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Committee advances bill modernizing captive insurance rules intended to boost market options
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Summary
House Bill 635 would update Louisiana’s captive insurance law—defining captive types, capital and reporting requirements and ratifying regulatory clarity—and was moved forward by the committee with technical and redomestication clarifications added at the author’s request.
House Bill 635, sponsored by Representative Bamberg, would comprehensively update the state’s captive-insurance statutes to define captive types (pure, association, branch captives), set capital-and-surplus minimums, and clarify exams, reporting and permissible lines of business.
Claire Lamoine of the Department of Insurance summarized captive insurance as an insurance mechanism that lets groups self-insure or form specialized insurers to share risk. The bill’s author said the statute modernizes Louisiana law for captives so entities that struggle to find coverage in admitted markets can form regulated captives for property, casualty and specialty risks. The committee adopted technical amendments and an originating committee amendment to reference a revised statute for redomestication and to adjust articles-of-association language.
Supporters said updated captive rules expand capacity in hard insurance markets and keep Louisiana competitive with other domiciles; the committee reported the bill favorably as amended.
Why it matters: A more modern captive statute aims to give Louisiana employers and groups another regulated option for insuring complex or high-severity exposures, which supporters say will increase market capacity and competition.
What’s next: HB 635 was accepted by the committee with amendments and will proceed for further House consideration.
