In a long-awaited decision, the Illinois Supreme Court reaffirmed Thursday the Illinois Appellate Court judgment that fixed indexed annuities are not securities under Illinois state law.
Had the Illinois Supreme Court not voted unanimously to affirm the Appellate Court ruling, Illinois “would have been the only state in the country to classify and treat fixed indexed annuities as a securities product,” Pam Heinrich, general counsel for the National Association for Fixed Annuities, told ThinkAdvisor in a Friday email message. “As such, individuals who held an insurance producer license in Illinois would have been required to obtain securities licensure in order to sell these (heretofore insurance) products.”
Heinrich stated that as “discussions about fixed annuity regulation and legislation continue to evolve at both the state and federal levels, NAFA remains vigilant in its advocacy efforts to protect fixed annuities.”
As the state’s supreme court ruling states, Section 989J of the Dodd-Frank Act — often referred to as the Harkin Amendment — sponsored by former Sen. Tom Harkin of Iowa, exempts from Securities and Exchange Commission regulation and registration requirements certain state-regulated annuities as long as they meet the following requirements:
- The value of the contract does not vary according to the performance of a separate account (this eliminates variable annuities from getting this exemption);
- The annuity contract satisfies applicable standard non-forfeiture laws; and
- Sales of the annuity must meet or exceed the suitability standards established by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC).
“As long as they meet those requirements, indexed annuities are treated as insurance products and are regulated at the state level by state departments of insurance,” Heinrich said.