Long Term Care and Disability Insurance

Is an Inflation Rider Critical to a Long Term…

Presented by Leonard Berthelsen I read with a smile on my face the news release by AALTCi regarding buyers purchasing less inflation protection on long term care plans in 2014.  The article stated that in 2014, the selection of the 5% inflation option on LTCi plans dropped from 51% to 14.5% in comparison to 2012 reported sales. The 5% inflation option has steadily increased in price to the point of making LTCi unaffordable for many consumers.  As a fall back, many agents just started quoting the 3% option that most carriers offered.  It certainly was less expensive but still high enough to dissuade many consumers from purchasing LTCi. Now I am not one to downplay the importance of benefit growth in a long term care plan, but there is another viable option that agents can consider.  It is simply called a “bulk benefit”.  We did an analysis of carrier rate increases about 3 years ago and looked at the plans that were subjected to rate increases and what benefits were included in those plans.  The commonality was long duration of benefit periods and the compounded inflation rider.  From that we looked to see what could be designed  into a long term care plan, have adequate benefits and still be affordable.  Hence, the “bulk benefit”. For example, take a couple aged 57 and 60 buying a $5,000 a month benefit with 5% compound inflation for a 5 year benefit duration. The cost from one of the top three carriers would be approximately $8,800 in annual premium.  Yes, unaffordable for most or they just aren’t interested in paying that kind of annual premium.  If you went with the 3% option, that premium would be approximately $4,850. Now look at the alternative foregoing inflation protection altogether.  Use a four year duration of benefits but design the plan at $10,000 per month.  You have doubled the benefit from the beginning and this is where your inflation protection is.  What’s the cost, approximately $4,900 annually. The crossover where the two designed plans will be equal to one another would be ages 72 and 75 for 5% compounded inflation and 78 and 81 with 3% compounded.  If the claim happened in the early ownership of the LTCi plan, certainly bulk benefit would be more desirable. Looking at life expectancy and the reality that most consumers don’t buy LTCi to cover 100% of the risk, this method starts to look attractive. We have to be aware that using this method of plan design takes the LTCi  Partnership out of the equation.  That has to be part of the conversation with the client.  Significant assets many times make the Partnership a non-issue but the conversation needs to be conducted with the client.  The purpose of DRA Partnership was to get more consumers to purchase private LTCi coverage and this model makes it a bit more affordable. When fully explained and a review of all the options and a premium comparison is completed, we see clients opt for the bulk benefit more often than not.   Having immediate large benefits versus the traditional and now more expensive long term care plan with that slow growth makes sense to a lot of consumers.  These are reimbursement policies, so if the entire benefit isn’t used in a given month, the remaining pool is available for future delivery.  It just makes sense to a lot of potential clients.
Life Insurance

Back to the Future

Presented by Gary Peterson   Following is a concept that can generate life sales into the future.   When you sell a term plan to your clients, prepare them for the next sale by discussing their needs for permanent insurance.  One of our carriers offers Return of Premium on their Universal Life product in addition to a Chronic Illness rider.  Another carrier has the option to make the change from a Universal Life to an Index Universal Life.   The approach would be:
  • Sell the term
  • Prepare clients for conversion to a Universal Life in a few years
  • In 20 years, get refund of premium or exercise the Chronic Illness rider for Living Benefits (if desired)
OR
  • Change the Universal Life to an Index Universal Life to build potential supplemental retirement funds
Call me at 800-397-9999 for more details on these potential solutions for your clients.  Remember, don’t just sell for today!