Title: Life Insurance and Annuities
1Chapter 15
- Life Insurance and Annuities
2Product Overview
- Term
- Pure life insurance
- Cash value policies
- Pure life insurance Savings accumulation
- Examples
- whole life
- universal life
- variable life
3Product Overview
- Can obtain savings accumulation by surrendering
the policy - Why bundle death protection savings
accumulation? - Tax advantaged method of saving
4Terminology
- Death benefit amount beneficiaries receive
- Cash value amount of savings accumulation
- Death protection amount of pure death
protection - death benefit - cash value
- Face amount stated amount of coverage
- death benefit (for term, whole life, some
universal life) - death benefit - cash value (for some universal
life)
5Term Insurance
- Data
- 1/4 of policies
- almost half of death protection purchased
- Guaranteed renewable
- Premium increases over time
6Endowment Insurance
- Pays face amount
- if the insured dies
- or
- if the insured survives the policy period
7Whole Life Insurance
- Policy period ends when insured reaches 100
- Equivalent to endowment policy to 100
- Premiums
- single premium
- limited pay
- continuous premium
8Whole Life Insurance
- Premiums generally do not increase over time
- But probability of dying increases over time
- higher upfront premiums than with term
- Policyholder prepays part of the cost of future
death protection - entitled to prepayments if policy is surrendered
- this is the cash value (savings accumulation)
9Whole Life Insurance
- If insured dies,
- beneficiaries receive face amount
- death protection cash value
- Structured so
- cash value ? over time
- death protection ? over time
-
10Whole Life Insurance
11Participating Policies
- Can (and usually does) pay annual dividends
- always with mutual companies
- often with stock companies
- Why? - premiums based on conservative assumptions
- Key assumptions interest rate levels and
mortality rates - These variables are correlated across
policyholders - Insurers methods of dealing with correlated
risk - Bear the correlated risk and hold a lot of
capital - Share correlated risk with policyholders
- Illustrated versus actual dividends
12Other Whole Life Policy Provisions
- Surrender Options
- Take cash value
- Use cash value as a single premium for
- paid up whole life
- term policy
- Policy loans
- borrow against cash value
- interest now varies with market rates
- in 1970s 80s, fixed rate disintermediation
13Expense Loadings
- Front-end expense charges
- Cash value grows slowly at first
- Implicit return on savings accumulation
- initially low
14Universal Life
- Similar to whole life
- Main differences
- Greater flexibility in premium payments
- Cash value does not follow a fixed schedule it
varies with - policyholders premium payments
- insurers expense and mortality charges
- rate insurer uses to credit interest to cash
value - minimum rate usually guaranteed
- rate often linked to short term interest rates
15Factors Affecting UL Cash Value
16Death Benefit Options with UL
- Level death benefit (as with WL)
- Death benefit varies with cash value
Death benefit
Death benefit
Cash value
Cash value
age
age
17Variable Life
- Similar to whole life
- Main differences
- Cash value does not follow a fixed schedule it
varies with - return earned on portfolio of mutual funds chosen
by policyholder - Death benefit
- minimum is guaranteed,
- varies with cash value
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19Tax Treatment of Life Insurance
- Death benefits are not taxed
- Income tax is not paid on increases in cash value
while the policy is in force - Upon surrender, income tax is paid on
- Cash surrender value - sum of all premiums
- sum of all policyholder dividends
20Implications of Tax Treatment
- Implicit returns on savings accumulation
- Escape taxation if insured dies
- Tax deferred if the policy is surrendered
- Partially taxed if policy is surrendered
- Amount which is taxed is less than implicit
return b/c part of premiums is cost of death
protection
21Annuity Contracts
- Large and growing part of life insurance business
- Divide contract period in two
- Accumulation period
- Policyholder pays premiums
- Payout period
- Insurer makes payments
22Use of Annuities
- Risk management perspective
- Protection against outliving resources
- Savings perspective
- Tax advantaged method of saving
- Implicit returns are tax deferred
23Savings Features
- Fixed annuities
- Return credited varies with interest rates
- Variable annuities
- Return credited varies with return on mutual
funds chosen by contract holder
24Overview of Annuity Contracts
25Life Insurance Pricing
- Ignore expenses and risk load
- focus on net premiums
- Use mortality table
- Probability of dying at age x conditional on
living through age x-1 - Example Probability of male dying at age 40
0.00302 - Assume
- Premiums paid at beginning of year
- Claims paid at end of year
26Pricing 1-Year Term
- Find fair premium for 100,000 1-year term for 40
year-old - Interest rate 10
- Insurers cash flows
- Beg. of Year End of Year
- -100,000 with
prob 0.00302 - Premium
- 0
with prob. 0.99698 - Premium Present value of expected claim cost
- 302 / 1.1 275
27Pricing 1-Year Term
- Find fair premium for 100,000 1-year term for 41
year-old - Interest rate 10
- Insurers cash flows
- Beg. of Year End of Year
- -100,000 with
prob 0.00329 - Premium
- 0
with prob. 0.99671 - Premium Present value of expected claim cost
- 329 / 1.1 299
28Pricing 1-Year Term
- Premium increases as probability of dying
increases
29Pricing 2-Year Term
- Find fair premium for 100,000 2-year term for 40
year-old - Insurers claim costs
- Beg. of Year 1 End of Year 1 End of Year 2
- -100,000 -100,000
- with prob 0.00302 with prob x
-
- 0 0
- with prob. 0.99698 with prob 1-x
30Pricing 2-Year Term
- What is x? it is the probability of a 40
year-old dying in his 42nd year? - Mortality table
- Number Number
- Age of People of Deaths
- 40 937723 2832
- 41 934891 3076
-
- Probability of 40 year-old dying in 41st year
0.00302 -
- Probability of 40 year-old dying in 42nd year
0.00328
31Pricing 2-Year Term
- Single premium
- Insurers expected cash flows
- Beg. of Year End of Year 1 End of Year 2
- Premium -302 -328
- Premium PV of expected claim costs
- 302 / 1.1 328 / 1.12
- 275 271 546
-
32Pricing 2-Year Term
- Level Premium
- same premium paid at beginning of each year (if
insured survives) - Insurers expected cash flows
- Beg. of Year End of Year 1 End of Year 2
- Premium Premium x 0.99698
- -302 -328
- Find Premium so that PV of expected premiums
PV of expected claims
33Pricing 2-Year Term
- Premium (1 0.99698/1.1) 546
- Premium 286.41
- Note
- 286.41 1/2 of single premium (546)
- Why?
- Chance second premium payment will not be made
- Second premium is discounted b/c of time value of
money
34A Comparison
- Expected costs of three alternative methods of
obtaining coverage
35Implications
- Annual premiums for successive term policies
reflect the annual cost of insuring - Annual cost 275 and 298
- With 2-year policy,
- premium in year 1 275
- premium in year 2
- With this example, size of difference is small
- With whole life policies (UL, VL)
- difference can be large
- gives rise to cash value
Essentially, pre-funding costs
36Pricing Immediate Annuities
- Example Find single premium for a 5,000 life
annuity for a 95-year-old - Assume person dies by age 100
- Interest rate 10
- Premium PV of expected payments to annuitant
4,530 - Probability Expected PV of
- of 96-year- Payment Expected
- Age old surviving 5,000 x prob Payment
- 97 6050/9831 3077 3,077 / 1.1 2,797
- 98 3145/9831 1,600 1,322 / 1.12 1,322
- 99 1076/9831 547 547/ 1.13 411
- 100 0 0 0
37Pricing Single Premium Whole Life
- Apply same principles used with term
- Forecast expected cash flows to age 100
- Find single premium
- PV of expected cost
- Assume
- no expenses or profits
- 5 interest rate
- policy will not lapse
38Pricing Single Premium Whole Life
Single Premium
39Continuous Level Premium Whole Life
- Continuous level premium
- Same premium is paid until insured dies or
reaches 100 - Equivalent to a life annuity
- Present value of a life annuity that pays P
starting at age 40 16.30 x P - Find P so that PV of premium payments PV of
costs - 16.30 x P 22,373 P 1,372.58
40Limited Payment Whole Life
- Limited payment level premium
- Same premium is paid for fixed number of years
- Example 20 years
- Equivalent to a 20 year annuity
- Present value of a 20-year annuity that pays P
starting at age 40 12.58 x P - Find P so that PV of premium payments PV of
costs - 12.58 x P 22,373 P 1,778.45
41Comparison of Cash Values in Whole Life
42How Much Life Insurance Should be Purchased?
- Rules of thumb
- Death benefit 8 times income
- Forecast beneficiaries sources uses of funds
- Uses
- Living expenses
- Education expenses
- Sources
- Social security
- Earnings
43Term Insurance Cost Comparisons
- Adjusted cost index
- Idea calculate accumulated future value of all
costs - Procedure
- accumulate premiums (P) per 1,000 of coverage
- less policyholder dividends (D)
- for 20 years
- at a 5 interest rate
44Whole Life Cost Comparisons
- One approach use adjusted cost index again
- but subtract cash value (CV) at end of 20 years
- AC20 AC20 - CV20
- In practice adjust cost indices are scaled to get
interest adjusted cost (IAC) - Another approach calculate implicit rate of
return
45Universal Life Cost Comparisons
- More complex
- One approach
- Use interest adjusted cost index subtracting an
estimate of cash value - under common assumptions(across policies being
compared) about premiums and interest rates - No consensus exists