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The following article about life
insurances provided by Roccy M. DeFrancesco of Trustmakers
Financial Services.
Life Insurance 101:
Term Life Insurance
Unfortunately, most people, if
they have life insurance have term life. Why? The simple
answer is because it’s inexpensive and because there is
a need to protect the family financially if the “bread
winner” dies during a term of years.
Unlike the other life insurance
policies, term life has no cash value; and if you do not die,
you (and your beneficiaries) do not get a benefit. For a
33-year old to purchase $1,000,000 worth of term coverage, it
might cost as little as $250 a year.
The problem with term
insurance is that clients who amass any amount of wealth
during their lives should have “permanent”
insurance (insurance that will be paid up until age 100+). If
you knew that 97%+ of all term policies never pay would that
give you pause to pour money into a term policy?
Types of term life
Non-guaranteed term
simply means, as you get older, the company will charge you
more every year for the insurance. The pros of non-premium
guaranteed term is simply that every year you will get the
lowest possible term cost, but you have no guarantee what that
will be in any given year.
Level
term is the most common. You can purchase 5-,
10-, 15-, 20- and 30-year term policies from almost any
company. Level term means that the premium will be level for a
particular death benefit. After the term is up, typically you
still have the contractual right to purchase insurance from
the company; but there is no guarantee what the rates will be
(this is called Convertible Term).
Summary on Term Life
– Buy it if you have a short term need for life
insurance and if premium costs are an issue. As soon as you
know you have a need for “permanent” insurance,
you should purchase a different type of policy.
Whole Life Insurance
Policies
Whole life (WL) provides a death
benefit and an accumulating cash value. By definition, it has
a fixed premium and a level death benefit to age 100. The
premiums do not increase with age, which averages the
client’s cost of the policy over the life of the policy
(although there is a high internal upfront load with whole
life). The cash value increases with time until it equals the
death benefit at age 100.
WL is considered by most as
“old-school” permanent life insurance. If
you’ve ever run into a Northwestern Mutual Life agent,
you would have been pitched WL insurance.
WL is the most expensive type of
life insurance you can purchase due to the large up front
load. Cash is credited in the policy based on the financial
returns of the life insurance company which ironically come
form overcharging clients for premiums and then crediting X
amount of the overcharged premium back into the cash value of
the policies (this is called a dividend). WL insurance
policies are also very conservative policies due to the fact
that the investment returns inside the policies are usually
very stable even if they are not spectacular.
Generally speaking, I personally
have very little use for whole life when working with clients.
Why? WL used to be sold on the “guaranteed” death
benefit (in the old days, this was the only kind of policy
which would “guarantee” a death benefit). Today,
there are several less expensive types of policies that
provide a guaranteed death benefit. WL is also sold as a cash
accumulator/retirement vehicle. My personal preference would
be not to use a WL policy due to the high up front costs and
limited potential for growth. There are simply better products
for this purpose.
Variable Life Insurance
Higher income clients are
typically aware of variable life because it has been pitched
to nearly every high income client in the country by
salespersons trying to talk a client into purchasing the
policy as a post-tax investment.
Variable Life (VL) is simple to
understand. When you pay your premium, X amount of the money
goes to pay term insurance for someone your age; and the rest
of the money goes into the stock market via mutual funds. Many
clients seem to love this policy because they seem to like the
fact that they are buying life insurance, but their money is
really going into the stock market.
The sale’s pitch is that
the cash value in a VL grows tax free and comes out tax free
and makes for a terrific investment. That is true of any
properly setup cash value life policy.
Most people also do not
understand that when you get over 70 years old, the costs of
insurance in a variable policy are tremendously high due to
the fact that the policy is using your annually renewable term
insurance rates (which are very high after the age of 70).
Also, there are no guarantees on
investment returns in the majority of variable policies. That
means that, if you have a negative year (or several like
2000-2002), the cash value in your policy (the money invested
in mutual funds) takes a nosedive with the stock market. You
might think that is not a big deal due to the fact that over
the long haul the policy will still average your assumed rate
of return of 10-12%. What you have not probably thought of is
that the expenses in your policy increase every year, and the
insurance company does not care if you do not have cash in
your policy to pay premiums because the market is in a funk.
The insurance company on schedule still takes out its chunk of
your money for life insurance premiums. We call that a double
whammy, to use a not so sophisticated term, to describe
premiums coming out and cash value decreasing.
My position on VL is very simple,
there is virtually no use for it in today’s marketplace.
With the new equity indexed life policies (see below) which
have a guaranteed minimum rate of return each year with upside
growth pegged to the best measuring index (the S&P 500),
there is no reason to “risk” your money in a VL
policy which has very high expenses when you reach
retirement.
Universal Life
Insurance
Universal Life (UL) is sort of a
hybrid between whole life insurance and variable life. UL is
the most flexible type of life insurance because of the fact
it does not technically require that a premium be paid into
the policy every year (out of your pocket), and because the
investment returns are much more stable than a variable
policy. Interest on the cash value is usually guaranteed at a
certain rate (2-4%) but will vary according to the investment
performance (which is pegged to Bond returns). Each month's
deductions are made from the cash value in the policy to pay
for the costs of the insurance protection. As long as the cash
value is substantial enough to maintain the monthly costs, the
policy will remain in force. The key to any form of Universal
Life is that it is interest sensitive and allows for an
adjustable death benefit.
I will not spend much time on
traditional UL insurance because my favorite type of policy is
what’s called an Indexed Equity Life Insurance policy
(see below).
Equity Indexed Life Insurance
Policy (EILIP)
An EILIP is a UL policy with a
twist. The twist is that the investment returns on the cash
value are pegged to the S&P 500 index (which has
consistently outperformed most mutual fund returns).
Like any UL product, the cash
value in the policy has a guaranteed return (usually 1-3%).
Therefore, unlike a variable policy which could tank if the
equity markets have a bad time, the EILIP never allows a
negative crediting year on the cash value in the policy.
Like anything in life, nothing is
for free. With the EILIPs, there is a guarantee, but there is
also a “cap” on the returns you are allowed to
participate in each year. The caps range from 10%-17% in the
policies.
So ask yourself this, what kind
of policy would you want to build cash? A VL policy which
could tank if the stock market doesn’t go well and which
has very high expense when you are in retirement? A WL policy
which has big up front loads and only a modest ability to
build cash annually? A traditional UL which has it’s
returns pegged to the Bond markets, or….
An indexed life policy which
gives you a minimum guaranteed rate of return each year on the
cash value and has the growth in the policy pegged to the best
performing stock index?
To me the answer is simple, if
you want permanent insurance that has cash value so you can
potentially borrow from it “tax-free” in
retirement, the choice is simple, you should purchase an
EILIP.
Side Note: You should also know
that there are EILIPs that will credit 140% of what the
S&P 500 returns and ones that will give you a
“free” long-term care insurance rider. The
policies get better and better each year and if you have a
cash value life insurance policy that is NOT an EILIP, you
should strongly consider 1035 exchanging your current policy
for an EILIP.
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