Annuity

Top 5 Reasons To Buy a Fixed Annuity

Presented by Deb Strong Today more than ever, we all know clients that have had some money invested in the stock market in security products whom may have lost some of their principal.  Why not talk to these clients about investing it in fixed annuities, to help them sleep at night.  This will allow them to have upside potential in the market and downside risk.  Please call Financial Brokerage for details. http://www.lifehealthpro.com/2015/05/05/top-5-reasons-to-buy-a-fixed-annuity?t=fixed-indexed
Long Term Care and Disability Insurance

When a LTC Rate Increase Occurs, How You React…

Presented by Leonard Berthelsen Rate increases in any product line are never popular, nor are they a pleasant conversation with your client. Long term care insurance is especially difficult due to the fact that your client may be considerably older now than when they originally purchased their policy. That distance between purchase time and now present an ever challenging set of issues for both you and your client. Should I be proactive and address this right away with my client or do I wait for the news to leak out and maybe the client has calmed down before they actually get the rate increase notice? The prudent way would seem to me to address it with the client as soon as you can. It certainly is better hearing it from you than your client getting blind-sided by a news story or hearing about it through the grapevine. So what is that conversation going to be like? Well, short of your client going ballistic on you, level heads need to prevail. Most carriers offering long term care insurance or carriers that offered it in the past have gone through rate increases at least once. You may have become seasoned in how to handle it but many agents still struggle today on the best approach when rates go up. It is important to first remember this, you did not make these rates go up, your client did not make them go up and circumstances beyond both of you are controlling this. Market events certainly have been issues for the past 7-8 years. The interest rate that the carrier expected to earn on the invested premiums has not met policy design, utilization in some areas of the product have been higher than anticipated, and the simple fact that people are living longer and developing care issues that LTC was designed to cover is happening more frequently than what the product was priced for. Now that access to home care is so prevalent in our society, policyholders are accessing benefits earlier and receiving those benefits over a longer period of time, thus making the average claim higher. Yes, some of the older plans had designed persistency rates well below what was actually experienced that resulted in necessary rate increases. I do have to say though, if the plan was designed and built within the last 10-15 years, the persistency issue has been relatively the same, very high and quite probably not a reason anymore for the rate increase. So why the lesson in LTC history? How will you explain why the increase occurred and how will you make it understandable? I have gone through several rate increase actions with multiple carriers and my basic explanation remains the same. Reiterate the value of the plan, why they bought it and its value to them in current dollars. This gets your client back in the frame of mind of the product’s importance and the value proposition that convinced them to purchase it in the first place. I’ll create a quick premium comparison for each client demonstrating what the same plan at their current age would cost today and compare it to what they already have in place. This many times will defuse the notion of dropping it and shopping for something else. Rarely will the increased premiums on the existing plan be more than what currently is being sold. Many times the benefits will be stronger in their plan than what they can buy today. Once I have an understanding of the pure premium issue, I can move on to affordability. If this rate increase is going to put the premium out of reach or just more than what they are willing to spend for LTC, then I need to have the discussion about adjusting their current plan. In most cases the carrier will proactively give several “landing points” for the client to consider which generally means they are going to reduce benefits to keep the premium at a level that is acceptable. Not all benefit reductions are negative or bad. Maybe the client purchased it with inflation protection and it has grown to an acceptable daily/monthly level and they are okay with freezing it at that level. An easy solution to the problem. Some carriers will allow the reduction in the percentage of inflation protection as a means of reducing premiums. My conversation may need to go into possibly looking at reducing the duration of the benefit or other riders as a means of reducing premium. The main advice here is really very basic. Be proactive with your client when you know that a rate increase is coming. Start the conversation as soon as you know the facts. Understand the “landing points” that the carrier is offering and make sure that you restate the reason why they purchased the plan in the first place. The importance of long term care coverage for that policy owner is more important today than ever before, and the price is never going to be more affordable than it is right now. We all are getting older, living longer and in many cases dying slower with health related issues. Let’s just make sure that our clients are making the right decisions regarding the rate increase and for the right reason.
Life Insurance

Laddering Life Insurance

Presented by Brian Leising

Laddering is a way to save your clients money on life insurance and give them exactly the amount of coverage they need at the exact time they need it. Instead of one policy covering multiple needs, your clients will have a separate policy for each need. How does this work? Let me show you an example:

Sample client, married, two children, one mortgage

Let’s say you conducted a needs analysis for a male age 35 and determined he needs $1,000,000 of life insurance for 30 years. Assuming the best health class, the price would be $814 per year. Does your client really need the entire $1,000,000 for all 30 years? What if he has a ten year old child he expects to be independent at age 20? $250,000 may only be needed for the next 10 years. Let’s assume he also has a 5 year old and needs another $250,000 until that child’s age 20 (15 years). He purchased a home with a 30 year mortgage 10 years ago and owes another $250,000 for the next 20 years. Finally, he plans to retire at age 65 and his wife needs the remaining $250,000 for income replacement for 30 years.

How to save $10,000

When you add up the premiums for $250,000 each of 10, 15, 20 and 30 year term the price is only $673.60 per year. That’s a 17% savings for the client. But wait, there’s more! In year 11 when the 10 year term expires, his price drops to just $559.50. In year 16 it drops to $430.50 and in year 21 it drops again to $269.00. That’s a total premium savings of $10,004 over 30 years, a 41% savings over that same time span!

Life Insurance

Badmouthing the Competition

Presented by Jim Linn When you throw dirt, you lose ground! We have all been faced with a client that was unhappy with a previous advisor or carrier and voiced their concern.  In trying to identify with the client you may have the urge to side with or even join in with your own two cents. Your “two cents” could cost you a lot more.  In a brief article on Lifehealthpro.com they address badmouthing the competition.  Click the link below for the short article:  http://www.lifehealthpro.com/2015/09/09/badmouthing-the-competition-is-a-losing-propositio?t=practice-management