6A

Notifications

6A.1

As set out in Fundamental Rule 7,[11] third-country branches must disclose to the PRA appropriately anything relating to the third-country branch or third-country branch undertaking of which the PRA would reasonably expect notice. This section sets out some examples of circumstances in which the PRA would expect notification.

Footnotes

  • 11. Rule 2.7 of the Fundamental Rules Part of the PRA Rulebook.

6A.2

As set out in the PRA’s SoP – The Prudential Regulation Authority’s approach to insurance branch authorisation and supervision, the PRA expects third-country branches to have under £500 million of insurance liabilities covered by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) when operating as a branch, and may consider authorisation as a subsidiary as an alternative where that is not the case. While not a hard threshold, the PRA expects third-country branches to notify the PRA where it is projected that the FSCS-protected liabilities of the branch may grow above this threshold in the near future.

6A.3

Third-country branches are also expected to notify the PRA where: 

  • the reinsurance arrangements of the third-country branch undertaking change materially from the point of authorisation, or where the arrangements would result in high levels of reinsurance with regard to the factors listed in Table A of the PRA’s SoP ‘The Prudential Regulation Authority’s approach to insurance branch authorisation and supervision’;[12] and 
  • the liabilities and/or premiums of the third-country branch increase materially as compared to the third-country branch undertaking, so that the PRA can reassess the supervisability of the third-country branch undertaking.

Footnotes