FSRA’s recent examinations raise serious concerns about the training and supervision of life insurance agents with Tiered MGAs. It also raises questions about how fairly insurance customers are being treated. In an examination of 130 life insurance agents with Tiered MGAs, FSRA cited 50% of those agents with 184 contraventions of the Insurance Act (Ontario). In addition, more than half the insurance products those agents sold in 2020 and 2021 were universal life insurance policies.
In a separate examination of 24 customer files of Tiered MGA life agents, 80% of the files did not have an analysis showing the universal life insurance policy was appropriate for the customer. FSRA also found substantial problems with retirement advice and with unrealistic or misleading assumptions.
If unsuitable parties are licensed to sell insurance, or if life insurance agents sell unsuitable insurance, Ontarians may be at significant risk of financial harm.
We were pleased to see FSRA proposed guidance about how it will decide if individuals, corporations, or partnerships are suitable to hold a life insurance license. We support FSRA clarifying how the following matters will affect whether FSRA will consider an agent suitable to hold a life insurance license:
- Criminal charges and convictions.
- Breaches of laws, regulations, or rules.
- Bankruptcy or insolvency.
- Not following FSRA Guidance (including guidance about fair treatment of customers).
- False statements, material omissions, or other dishonesty.
- Failure to diligently perform any activity that an agent agrees to perform on behalf of an insurer or another agent.
While FSRA’s proposed guidance is a welcome addition to its toolkit to hold the insurance sector accountable, we strongly recommend the government give FSRA more powers (including rule-making powers). This will help to ensure that FSRA can protect Ontarians from bad actors in the insurance sector.
You can read our recent comment letter about this here.
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