The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation INFORM+INSPIRE Life Insurance and Annuities R. B. Drennan, PhD Temple University August 20, 2011.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Life Insurance Policies “Whole Life Insurance”
Advertisements

Chapter 12: Life Insurance Planning
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 14 Annuities and Individual Retirement Accounts.
© 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Financial Planning with Life Insurance Chapter 12
Annuity Liquidity Program™ Stone Street Capital’s.
Annuity Fundamentals Linda L. Lanam Vice President, Annuities & Market Regulation May 2005.
© AMERICAN COUNCIL OF LIFE INSURERS 101 Constitution Ave., NW, Washington, DC The Value of Annuities Retirement Savings to Last a Lifetime Texas.
Variable Annuities Abusive Sales Practices and Liability By Joel D. Feldman Anapol, Schwartz, Weiss, Cohan, Feldman & Smalley.
Intensive Actuarial Training for Bulgaria January, 2007 Lecture 2 – Life Annuity By Michael Sze, PhD, FSA, CFA.
GETTING STARTED WITH LFM Welcome to the Professional’s Approach to Indexed Annuities Presented by: LFM Fixed Strategies Insurance Services Florian Spinello.
© 2011 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Annuities: The Whole Story Presented by: Matthew J. Curfman, CFP® Senior Vice President of Investment Services Richmond Brothers Financial Management Specialists,
©2008 Lincoln National Corporation For agent or broker use only. Not to be used with the general public. LCN /08. [Name] [Title] Lincoln.
Chapter 12 Life Insurance.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Chapter 7 Financial Operations of Insurers.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 7 Financial Operations of Insurers.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada 5-1 Chapter 5 Life Insurance.
PFIN 4 Insuring Your Life 8 Copyright ©2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible.
Payouts from 401(k) Plans September 25, By the end of this lecture, you should be able to: Explain payout options from 401(k) plans Discuss the.
Life and Health Insurance
Personal Finance Garman/Forgue Ninth Edition
CHAPTER 15 ANNUITIES. Annuities  Explain the purpose if an annuity  Identify five different ways that annuities can be classified or described  Explain.
Chapter 4: Insurance Company Operations
INFORM+INSPIRE The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation Life Insurance, Annuities and Health Insurance David T. Russell, Ph.D. Director, CSUN Center.
Chapter 18. Learning Objectives (1 of 2) Define the characteristics of a tax- favored savings program Explain the key features of the different IRA programs.
The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation INFORM+INSPIRE Life Insurance and Annuities R. B. Drennan, PhD Temple University May 20, 2013.
Insurance Fundamentals for Policymakers. Four assignments: Insurance Principles Insurance Coverages: Property and Casualty Insurance Coverages: Life and.
Name Annuity doctor State & State License Number.
Why Life Settlements? Anthony Ridd Director of Life Settlements LifeStyle Insurance Services ext. 27.
Chapter 16 Life Insurance. Copyright ©2014 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.11-2 Agenda Premature Death Types of Life Insurance Variations.
Life Insurance 101 Financial Independence Group Life Department Financial Independence Group, Inc.Life Insurance 101.
Achieving More Together Insured inheritance strategy.
15.5. Helps replace lost income for a family who is financially dependent upon another person. Protects against financial loss. Policy states:  name.
Life Insurance Basics.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada 6-1 Defined-contribution Pension Plans The reverse of defined-benefit plans Contribution is known up-front The.
Life Insurance Why are we talking about this?. Life Insurance When should I buy?
Mortality Risk Management: Individual Life Insurance
Innovation in Life Insurance! Life & Accident Assurance Co. Life & Accident Assurance Co. Vernon U. Lawrence Vernon U. Lawrence.
Variable & Variable Universal Life Insurance  Variable Life  Combined traditional whole life insurance with mutual fund type of investments 
Intensive Actuarial Training for Bulgaria January 2007 Lecture 4 – Life Insurance Reserve & Minimum Capital By Michael Sze, PhD, FSA, CFA.
© 2011 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
It’s Your Money! Week 2: Annuities and Mutual Funds.
Chapter 14 Annuities and Individual Retirement Accounts
Life & Health Insurance Chapter 15. Kinds of Life Insurance 1. Term Insurance –For a short period of time (parent with young children) 2.Permanent Insurance.
1 For agent use only. Not for dissemination to the public. Annuities 101 For Agent Use Only — Not for Dissemination to the Public.
Life Insurance. Insurance is an important component of both financial and estate planning. Care must be taken to ensure that insurance products achieve.
RENUKA MEHRA LECTURER IN B.B.A. GCCBA-42.  LIFE INSURANCE  Purchase policy ; insurance company promises to pay a lump sum at  the time of the policy.
 Characteristics  Provides protection for the entire lifetime  Level or fixed periodic premiums payable for the lifetime of the insured  Level.
By Danielle Scott.  An annuity is an investment contract between an insurance company and a person where a person makes a series of payments or pays.
Copyright © 2004 by Thomson Southwestern All rights reserved Insurance Company Financial Management Issues Chapter 16.
Life Insurance In Qualified Plans Chapter 32 Tools & Techniques of Life Insurance Planning  What is it?  Life insurance is purchased and owned.
for institutional investors. Insurance companies.
Chapter 7 Financial Operations of Insurers. Copyright ©2014 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.7-2 Agenda Property and Casualty Insurers Life.
Annuities Mark Ricklefs CLU ChFC CFP. Caveat This presentation is for informational purposes only. The speaker appearing at this meeting is solely responsible.
Insurance Companies and Pension Plans
1 Ins301 Chp15 –Part1 Life Insurance and Annuities Terminology Types of life insurance products Tax treatment of life insurance Term insurance Endowment.
Single Pay & Flexible Pay Longevity Annuities Refreshing NEW look at Longevity Annuities.
Insuring Your Life Chapter 8. Insurance Concept Protect Assets and Income.
Life Insurance. Objectives Students will define keys terms related to life insurance Students will identify key features of various types of life insurance.
© 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Chapter 15 (not 15.8) Selected Chapter questions: 1,5,6 1.
Chapter 12 Life Insurance McGraw-Hill/Irwin
SecureLife Universal Life Cash Value (UL CV)
Insurance Companies and Pension Plans
The Fundamentals of Investing
Insurance Companies and Pension Plans
Chapter 12 Life Insurance McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Chapter 12 Life Insurance.
Presentation transcript:

The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation INFORM+INSPIRE Life Insurance and Annuities R. B. Drennan, PhD Temple University August 20, 2011

2 Life Numbers…  How long will you live?  What is “life expectancy”?  Males/Females  Today: M / F LifeExpectancyAt Birth YearFemaleMale The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

3 Mortality: Nature of the Loss (Premature Death) Meaning-- “Death with outstanding unfulfilled financial obligations”  Costs  Loss of earnings to family (Human Life Value)  Final expenses (Liquidity Issue)  Non-economic costs  Emotional loss, role models  Causes of death among young (~20)  CA, S, OA, C The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

4 Life Numbers…  Probability of death for year-old:  In U.S.:  X out of 1,000  $100,000 of LI coverage:  F * S .001 * $100,000 = $____  $1 per $1000 of face amount  Price for pure protection The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

5 Term Life Insurance Pricing time $ or p(l) mortality curve (~term) 100x The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

6 Term Versus Permanent Pricing time $ or p(l) overpayment under payment level premium mortality curve (~term) 100x The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

7 Life Insurance Products  Traditional  Term Life  Whole Life  Endowment  Annuities  Non-Traditional  Universal Life  Variable Life  Variable Universal Life  Variable Annuities The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

8 Life Insurance Rate (Price) Development  Mortality Experience and Rating Factors  Age (group 20 and 60 year-olds?)  Male / Female  Smoker / Non-Smoker  Race?  Unique Factors: Hobbies, Job, Foreign Residence  Loading (Net Rate vs Gross Rate)  Expenses  Taxes  Contingencies  Profit  Interest (Long-term contract) The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

9 Objectives in Insurance Prices (Rates)  Adequate  The payments generated by a block of policies plus any investment return on same must be sufficient to cover current / future benefits and costs  Equitable (not “unfairly” discriminatory)  Refers to setting premiums commensurate with expected losses and expenses; also suggests no cross subsidization. Sets a floor.  Not Excessive  Sets a ceiling  Competition  Regulation (FL catastrophes) The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

10 Solvency Policing  Statutory Accounting ( A = L + Surplus )  Minimum Capital and Surplus Requirements  Annual and Quarterly Financial Statements  Audited Statements Required  Statements Signed by an Actuary  Company Examinations  Every 3 to 5 years  Coordinated within zones The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

11 Solvency Policing  Investment Restrictions  Type, quality, and quantity  Insurers typically match assets and liabilities  Minimum Reserve Requirements  Solvency Monitoring  Insurance Regulatory Information System (IRIS)  FAST – Financial Analysis Solvency Tools  Risk-Based Capital Requirements  Ratings (Best, S&P, Weiss)  Holding Company Issues The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

12 Consumer Protection  Product and Price  Rate criteria (not inadequate, not excessive, not “ unfairly ” discriminatory)  Types of rating laws  Prior approval  MLR in health insurance  Policy forms (products)  Underwriting  Agents and Brokers The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

Consumer Protection  Unfair Trade Practices  Rebating, Twisting vs. Replacement  Market Conduct Examinations  Policy Forms - Contracts  Definition of key terms  Grace period  Incontestability Clause  Surrender values  Reinstatement The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

14 Annuities Oscar Wilde: –“…It is better to have a permanent income than to be fascinating.” The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

15 The Risk  We’ve worked and saved $1 million  The Risk: We might live a (really) long time and outlive our assets  W.B.’s goal:  In most countries:  65-year-old men and women can expect to live to 81 and 85  1/3 women and 1/5 men born today will live beyond 90 The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

16 How Long Will Retirement Assets Last? The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

17 Life Insurance vs. Annuities  Think of as opposite of LI  Life insurance addresses the risk of dying too soon—mortality risk  Annuities address the risk of living “too long”—longevity risk The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

18 Life Insurance vs. Annuities  Over 50% of Life Insurer premiums today are for annuities instead of LI—why the shift from when they were only 25%?  Basic Idea is: For every $100,000, 65- year-old can receive ~$700 in monthly income ($8,400 per year), for life.  Now, women receive more or less than men? And why? The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

19 Annuities Defined  Life Annuity  In return for a single premium or a series of premiums  Provides a series of periodic payments to a named person  Starting at a specified date (now or later)  For life  …People always live forever when there is any annuity to be paid to them. Jane Austen The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

20 Purpose of Annuities  Purpose: to provide an income that cannot be outlived  Insurer takes on longevity risk and investment risk  Annuitant / Payee takes on risk of dying too soon  Live to 104, good deal; Die in 6 months, not so good  Insurer not so concerned with poor health of applicants for annuities The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

21The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation One Product, Two Stages: A Deferred Stage, Then an Immediate Stage Annuitization (conversion from deferred to immediate stage) Source: Black and Skipper, Life & Health Insurance, 13 th edition, (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 2000) p. 165.

22 Annuities—Mechanics  Longevity risk is pooled by insurer  Insurer can predict the approximate number of annuitants who will be alive at the end of each year  Some individuals will live long / short  The unliquidated contributions of those who die early can be used to provide payments to those who live a long time – benefit of survivorship  Some people uncomfortable with big “forfeit”—to be discussed shortly. Thus, few people annuitize, and even fewer annuitize without some form of minimum guarantee The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

23 Annuity Settlement Options  Cash option—lump sum or in installments for a period of time  Life annuity (no refund) – provides life income while annuitant alive; payments end at death  Highest periodic income  But potential for big forfeiture  Life annuity w/ guaranteed payments  Usually 5, 10, 15 or 20 years  In general, monthly benefit is related to risk borne by annuitant versus insurer The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

24The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation Deferred Annuities, Classified by Underlying Investment Deferred Annuities Fixed Traditional Fixed Indexed Variable Traditional Variable With Guaranteed Minimum Benefits

Fixed Annuities  Traditional Fixed  Guaranteed ROR at the time of purchase  No investment risk for the purchaser  More safety  Tradeoff – ROR is very modest The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

Fixed Annuities  Indexed Annuities  Splits the difference between a fixed and variable annuity  Fixed guaranteed minimum ROR  Variable ROR tied to S&P Market Index or some other barometer of investment growth  Can participate in the market while still protecting their principal The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

Variable Annuities  Traditional Variable  Ties the growth of the annuity to stock and mutual funds  No guarantees offered by the insurer The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

Variable Annuities  Variable with Living Benefit Option  Guaranteed minimum benefits  Guaranteed benefits for life  Guaranteed minimum ROR  Opportunity for a portion of their funds to be invested at a potentially higher ROR The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

Individual Annuity Sales – The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation

30The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation Annuity Regulation Currently, Who Regulates What?

31The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation States Regulate Fixed and Variable Annuities Annuities are insurance products because, in their immediate annuity stage, they involve “life contingencies” This means the benefit depends on how long someone lives As insurance products, they are regulated by the states State regulation of annuities covers Minimum reserves Contract provisions Market conduct standards

32The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation Currently, the SEC Regulates Variable Annuities The SEC considers a variable annuity an investment, not an insurance product Because the annuity owner retains the investment risk (unlike a fixed annuity, in which investment risk is transferred to the insurance/annuity company) SEC regulation is in addition to state securities regulation, but states typically copy SEC requirements SEC regulation of annuities covers Market conduct standards

33The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation Who Regulates Indexed Annuities? Indexed annuities are fixed annuity products When interest is credited, the credit is determined by the annuity company. The determination uses a formula that the company can change. The formula uses an external index, often the S&P 500 As fixed annuity product, they’re currently regulated by the states Even though indexed annuities Determine investment growth by reference to a stock market index, and May be sold partly on the “upside potential,” they’re not currently regulated by the SEC  This issue is a matter of debate – Rule 151(a)

34The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation “Suitability” Issue It involves matching The customer’s characteristics, future plans for the policy and related financial matters, the customer’s circumstances, and A policy’s characteristics Ideally, the policy should also be better suited for the customer’s needs than alternative financial products and/or arrangements.

35The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation Who Decides What’s Suitable? Two Philosophies Let the buyer decide what’s suitable for him/herself Provide full and clear disclosure of all relevant information related to an annuity Put the “burden” on the seller to sell only products that are suitable for the buyer Specify types of information the seller must take into account Require that the insurer review prospective sales for suitability

36The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation Summary of Annuities Annuities are financial products that many people find hard to understand Regulators have been concerned that some people are buying annuities that are unsuitable for them – particularly variable annuities Indexed annuities are still regulated by the states but have been proposed to be regulated by the SEC Suitability standards are inconsistent from one jurisdiction to another Regulation will differ depending on which suitability model is relied on

37The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation Life Insurance and Annuities Thank you For more information contact: The Griffith Insurance Education Foundation 623 High Street Worthington, Ohio Phone: