Definition:HGB
📜 HGB (Handelsgesetzbuch), Germany's Commercial Code, is the foundational legal framework governing financial reporting and accounting for insurance companies operating under German jurisdiction. While IFRS has become the dominant standard for publicly listed insurers across the European Union, the HGB remains the controlling regime for statutory accounts filed by German insurers — including many mutual insurers, smaller stock companies, and the legal-entity accounts of subsidiaries within larger groups. Insurance-specific provisions within the HGB, supplemented by the Versicherungsunternehmens-Rechnungslegungsverordnung (RechVersV), prescribe how insurers must recognize technical provisions, account for premiums, and present their balance sheets to satisfy the requirements of BaFin, Germany's financial supervisory authority.
⚙️ Under HGB accounting, insurers follow a prudence-oriented approach that differs markedly from the economic-value philosophy underpinning IFRS 17 or the fair-value orientation found in US GAAP. Assets are generally carried at historical cost or amortized cost rather than marked to market, and technical provisions tend to be set conservatively — sometimes deliberately above best-estimate levels to create implicit safety margins. This conservative bias means that an insurer's HGB balance sheet may understate the true economic value of its investment portfolio while simultaneously overstating its liabilities relative to a Solvency II balance sheet. For groups that must prepare consolidated IFRS statements alongside HGB statutory accounts, the reconciliation between the two frameworks can be complex, particularly around the treatment of deferred acquisition costs, equalization reserves, and the discounting of loss reserves.
🏛️ Germany is the largest insurance market in Continental Europe, which makes the HGB far more than a local accounting curiosity. Any global reinsurer, MGA, or insurtech seeking to write business through a German carrier or establish a German subsidiary must understand HGB reporting obligations and how they interact with Solvency II regulatory capital requirements. The ongoing coexistence of HGB statutory reporting and IFRS consolidated reporting within the same group creates dual-reporting burdens that drive significant demand for actuarial and accounting expertise. As the industry continues to absorb the transition to IFRS 17, the contrasts between HGB's prudence-first philosophy and IFRS 17's current-value measurement model remain a central topic for CFOs and auditors operating in the German market.
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