Oklahoma Code § 36-6061

Title 36. Insurance: Separate accounts - Variable annuity and life insurance
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contracts - Regulations.
A.  Any domestic life insurance company may establish one or
more separate accounts, and may allocate to such separate account or
accounts any amounts including without limitation proceeds applied
under optional modes of settlement or under dividend options to
provide for life insurance or annuities and benefits incidental
thereto, payable in fixed or in variable dollar amounts, or in both,
subject to the following:
1.  Except as hereinafter provided, the amounts allocated to
each such account and accumulations thereon may be invested and
reinvested without regard to any requirements or limitations
prescribed by the laws of this state governing the investments of
life insurance companies; provided, that to the extent that the
company's reserve liability with regard to a. benefits guaranteed as
to amounts and duration, and b. funds guaranteed as to principal
amount or stated rate of interest is maintained in any separate
account, a portion of the assets of such separate account at least
equal to such reserve liability shall be, except as the Commissioner
may otherwise approve, invested in accordance with the laws of this
state governing the investments of life insurance companies.  The
investments in such separate account or accounts shall not be taken
into account in applying the investment limitations applicable to
other investments of the company.
2.  With respect to seventy-five percent (75%) of the market
value of the total assets in a separate account no company shall
purchase or otherwise acquire the securities of any issuer, other
than securities issued or guaranteed as to principal or interest by
the United States, if immediately after such purchase or acquisition
the market value of such investment, together with prior investments
of such separate account in such security taken at market value,
would exceed ten percent (10%) of the market value of the assets of
said separate account; provided, however, that the Commissioner may
waive such limitations if, in his opinion, such waiver will not
render the operation of such separate account hazardous to the
public or the policyholders in this state.
3.  No separate account shall invest in the voting securities of
a single issuer if such investment would result in the company
owning an amount in excess of ten percent (10%) of the total issued
and outstanding voting securities of such issuer; provided, that the
foregoing shall not apply with respect to securities held in

separate accounts, the voting rights in which are exercisable only
in accordance with instructions from persons having interest in such
accounts.
4.  The limitations provided in subsections 2. and 3. above
shall not apply to the investment with respect to a separate account
in the securities of an investment company registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940, provided that the investments of
such investment company comply in substance with subsections 2. and
3. hereof.
5.  The income, if any, and gains and losses, realized or
unrealized, from assets allocated to each account shall be credited
to or charged against the account in accordance with the applicable
contract without regard to other income, gains or losses of the
company.
6.  Assets allocated to a separate account shall be valued at
their market value on the date of valuation, or if there is no
readily available market, then in accordance with the applicable
contract or the rules or other written agreement applicable to such
separate account; provided, the portion of the assets of such
separate account at least equal to the company's reserve liability
with regard to the guaranteed benefits and funds referred to in
subsection 1. hereof, if any, shall be valued in accordance with the
rules otherwise applicable to the company's assets.  The reserve
liability for variable contracts shall be determined in accordance
with actuarial procedures that recognize the variable nature of the
benefits provided and any mortality guarantees.
7.  If, and to the extent, so provided under the applicable
contracts, that portion of the assets of any such separate account
equal to the reserves, and other contract liabilities with respect
to such account, shall not be chargeable with liabilities arising
out of any other business the company may conduct.
8.  The life insurance company shall have the power and the
company's charter shall be deemed amended to authorize such company
to do all things necessary under any applicable state or federal law
in order that variable contracts may be lawfully sold or offered for
sale including, without limitation, a.  with respect to any separate
account registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission as a
unit investment trust exercise voting rights in connection with any
securities of a regulated investment company registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940 and held in such separate accounts in
accordance with instructions from persons having interests in such
accounts ratably as determined by the company, or b.  with respect
to any separate account registered with the Securities and Exchange
Commission as a management investment company, establish for such
account a committee, board, or other body, the members of which may
or may not be otherwise affiliated with such company and may be
elected to such membership by the vote of persons having interests

in such account ratably as determined by the company.  Such
committee, board or other body may have the power, exercisable alone
or in conjunction with others, to manage such separate account and
the investment of its assets.
B.  Any contract providing benefits payable in variable amounts
delivered or issued for delivery in this state shall contain a
statement of the essential features of the procedure to be followed
by the company in determining the dollar amount of such variable
benefits.  Any such contract under which the benefits vary to
reflect investment experience, including a group contract and any
certificate issued thereunder shall state that such dollar amount
may decrease or increase and shall contain on its first page a
statement that the benefits thereunder are on a variable basis.
C.  No domestic life insurance company, and no other life
insurance company admitted to transact business in this state, shall
be authorized to deliver within this state any variable contract
providing benefits in variable amounts until said company has
satisfied the Insurance Commissioner that its condition or methods
of operation in connection with the issuance of such contracts will
not render its operation hazardous to the public or its
policyholders in this state.  In determining the qualification of a
company requesting authority to deliver such contracts within this
state, the Insurance Commissioner shall consider, among other
things:
1.  The history and financial condition of the company;
2.  The character, responsibility and general fitness of the
officers and directors of the company; and
3.  In the case of a company other than a domestic company,
whether the statutes and regulations of the jurisdiction of its
incorporation, or state of entry in the case of an alien company,
provide a degree of protection to policyholders and the public which
is substantially equal to that provided by this section and the
rules and regulations issued thereunder.
An authorized life insurance company, whether domestic, foreign
or alien, which issues variable contracts and which is a subsidiary
of (or affiliated through common management or ownership with)
another life insurance company authorized to do business in this
state may be deemed to have met the provisions of this subsection if
either it or the parent or affiliated company meets the requirements
hereof.
D.  The Insurance Commissioner shall have the sole and exclusive
authority to regulate the issuance and sale of such contracts and to
issue such reasonable rules and regulations as may be necessary to
carry out the purposes and provisions of this section; and such
contracts, the companies which issue them and the agents or other
persons who sell them shall not be subject to the Oklahoma Uniform

Securities Act of 2004 nor to the jurisdiction of the Oklahoma
Securities Commission thereunder.
Added by Laws 1967, c. 287, § 1, emerg. eff. May 8, 1967.  Amended
by  Laws 1969, c. 94, § 1, emerg. eff. March 27, 1969; Laws 1973, c.
194, § 1, emerg. eff. May 16, 1973; Laws 2022, c. 77, § 5, eff. Nov.
1, 2022.

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