Title: Class 15 Insurance and Risk Management
1Class 15Insurance and RiskManagement
-
- George D. Krempley
- Bus. Fin. 640
- Autumn Quarter 2006
2Todays Agenda
- Life Settlement Options
- Life Insurance Net Single Premium Calculation
- Annuity principle
- Types of annuities
- Taxation of Individual Annuities
- Individual Retirement Accounts
- Traditional IRA
- Roth IRA
3Life Insurance Settlement Options
- Cashmost proceeds are paid as cash
- Interest Option
- Fixed Period Option
- Fixed Amount Option
- Life Income Options
4Advantages Non-cash Settlement Options
- Periodic income to the family
- Guaranteed principal and interest
- Can be useful in life insurance planning
- Long-term guarantees
- No additional cost
5Non-Cash Settlement Options Disadvantages
- Higher yields elsewhere
- Settlement agreement may be inflexible and
restrictive. - Life income options not attractive at younger
ages - Insurance windfall can create problems for the
beneficiary.
6Interest Settlement Option
- Interest paid to the beneficiary
- Minimum interest rate guaranteed
- Beneficiary can make withdrawals
- Advantages
- flexibility, may allow change to another option
- Main disadvantage higher returns elsewhere.
7Fixed Period Settlement Option
- Pays monthly, quarterly, semiannual, or annual
payments - Death of beneficiary
- Remaining payments go to a contingent beneficiary
- To the estate of primary beneficiary if the
contingent beneficiary dies - Useswhen income needed for definite period of
time - Social Security black-out period
- readjustment period
- family dependency period
- Limitationsinflexible partial withdrawals not
allowed
8Fixed Amount Settlement Option
- Specified amount paid to beneficiary each time
period - Advantages
- Considerable flexibility on withdrawals
- May allow change to another option or
- Increase and decrease in fixed amount
9EXHIBIT 18.2 Fixed-Period Option (Minimum
Monthly Income Payments per 1000 Proceeds, 3
Percent Interest)
10EXHIBIT 18.3 Life Income Options (Minimum
Monthly Income Payments per 1000 Proceeds)
11EXHIBIT 18.4 Joint-and-Survivor Life Income
Option (Minimum Monthly Income Payments per 1000
Proceeds)
12Use of a Trust
- Alternative to Settlement Option
- Desirable when
- Amount of insurance is substantial
- Judgment in amount and timing of pay-outs is
required - Example situations
- Minor children
- Mentally handicapped adult
- Disadvantages
- Must pay trustees fee
- Returns not guaranteed
13EXHIBIT 27.1 Commissioners 1980 Standard
Ordinary Mortality Table, Male Lives
14EXHIBIT 27.1 (continued) Commissioners 1980
Standard Ordinary Mortality Table, Male Lives
15EXHIBIT 27.2 Present Value of 1 at 5 Percent
Compound Interest
16EXHIBIT 27.3 Figuring the NSP for a Five-Year
Term Insurance Policy
17Annuity Contracts
- Large and growing part of life insurance business
- Divide contract period in two
- Accumulation period
- Policyholder pays premiums
- Payout period (liquidation period)
- Insurer makes payments
18Use of Annuities
- Risk management perspective
- Protection against outliving resources
- Savings perspective
- Tax advantaged method of saving
- Implicit returns are tax deferred
19Annuity Principle
- Periodic payment that continues for
- Fixed period, or
- Duration of a designated life or lives
- Annuitant
- Person who receives periodic payment, or
- Whose life governs duration of payment
20Annuity Vs. Life Insurance
- Life Insurance
- Creates an immediate estate
- Protects against dying too soon
- Annuity
- Provides a lifetime income that cannot be
outlived - Protects against living too long
21Overview of Annuity Contracts
22Types of Annuities
- Fixed
- Variable
- Equity-indexed
23Fixed Annuity
- Periodic payments to annuitant that are
- fixed
- guaranteed
24Fixed Annuity Accumulation Period
- Premiums credited with interest
- Guaranteed minimum rate
- In some states, recently indexed to 5-year
Treasury bond - Current rate
25Fixed Annuity Liquidation Period
- This is the payout period
- Accumulated cash is annuitized
- Guaranteed lifetime income
- No protection against inflation
26Payment of Benefits
- Immediate annuity
- Deferred annuity
27Deferred Annuity Premium methods
- Single premium
- Level premium
- Flexible premium
28Payment of Benefits
29Annuity Settlement Options
- Cash
- Life Annuity (no refund)
- Also known as straight life annuity
- Life Annuity with guaranteed payments
- Also known as period certain
30Annuity Settlement Options (cont.)
- Installment Refund Option
- Joint and Survivor Annuity
31Overview Variable Annuity
- Provides inflation hedge by maintaining real
purchasing power of periodic payments during
retirement. - During accumulation period, premiums are
invested, and accumulation units are acquired. - At retirement, accumulation units are converted
into annuity units. - Quantity of annuity remains constant
- But, the value of the annuity unit changes
periodically depending on the value of the
subaccount in which the premiums are invested. - As a result, amount of monthly income changes
periodically based on the value of the subaccount.
32Variable Annuity Basic Characteristics
- Premiums used to purchase accumulation units
- Units invested in common stocks and other
investments - At retirement, converted to annuity units
- In both cases, value of units varies with market
33Variable Annuity Guaranteed Death Benefit
- If annuitant dies before retirement, amount paid
to beneficiary will be higher of - Amount invested in contract
- Value of account at time of death
- Some newer variable annuities offer enhanced
death benefits - Rising floor
- Stepped up benefits
34Variable Annuity Fees and Expenses
- Typical charges
- Investment management charge
- Administrative charge
- Mortality and expense risk charge
- Surrender charge
- Some may have front-end load
- Total fees and expenses could exceed 2 of assets
35Variable Annuity Investment Performance
- Owner given investment choices, similar to mutual
funds - Portfolios called sub-accounts
- Funds can be transferred without tax consequences
- Investment performance varies widely depending
on - Insurer
- Type of investment
- Expense rate
36Overview Equity-indexed Annuity
- An equity-indexed annuity is a fixed, deferred
annuity - Allows annuity owner to participate in the growth
of the stock market - Also provides downside protection against the
loss of principal and prior interest earnings if
the annuity is held to term. - The interest credited is based on a stock market
index, typically Standard and Poors 500
Composite Stock Index (SP 500). - The annuity is credited with part of the gain in
the index. - A few insurers have participation rates of 100
percent.
37Equity Indexed Annuity
- Participation rate Percent of stock index that
is credited to the contract - Participation rates generally range from 25
percent to 90 percent of the gain in the stock
index. - Cap on the maximum percentage of gain
- Maximum percentage of gain that is credited to
the contract
38Equity Indexed Annuity Indexing Method
- Method for crediting excess interest to contract
- Several methods used
- Annual reset method
- Interest earnings calculated changed on annual
change in stock market - Index starting point is reset annually
- Also called ratchet method
39Equity-Index Annuity Guaranteed Minimum Value
- Applies to E-A annuities with terms greater than
one year - Protects loss of principal if held to term
- Typical minimum value 90 of single value
accumulated at 3 interest - During first 3 4 years, investor may experience
loss of principal
40Taxation of Individual Annuities
- Premiums are not income-tax deductible
- Investment income is tax-deferred
- Accumulates free of taxes until distributed
- Premature distribution (before 59 ½) subject to
10 penalty tax
41Taxation of Individual Annuities (cont.)
- Net cost of periodic annuity payment not subject
to taxation - Exclusion ratio determines taxable and
non-taxable portions - Exclusion Ratio Investment in Contract/Expected
Return - Example, p.444 of text
42Individual Retirement Accounts
43Traditional IRA
- Eligibility requirements
- Annual contribution limits
- Income tax deduction of traditional IRA
contributions - Special phase-out rule for spouses
- Savers credit
44Traditional IRA (cont)
- Withdrawal of funds
- Taxation of distributions
- Establishing a traditional IRA
- IRA investments
- IRA rollover account
45Traditional IRA Eligibility Requirements
- Traditional IRA has two eligibility requirements.
- Participant must have taxable compensation during
the year - Can include wages and salaries, bonuses,
commissions, and self-employment income. - Participant must be under age 70 1/2.
46Traditional IRA Annual Contribution Limit
- For 2004, maximum annual IRA contribution for
workers under age 50 was 3000. - Workers age 50 and older could contribute a
maximum of 3500 each year. - If the participant had nonworking or low-earning
spouse, maximum annual IRA contribution could be
increased to 6000 (spousal IRA). - However, the maximum annual contribution to each
account is limited to 3000. Under present law,
the annual IRA contribution limits will increase
in the future.
47Roth IRA
- Income limits
- Single taxpayers 95,000 or less
- Married filing jointly 150,000 or less
- Conversion to a Roth IRA
- Limited to taxpayers with adjusted gross income
of 100,000 or less
48Traditional IRA Tax Treatment
- Workers to deduct part or all of their IRA
contributions. - Deduction is limited to workers
- Whose taxable compensation is below certain
annual thresholds - Are not active participants in an employer
sponsored retirement plan.
49Traditional IRA Tax Treatment (cont.)
- Investment income accumulates income-tax free on
a tax-deferred basis - Distributions are taxed as ordinary income.
50Roth IRA Tax Treatment
- Annual contributions to a Roth IRA are not
income-tax deductible. - Investment income accumulates income-tax free
- Qualified distributions are not taxable if
certain requirements are met. - A qualified distribution is any distribution that
(1) is made after a five-year period beginning
with the first tax year for which a Roth
contribution is made, and (2) is made for any of
the following reasons
51Roth IRA Tax Treatment
- A qualified distribution is any distribution that
is made - After a five-year period beginning with the first
tax year for which a Roth contribution is made - For any of the following reasons
- The individual is age 59 1/2 or older.
- The individual is disabled.
- Distribution is paid to a beneficiary or to the
estate after the individuals death. - Distribution is used to pay qualified first-time
homebuyer expenses (maximum of 10,000).