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DECLARATION |
Part of a property or
liability insurance policy that states the name
and address of policyholder, property insured, its
location and description, the policy period,
premiums, and supplemental information. Referred
to as the “dec page.”
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DEDUCTIBLE |
The amount of loss paid by
the policyholder. Either a specified dollar
amount, a percentage of the claim amount, or a
specified amount of time that must elapse before
benefits are paid. The bigger the deductible, the
lower the premium charged for the same coverage.
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DEFERRED ANNUITY |
An annuity contract that is
purchased either with a single tax-deferred
premium or with periodic tax-deferred premiums
over time. Payments begin at a predetermined point
in time, such as retirement.
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DEFINED BENEFIT PLAN |
A retirement plan under
which pension benefits are fixed in advance by a
formula based generally on years of service to the
company multiplied by a specific percentage of
wages, usually average earnings over that period
or highest average earnings over the final years
with the company.
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DEFINED CONTRIBUTION PLAN |
An employee benefit plan
under which the employer sets up benefit accounts
and contributions are made to it by the employer
and by the employee. The employer usually matches
the employee's contribution up to a stated limit.
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DEMAND DEPOSIT |
Customer assets that are
held in a checking account. Funds can be readily
withdrawn by check, “on demand.”
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DEMUTUALIZATION |
The conversion of insurance
companies from mutual companies owned by their
policyholders into publicly-traded stock
companies.
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DEPOSITORY INSTITUTION |
Financial institution that
obtains its funds mainly through deposits from the
public. Includes commercial banks, savings and
loan associations, savings banks, and credit
unions.
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DEREGULATION |
In insurance, reducing
regulatory control over insurance rates and forms.
Commercial insurance for businesses of a certain
size has been deregulated in many states.
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DERIVATIVES |
Contracts that derive their
value from an underlying financial asset, such as
publicly-traded securities and foreign currencies.
Often used as a hedge against changes in value.
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DIFFERENCE IN CONDITIONS |
Policy designed to fill in
gaps in a business’s commercial property insurance
coverage. There is no standard policy. Policies
are specifically tailored to the policyholder’s
needs.
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DIMINUTION OF VALUE |
The idea that a vehicle
loses value after it has been damaged in an
accident and repaired.
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DIRECT PREMIUMS |
Property/casualty premiums
collected by the insurer from policyholders,
before reinsurance premiums are deducted. Insurers
share some direct premiums and the risk involved
with their reinsurers.
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DIRECT SALES/ DIRECT
RESPONSE |
Method of selling insurance
directly to the insured through an insurance
company’s own employees, through the mail, or via
the Internet. This is in lieu of using captive or
exclusive agents.
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DIRECT WRITERS |
Insurance companies that
sell directly to the public using exclusive agents
or their own employees, through the mail, or via
Internet. Large insurers, whether predominately
direct writers or agency companies, are
increasingly using many different channels to sell
insurance. In reinsurance, denotes reinsurers that
deal directly with the insurance companies they
reinsure without using a broker.
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DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS
LIABILITY INSURANCE/D&O |
Covers directors and
officers of a company for negligent acts or
omissions, and for misleading statements that
result in suits against the company, often by
shareholders. Directors and officers insurance
policies usually contain two coverages: personal
coverage for individual directors and officers who
are not indemnified by the corporation for their
legal expenses or judgments against them – some
corporations are not required by their corporate
or state charters to provide indemnification; and
corporate reimbursement coverage for indemnifying
directors and officers. Entity coverage for claims
made specifically against the company may also be
available.
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DIVIDENDS |
Money returned to
policyholders from an insurance company’s
earnings. Considered a partial premium refund
rather than a taxable distribution, reflecting the
difference between the premium charged and actual
losses. Many life insurance policies and some
property/casualty policies pay dividends to their
owners. Life insurance policies that pay dividends
are called participating policies.
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DOMESTIC INSURANCE
COMPANY |
Term used by a state to
refer to any company incorporated there.
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