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Determining Amount of Life Insurance Need . Multiple of Income Approach - simplistic approach to life insurance planning that determines life insurance needs based on the client's current annual incomeHuman Life Value Approach capitalizing the present value of a person's estimated future incom
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1. Chapter 10Life Insurance Planning and Purchasing Decisions Appropriate amount and type of insurance
Measuring the cost
Issues with Illustrations and Replacement
Substandard coverage
Viatical agreements and Life settlements
Business uses of life insurance
Tax treatment of life insurance
Life insurance in estate planning
2. Determining Amount of Life Insurance Need Multiple of Income Approach - simplistic approach to life insurance planning that determines life insurance needs based on the client’s current annual income
Human Life Value Approach – capitalizing the present value of a person’s estimated future income that will be used to support those dependent on that income
3. Determining Amount of Life Insurance Need Financial Needs Analysis – an approach to determine how much life insurance a client needs if the principal sum is to be liquidated in meeting the client's financial objectives for his or her survivors
Capital Needs Analysis - an approach to determine how much life insurance is needed to provide a principal sum adequate to fund survivors’ needs while preserving the principal
4. Financial Needs Lump-sum (Cash) Needs
Final illness costs
Outstanding debt
Estate administration and taxes
Probate and legal expenses
Funeral, burial, etc.
Short-term living and household expenses
Emergency fund
5. Financial needs Ongoing Income Needs
Readjustment income
Dependency period- minor children
Blackout period- period between when youngest child turns 16 and spouse turns 60
Surviving Spouse income with social security and pension
6. Financial Needs Analysis Identify lump-sum and ongoing income needs
Identify resources
Needs – resources = deficit
Calculate deficit for each period
Determine NPV (net present value) of the deficit for each period using appropriate discount rate
Life insurance in that amount funds previously unfunded objectives
7. Example: The Stringers
8. Capital Needs Analysis Complete a financial needs analysis to determine capital needs
Determine client’s net worth
Subtract illiquid assets (not used for income)
Subtract lump-sum needs
Needs – resources = deficit
Deficit/applicable interest rate
Resulting capital sum will produce enough income to meet the deficit without liquidating capital fund
9. Choosing Type of Insurance Term features
Temporary coverage
Low initial premium
Rising premium
Margin for adverse selection
Level, increasing, or decreasing death benefits
Appropriate use of term
Hedge a loan
Offset speculative business investment
Dependent children
10. Buy Term and Invest the Difference? Safety of principal and income
Rate of return
Liquidity
Assurance that saving will be done (forced saving)
11. Choosing Type of Insurance Length of the planned premium-paying period
Emphasis on saving vs. protection
When death benefits are needed
Desire for inflation protection
Importance of yield vs. safety in savings
Unbundling of cost components
Premium flexibility
12. Measuring Cost of Insurance Surrender cost index
estimates the net cost of life insurance on a time-value-adjusted basis, assuming the policy will be surrendered at a specified time (10 or 20 years)
Net payment cost index
estimates the net cost of life insurance on a time-value-adjusted basis assuming that the death benefit will be paid at a specified time period (10 or 20 years)
13. Life Insurance Illustrations Tables or graphs depicting a policy’s performance over a period of years
Includes nonguaranteed elements. Company makes assumptions about future performance
They are of limited value for comparing different policies
NAIC model regulation prohibits inappropriate use of illustrations, requires annual reports on universal life policies
14. Replacement Replacing existing life insurance policy with another
To prevent financial harm to the policyowner, agents and insurers must follow prescribed procedures
Includes 1035 exchanges
Issues in replacement
pay high first-year expenses again?
higher premium?
new suicide clause?
new incontestable clause?
more or less favorable policy terms?
15. Section 1035 Exchange Defers tax implications of policy replacement
Old and new contract must cover same insured and have same policyowner
Life contract may be exchanged for annuity, annuity may be exchange for life insurance, but annuity may not be exchanged for life insurance
Must follow certain required procedures, such as life to life, life to annuity, annuity to annuity
16. Substandard Coverage Methods Rate-up age method
bases premium rate and policy values on an age older than the actual age. Used when extra mortality is increasing. Increases policy values
Extra percentage tables
separate, higher-than-normal mortality rates are used in calculating the premium when hazard is increasing. Normally no change in policy values
Flat extra premium
charging a specified extra premium per $1,000 of insurance regardless of age. Normally temporary. No change in cash values or dividends. Extra mortality is constant
Lien
death proceeds are reduced if death occurs within the first few years of coverage. Often prohibited by state law.
17. Viatical Agreements and Life Settlements Viatical settlement- sale of a life insurance policy where insured is terminally ill and doctor-certified to have less than 2 years life expectancy.
Policyowner sells policy to third party for more than cash value but less than face amount.
New owner responsible for premium payments and receives death benefit payable.
Life settlements involve sale of policy to investors or others where terminal illness is not a factor.
Can raise cash for seniors who need cash but no longer need, want or can afford life insurance
Raises ethical issues, with much state regulatory activity currently (STOLI, IILI)
18. Business Insurance Key Employee Insurance - protects a business against possibility of income loss and/or expense increase following a key employee’s death Employer owns policy and is beneficiary. Premium not tax-deductible
Buy-Sell Agreement - a contract binding the owner of a business interest to sell the business interest for a specified or determinable price at his or her death or disability and a designated purchaser to buy at that time
19. Buy-Sell Agreements Entity Agreement - a business buy-sell agreement in which the business itself is the designated purchaser of the deceased's business interest
Cross-Purchase Agreement - a business buy-sell agreement in which the surviving co-owners will be the purchasers of the business interest of a deceased owner
20. Section 79 Plans Employer-sponsored group life plans that permit the employer to take a tax deduction on premium payments for coverage up to $50,000 if plan is not discriminatory
Coverage above $50,000 is taxable income for employees based on premium rates specified in Table I by the IRS
21. Split-Dollar Life Insurance A plan under which two parties, usually an employer and an insured employee, share the premium costs, death proceeds, and perhaps cash value of a life insurance policy pursuant to a prearranged agreement
If employee owns policy, employer paid premiums treated as loans. Employee pays market-interest rate
If employer owns policy and pays premium, employee pays tax on economic benefit on value of life insurance protection and employee’s interest in cash value increases
22. Tax Treatment of Life Insurance Death Benefits
Generally not taxable income to beneficiary
Exceptions
Transfer for value rule (policy transferred for valuable consideration)
Failing IRS definition of life insurance
Living benefits
Dividends, withdrawals, policy loans, and cash surrender
Returns exceeding policyholder’s basis taxable
Inside buildup not taxable
1035 exchange not taxable
23. Income Tax Definition of Life Insurance Cash Value Accumulation Test- determines if a life insurance policy meets the definition of life insurance for federal income tax purposes. To qualify, the cash value must not exceed the net single premium needed to fund the policy's death benefit.
Guideline Premium and Corridor Test –a two-pronged test determines if a life insurance policy meets the definition of a life insurance policy for federal income tax purposes. The test relates to both the size of the total premium paid and the size of the death benefit relative to the cash value.
24. Tax Treatment of Life Insurance Inside Buildup - the increase in the cash value or investment fund of a permanent life insurance policy is not taxable while in the policy
Modified Endowment Contract (MEC) - a life insurance policy that fails to meet the IRC’s 7-pay test. Distributions receive less favorable tax treatment than other life insurance contracts. MEC’s taxed like an annuity
25. Tax Treatment of Life Insurance Deductibility of Premium Payments
Generally, premiums for personally owned individual life insurance is not tax-deductible
Three situations in which life insurance premiums may be deductible
Charitable contribution
Employer sponsored benefit (if taxable to employee)
As part of Alimony for ex-spouse
26. Transfer Taxation - Gift Tax Gift tax- a tax imposed on transfers of property by gift during the donor's lifetime
Gift - for federal gift tax purposes, a completed transfer and acceptance of property for less than full and adequate consideration
Annual Exclusion - the amount of a gift exempt from federal transfer taxation (for 2008, $12,000). Can be doubled if the donor is married and the donor's spouse elects to split the gift (2008- $24,000)
27. Transfer Taxation - Estate Tax Estate tax - a tax imposed by the federal government and many states on the right of a person to transfer property at death
Gross Estate - for federal estate tax purposes, the property of a decedent that passes by will and by other means
Incident of ownership - any right to the economic benefits of a piece of property, such as a life insurance policy
28. Life Insurance in Estate Planning Federal Estate Taxation of Life Insurance
Life insurance included in the estate if:
proceeds payable to the estate or executor
insured had incidents of ownership
insured had incidence of ownership on transferred policy within 3 years of death
29. Life Insurance in Estate Planning Techniques using Life Insurance in Estate Planning
Gifts of life insurance policies to ILIT (Irrevocable life insurance trust) or family member. Prevent estate inclusion using annual exclusion
Providing estate liquidity, pay estate expenses
Enhance estate value
Wealth replacement
Use of second-to-die policies (for unlimited marital deduction)
30. Annuities - Chapter 11 Nature and Types of annuities
Joint annuities
Variable annuities
Indexed annuities
Actuarial considerations, fees and charges
Federal income tax treatment
Uses of annuities
Ethical issues
Uses of annuities in structured settlements
Impaired risk annuities
31. Types of Annuities Annuity - a periodic payment to begin at a specified or contingent date and continue for a fixed period or for the duration of a designated life or lives
Annuitant - the person whose life governs the duration of benefit payments under a life annuity
32. Types of Annuities Annuity certain - an annuity with benefit payments that continue for a definite period of time without being linked to the duration of a specified human life (fixed period annuity
Life (whole life) annuity - an annuity whose benefit payments continue for the duration of a designated life
Temporary life annuity - an annuity whose benefit payments continue until the earlier of the death of a designated person or the end of a specified period of time. The term life with annuity indicates a life contingency
33. Life Insurance versus Annuities Life insurance
Protect against loss of income from premature death
Pooling—those who live longer subsidize those who don’t
Premiums based on mortality table focusing on probabilities of death
Premiums discounted for future interest earnings
Annuities
Protect against loss of income from longevity
Pooling—those who die early subsidize those who live long
Different mortality table- annuitants live longer. Focuses on probability of surviving
Premiums (deposits) discounted
34. Types of Annuities Joint (joint-life) annuity - benefit payments continue only until the first death among specified lives (rarely used)
Joint-and-last-survivor annuity - benefit payments continue until the last death among specified lives
35. Types of Annuities Immediate annuity - benefit payments begin one payment interval after the date of purchase
Deferred annuity - benefit payments begin more than one payment interval after the date of purchase
Accumulation period - period during which premiums (deposits) are paid to the insurer
Liquidation period - period during which benefits are paid by the insurer
36. Types of Annuities Pure (straight life) annuity - provides no guaranteed minimum number of benefit payments or refund of the purchase price; pays for life of the annuitant; stops at death. Provides highest payout and greatest risk. Also called life-no refund annuity
Refund annuity - promises to return a portion or all of the purchase price or to provide a guaranteed minimum number of benefit payments, no matter how early in the liquidation period the annuitant dies
37. Types of Annuities Installment refund annuity - if the annuitant dies before receiving total benefit payments equal to the purchase price of the annuity, the difference will be refunded in the form of continuing benefit payments
Cash refund annuity - if the annuitant dies before receiving total benefit payments equal to the purchase price of the annuity, all or a stated percentage of the difference will be refunded in cash
38. Types of Annuities Fixed annuity - provides a stated periodic dollar benefit regardless of the insurer's investment return
Variable annuity - benefit payments vary with changes in investment performance
Life annuity certain - provides a guaranteed minimum number of benefit payments whether the annuitant lives or dies. Combines an annuity certain and a pure deferred life annuity. Also called period-certain
39. Annuity Contract Design Premiums quoted in $100 of annual premium or per $10 of monthly income
Minimum guaranteed rate of interest
Secondary higher guaranteed rate (for first several years)
Cash withdrawals may reduce secondary rate
Bail-out provision (% drop in rate allows withdrawal)
Cash option (withdrawal or partial surrender - allows an annuitant, at the start of the liquidation period, to withdraw the funds in cash rather than as an annuity
40. Variable Annuity Contract Accumulation units - number of units bought and value of each unit vary depending on when purchases are made. Units reflect market value, like NAV of mutual fund shares
Annuity units - number of annuity units distributed periodically is constant, but their value varies depending on company assumptions regarding mortality, expense and investment experience. Units revalued annually to determine life income per unit for coming year
41. Indexed Annuity Guarantees a minimum fixed rate of interest credits but also provides higher credits if a specified common stock index rises sufficiently
Many variations in products regarding
Participation rates
Cap rates
Indexing formula
Possible SEC regulation requiring product to be treated as a security
42. Annuity Mortality Purchasers of annuities have generally lower mortality rates than others (adverse selection).
Mortality rates for most people, including annuitants, have been declining.
A high percentage of annuitants are women, who have greater average longevity than men.
43. Fees and Charges Mortality and expense charge
Investment management fee
Administrative or maintenance fee
Front-end load
Surrender charge (back-end load)
44. Federal Income Tax Treatment Amounts received during accumulation period
Taxable to the extent of income earned (LIFO)
10% tax on withdrawals before 59 ˝
Amounts received during liquidation period
Depends on exclusion ratio – amount invested/the amount expected to be received as life annuity.
Amount excluded ratio x payment = tax-free return of principal.
Excluded amount, presumed to be return of investment, is not taxable
Balance is taxable
45. Annuity Uses Those seeking to accumulate an estate or hedge against adverse financial developments
Those seeking guaranteed income, especially retirement
Charitable gift annuities - can meet three goals:
contributing to religious, educational, or other charitable organization
providing life income for annuitant(s)
minimizing taxes
Impaired-risk annuities - increased annuity payments (or reduced premiums) reflect annuitant’s reduced life expectancy due to injury or poor health
46. Ethical Issues Insurance producer and/or insurer should have reasonable grounds for believing the proposed annuity is suitable for the consumer based on facts the consumer provides concerning
financial status
tax status
investment objectives
other reasonable information
There is regulatory concern about suitability for older clients, especially with variable annuities
47. Charitable Gift Annuity Charitably-inclined client donates cash or other asset to charity.
Charity pays annuity income for life of annuitant to donor or other beneficiary (called a charitable lead trust)
Client entitled to immediate tax deduction for irrevocable gift to charity based on value of gift and IRS annuity tables that determine present value of annuity based on age and federal interest rate, like exclusion ratio.
48. Structured Settlement An agreement to pay a specified set of periodic benefits in lieu of (or in addition to) a single, lump-sum amount
Used when settling liability claims for bodily injury or wrongful death
Provide financial security, management of benefits, guaranteed payout, and benefits that can be matched to need (court order)
49. Self-Test Questions Chapter 10 Using a simple multiple of earnings method to determine the amount of life insurance needed ignores key information about how much a client has already accumulated.
2. The financial needs analysis approach considers both lump-sum needs at death and ongoing income needs.
3. With the financial needs analysis approach, the amount of additional life insurance needed is determined by subtracting the resources already available from the resources needed by the surviving dependents if the client should die today, assuming all future income payments are composed solely of investment earnings on a capital sum.
A major advantage of the financial needs analysis approach is that it fails to take into account factors that may be difficult to forecast, such as Social Security benefits and future earnings by a spouse.
5. Although term insurance is available in the marketplace, virtually all client life insurance needs are best met with whole life insurance.
50. Self-Test Questions Chapter 11 1. The person whose life governs the duration of payments in an annuity is called the annuitant.
2. Annuities serve essentially the same function as life insurance.
3. If Jack would like to accumulate money for his planned retirement in 20 years, he should purchase an immediate annuity with periodic premiums. 4. If Rachel purchased a life annuity with 20 years certain to liquidate her retirement savings and was still alive at the end of 20 years, her annuity benefit payments would cease.
5. An installment refund annuity promises to keep paying installment benefits to the annuitant and/or beneficiary until the total equals the purchase price of the annuity plus interest at a guaranteed rate.