Jet engine manufacturer United Technologies Corp. is asking the Labor
Department for permission to fund benefit risks through its Vermont “captive”
insurance company.
Hartford-based United Technologies wants to use its
12-year-old Vermont captive insurance company, United Technologies Insurance
(Vermont) Inc., to reinsure group term life insurance, accidental death and
dismemberment and long-term disability policies.The group life and accidental death and dismemberment policies would be
written by a Cigna Corp. unit, while the long-term disability policies would be
written by a unit of Liberty Mutual Group. The fronting insurers would reinsure
100 percent of the risk with UTIV.
United Technologies now uses UTIV to fund property/casualty risks. Last year,
UTIV generated about $50 million in premiums, making it one of Vermont’s larger
single-parent captives.
United Technologies, which had $47.8 billion in revenue last year, is the
first employer this year to ask for Labor Department approval to fund employee
benefits through a captive insurance company. Earlier this year, financial
services giant Wells Fargo & Co. of San Francisco received approval to
reinsure group and long-term disability policies through its Vermont
captive.
Employers that received approval last year to fund benefits risks through
their captive insurance companies were consumer food products manufacturer H.J.
Heinz Co. of Pittsburgh, which is using its Vermont captive insurance company to
fund group term life insurance policies; U.S. affiliates of U.K. pharmaceutical
manufacturer AstraZeneca PLC to fund benefits through its Vermont captive; and
Atlanta-based natural gas distributor AGL Resources Inc. to reinsure certain
benefit risks through the Hawaii branch of its British Virgin Islands captive
insurance company.
Filed by Jerry Geisel of Business
Insurance, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment,
e-mail editors@workforce.com.