OVERVIEW: At AIM Settlements, we
believe it is important that consumer and financial
professionals are armed with balance view of alternative
before making the Life Settlement decision. This article
which appeared in the Wall Street Journal discusses a study
by Deloitte Consulting, LLP stressing that a Life Settlement
is not for everyone
Recognizing Life Insurance's Value
Study Says Keeping a Policy
May Mean a Bigger Payoff Than Selling
to an Investor
By
Rachel
Emma Silverman
Staff
Reporter of
The Wall
Street Journal
Keeping a life-insurance policy is often a better bet than
selling a policy to an investor or surrendering it,
according to a new study.
The report, conducted by
researchers at Deloitte Consulting LLP and the University of
Connecticut, analyzes the burgeoning life-settlement
industry, the secondary market for life-insurance policies.
In a life-settlement transaction, a policyholder sells a
life-insurance policy to a third party, typically an
institutional investor, which takes over the premiums for
the policy and reaps the payout when the seller dies.
The study examined the value
of selling a life-insurance policy, compared with two other
options: keeping a life-insurance policy until death or
surrendering a policy and collecting the cash surrender
value, the amount an insurer pays when you surrender the
policy. The study, which was funded by several insurers,
including MassMutual Financial Group, focused on older
policyholders with some health impairments, which the
researchers say is the typical target market for life
settlements. The study found that if these policyholders
want to maximize their estates for heirs or a charity, it is
generally best to keep their policies. That is because
selling a life-insurance contract has high transaction costs
to both the seller and buyer—including commissions and
taxes—that bite into a policy's value, the study said.
The report suggests that if
a policyholder needs cash, it is smarter to sell another
asset, such as securities, rather than an insurance policy.
For the majority of policyholders with impaired health, "the
greatest economic value results from retaining the contract
until death," the researchers wrote.
However, the researchers
also found that for these insured people, selling a policy
to an investor will be more lucrative than surrendering a
policy.
The study examined 534
life-settlement contracts filed with the New York Department
of Insurance from 2000 to 2003, with a total face amount of
about $267.5 million. They found that life-settlement
companies, on average, paid only 20% of the face amount of
an insurance policy. By contrast, the "intrinsic economic
value of the policy"—the estimated future payout minus
future premium costs—was an estimated 64% of the policy's
face amount.
To be sure, some insurers
have had concerns about the life-settlement industry for a
variety of reasons, including whether the secondary market
could affect how many policies lapse and how policies are
priced.
Life settlements are
typically aimed at people over age 65, with policies of at
least $250,000, and who have some health problems and a life
expectancy from two to 15 years. The transactions can be
attractive for policyholders who might not have the means to
pay future premiums nor the desire to do so if, for example,
all their beneficiaries have passed away. Life-settlement
companies might pay anywhere from four to eight times the
cash surrender value for an insurance policy, says Alan
Buerger, the chief executive of Coventry First,
a Fort Washington, Pa., life-settlement firm.
Selling an insurance policy
frees up cash for current needs, such as pricey
long-term-care insurance, especially if the policyholder
doesn't have other assets that can be easily liquidated to
pay the premiums.
Every individual's situation
is different, and in real life, some people don't keep their
policies and instead end up letting them lapse. "The
secondary market gives another option," says Mr. Buerger.
Coventry First funded its own examination of the Deloitte-UConn
study, by consultant Hal J. Singer and Neil A. Doherty, a
professor of insurance at the University of Pennsylvania's
Wharton School. Mr. Singer says that the study's conclusions
critically understate who could benefit from a
life-settlement transaction. For instance, some people might
still prefer to sell their insurance policies and leave a
smaller estate for their heirs. He also encourages
competition among life-settlement firms, which should lead
to better selling prices for policyholders.
John Skar, senior vice
president at MassMutual, recommends that many customers with
impaired health retain their policies, rather than letting
them lapse or selling them. "The fact that a sophisticated
investor wants to buy it should put a light bulb that the
policy is worth something."