining compliance with the  limitations,  if
any,   contained   in  the  other  Sections.  Investments  in
obligations   of   foreign   governments,   their   political
subdivisions and government sponsored  enterprises  of  these
persons,  except for those exempted under subsections C and D
of this Section, shall  be  subject  to  the  limitations  of
Section 126.10.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.18 new)
    Sec.  126.18.  Derivative  transactions.  An insurer may,
directly or  indirectly  through  an  investment  subsidiary,
engage  in  derivative  transactions under this Section under
the following conditions:
    A.  General conditions.
    (1)  An insurer may use derivative instruments under this
Section  to  engage  in  hedging  transactions   and   income
generation transactions.
    (2)  An   insurer  may  use  derivative  instruments  for
replication transactions only after the Director  promulgates
reasonable  rules  that  set  forth  methods  of  disclosure,
reserving  for  risk-based capital, and determining the asset
valuation reserve for these  investments.   Any  asset  being
replicated  is  subject to all the provisions and limitations
on the making thereof specified in this Article with  respect
to   investments   by  the  insurer  as  if  the  transaction
constituted  a  direct  investment  by  the  insurer  in  the
replicated asset.
    (3)  With respect to all hedging transactions, an insurer
shall be able to demonstrate to  the  Director  the  intended
hedging  characteristics and the ongoing effectiveness of the
derivative transaction or  combination  of  the  transactions
through cash flow testing or other appropriate analyses.
    (4)  The  Director  may  promulgate  reasonable rules for
investments and transactions under  this  Section  including,
but  not  limited  to,  rules which impose financial solvency
standards, valuation standards, and reporting requirements.
    B.  Limitations on hedging transactions.
    An insurer may enter into hedging transactions under this
Section if, as a result of and after  giving  effect  to  the
transaction:
    (1)  The  aggregate  statement  value  of  options, caps,
floors  and  warrants  not  attached  to  another   financial
instrument  purchased  and  used in hedging transactions then
engaged in by  the  insurer  does  not  exceed  7.5%  of  its
admitted assets;
    (2)  The  aggregate  statement value of options, caps and
floors written in hedging transactions then engaged in by the
insurer does not exceed 3% of its admitted assets; and
    (3)  The aggregate potential exposure of collars,  swaps,
forwards  and  futures  used  in  hedging  transactions  then
engaged  in  by  the  insurer  does  not  exceed  6.5% of its
admitted assets.
    C.  Limitations on income generation transactions.
    An insurer may enter into the following types  of  income
generation transactions subject to the quantitative limits of
subsection C(5):
    (1)  Sales  of  covered call options on noncallable fixed
income securities, callable fixed income  securities  if  the
option  expires  by  its  terms  prior  to  the  end  of  the
noncallable  period  or derivative instruments based on fixed
income securities;
    (2)  Sales of covered call options on equity  securities,
if  the  insurer  holds  in its portfolio, or can immediately
acquire  through  the  exercise  of  options,   warrants   or
conversion   rights  already  owned,  the  equity  securities
subject to call during the complete term of the  call  option
sold;
    (3)  Sales  of  covered  puts  on  investments  that  the
insurer  is  permitted  to acquire under this Article, if the
insurer has escrowed, or entered into a  custodian  agreement
segregating,  cash  or  cash  equivalents with a market value
equal to the amount of its purchase obligations under the put
during the complete term of the put option sold; or
    (4)  Sales of covered caps  or  floors,  if  the  insurer
holds  in  its  portfolio the investments generating the cash
flow to make the required payments under the caps  or  floors
during   the   complete   term  that  the  cap  or  floor  is
outstanding.
    (5)  If as a result of and after  giving  effect  to  the
transactions,  the  aggregate  statement  value  of the fixed
income assets that are subject to call or that  generate  the
cash  flows  for  payments under the caps or floors, plus the
face value of fixed income securities underlying a derivative
instrument subject to call, plus the amount of  the  purchase
obligations  under  the  puts,  does  not  exceed  10% of its
admitted assets.
    D.  Counterparty exposure. An insurer shall  include  all
counterparty  exposure amounts in determining compliance with
the limitations of Section 126.10.
    E.  Additional   transactions.    Pursuant    to    rules
promulgated  under  Section  126.8,  the Director may approve
additional  transactions  involving  the  use  of  derivative
instruments in excess of the limits of subsection B  of  this
Section or for other risk management purposes.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.19 new)
    Sec.  126.19.  Policy loans. A life insurer may lend to a
policyholder on the security of the cash surrender  value  of
the  policyholder's  policy  a  sum  not  exceeding the legal
reserve that the insurer  is  required  to  maintain  on  the
policy.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.20 new)
    Sec. 126.20.  Additional investment authority.
    A.  Solely  for the purpose of acquiring investments that
exceed  the  quantitative  limitations  of  Sections   126.10
through  126.17, an insurer may acquire under this subsection
an investment, or engage in investment practices described in
Section  126.16,  but  an  insurer  shall  not   acquire   an
investment,  or  engage  in investment practices described in
Section 126.16, under this subsection if, as a result of  and
after giving effect to the transaction:
    (1)  The  aggregate amount of investments then held by an
insurer under this subsection would exceed 3% of its admitted
assets; or
    (2)  The  aggregate  amount  of  investments  as  to  one
limitation in Sections 126.10 through 126.17 then held by the
insurer under this subsection would exceed 1% of its admitted
assets.
    B.  (1)  In addition  to  the  authority  provided  under
subsection  A  of  this Section, an insurer may acquire under
this subsection an investment  of  any  kind,  or  engage  in
investment  practices  described  in Section 126.16, that are
not specifically prohibited by this Article,  without  regard
to the categories, conditions, standards or other limitations
of  Sections  126.10  through  126.17  if, as a result of and
after giving effect to the transaction, the aggregate  amount
of  investments  then  held  under  this subsection would not
exceed the lesser of:
    (a)  10% of its admitted assets; or
    (b)  75% of its capital and surplus.
    (2)  However, an insurer shall not acquire any investment
or engage in any investment practice  under  this  subsection
if,   as   a  result  of  and  after  giving  effect  to  the
transaction, the aggregate amount of all investments  in  any
one  person  then  held  by the insurer under this subsection
would exceed 3% of its admitted assets.
    C.  In  addition  to  the  investments   acquired   under
subsections  A  and B of this Section, an insurer may acquire
under this subsection an investment of any kind, or engage in
investment practices described in Section  126.16,  that  are
not specifically prohibited by this Article without regard to
any limitations of Sections 126.10 through 126.17 if:
    (1)   The Director grants prior approval;
    (2)  The  insurer  demonstrates  that its investments are
being made in  a  prudent  manner  and  that  the  additional
amounts will be invested in a prudent manner; and
    (3)  As  a  result  of  and  after  giving  effect to the
transaction the aggregate amount of investments then held  by
the insurer under this subsection does not exceed the greater
of:
    (a)  25% of its capital and surplus; or
    (b)  100% of capital and surplus less 10% of its admitted
assets.
    D.  Under  this  Section, an insurer shall not acquire or
engage in an investment  practice  prohibited  under  Section
126.5 or an investment that is a derivative transaction.
    (215 ILCS 5 Art. VII, Part 3 heading new)
             3.  PROPERTY AND CASUALTY INSURERS

    (215 ILCS 5/126.21 new)
    Sec.  126.21.  Applicability.  This Part 3 shall apply to
the investments and  investment  practices  of  property  and
casualty   insurers  authorized  to  transact  the  kinds  of
insurance in either or both Class 2 or Class 3 of  Section  4
of this Code, subject to the provisions of Section 126.1B.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.22 new)
    Sec. 126.22.  Reserve requirements.
    A.  Reserve requirements.
    (1)  Subject  to all  other limitations and  requirements
of this  Article, a  property   and  casualty  insurer  shall
maintain   an   amount  at  least  equal  to  the  lesser  of
$250,000,000 or 100% of  adjusted loss   reserves  and   loss
adjustment   expense  reserves,  100%  of  adjusted  unearned
premium reserves and 100% of statutorily required policy  and
contract reserves in:
    (a)  Cash and cash equivalents;
    (b)  High and medium grade investments that qualify under
Sections 126.24 or 126.25;
    (c)  Equity  interests  that qualify under Section 126.26
and that are traded on a qualified exchange;
    (d)  Investments of the type set forth in Section  126.30
if  the  investments  are rated in the highest generic rating
category  by  a  nationally  recognized  statistical   rating
organization   recognized  by  the  SVO  for  rating  foreign
jurisdictions  and  if  any  foreign  currency  exposure   is
effectively   hedged   through   the  maturity  date  of  the
investments;
    (e)  Qualifying investments of  the  type  set  forth  in
subparagraphs  (b),  (c)  or  (d)  of this paragraph that are
acquired under Section 126.32;
    (f)  Interest  and  dividends  receivable  on  qualifying
investments of  the  type  set  forth  in  subparagraphs  (a)
through (e) of this subsection; or
    (g)  Reinsurance recoverable on paid losses.
    (2)  Reserve Requirement Amount:
    (a)  For  purposes of determining the amount of assets to
be maintained  under  this  subsection,  the  calculation  of
adjusted  loss reserves and loss adjustment expense reserves,
adjusted unearned premium reserves and  statutorily  required
policy  and  contract  reserves shall be based on the amounts
reported as of the most recent annual or quarterly  statement
date.
    (b)  Adjusted  loss  reserves and loss adjustment expense
reserves shall be equal to the sum  of  the  amounts  derived
from the following calculations:
    (i)  The result of each amount reported by the insurer as
losses  and loss adjustment expenses unpaid for each accident
year for each individual line of business; multiplied by
    (ii)  The discount factor that is applicable to the  line
of  business  and  accident  year  published  by the Internal
Revenue Service under Internal Revenue Code Section  846  (26
U.S.C.    846),  as  amended,  for  the  calendar  year  that
corresponds to  the  most  recent  annual  statement  of  the
insurer; minus
    (iii)  Accrued  retrospective  premiums  discounted by an
average  discount  factor.  The  discount  factor  shall   be
calculated   by  dividing  the  losses  and  loss  adjustment
expenses unpaid after discounting (the product of  Items  (i)
and  (ii)  in  this subparagraph) by loss and loss adjustment
expense  reserves  before  discounting  Item  (i)   of   this
subparagraph.
    (iv)  For  purposes of these calculations, the losses and
loss adjustment expenses unpaid shall be  determined  net  of
anticipated   salvage  and  subrogation,  and  gross  of  any
discount for the time value of money or tabular discount.
    (c)  Adjusted unearned premium reserves shall be equal to
the result of the following calculation:
    (i)  The amount  reported  by  the  insurer  as  unearned
premium reserves; minus
    (ii)  The  admitted asset amounts reported by the insurer
as:
    (I)  Premiums in and agents' balances in  the  course  of
collection,  accident  and health premiums due and unpaid and
uncollected premiums for accident and health premiums;
    (II)  Premiums, agents' balances and installments  booked
but deferred and not yet due;
    (III)  Bills receivable, taken for premium; and
    (IV)  Equities and deposits in pools and associations.
    (d)  Statutorily  required  policy  and contract reserves
shall also include contingency reserves required for mortgage
guaranty  insurers,  municipal  bond  insurers,   and   other
financial guaranty insurers.
    B.  Monitoring  and  reporting.  A  property and casualty
insurer  shall  supplement  its  annual  statement   with   a
reconciliation   and   summary  of  its  assets  and  reserve
requirements as required in subsection A of this  Section.  A
reconciliation  and  summary showing that an insurer's assets
as required in subsection A of this Section are greater  than
or   equal  to  its  undiscounted  reserves  referred  to  in
subsection A of this Section shall be sufficient  to  satisfy
this  requirement.  Upon prior notification, the Director may
require an  insurer  to  submit  such  a  reconciliation  and
summary   with  any  quarterly  statement  filed  during  the
calendar year.
    C.  Notification requirements and  mandatory  safeguards.
If  a  property and casualty insurer's assets and reserves do
not comply with subsection A of  this  Section,  the  insurer
shall  notify the Director immediately of the amount by which
the reserve requirements exceed the annual statement value of
the qualifying assets, explain why the deficiency exists  and
within  30  days  of the date of the notice propose a plan of
action to remedy the deficiency.
    D.  Authority of the Director.
    (1)  If the Director determines that an insurer is not in
compliance with subsection A of this  Section,  the  Director
shall  require the insurer to eliminate the condition causing
the noncompliance within a specified time from the  date  the
notice  of  the Director's requirement is mailed or delivered
to the insurer.
    (2)  If an insurer fails to comply  with  the  Director's
requirement  under  paragraph  (1)  of  this  subsection, the
insurer is deemed to be in hazardous financial condition, and
the Director shall take one or more of the actions authorized
by law as to insurers in hazardous financial condition.
    E.  An insurer subject to this Section must  comply  with
the requirements of this Section after December 31, 1997.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.23 new)
    Sec.  126.23.  General  5%  diversification,  medium  and
lower grade investments, and Canadian investments.
    A.  General 5% diversification.
    (1)  Except  as  otherwise  specified in this Article, an
insurer shall not acquire directly or indirectly  through  an
investment subsidiary an investment under this Article if, as
a  result  of  and after giving effect to the investment, the
insurer would hold more than 5% of  its  admitted  assets  in
investments   of   all   kinds   issued,  assumed,  accepted,
guaranteed, or insured by a single person.
    (2)  This 5% limitation shall not apply to the  aggregate
amounts  insured  by a single financial guaranty insurer with
the highest generic rating issued by a nationally  recognized
statistical rating organization.
    (3)  Asset-backed  securities shall not be subject to the
limitations of paragraph (1)  of  this  subsection,  however,
except  as  permitted  by subsection A(4) of this Section, an
insurer shall not acquire an asset-backed security if,  as  a
result  of  and  after  giving  effect to the investment, the
aggregate amount of asset-backed  securities  secured  by  or
evidencing  an  interest  in a single asset or single pool of
assets held by a trust or other business entity, then held by
the insurer would exceed 5% of its admitted assets.
    (4)  A  company's   investments   in   mortgage   related
securities,  as  defined  by  the  Secondary  Mortgage Market
Enhancement Act of 1984 (United States Public Law 98-440,  12
U.S.C. 24, 1451, 1454 et seq.), that are backed by any single
pool  of mortgages and made pursuant to the authority of that
Act, shall not exceed 5% of its admitted assets.
    B.  Medium and lower grade investments.
    (1)  An insurer shall not acquire, directly or indirectly
through  an  investment  subsidiary,  an   investment   under
Sections  126.24, 126.27, and 126.30 or counterparty exposure
under Section 126.31D if, as a result  of  and  after  giving
effect to the investment:
    (a)  The  aggregate  amount of all medium and lower grade
investments then held by the insurer would exceed 20% of  its
admitted assets;
    (b)  The aggregate amount of lower grade investments then
held by the insurer would exceed 10% of its admitted assets;
    (c)  The  aggregate amount of investments rated 5 or 6 by
the SVO then held by the  insurer  would  exceed  5%  of  its
admitted assets;
    (d)  The  aggregate  amount of investments rated 6 by the
SVO then held by the insurer would exceed 1% of its  admitted
assets; or
    (e)  The aggregate amount of lower grade investments then
held by the insurer that receive as cash income less than the
equivalent  yield  for  Treasury  issues  with  a comparative
average life, would exceed 1% of its admitted assets.
    (2)  An insurer shall not acquire, directly or indirectly
through  an  investment  subsidiary,  an   investment   under
Sections  126.24, 126.27, and 126.30 or counterparty exposure
under Section 126.31D if, as a result  of  and  after  giving
effect to the investment:
    (a)  The  aggregate  amount  of  medium  and  lower grade
investments issued, assumed, accepted, guaranteed, or insured
by any one person or, as to asset-backed  securities  secured
by  or  evidencing  an  interest in a single asset or pool of
assets, then held by the  insurer  would  exceed  1%  of  its
admitted assets; or
    (b)  The  aggregate  amount  of  lower  grade investments
issued, assumed, accepted, guaranteed, or insured by any  one
person  or,  as  to  asset-backed  securities  secured  by or
evidencing an interest in a single asset or pool  of  assets,
then  held  by  the insurer would exceed 0.5% of its admitted
assets.
    (3)  If an insurer attains or exceeds the  limit  of  any
one  rating  category  referred  to  in  this subsection, the
insurer  shall  not  thereby  be  precluded  from   acquiring
investments   in  other  rating  categories  subject  to  the
specific  and  multi-category  limits  applicable  to   those
investments.
    C.  Canadian investments.
    (1)  An insurer shall not acquire, directly or indirectly
through  an  investment  subsidiary, any Canadian investments
authorized by this Article, if  as  a  result  of  and  after
giving  effect  to  the  investment,  the aggregate amount of
these investments then held by the insurer would  exceed  40%
of  its  admitted  assets,  or  if  the  aggregate  amount of
Canadian investments not acquired under Section 126.24B  then
held by the insurer would exceed 25% of its admitted assets.
    (2)  However,  as  to an insurer that is authorized to do
business in Canada or that has outstanding insurance, annuity
or reinsurance  contracts  on  lives  or  risks  resident  or
located  in  Canada and denominated in Canadian currency, the
limitations of paragraph (1)  of  this  subsection  shall  be
increased by the greater of:
    (a)  The  amount  the insurer is required by Canadian law
to  invest  in  Canada  or  to  be  denominated  in  Canadian
currency; or
    (b)  125%  of  the  amount  of  its  reserves  and  other
obligations under contracts on risks resident or  located  in
Canada.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.24 new)
    Sec.  126.24.  Rated  credit  instruments. Subject to the
limitations of subsection F of this Section, an  insurer  may
acquire rated credit instruments:
    A.  Subject  to  the  limitations of Section 126.23B, but
not to the limitations of  Section  126.23A  except  for  the
limitation  of  subsection (4) of Section 126.23A, an insurer
may  acquire  rated  credit  instruments   issued,   assumed,
guaranteed, or insured by:
    (1)  The United States; or
    (2)  A  government  sponsored  enterprise  of  the United
States,  if  the  instruments  of  the  government  sponsored
enterprise are assumed, guaranteed, or insured by the  United
States or are otherwise backed or supported by the full faith
and credit of the United States.
    B.  (1)  Subject  to  the limitations of Section 126.23B,
but not to the limitations of Section 126.23A, an insurer may
acquire rated credit instruments issued, assumed, guaranteed,
or insured by:
    (a)  Canada; or
    (b)  A government sponsored enterprise of Canada, if  the
instruments   of  the  government  sponsored  enterprise  are
assumed, guaranteed, or insured by Canada  or  are  otherwise
backed or supported by the full faith and credit of Canada;
    (2)  However,  an insurer shall not acquire an instrument
under this subsection if, as a result  of  and  after  giving
effect to the investment, the aggregate amount of investments
then  held  by the insurer under this subsection would exceed
40% of its admitted assets.
    C.  (1)  Subject to the limitations of  Section  126.23B,
but not to the limitations of Section 126.23A, an insurer may
acquire  rated  credit  instruments,  excluding  asset-backed
securities:
    (a)  Issued  by  a government money market mutual fund, a
class one money market mutual fund or a class one bond mutual
fund;
    (b)  Issued,  assumed,  guaranteed,  or  insured   by   a
government  sponsored  enterprise  of the United States other
than those eligible under subsection A of this Section;
    (c)  Issued, assumed, guaranteed, or insured by a  state,
if the instruments are general obligations of the state; or
    (d)  Issued by a multilateral development bank.
    (2)  However,  an insurer shall not acquire an instrument
of any one fund, any one enterprise or  entity,  or  any  one
state  under  this  subsection  if,  as a result of and after
giving effect to the  investment,  the  aggregate  amount  of
investments  then  held  by  the  insurer  in  any  one fund,
enterprise, entity, or  state  under  this  subsection  would
exceed 10% of its admitted assets.
    D.  Subject  to  the  limitations  of  Section 126.23, an
insurer may acquire preferred stocks  that  are  not  foreign
investments  and  that  meet the requirements of rated credit
instruments if, as a result of and after giving effect to the
investment:
    (1)  The aggregate amount of preferred stocks  then  held
by  the insurer under this subsection does not exceed 33 1/3%
of its admitted assets; and
    (2)  The aggregate amount of preferred stocks  then  held
by  the  insurer  under this subsection which are not sinking
fund stocks or rated P1 or P2 by the SVO does not exceed  15%
of its admitted assets.
    E.  Subject  to  the  limitations  of  Section  126.23 in
addition to those investments eligible under  subsections  A,
B,  C  and  D  of  this Section, an insurer may acquire rated
credit instruments that are not foreign investments.
    F.  An insurer shall not  acquire  special  rated  credit
instruments  under  this Section if, as a result of and after
giving effect to the  investment,  the  aggregate  amount  of
special  rated  credit  instruments  then held by the insurer
would exceed 5% of its admitted assets.  The Director may, by
rule, identify certain special rated credit instruments  that
are exempt from the limitation imposed by this subsection.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.25 new)
    Sec. 126.25.  Insurer investment pools.
    A.  An  insurer  may  acquire  investments  in investment
pools that:
    (1)  Invest only in:
    (a)  Obligations that are rated 1 or 2 by the SVO or have
an equivalent of an SVO 1 or 2 rating (or, in the absence  of
a  1  or  2  rating  or  equivalent  rating,  the  issuer has
outstanding obligations with an SVO  1  or  2  or  equivalent
rating)   by   a  nationally  recognized  statistical  rating
organization recognized by the SVO and have:
    (i)  A remaining maturity of 397 days or less  or  a  put
that  entitles  the holder to receive the principal amount of
the obligation which put may be exercised through maturity at
specified intervals not exceeding 397 days; or
    (ii)  A remaining maturity of  3  years  or  less  and  a
floating  interest  rate  that resets no less frequently than
quarterly on the basis of a current short-term index (federal
funds, prime rate, treasury bills, London  InterBank  Offered
Rate  (LIBOR)  or  commercial  paper)  and  is  subject to no
maximum limit, if the obligations do  not  have  an  interest
rate that varies inversely to market interest rate changes;
    (b)  Government  money  market  mutual funds or class one
money market mutual funds; or
    (c)  Securities   lending,   repurchase,   and    reverse
repurchase,  transactions  that  meet all the requirements of
Section  126.29,  except  the  quantitative  limitations   of
Section 126.29D; or
    (2)  Invest  only  in  investments  which  an insurer may
acquire under this Article, if  the  insurer's  proportionate
interest  in  the  amount  invested in these investments when
combined with amounts of such investments  made  directly  or
indirectly  through an investment subsidiary or other insurer
investment pool permitted under this subsection A(2) does not
exceed  the  applicable  limits  of  this  Article  for  such
investments.
    B.  For  an  investment  in  an  investment  pool  to  be
qualified under this Article, the investment pool shall not:
    (1)  Acquire securities issued, assumed,  guaranteed,  or
insured by the insurer or an affiliate of the insurer;
    (2)  Borrow or incur any indebtedness for borrowed money,
except   for   securities   lending  and  reverse  repurchase
transactions that meet the  requirements  of  Section  126.29
except the quantitative limitations of Section 126.29D; or
    (3)  Acquire  an  investment  if,  as  a  result  of such
transaction, the aggregate value of securities then loaned or
sold to, purchased from  or  invested  in  any  one  business
entity  under  this  Section  would  exceed  10% of the total
assets of the investment pool.
    C.  The limitations of Section 126.23A shall not apply to
an insurer's investment in an  investment  pool,  however  an
insurer shall not acquire an investment in an investment pool
under this Section if, as a result of and after giving effect
to  the  investment, the aggregate amount of investments then
held by the insurer under this Section:
    (1)  In all investment  pools  investing  in  investments
permitted  under subsection A(2) of this Section would exceed
25% of its admitted assets; or
    (2)  In all investment pools  would  exceed  40%  of  its
admitted assets.
    D.  For  an  investment  in  an  investment  pool  to  be
qualified  under  this Article, the manager of the investment
pool shall:
    (1)  Be organized under the laws of the United States  or
a  state  and  designated  as  the  pool manager in a pooling
agreement;
    (2)  Be the insurer, an affiliated insurer or a  business
entity  affiliated  with  the  insurer,  a  qualified bank, a
business entity registered under the Investment Advisors  Act
of  1940  (15  U.S.C.   80a-1 et seq.), as amended or, in the
case of a reciprocal insurer or interinsurance exchange,  its
attorney-in-fact, or in the case of a United States branch of
an  alien  insurer, its United States manager or an affiliate
or subsidiary of its United States manager;
    (3)  Be responsible for the compilation  and  maintenance
of detailed accounting records setting forth:
    (a)  The  cash receipts and disbursements reflecting each
participant's  proportionate  investment  in  the  investment
pool;
    (b)  A complete description of all underlying  assets  of
the   investment   pool  (including  amount,  interest  rate,
maturity date (if any) and other  appropriate  designations);
and
    (c)  Other  records  which, on a daily basis, allow third
parties  to  verify  each  participant's  investment  in  the
investment pool; and
    (4)  Maintain the assets of the investment pool in one or
more accounts, in the name of or on behalf of the  investment
pool,  under  a  custody agreement with a qualified bank. The
custody agreement shall:
    (a)  State and recognize the claims and  rights  of  each
participant;
    (b)  Acknowledge   that  the  underlying  assets  of  the
investment pool are held  solely  for  the  benefit  of  each
participant  in  proportion  to  the  aggregate amount of its
investments in the investment pool; and
    (c)  Contain an agreement that the underlying  assets  of
the  investment pool shall not be commingled with the general
assets of the custodian qualified bank or any other person.
    E.  The pooling agreement for each investment pool  shall
be in writing and shall provide that:
    (1)  An  insurer  and  its affiliated insurers or, in the
case of an investment pool investing  solely  in  investments
permitted  under subsection A(1) of this Section, the insurer
and its subsidiaries, affiliates or  any  pension  or  profit
sharing  plan of the insurer, its subsidiaries and affiliates
or, in the case  of  a  United  States  branch  of  an  alien
insurer,  affiliates  or  subsidiaries  of  its United States
manager, shall, at all times, hold 100% of the  interests  in
the investment pool;
    (2)  The  underlying  assets of the investment pool shall
not be commingled with the general assets of the pool manager
or any other person;
    (3)  In proportion to the aggregate amount of  each  pool
participant's interest in the investment pool:
    (a)  Each  participant  owns an undivided interest in the
underlying assets of the investment pool; and
    (b)  The underlying assets of  the  investment  pool  are
held solely for the benefit of each participant;
    (4)  A  participant, or in the event of the participant's
insolvency, bankruptcy or receivership, its trustee, receiver
or other  successor-in-interest,  may  withdraw  all  or  any
portion  of its investment from the investment pool under the
terms of the pooling agreement;
    (5)  Withdrawals may be made on demand without penalty or
other assessment on any business day, but settlement of funds
shall  occur  within  a  reasonable  and   customary   period
thereafter  not  to  exceed  10  business days. Distributions
under this paragraph shall be calculated in each case net  of
all then applicable fees and expenses of the investment pool.
The  pooling  agreement  shall  provide that the pool manager
shall distribute to a participant, at the discretion  of  the
pool manager:
    (a)  In   cash,   the  then  fair  market  value  of  the
participant's pro rata share of each underlying asset of  the
investment pool;
    (b)  In  kind, a pro rata share of each underlying asset;
or
    (c)  In a combination of cash and in kind  distributions,
a pro rata share in each underlying asset; and
    (6)  The  pool  manager  shall  make  the  records of the
investment pool available for inspection by the Director.
    F.  Except for the  formation  of  the  investment  pool,
transactions  between  a  domestic  insurer and an affiliated
insurer  investment  pool  shall  not  be  subject   to   the
requirements of Section 131.20a of this Code.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.26 new)
    Sec. 126.26.  Equity Interests.
    A.  Subject  to  the  limitations  of  Section 126.23, an
insurer  may  acquire  directly,  or  indirectly  through  an
investment subsidiary, equity interests in business  entities
organized under the laws of any domestic jurisdiction.
    B.  An  insurer shall not acquire directly, or indirectly
through an investment subsidiary, an  investment  under  this
Section  if,  as  a  result of and after giving effect to the
investment, the aggregate amount of investments then held  by
the  insurer  under  this Section would exceed the greater of
25% of its admitted assets or 100% of its surplus as  regards
policyholders.
    C.  An  insurer  shall not acquire under this Section any
investments  that  the  insurer  may  acquire  under  Section
126.28.
    D.  An insurer shall  not  short  sell  equity  interests
unless the insurer covers the short sale by owning the equity
interest  or  an  unrestricted  right  to the equity interest
exercisable within 6 months of the short sale.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.27 new)
    Sec. 126.27.  Tangible personal property under lease.
    A.  (1)  Subject to the limitations of Section 126.23, an
insurer may acquire  tangible  personal  property  or  equity
interests  therein located or used wholly or in part within a
domestic jurisdiction either directly or  indirectly  through
limited   partnership   interests   and  general  partnership
interests not otherwise prohibited by Section  126.5D,  joint
ventures,  stock  of  an  investment subsidiary or membership
interests in a limited liability company, trust certificates,
or other similar instruments.
    (2)  Investments acquired under  paragraph  (1)  of  this
subsection shall be eligible only if:
    (a)  The   property  is  subject  to  a  lease  or  other
agreement with a person whose rated credit instruments in the
amount of the purchase price of  the  personal  property  the
insurer could then acquire under Section 126.24; and
    (b)  The  lease  or  other agreement provides the insurer
the right to receive rental, purchase or other fixed payments
for the use or purchase of the property,  and  the  aggregate
value  of  the payments, together with the estimated residual
value of the property at the end of its useful life  and  the
estimated   tax   benefits  to  the  insurer  resulting  from
ownership of the property, shall be adequate  to  return  the
cost  of  the  insurer's  investment  in the property, plus a
return deemed adequate by the insurer.
    B.  The  insurer  shall  compute  the  amount   of   each
investment  under  this  Section  on  the basis of the out of
pocket purchase price and applicable related expenses paid by
the insurer for the investment, net of each borrowing made to
finance the purchase price and expenses, to  the  extent  the
borrowing is without recourse to the insurer.
    C.  An  insurer  shall not acquire directly or indirectly
through an investment subsidiary  an  investment  under  this
Section  if,  as  a  result of and after giving effect to the
investment, the aggregate amount of all investments then held
by the insurer under this Section would exceed:
    (1)  2% of its admitted assets; or
    (2)  0.5% of its admitted assets as to any single item of
tangible personal property.
    D.  For  purposes  of  determining  compliance  with  the
limitations of Section 126.23,  investments  acquired  by  an
insurer  under  this  Section  shall be aggregated with those
acquired  under  Section  126.24,  and  each  lessee  of  the
property under a lease referred to in this Section  shall  be
deemed  the  issuer  of  an  obligation  in the amount of the
investment of the  insurer  in  the  property  determined  as
provided in subsection B of this Section.
    E.  Nothing  in  this  Section  is applicable to tangible
personal property lease arrangements between an  insurer  and
its   subsidiaries   and  affiliates  under  a  cost  sharing
arrangement   or   agreement    permitted    under    Section
131.20a(1)(a)(iv) of this Code.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.28 new)
    Sec. 126.28.  Mortgage loans and real estate.
    A.  Mortgage loans.
    (l)  Subject  to  the  limitations  of Section 126.23, an
insurer may acquire, either directly  or  indirectly  through
limited   partnership   interests   and  general  partnership
interests not otherwise prohibited by Section  126.5D,  joint
ventures,  stock  of  an  investment subsidiary or membership
interests in a limited liability company, trust certificates,
or  other  similar  instruments,   obligations   secured   by
mortgages   on   real   estate  situated  within  a  domestic
jurisdiction, but a mortgage loan which is secured  by  other
than a first lien shall not be acquired under this subsection
(1)  unless  the insurer is the holder of the first lien. The
obligations held by the insurer and any obligations  with  an
equal lien priority, shall not, at the time of acquisition of
the obligation, exceed:
    (a)  90%  of the fair market value of the real estate, if
the mortgage loan is secured by a purchase money mortgage  or
like security received by the insurer upon disposition of the
real estate;
    (b)  80%  of the fair market value of the real estate, if
the mortgage loan requires  immediate  scheduled  payment  in
periodic  installments  of  principal  and  interest,  has an
amortization period of 30 years or less and periodic payments
made no less frequently than annually. Each periodic  payment
shall   be  sufficient  to  assure  that  at  all  times  the
outstanding principal balance of the mortgage loan  shall  be
not  greater  than  the  outstanding  principal balance which
would be outstanding under a  mortgage  loan  with  the  same
original  principal  balance, with the same interest rate and
requiring equal payments of principal and interest  with  the
same  frequency  over  the same amortization period. Mortgage
loans  permitted  under   this   subsection   are   permitted
notwithstanding  the  fact that they provide for a payment of
the principal balance prior to  the  end  of  the  period  of
amortization of the loan. For residential mortgage loans, the
80%  limitation may be increased to 97% if acceptable private
mortgage insurance has been obtained; or
    (c)  75% of the fair market value of the real estate  for
mortgage   loans   that  do  not  meet  the  requirements  of
subparagraph (a) or (b) of this paragraph.
    (2)  For purposes of paragraph (1)  of  this  subsection,
the  amount  of  an obligation required to be included in the
calculation of the loan-to-value ratio may be reduced to  the
extent  the  obligation  is  insured  by  the Federal Housing
Administration or guaranteed by the Administrator of Veterans
Affairs, or their successors.
    (3)  Subject to the limitations  of  Section  126.23,  an
insurer  may  acquire,  either directly or indirectly through
limited  partnership  interests   and   general   partnership
interests  not  otherwise prohibited by Section 126.5D, joint
ventures, stock of an  investment  subsidiary  or  membership
interests in a limited liability company, trust certificates,
or other similar instruments, obligations secured by a second
mortgage   on   real   estate   situated  within  a  domestic
jurisdiction, other than as authorized in subsection  (1)  of
this Section 126.28. The obligation held by the insurer shall
be the sole second lien priority obligation and shall not, at
the  time of acquisition of the obligation, exceed 70% of the
amount by which the fair market  value  of  the  real  estate
exceeds the amount outstanding under the first mortgage.
    (4)  A  mortgage  loan  that  is held by an insurer under
Section  126.3F  or  acquired  under  this  Section  and   is
restructured  in  a  manner  that meets the requirements of a
restructured  mortgage  loan  in  accordance  with  the  NAIC
Accounting  Practices  and  Procedures  Manual  or  successor
publication shall continue to  qualify  as  a  mortgage  loan
under this Article.
    (5)  Subject to the limitations of Section 126.23, credit
lease  transactions  that do not qualify for investment under
Section 126.24 with the following  characteristics  shall  be
exempt   from   the  provisions  of  paragraph  (1)  of  this
subsection:
    (a)  The loan amortizes over the initial fixed lease term
at least in an amount sufficient so that the loan balance  at
the  end  of  the  lease  term  does  not exceed the original
appraised value of the real estate;
    (b)  The lease payments cover or exceed  the  total  debt
service over the life of the loan;
    (c)  A  tenant  or  its  affiliated  entity,  whose rated
credit instruments have  a  SVO  1  or  2  designation  or  a
comparable  rating  from  a nationally recognized statistical
rating organization recognized by the SVO, has a  full  faith
and credit obligation to make the lease payments;
    (d)  The  insurer  holds or is the beneficial holder of a
first lien mortgage on the real estate;
    (e)  The expenses of the real estate are  passed  through
to  the  tenant,  excluding exterior, structural, parking and
heating,  ventilation  and   air   conditioning   replacement
expenses, unless annual escrow contributions, from cash flows
derived from the lease payments, cover the expense shortfall;
and
    (f)  There  is  a  perfected  assignment of the rents due
pursuant to the lease to, or for the benefit of, the insurer.
    B.  Income producing real estate.
    (1)  An insurer may acquire, manage and dispose  of  real
estate situated in a domestic jurisdiction either directly or
indirectly  through limited partnership interests and general
partnership interests not  otherwise  prohibited  by  Section
126.5D,  joint ventures, stock of an investment subsidiary or
membership interests in a limited  liability  company,  trust
certificates,  or  other similar instruments. The real estate
shall be income producing  or  intended  for  improvement  or
development for investment purposes under an existing program
(in  which  case the real estate shall be deemed to be income
producing).
    (2)  The real estate may be subject to  mortgages,  liens
or  other  encumbrances,  the  amount  of which shall, to the
extent that the obligations secured by the  mortgages,  liens
or  encumbrances  are  without  recourse  to  the insurer, be
deducted from the amount of the investment of the insurer  in
the  real  estate for purposes of determining compliance with
subsections D(2) and D(3) of this Section.
    C.  Real estate for the accommodation of business.
    An insurer may  acquire,  manage,  and  dispose  of  real
estate  for  the  convenient  accommodation  of the insurer's
(which  may  include  its  affiliates)  business  operations,
including  home  office,  branch  office  and  field   office
operations.
    (1)    Real  estate  acquired  under  this subsection may
include excess space for rent to others, if the excess space,
valued at  its  fair  market  value,  would  otherwise  be  a
permitted  investment  under subsection B of this Section and
is so qualified by the insurer;
    (2)  The real estate acquired under this  subsection  may
be   subject  to  one  or  more  mortgages,  liens  or  other
encumbrances, the amount of which shall, to the  extent  that
the   obligations   secured   by   the  mortgages,  liens  or
encumbrances are without recourse to the insurer, be deducted
from the amount of the investment of the insurer in the  real
estate for purposes of determining compliance with subsection
D(4) of this Section; and
    (3)  For purposes of this subsection, business operations
shall  not  include  that portion of real estate used for the
direct provision of health care services by an insurer  whose
insurance   premiums  and  required  statutory  reserves  for
accident and health insurance  constitute  at  least  95%  of
total  premium  considerations  or  total  statutory required
reserves, respectively. An insurer may  acquire  real  estate
used for these purposes under subsection B of this Section.
    D.  Quantitative limitations.
    (1)  An  insurer  shall  not  acquire an investment under
subsection A of this Section if, as a  result  of  and  after
giving  effect to the investment, the aggregate amount of all
investments then held by the insurer under  subsection  A  of
this Section would exceed:
    (a)  1% of its admitted assets in mortgage loans covering
any one secured location;
    (b)  0.25%  of  its admitted assets in construction loans
covering any one secured location; or
    (c)  1% of its admitted assets in construction  loans  in
the aggregate.
    (2)  An  insurer  shall  not  acquire an investment under
subsection B of this Section if, as a  result  of  and  after
giving   effect   to   the  investment  and  any  outstanding
guarantees  made  by  the  insurer  in  connection  with  the
investment, the aggregate amount of investments then held  by
the  insurer  under  subsection  B  of  this Section plus the
guarantees then outstanding would exceed:
    (a)  1% of its admitted assets in any one parcel or group
of contiguous  parcels  of  real  estate,  except  that  this
limitation  shall  not  apply  to that portion of real estate
used for the direct provision of health care services  by  an
insurer  whose  insurance  premiums  and  required  statutory
reserves  for  accident  and  health  insurance constitute at
least 95% of total premium considerations or total  statutory
required  reserves,  respectively, such as hospitals, medical
clinics,  medical  professional  buildings  or  other  health
facilities used for the purpose of providing health services;
or
    (b)  The lesser of 10% of its admitted assets or  40%  of
its surplus as regards policyholders in the aggregate, except
for   an   insurer  whose  insurance  premiums  and  required
statutory  reserves  for  accident   and   health   insurance
constitute  at  least  95% of total premium considerations or
total  statutory  required   reserves,   respectively,   this
limitation  shall  be increased to 15% of its admitted assets
in the aggregate.
    (3)  An insurer shall not  acquire  an  investment  under
subsection  A  or  B  of  this Section if, as a result of and
after giving effect to the investment and any  guarantees  it
has  made  in  connection  with the investment, the aggregate
amount of all investments then  held  by  the  insurer  under
subsections  A and B of this Section plus the guarantees then
outstanding would exceed 25% of its admitted assets.
    (4)  The limitations of Section 126.23 shall not apply to
an insurer's acquisition of real estate under subsection C of
this Section. An insurer shall not acquire real estate  under
subsection  C  of  this  Section if, as a result of and after
giving effect to the acquisition, the aggregate amount of all
real estate then held by the insurer under  subsection  C  of
this  Section  would  exceed 10% of its admitted assets. With
the permission of the Director, additional  amounts  of  real
estate may be acquired under subsection C of this Section.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.29 new)
    Sec.  126.29.  Securities lending and repurchase, reverse
repurchase, and dollar  roll  transactions.  An  insurer  may
enter    into   securities   lending,   repurchase,   reverse
repurchase,  and  dollar  roll  transactions  with   business
entities, subject to the following requirements:
    A.  The  insurer's  board  of  directors  shall  adopt  a
written  plan that is consistent with the requirements of the
written plan in Section 126.4A that specifies guidelines  and
objectives to be followed, such as:
    (1)  A  description of how cash received will be invested
or used for general corporate purposes of the insurer;
    (2)  Operational procedures to manage interest rate risk,
counterparty  default  risk,  the  conditions   under   which
proceeds  from reverse repurchase transactions may be used in
the ordinary course of business and  the  use  of  acceptable
collateral  in  a manner that reflects the liquidity needs of
the transaction; and
    (3)  The extent to which the insurer may engage in  these
transactions.
    B.  The  insurer shall enter into a written agreement for
all transactions authorized in this Section other than dollar
roll transactions. The written agreement shall  require  that
each  transaction  terminate  no  more than one year from its
inception or upon the earlier  demand  of  the  insurer.  The
agreement shall be with the business entity counterparty, but
for  securities  lending  transactions,  the agreement may be
with an agent acting on behalf of the insurer, if  the  agent
is a qualified business entity, and if the agreement:
    (1)  Requires the agent to enter into separate agreements
with   each   counterparty   that  are  consistent  with  the
requirements of this Section; and
    (2)  Prohibits securities lending  transactions  pursuant
to the agreement with the agent or its affiliates.
    C.  Cash  received  in  a  transaction under this Section
shall be invested in accordance with this Article  and  in  a
manner that recognizes the liquidity needs of the transaction
or  used  by  the insurer for its general corporate purposes.
For so long  as  the  transaction  remains  outstanding,  the
insurer,  its  agent  or  custodian  shall  maintain,  as  to
acceptable  collateral  received  in a transaction under this
Section, either physically or through the book entry  systems
of   the   Federal   Reserve,   Depository   Trust   Company,
Participants  Trust  Company or other securities depositories
approved by the Director:
    (1)  Possession of the acceptable collateral;
    (2)  A perfected  security  interest  in  the  acceptable
collateral; or
    (3)  In  the case of a jurisdiction outside of the United
States, title to, or rights of a  secured  creditor  to,  the
acceptable collateral.
    D.  The  limitations  of Sections 126.23 and 126.30 shall
not  apply  to  the  business  entity  counterparty  exposure
created by transactions under this Section. For  purposes  of
calculations   made   to   determine   compliance  with  this
subsection, no effect will be given to the  insurer's  future
obligation  to resell securities, in the case of a repurchase
transaction, or to repurchase securities, in the  case  of  a
reverse  repurchase  transaction.  An insurer shall not enter
into a transaction under this Section if, as a result of  and
after giving effect to the transaction:
    (1)  The  aggregate  amount  of securities then loaned or
sold  to,  or  purchased  from,  any  one   business   entity
counterparty  under  this  Section  would  exceed  5%  of its
admitted  assets.  In  calculating  the  amount  sold  to  or
purchased  from  a   business   entity   counterparty   under
repurchase  or reverse repurchase transactions, effect may be
given to netting provisions under a master written agreement;
or
    (2)  The aggregate amount of all securities then  loaned,
sold  to  or  purchased from all business entities under this
Section would exceed 40%  of  its  admitted  assets  but  the
limitation  of  this  subsection  shall  not apply to reverse
repurchase transactions for so long as the borrowing is  used
to  meet operational liquidity requirements resulting from an
officially  declared  catastrophe  and  subject  to  a   plan
approved by the Director.
    E.  In  a  dollar  roll  transaction,  the  insurer shall
receive cash in an amount at least equal to the market  value
of   the   securities  transferred  by  the  insurer  in  the
transaction as of the transaction date.
    F.  The Director  may  promulgate  reasonable  rules  for
investments  and  transactions  under this Section including,
but not limited to, rules  which  impose  financial  solvency
standards, valuation standards, and reporting requirements.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.30 new)
    Sec.  126.30.  Foreign  investments  and foreign currency
exposure.
    A.  Subject to the  limitations  of  Section  126.23,  an
insurer   may  acquire  directly  or  indirectly  through  an
investment subsidiary,  foreign  investments,  or  engage  in
investment   practices   with   persons   of  or  in  foreign
jurisdictions, of substantially the same types as those  that
an  insurer is permitted to acquire under this Article, other
than of the type permitted under Section  126.25,  if,  as  a
result and after giving effect to the investment:
    (1)  The  aggregate  amount  of  foreign investments then
held by the insurer under this subsection does not exceed 20%
of its admitted assets; and
    (2)  The aggregate amount  of  foreign  investments  then
held by the insurer under this subsection in a single foreign
jurisdiction does not exceed 10% of its admitted assets as to
a  foreign  jurisdiction  that has a sovereign debt rating of
SVO 1 or 5% of its admitted assets as to  any  other  foreign
jurisdiction.
    B.  Subject  to  the  limitations  of  Section 126.23, an

insurer may acquire  investments,  or  engage  in  investment
practices  denominated  in foreign currencies, whether or not
they are foreign investments acquired under subsection  A  of
this  Section,  or  additional foreign currency exposure as a
result  of  the  termination  or  expiration  of  a   hedging
transaction  with  respect  to  investments  denominated in a
foreign currency, if, as a result of and after giving  effect
to the transaction:
    (1)  The aggregate amount of investments then held by the
insurer   under   this   subsection  denominated  in  foreign
currencies does not exceed 15% of its admitted assets; and
    (2)  The aggregate amount of investments then held by the
insurer under this  subsection  denominated  in  the  foreign
currency of a single foreign jurisdiction does not exceed 10%
of  its admitted assets as to a foreign jurisdiction that has
a sovereign debt rating of SVO 1 or 5% of its admitted assets
as to any other foreign jurisdiction.
    (3)  However,  an  investment  shall  not  be  considered
denominated in a foreign currency if  the  acquiring  insurer
enters  into  one or more contracts in transactions permitted
under  Section  126.31   in   which   the   business   entity
counterparty agrees to exchange, or grants to the insurer the
option to exchange, all payments made on the foreign currency
denominated investment (or amounts equivalent to the payments
that are or will be due to the insurer in accordance with the
terms  of  such investment) for United States currency during
the period  the  contract  or  contracts  are  in  effect  to
insulate the insurer against loss caused by diminution of the
value  of  payments owed to the insurer due to future changes
in currency exchange rates.
    C.  In   addition   to   investments   permitted    under
subsections  A  and  B  of  this  Section, an insurer that is
authorized to do business in a foreign jurisdiction, and that
has outstanding insurance, annuity or  reinsurance  contracts
on  lives  or  risks  resident  or  located  in  that foreign
jurisdiction and denominated  in  foreign  currency  of  that
jurisdiction, may acquire foreign investments respecting that
foreign jurisdiction, and may acquire investments denominated
in   the  currency  of  that  jurisdiction,  subject  to  the
limitations of Section  126.23.   However,  investments  made
under  this subsection in obligations of foreign governments,
their  political  subdivisions   and   government   sponsored
enterprises  shall  not  be  subject  to  the  limitations of
Section 126.23 if those investments carry an SVO rating of  1
or  2.  The  aggregate  amount of investments acquired by the
insurer under this subsection shall not  exceed  the  greater
of:
    (1)  The  amount the insurer is required by law to invest
in the foreign jurisdiction; or
    (2)  125%  of  the  amount  of  its  reserves,   net   of
reinsurance, and other obligations under the contracts.
    D.  In    addition   to   investments   permitted   under
subsections A and B of this Section, an insurer that  is  not
authorized to do business in a foreign jurisdiction but which
has  outstanding  insurance, annuity or reinsurance contracts
on  lives  or  risks  resident  or  located  in   a   foreign
jurisdiction  and  denominated  in  foreign  currency of that
jurisdiction, may acquire foreign investments respecting that
foreign jurisdiction, and may acquire investments denominated
in  the  currency  of  that  jurisdiction  subject   to   the
limitations set forth of Section 126.24. However, investments
made   under   this  subsection  in  obligations  of  foreign
governments,  their  political  subdivisions  and  government
sponsored enterprises shall not be subject to the limitations
of Section 126.23 if those investments carry an SVO rating of
1 or 2. The aggregate amount of investments acquired  by  the
insurer  under  this  subsection shall not exceed 105% of the
amount  of  its  reserves,  net  of  reinsurance,  and  other
obligations under the contracts on risks resident or  located
in the foreign jurisdiction.
    E.  Investments  acquired  under  this  Section  shall be
aggregated with investments of the same types made under  all
other  Sections of this Article, and in a similar manner, for
purposes of determining compliance with the  limitations,  if
any,   contained   in  the  other  Sections.  Investments  in
obligations   of   foreign   governments,   their   political
subdivisions and government sponsored  enterprises  of  these
persons,  except for those exempted under subsections C and D
of this Section, shall  be  subject  to  the  limitations  of
Section 126.23.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.31 new)
    Sec.  126.31.  Derivative  transactions.  An insurer may,
directly or  indirectly  through  an  investment  subsidiary,
engage  in  derivative  transactions under this Section under
the following conditions:
    A.  General conditions.
    (1)  An insurer may use derivative instruments under this
Section  to  engage  in  hedging  transactions   and   income
generation transactions.
    (2)  An   insurer  may  use  derivative  instruments  for
replication transactions only after the Director  promulgates
reasonable  rules  that  set  forth  methods  of  disclosure,
reserving  for  risk-based capital, and determining the asset
valuation reserve for these  investments.   Any  asset  being
replicated  is  subject to all the provisions and limitations
on the making thereof specified in this Article with  respect
to   investments   by  the  insurer  as  if  the  transaction
constituted  a  direct  investment  by  the  insurer  in  the
replicated asset.
    (3)  With respect to all hedging transactions, an insurer
shall be able to demonstrate to  the  Director  the  intended
hedging  characteristics and the ongoing effectiveness of the
derivative transaction or combination of transactions through
cash flow testing or other appropriate analyses.
    (4)  The Director may  promulgate  reasonable  rules  for
investments  and  transactions  under this Section including,
but not limited to, rules  which  impose  financial  solvency
standards, valuation standards, and reporting requirements.
    B.  Limitations on hedging transactions.
    An insurer may enter into hedging transactions under this
Section  if,  as  a  result of and after giving effect to the
transaction:
    (1)  The aggregate  statement  value  of  options,  caps,
floors   and  warrants  not  attached  to  another  financial
instrument purchased and used in  hedging  transactions  then
engaged  in  by  the  insurer  does  not  exceed  7.5% of its
admitted assets;
    (2)  The aggregate statement value of options,  caps  and
floors written in hedging transactions then engaged in by the
insurer does not exceed 3% of its admitted assets; and
    (3)  The  aggregate potential exposure of collars, swaps,
forwards  and  futures  used  in  hedging  transactions  then
engaged in by  the  insurer  does  not  exceed  6.5%  of  its
admitted assets.
    C.  Limitations on income generation transactions.
    An  insurer  may enter into the following types of income
generation transactions subject to the quantitative limits of
subsection C(4):
    (1)  Sales of covered call options on  noncallable  fixed
income  securities,  callable  fixed income securities if the
option  expires  by  its  terms  prior  to  the  end  of  the
noncallable period or derivative instruments based  on  fixed
income securities;
    (2)  Sales  of covered call options on equity securities,
if the insurer holds in its  portfolio,  or  can  immediately
acquire   through   the  exercise  of  options,  warrants  or
conversion  rights  already  owned,  the  equity   securities
subject  to  call during the complete term of the call option
sold; or
    (3)  Sales  of  covered  puts  on  investments  that  the
insurer is permitted to acquire under this  Article,  if  the
insurer  has  escrowed, or entered into a custodian agreement
segregating, cash or cash equivalents  with  a  market  value
equal to the amount of its purchase obligations under the put
during the complete term of the put option sold.
    (4)  If  as  a  result  of and after giving effect to the
transactions, the aggregate  statement  value  of  the  fixed
income assets that are subject to call plus the face value of
fixed  income  securities  underlying a derivative instrument
subject to call, plus the amount of the purchase  obligations
under the puts, does not exceed 10% of its admitted assets.
    D.  Counterparty  exposure.  An insurer shall include all
counterparty exposure amounts in determining compliance  with
the limitations of Section 126.23.
    E.  Additional    transactions.    Pursuant    to   rules
promulgated under Section 126.8,  the  Director  may  approve
additional  transactions  involving  the  use  of  derivative
instruments  in  excess of the limits of subsection B of this
Section or for other risk management purposes.

    (215 ILCS 5/126.32 new)
    Sec. 126.32.  Additional investment authority.
    A.  Under  this   Section,   an   insurer   may   acquire
investments  or  engage  in  investment practices of any kind
that are not specifically prohibited by Section 126.5 and are
not derivative instruments without regard to  any  limitation
in  Sections  126.23 through 126.30, but an insurer shall not
acquire an investment or engage  in  an  investment  practice
under this Section if, as a result of and after giving effect
to  the  transaction, the aggregate amount of the investments
then held by the insurer under this Section would exceed  the
greater of:
    (1)  Its unrestricted surplus; or
    (2)  The lesser of:
    (a)  10% of its admitted assets; or
    (b)  50% of its surplus as regards policyholders.
    B.  An insurer shall not acquire any investment or engage
in  any  investment  practice  under  subsection A(2) of this
Section if, as a result of and after  giving  effect  to  the
transaction  the  aggregate  amount of all investments in any
one person then held by the  insurer  under  that  subsection
would exceed 5% of its admitted assets.

    (215 ILCS 5/124 rep. through 125.24a rep.)
    Section  10.  The  Illinois  Insurance Code is amended by
repealing Sections 124 through 125.24a.

    Section 15.  The Illinois Insurance Code  is  amended  by
changing  Sections  3.1,  26,  53,  74,  111, 131.3, 136, and
245.21 as follows:

    (215 ILCS 5/3.1) (from Ch. 73, par. 615.1)
    Sec. 3.1.  Definitions  of  admitted  assets.   "Admitted
Assets"  includes  the investments authorized or permitted by
this Code, the credit for reinsurance allowed by  this  Code,
and in addition thereto, only the following:
    (a)  Petty  cash  and  other  cash funds in the company's
principal or any official branch office and under the control
of the company.
    (b)  Immediately withdrawable funds on deposit in  demand
accounts,  in  a  bank or trust company as defined in Section
126.2MMM(1) 124.7c or like funds actually in the principal or
any official branch office at statement date, and, in transit
to such bank or trust company with authentic  deposit  credit
given  prior  to  the  close  of  business  on the fifth bank
working day following the statement date.
    (c)  The amount fairly estimated as recoverable  on  cash
deposited  in  a  closed bank or trust company, if qualifying
under the provisions of this Section prior to the  suspension
of such bank or trust company.
    (d)  Bills  and  accounts  receivable  collateralized  by
securities  of the kind in which the company is authorized to
invest.
    (e)  Bills receivable not past due  covering  uncollected
premiums  taken  by  a company in the transaction of business
described in Class 3 of Section 4, in an amount not to exceed
the unearned premium reserve  liability  calculated  on  each
respective policy.
    (f)  For  in  force  insurance coverages written by fire,
casualty, and reciprocal companies, excluding group  accident
and  health  business,  premium deposits, gross premiums, and
agents' balances (net of related commissions) not  more  than
90  days  past  due; installments booked but deferred and not
yet due (net  of  related  commissions),  provided  that  all
amounts  having become due from the insured are not more than
90 days past due; and audit and retrospective premium to  the
extent  permitted  to  be  admitted  pursuant  to  the Annual
Statement  Instructions  and  the  Accounting  Practices  and
Procedures  Manual  for  Property   and   Casualty   Insurers
published   by   the   National   Association   of  Insurance
Commissioners,  unless  the  Director  prescribes  otherwise.
However, audit  and  retrospective  premiums  that  represent
anticipated  additional  premiums  on  policies for which the
policy period has not yet expired may not be admitted.
    (g)  Net amount of uncollected premiums on group life and
group accident and health policies, not  more  than  90  days
past due.
    (h)  Due  and uncollected accident and health premiums on
in force individual policies, on insurance written  by  Class
1,  Section  4  companies,  less  commissions  due thereon to
agents; not exceeding in the aggregate  the  premium  reserve
liability computed on such business.
    (i)  Premium  notes,  policy loans and liens, and the net
amount of uncollected and  deferred  premiums  on  individual
life  insurance  policies, not in excess of the liability for
the legal reserves specified in Section 223 or  281  of  this
Code on such individual life insurance policies.
    (j)  Premium  and assessment notes, certificate loans and
liens, and the gross amount  less  loading,  of  premiums  or
assessments  actually collected by subordinate lodges not yet
turned over to the Supreme Lodge on individual life insurance
certificates not in excess of the  liability  for  the  legal
reserves   specified  in  Section  297.1  or  305.1  on  such
individual life insurance certificates.
    (k)  Mortuary assessments due and  unpaid  on  last  call
made  within  60  days,  on  insurance in force and for which
notices have been issued, not in excess of the liability  for
the unpaid claims which are to be paid by the proceeds.
    (l)  Amounts   fairly   estimated   as  recoverable  from
advances made on contracts under surety bonds.
    (m)  Amounts   receivable   from   insurance    companies
authorized to do business in this State and from associations
or  bureaus  owned  or  controlled  by 5 or more separate and
nonaffiliated,  by   ownership   or   management,   insurance
companies  of  which  a  majority  thereof  are authorized to
transact  business  in  this  State.   The  amount  of  those
receivables allowed as admitted assets  may  not  exceed  the
lesser of 5% of the company's total admitted assets or 10% of
the  company's  surplus  as  regards  policyholders.  Amounts
receivable  from  insurance  companies  or  associations   or
bureaus  not  meeting the preceding standards of this Section
if collateralized in the manner prescribed by Section 173.1.
    (n)  Tax refunds due from the United States or any state,
the Government of Canada or any province, or the Commonwealth
of Puerto Rico or amounts due to a subsidiary from  a  parent
under  a  tax  allocation  agreement that conforms with rules
adopted by the Director.
    (o)  The interest accrued on mortgage loans conforming to
this Code, not exceeding an aggregate amount on an individual
loan of one year's total due and accrued interest.
    (p)  The rents accrued and owing to the company  on  real
and  personal  property,  directly or beneficially owned, not
exceeding on each  individual  property  the  amount  of  one
year's total due and accrued rent.
    (q)  Interest  or  rents  accrued  on  conditional  sales
agreements, security interests, chattel mortgages and real or
personal  property  under  lease  to  other corporations, all
conforming to this Code, and not exceeding on any  individual
investment,  the  amount  of one year's total due and accrued
interest or rent.
    (r)  The fixed and required interest due and  accrued  on
bonds and other like evidences of indebtedness, conforming to
this Code, and not in default.
    (s)  Dividends  receivable  on shares of stock conforming
to this Code;  provided  that  the  market  price  taken  for
valuation   purposes  does  not  include  the  value  of  the
dividend.
    (t)  The interest or dividends due and payable,  but  not
credited,  on  deposits  in  banks  and trust companies or on
accounts with savings and loan associations.
    (u)  Interest accrued on secured loans conforming to this
Code, not exceeding the amount of one year's interest on  any
loan.
    (v)  Interest accrued on tax anticipation warrants.
    (w)  The  value of electronic computer or data processing
machines or systems purchased for use in connection with  the
business of the company, if such machines or systems whenever
purchased  have  an aggregate original cost to the company of
at least $75,000. The amortized value  of  such  machines  or
systems  at the end of any calendar year shall not be greater
than the original purchase price less 10% for each  completed
year,  or  pro  rata  portion for any fraction thereof, after
such  purchase,  with  the  total  admissible  value  at  any
statement date to be limited to an amount not exceeding 2% of
the company's admitted assets at such statement date.
    (x)  Amounts,  other  than   premium,   receivable   from
affiliates,  not  outstanding  for  more  than  3 months, and
arising under, management  contracts  or  service  agreements
which  meet the requirements of Section 141.1 of the Illinois
Insurance Code to the extent that the  affiliate  has  liquid
assets  sufficient  to  pay the balance.  The amount of those
receivables included in admitted assets may  not  exceed  the
lesser  of  5% of the company's admitted assets or 10% of the
company's surplus as regards policyholders.  For purposes  of
this  subsection, "affiliate" has the meaning given that term
in Article VIII 1/2 of the Illinois Insurance Code.
    (y)  Property and liability  guaranty  fund  or  guaranty
association  assessments  paid  in any state, but only to the
extent it is probable the company  will  be  able  to  offset
those  assessments against present or future premium taxes or
income taxes payable in the state in  which  the  assessments
were  paid.    The  amount  of  those  assessments allowed as
admitted assets may not  exceed  the  lesser  of  5%  of  the
company's  total  admitted  assets  or  10%  of the company's
surplus as regards policyholders.  The Director may  disallow
any  such  assessment  as  an admitted asset to the extent he
determines a company is unlikely  to  realize  a  present  or
future  premium  tax  or income tax offset as a result of the
assessment.
(Source: P.A. 88-364; 88-535;  88-627,  eff.  9-9-94;  89-97,
eff. 7-7-95; 89-669, eff. 1-1-97.)

    (215 ILCS 5/26) (from Ch. 73, par. 638)
    Sec. 26. Deposit. Every company subject to the provisions
of this Article shall make and maintain with the Director for
the  protection  of  all  creditors, policyholders and policy
obligations of the company, a deposit of securities which are
authorized investments under Section 126.11A(1),  126.11A(2),
126.24A(1), or 126.24A(2) Sections 125.1a and 125.2a having a
fair  market  value  equal to the minimum capital and surplus
required to be maintained under Section 13.
(Source: P.A. 88-364.)

    (215 ILCS 5/53) (from Ch. 73, par. 665)
    Sec. 53. Deposit. Each company subject to the  provisions
of this Article shall make and maintain with the Director for
the  protection  of  all  creditors, policyholders and policy
obligations of the company, a deposit of securities which are
authorized investments under Section 126.11A(1),  126.11A(2),
126.24A(1), or 126.24A(2) Sections 125.1a and 125.2a having a
fair market value equal to the minimum surplus required to be
maintained under Section 43.
(Source: P.A. 88-364.)

    (215 ILCS 5/74) (from Ch. 73, par. 686)
    Sec. 74. Deposit.
    (1)  Each  domestic  reciprocal subject to the provisions
of this  Article shall make and maintain  with  the  Director
for the protection of all creditors, policyholders and policy
obligations of such reciprocal, a deposit of securities which
are   authorized   investments   under   Section  126.11A(1),
126.11A(2), 126.24A(1), or  126.24A(2)  Sections  125.1a  and
125.2a  having  a  fair  market  value  equal  to the surplus
required to be maintained under Section 66.
(Source: P.A. 88-364.)

    (215 ILCS 5/111) (from Ch. 73, par. 723)
    Sec. 111.   Conditions  of  issuance  of  certificate  of
authority.
    (1)  Before   a  certificate  of  authority  to  transact
business in this State  is  issued  to  a  foreign  or  alien
company, such company shall satisfy the Director that:
         (a)  the company is duly organized under the laws of
    the  state or country under whose laws it professes to be
    organized  and  authorized  to  do  the  business  it  is
    transacting or proposes to transact;
         (b)  its name is not the  same  as,  or  deceptively
    similar  to,  the name of any domestic company, or of any
    foreign or alien company authorized to transact  business
    in this State;
         (c)  if  a  company transacting business of the kind
    or kinds enumerated in Class 1 of Section 4,  it  is  not
    engaging  in  practices  in any state which if engaged in
    this State, would constitute a violation of Section  237;
    and  it  is  not  transacting any kinds of business other
    than those enumerated in Class 1 of Section 4;
         (d)  if a stock company, it has a  paid  up  capital
    and  surplus  at  least equal to the capital and original
    surplus required by this  Code  for  a  domestic  company
    doing  the same kind or kinds of business or, if a mutual
    company or reciprocal, it has a surplus and provision for
    contingent liability of policyholders, at least equal  to
    the   original   surplus  and  provision  for  contingent
    liability  of  policyholders  required  for   a   similar
    domestic   company  doing  the  same  kind  or  kinds  of
    business, or, if a fraternal benefit  society,  it  meets
    the   requirements   prescribed  in  this  Code  for  the
    organization of a domestic company or society,  or  if  a
    Lloyds it meets the requirements of Article V;
         (e)  its  funds  are invested in accordance with the
    laws of its domicile; and
         (f)  in the case of  a  stock  company  its  minimum
    capital and surplus and required reserves, or in the case
    of  a  mutual  company or a reciprocal proposing to issue
    policies  without  contingent  liability,   its   minimum
    surplus  and  required  reserves,  or  in the case of any
    other company, all its funds, are invested in  securities
    or  property  which afford a degree of financial security
    equal to that required for  similar  domestic  companies,
    provided  that  this  clause  shall  not  be construed as
    requiring the application of limitations relating  either
    to  the  kind  or amount of securities prescribed by this
    Code for the investments of domestic companies.
    (2)  In determining whether  an  alien  company  complies
with  the  provisions  of  subsection (1) of this section the
Director shall  consider  only  business  transacted  in  the
United  States,  only the assets described in Section 60j and
only  liabilities  in  connection  with  its  United   States
business.
    (3)  Before  a  certificate  of  authority is issued to a
foreign or alien company,  other  than  a  Lloyds,  it  shall
deposit  with  the  Director  securities which are authorized
investments for  similar  domestic  companies  under  Section
126.11A(1),  126.11A(2),  126.24A(1),  or 126.24A(2) Sections
125.1a and 125.2a of  the  amount,  if  any,  required  of  a
domestic  company similarly organized and doing the same kind
or kinds of business; or in lieu of such deposit such foreign
or alien company shall satisfy the Director that  it  has  on
deposit with an official of a state of the United States or a
depositary  designated or authorized for such purpose by such
official, authorized by the law of such state to accept  such
deposit,  securities  of  at  least  a  like  amount, for the
benefit and security  of  all  creditors,  policyholders  and
policy obligations of such company in the United States.
    (4)  Before  issuing  a  certificate  of  authority  to a
foreign  or  alien  company,  the  Director  may   cause   an
examination  to  be made of the condition and affairs of such
company.
(Source: P.A. 88-364.)

    (215 ILCS 5/131.3) (from Ch. 73, par. 743.3)
    Sec. 131.3. (1) Investments in  common  stock,  preferred
stock,  debt  obligations or other securities of subsidiaries
made under Section 131.2  of  this  Article  are  subject  to
Sections  126.3,  126.4,  126.5,  126.6, 126.7, 124.1, 124.2,
124.3, 124.6, 125a and 133 of this Code but are  not  subject
to  any  other  of  the  otherwise applicable restrictions or
prohibitions  contained  in  this  Code  applicable  to  such
investments of a domestic company subject to this Code.
    (2)  If a company ceases to control a subsidiary, it must
dispose of any investment therein  made  under  this  section
within  3  years from the time of the cessation of control or
within such further  time  as  the  Director  may  prescribe,
unless  at  any  time  after  the  investment  is  made,  the
investment  meets  the  requirements for investment under any
other section of this Code, and the company has notified  the
Director thereof.
(Source: P.A. 84-805.)

    (215 ILCS 5/136) (from Ch. 73, par. 748)
    Sec. 136.  Annual statement.
    (1)  Every  company  authorized  to  do  business in this
State or  accredited  by  this  State  shall  file  with  the
Director  by March 1st in each year 2 copies of its financial
statement for  the  year  ending  December  31st  immediately
preceding  on  forms  prescribed by the Director, which shall
conform substantially to the form of statement adopted by the
National Association of Insurance Commissioners.  Unless  the
Director  provides  otherwise,  the annual statement is to be
prepared in accordance with the annual statement instructions
and the Accounting Practices and Procedures Manual adopted by
the National Association  of  Insurance  Commissioners.   The
Director  shall  have  power  to  make such modifications and
additions in this form as he may deem desirable or  necessary
to  ascertain  the condition and affairs of the company.  The
Director shall have authority to extend the time  for  filing
any  statement  by any company for reasons which he considers
good and sufficient. In every statement the  admitted  assets
shall be shown at the actual values as of the last day of the
preceding  year,  in accordance with Section 126.7 124.6. The
statement shall be verified by oaths  of  the  president  and
secretary  of  the  company  or, in their absence, by 2 other
principal officers. In addition, any company may be  required
by  the  Director,  when  he  considers  that  action  to  be
necessary    and    appropriate   for   the   protection   of
policyholders,  creditors,  shareholders,  or  claimants,  to
file, within 60 days after mailing to the  company  a  notice
that such is required, a supplemental summary statement as of
the  last  day of any calendar month occurring during the 100
days next preceding the mailing of such notice designated  by
him  on  forms  prescribed and furnished by the Director. The
Director may require supplemental summary  statements  to  be
certified  by  an independent actuary deemed competent by the
Director or by an independent certified public accountant.
    (2)  The statement of an alien company shall embrace only
its condition and transactions in the United States and shall
be verified by the oaths of its resident manager or principal
representative in the United States, except that in the  case
of any life company organized under the laws of Canada or any
province  thereof, the statement may be verified by the oaths
of any of its principal officers designated for that  purpose
by its board of directors.
    (3)  For  the  information  of  the  public generally the
Director shall cause an abstract of the information contained
in the annual statement to be made available to the public as
soon as practicable after  filing  with  the  Department,  by
printing  those  abstracts  in pamphlet tabular form for free
general distribution by the  Department,  or  by  such  other
publication  in  the  city  of  Springfield or in the city of
Chicago as may be reasonably necessary more fully  to  inform
the   public   of   the   financial  condition  of  companies
transacting business in this State.
    (4)  Each domestic, foreign, and alien insurer authorized
to do business in this State  or  accredited  by  this  State
shall  participate  in  the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners'  Insurance  Regulatory   Information   System,
including  the payment of all fees and charges of the system.
Each company shall, on or before March 1 of each  year,  file
with  the  National  Association of Insurance Commissioners a
copy  of  its  annual  financial  statement  along  with  any
additional  filings  prescribed  by  the  Director  for   the
preceding  year.   The  statement  filed  with  the  National
Association  of  Insurance Commissioners shall be in the same
format and scope as that required  by  this  Code  and  shall
include a signed jurat page and actuarial certification.  Any
amendments  and  addendums to the annual statement shall also
be  filed  with  the  National   Association   of   Insurance
Commissioners. Each company shall also file with the National
Association  of  Insurance Commissioners annual and quarterly
financial statement information in computer  readable  format
as  required  by the Insurance Regulatory Information System.
Failure of a company to file financial statement  information
in  computer readable format shall subject the company to the
provisions of Section 139.
    (5)  All  financial  analysis  ratios   and   examination
synopsis concerning insurance companies that are submitted to
the   Director  by  the  National  Association  of  Insurance
Commissioners' Insurance Regulatory  Information  System  are
confidential and may not be disclosed by the Director.
(Source: P.A. 87-1090; 88-364.)

    (215 ILCS 5/245.21) (from Ch. 73, par. 857.21)
    Sec.  245.21.  A domestic life company, including for the
purposes of this Article all domestic  fraternal  beneficiary
associations, societies or companies which operate on a legal
reserve  basis,  may establish one or more separate accounts,
and  may  allocate   thereto   amounts   (including   without
limitation   proceeds   applied   under   optional  modes  of
settlement or under dividend options)  to  provide  for  life
insurance  or  annuities  (and  benefits incidental thereto),
payable in fixed or variable amounts or both, subject to  the
following:
    (1)  The   income,   gains   and   losses,   realized  or
unrealized, from assets allocated to a separate account  must
be credited to or charged against the account, without regard
to other income, gains or losses of the company.
    (2)  Except  as  may be provided with respect to reserves
for guaranteed benefits and funds referred  to  in  paragraph
(3)  of  this  Section  (i) amounts allocated to any separate
account  and  accumulations  thereon  may  be  invested   and
reinvested  without regard to any requirements or limitations
of Part 2 or Part 3 of Article  VIII  Sections  125a  through
125.24a of this Code and (ii) the investments in any separate
account or accounts may not be taken into account in applying
the   investment  limitations  otherwise  applicable  to  the
investments of the company.
    (3)  Except with the approval of the Director  and  under
the  conditions as to investments and other matters as he may
prescribe, that must recognize the guaranteed nature  of  the
benefits provided, reserves for (i) benefits guaranteed as to
dollar  amount  and  duration and (ii) funds guaranteed as to
principal amount or  stated  rate  of  interest  may  not  be
maintained in a separate account.
    (4)  Unless  otherwise  approved  by the Director, assets
allocated to a separate  account  must  be  valued  at  their
market  value  on  the  date  of valuation, or if there is no
readily available market, then as provided in the contract or
the rules  or  other  written  agreement  applicable  to  the
separate  account. Unless otherwise approved by the Director,
the portion, if any, of the assets of  the  separate  account
equal  to  the company's reserve liability with regard to the
guaranteed benefits and funds referred to in paragraph (3) of
this Section must be valued  in  accordance  with  the  rules
otherwise applicable to the company's assets.
    (5)  Amounts  allocated  to a separate account under this
Article are owned by the company, and the company may not be,
nor hold itself out to be, a trustee with  respect  to  those
amounts.  The  assets  of  any  separate account equal to the
reserves and other contract liabilities with respect  to  the
account  may  not  be charged with liabilities arising out of
any other business the company may conduct.
    (6)  No sale, exchange or other transfer of assets may be
made by a company between any of  its  separate  accounts  or
between  any  other investment account and one or more of its
separate accounts unless,  in  case  of  a  transfer  into  a
separate  account,  the  transfer is made solely to establish
the account or to support the operation of the contracts with
respect to the separate account  to  which  the  transfer  is
made,  and  unless  the  transfer,  whether  into  or  from a
separate account, is made (i) by a transfer of cash, or  (ii)
by  a  transfer  of  securities having a readily determinable
market value, if the transfer of securities  is  approved  by
the  Director. The Director may approve other transfers among
those accounts if, in his opinion, the transfers would not be
inequitable.
    (7)  To the extent a company considers  it  necessary  to
comply  with  any  applicable  federal  or  state  laws,  the
company,  with  respect  to  any  separate account, including
without limitation any separate account which is a management
investment company or a unit investment  trust,  may  provide
for persons having an interest therein appropriate voting and
other  rights  and  special procedures for the conduct of the
business of the account, including without limitation special
rights  and  procedures  relating   to   investment   policy,
investment advisory services, selection of independent public
accountants, and the selection of a committee, the members of
which  need  not be otherwise affiliated with the company, to
manage the business of the account.
(Source: P.A. 86-1154; 86-1156.)

    Section 20.  The Housing Development and Construction Act
is amended by changing Section 5 as follows:

    (310 ILCS 20/5) (from Ch. 67 1/2, par. 57)
    Sec. 5.  Any grants paid hereunder to a housing authority
shall be deposited in a separate fund  and,  subject  to  the
approval of the Department of Commerce and Community Affairs,
may  be  used for any or all of the following purposes as the
needs of the community may require: the acquisition  of  land
by   purchase,  gift  or  condemnation  and  the  improvement
thereof, the purchase and installation of  temporary  housing
facilities,  the  construction  of  housing units for rent or
sale to veterans, the families of  deceased  servicemen,  and
for persons and families who by reason of overcrowded housing
conditions  or  displacement  by  eviction,  fires  or  other
calamities,  or  slum  clearance  or  other private or public
project involving relocation, are in urgent need of safe  and
sanitary housing, the making of grants in connection with the
sale  or  lease of real property as provided in the following
paragraph of this section,  and  for  any  and  all  purposes
authorized  by  the "Housing Authorities Act," approved March
19, 1934, as amended, including  administrative  expenses  of
the   housing   authorities  in  relation  to  the  aforesaid
objectives, to the extent and for the purposes authorized and
approved by the Department of Commerce and Community Affairs.
Each housing authority is vested with power to  exercise  the
right  of  eminent domain for the purposes authorized by this
Act.  Condemnation  proceedings  instituted   by   any   such
authority shall be in all respects in the manner provided for
the exercise of the right of eminent domain under Article VII
of the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended.
    In  addition  to  the  foregoing,  and for the purpose of
facilitating the development  and  construction  of  housing,
housing  authorities may, with the approval of the Department
of Commerce and Community Affairs, enter into  contracts  and
agreements for the sale or lease of real property acquired by
the Authority through the use of the grant hereunder, and may
sell  or  lease  such  property  to  (1) housing corporations
operating under "An Act in  relation  to  housing,"  approved
July  12,  1933,  as  amended; (2) neighborhood redevelopment
corporations operating under the "Neighborhood  Redevelopment
Corporation  Law,"  approved  July  9,  1941;  (3)  insurance
companies  operating  under  Article  VIII Section 125 of the
"Illinois  Insurance  Code,"  approved  June  29,  1937,   as
amended;   (4)  non-profit  corporations  organized  for  the
purpose  of  constructing,  managing  and  operating  housing
projects and the improvement of housing conditions, including
the sale or rental  of  housing  units  to  persons  in  need
thereof;  or  (5)  to  any  other  individual, association or
corporation,  including  bona  fide   housing   cooperatives,
desiring to engage in a development or redevelopment project.
The  term  "corporation"  as  used  in  this section, means a
corporation organized under the laws of  this  or  any  other
state  of  the  United  States,  or of any country, which may
legally make investments  in  this  State  of  the  character
herein  prescribed,  including  foreign  and  alien insurance
companies as defined in Section 2 of the "Illinois  Insurance
Code." No sale or lease shall be made hereunder to any of the
aforesaid  corporations, associations or individuals unless a
plan approved by the Authority  has  been  presented  by  the
purchaser  or  lessee for the development or redevelopment of
such  property,  together  with  a  bond,  with  satisfactory
sureties,  of  not  less  than  10%  of  the  cost  of   such
development or redevelopment, conditioned upon the completion
of  such  development  or  redevelopment;  provided  that the
requirement of the bond may be waived by  the  Department  of
Commerce  and  Community  Affairs  if  it is satisfied of the
financial ability of the purchaser or lessee to complete such
development or redevelopment in accordance with the presented
plan.  To further assure that the real property  so  sold  or
leased  shall  be  used  in  accordance  with  the  plan, the
Department of Commerce and Community Affairs may require  the
purchaser  or  lessee to execute in writing such undertakings
as the Department deems necessary to obligate such  purchaser
or  lessee (1) to use the property for the purposes presented
in the plan; (2) to commence and complete the building of the
improvements designated in the plan  within  the  periods  of
time  that  the  Department of Commerce and Community Affairs
fixes as reasonable,  and  (3)  to  comply  with  such  other
conditions as are necessary to carry out the purposes of this
Act.   Any such property may be sold pursuant to this section
for any legal consideration in an amount to  be  approved  by
the  Department of Commerce and Community Affairs. Subject to
the  approval  of  the  Department  of Commerce and Community
Affairs, a  housing  authority  may  pay  to  any  non-profit
corporation  of  the character described in this section from
grants made available from state funds,  such  sum  of  money
which,  when added to the value of the land so sold or leased
to such non-profit corporation and the value of other  assets
of  such  non-profit  corporation  available  for  use in the
project, will enable such non-profit  corporation  to  obtain
Federal    Housing    Administration   insured   construction
mortgages.  Any  such  authority  may  also  sell,  transfer,
convey  or  assign  to  any  such  non-profit corporation any
personal property, including building materials and supplies,
as it deems necessary to facilitate  the  completion  of  the
development or redevelopment by such non-profit corporation.
    If  the area of operation of a housing authority includes
a city, village or incorporated town having a  population  in
excess  of  500,000,  as  determined  by  the  last preceding
Federal Census, no real property or interest in real property
shall  be  acquired  in  such  municipality  by  the  housing
authority until  such  time  as  the  housing  authority  has
advised  the  governing  body  of  such  municipality  of the
description  of  the  real  property,  or  interest  therein,
proposed to be  acquired,  and  the  governing  body  of  the
municipality  has  approved  the  acquisition  thereof by the
housing authority.
(Source: P.A. 82-783.)

    Section 25.  The Blighted Areas Redevelopment Act of 1947
is amended by changing Section 19 as follows:

    (315 ILCS 5/19) (from Ch. 67 1/2, par. 81)
    Sec. 19.  The Commission may at such times  as  it  deems
expedient  transfer  and  sell  the fee simple title, or such
lesser estate as the Commission may have heretofore  acquired
or  may  hereafter  acquire,  to  all or any part of the real
property within the  area  of  a  redevelopment  project  not
disposed  of  in  accordance  with  Sections  17, 18 and 18.1
hereof  to  (1)   Neighborhood   Redevelopment   Corporations
operating  under  the "Neighborhood Redevelopment Corporation
Law", approved  July  9,  1941,  as  amended,  (2)  Insurance
Companies operating under Article VIII Section 125.21a of the
"Illinois   Insurance  Code",  approved  June  29,  1937,  as
amended, (3) any  individual,  association,  or  corporation,
organized  under the laws of this State or of any other State
or country, which may legally make such investments  in  this
State,  including  foreign  and alien insurance companies, as
defined in Section 2 of the Illinois Insurance Code,  or  (4)
bodies  politic  and  corporate,  public corporations, or any
private interests empowered by law to  acquire,  develop  and
use  such  real property for such uses, public or private, as
are in accordance with an approved plan;  provided,  however,
that  any  sale of real property to a Housing Authority shall
be made only in accordance with the provisions of Sections 18
and 18.1 hereof. To assure that the real property so sold  is
used  in  accordance  with  the  approved plan referred to in
Section 19.1 hereof, the Commission shall  inquire  into  and
satisfy  itself  concerning  the  financial  ability  of  the
purchaser  to  complete  the redevelopment in accordance with
the approved plan and shall require the purchaser to  execute
in  writing  such  undertakings  as  the  Commission may deem
necessary to obligate the purchaser: (1) to use the land  for
the purposes designated in the approved plan, (2) to commence
and  complete  the  building  of  the improvements within the
periods of time which the Commission fixes as reasonable, and
(3) to comply with such other conditions as are necessary  to
carry out the purposes of this Act. Any such area may be sold
either  as  an  entirety or in such parcels as the Commission
shall deem expedient. It shall not be necessary that title be
acquired  to  all  real  property  within  the  area   of   a
redevelopment  project  before the sale of a part thereof may
be made as provided herein. Any real property  sold  pursuant
to  the foregoing provisions of this Section shall be sold at
its use value (which may be less than its acquisition  cost),
which represents the value at which the Commission determines
such  land  should  be made available in order that it may be
developed or redeveloped for the purposes  specified  in  the
approved plan.
    Any   real   property   lying   within   the  area  of  a
redevelopment  project  which  has  not  been  sold  by   the
Commission  within  5 years after the Commission has acquired
title to all the  real  property  within  the  area  of  that
redevelopment   project,  shall  be  forthwith  sold  by  the
Commission at public sale for  cash  to  the  highest  bidder
obligating  himself  in the manner set forth in the preceding
paragraph of  this  Section  to  redevelop  the  property  in
accordance with the approved plan. Notice of such sale and of
the  place  where the approved plan may be inspected shall be
published once in a newspaper having a general circulation in
the municipality in which the real property  is  situated  at
least  20  days  prior  to  the date of such public sale, and
shall contain a description of the real property to be sold.
    The Commission may reject the bids received  if,  in  the
opinion  of the Commission, the highest bid does not equal or
exceed the use value (as herein above defined) of the land to
be sold. At the expiration of six (6) months from the date of
rejecting bids, the Commission shall again advertise for sale
any real property then  remaining  unsold.  Each  publication
shall  be  subject to the same requirements and conditions as
the original publication.
(Source: P.A. 83-333.)

    Section 99. Effective date. This Act  takes  effect  upon
becoming law.

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