Definition:Binding authority agreement: Difference between revisions
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▲🖊️ '''Binding authority agreement''' is the contract that defines the scope and limits of underwriting power granted by an insurer or Lloyd's syndicate to a coverholder or managing general agent. It spells out exactly what the delegate can and cannot do: the classes of business they may write, the maximum line sizes, the geographic territories, the policy wordings to be used, and the commission structure. In the Lloyd's market this document is often called a "binder" or "coverholder appointment," and it must be registered with Lloyd's before any business is transacted.
🔄 Day-to-day operation under the agreement follows a defined rhythm. The coverholder receives submissions, evaluates them against the underwriting guidelines embedded in the binder, and issues policies for risks that fall within those parameters. Any risk that sits outside the agreed appetite must be referred back to the carrier for explicit approval. Premium and claims data flow to the carrier through periodic bordereaux reports, and the agreement typically requires the coverholder to maintain specified technology systems, error-and-omission coverage, and professional staffing levels.
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