LLM2080 - Syndicate accounts: RITC: the effect of annual accounting
The RITC remains a feature of Lloyd's and is likely to do so
while the annual venture concept exists and each year’s
syndicate is a separate legal entity.
Before annual accounting, the RITC was an expense in the
underwriting account of the syndicate for the closing year and a
receipt (not an opening provision) in the underwriting account of
the following year’s syndicate.
Run-off syndicates are required to make an estimate of future
liabilities (see
LLM2070), that is, a provision, and
revisit it every year until they are able to pay an RITC.
A single member corporate syndicate cannot technically pay a
reinsurance premium to itself. Lloyd’s rules deem the
provision for known and unknown liabilities of a closing year of
account to be an RITC.
The annual account balance sheet will show a provision for
future liabilities, part of which represents those liabilities
assumed under an RITC. The amount of the RITC received and paid
will be shown in the syndicate underwriting year accounts (
LLM2210).
