|
Lapsing is OK, but not the best idea
By Paul
Bannister Bankrate.com
Once upon a time that insurance policy
seemed like a good thing. Now it seems like a financial burden and
you're thinking of deep-sixing it.
Should you simply stop paying on it or is there a
smarter approach?
You may think you're paying too much for coverage
you no longer want, or the policy's cash value isn't growing fast
enough, or it isn't needed any more, or you've found a better deal
elsewhere.
Other circumstances can apply, too. You might need
to pay for rising health-care costs, or the policy's beneficiary
has been changed through divorce or death. Perhaps you face a forced
liquidation because of bankruptcy or financially tough times, or
maybe you just have a simple wish to live your later years in greater
financial comfort.
You basically have three options: You can let the
policy lapse by ending premium payments, you can surrender it or
you can tap the hidden value in the policy through a life settlement.
Allowing a policy to lapse is the easiest thing to
do, but probably the least attractive.
A life insurance policy cancels itself, or lapses,
when you stop paying the premiums. If it's a term policy, the owner
receives nothing. It ends when you stop sending the checks or cancel
that standing order.
If it's a whole life policy that has accumulated some
cash value, the insurer will use whatever value is in the policy
to pay the monthly premiums until that value is used up, and then
the policy becomes void.
But that isn't exactly the end of it. And lapsing
a policy can have its drawbacks.
"Multiple lapses of policies can suggest to an
insurer that you are financially unstable. Because an insurer often
pays its agent a commission of more than half of the first year's
premium, lapsing a policy early can cost the company money,"
says Kerry Williams a consumer advocate and information officer
in the consumer education and outreach program for the state of
California.
"The company pays to insure you, the agent makes
his commission, but the company isn't making anything if you get
out before they can pass the break-even point.
"The next time you want to insure, you might
find yourself rejected for too many lapses, or at the very least
have to pay a year's worth of premiums upfront so they are sure
of their money.
So lapsing is not the best option. What's next? If
it's a whole life or permanent contract, you can turn it in, or
surrender the policy.
In that case, you'll receive the cash surrender value
of the contract, walk away with a fraction of the policy's worth
and start again. But keep in mind, you've been paying to build up
your policy's value, you've paid the agent's commission and you've
paid for life insurance. Just when you might start to approach the
break-even point, you hand it over to the insurer. It's good profit
to them.
You get something, but not the handsome return you
can expect under option three, if circumstances are right.
Remember, a life insurance policy is property just
like a house, stocks, bonds, or a car. You can legally sell the
policy to a third party who will continue to pay the premiums for
you -- and that third party will get the eventual benefit of the
policy's full value when the policy holder passes away.
Typically, the sale, which is called a life settlement,
gives you, the policy holder, a lump sum of cash that is less than
the face amount of the policy, but is more than the cash surrender
value.
Lori Friedman, a financial planner and CEO of Innovative
Underwriters Inc., Philadelphia, Pa., says the strategy works
best for policies with a minimum face amount of $500,000, when the
insured has less than a 12-year life expectancy, has had a change
in health since the policy was purchased, and when the policy can
be enhanced for the purpose of its sale.
"It's a win-win situation. The policy holder
gets more, the purchaser of the policy gets a profit, and the insurer
gets the use of the funds during the policy's life," she explains.
In one example provided by Friedman, a 75-year-old
hotel developer left his $10 million enterprise to his two sons,
and planned to fund his retirement partially through a consultant's
salary from the company.
The sons squabbled, the business started to sink and
a $4 million life policy on the patriarch's life was in danger of
lapsing because the sons could not afford the premiums of $100,000
a year.
By agreeing to sell the policy in a life settlement
for 30 percent of its face value, Dad got $1.2 million for his retirement
fund and saved $100,000 a year in premiums.
The ownership of the policy transfers to the "funder,"
who pays the annual premiums until the patriarch's death, when the
full $4 million in benefits goes to the purchaser.
For the client, the key question is: What will you
get for your policy?
That depends on your age, your life expectancy and
your medical condition, plus factors like the insurance company's
own rating, what type policy you have and what sort of premiums
you're paying.
Most types of life insurance policies, including universal,
whole life and converted term, can qualify for a life settlement.
You could sell the policy to a friend, but a licensed broker will
probably get you a better offer and steer you into a legal deal
that will not be challenged later by the insurer.
The broker will not require you to take a medical
examination or to pay fees and will complete the transaction in
30 to 45 days. The proceeds are tax free up to the amount of your
annual premiums.
Paul Bannister is a freelance
writer based in Oregon.
-- Posted: July 28, 2004
|