GIM11190 - Captive insurers: warranties, creditor business and service agreements: FA 2003
High street retailers have often made use of captive insurers,
fronted by UK insurers, to insure the risks of extended warranties
to customers who purchase such items as electrical goods. The
policy is written directly with a fronting insurer who then
reinsures to the retailer’s captive. A development of the
warranty scheme is for the retailer to sell a service agreement
between the fronting company and the customer, which covers the
same risks as the insurance. The agreements are then insured by the
service company with the retailer’s captive. Similar schemes
were also set up by banks providing credit card protection
business. This latter type of insurance may include an element of
long term protection business which is not discussed here, although
it is also subject to the new legislation mentioned below.
In such cases the retailer acts as ‘agent’ for
the insurer/service company in selling the policy/agreement and
carries out most of the activity undertaken under the scheme. The
insurance policy or service agreement is, however, with the
customer and therefore with a third party, i.e. the transaction of
insurance is not between connected persons. Such arrangements have
in the past been challenged on transfer pricing grounds. But the
CFC legislation did not apply because the captive would pass the
exempt activities test, as the policies were not obtained from
connected persons –ICTA88/SCH25/PARA6 (2)(b).
FA03/S200 and FA03/SCH42 amended the exempt activities test
in Schedule 25 to ensure that captives of this sort could no longer
obtain automatic exemption from the CFC legislation. Part 2 of
Schedule 25 was amended so that a company engaged in wholesale,
distributive, financial or service business is only engaged in
“exempt activities” where less than 50% of its turnover
is derived from persons, among others, who are individuals
habitually resident in the UK (paragraph 6(2A)(f)). There is a let
out for insurers who effect or carry out contracts of long-term
business, other than protection business, or who insure or reinsure
large risks. Further guidance on the application of this
legislation to insurers can be found in the International Manual
(see INTM205110).
