Posts Tagged Mutual Whole Life Insurance

The Case for Investing in Life Insurance

Now Could Be the Right Time to Invest in Your Own Health

By:  Barry James Dyke

Key Points

  • Insurance companies do not invest their money in the potentially unstable way that banks do.
  • A mix of term and permanent life insurance is ideal for most investors, though only permanent life offers interest rewards.
  • Life insurance policies should never be created for short-term investing.

Two years ago, presidential candidate John McCain secured initial campaign financing by using his $3 million life insurance policy as collateral.

In 1980, Doris Christopher used a life insurance loan to launch her struggling kitchen gadget company. In 2002, she sold that company—the Pampered Chef—to Warren Buffett for a reported $900 million.

Even in the midst of the Great Depression, J.C. Penney used a loan against his $3 million life insurance policy to resuscitate his retail stores after the 1929 crash.

By this point in our nation’s recession, it is clear that there is no such thing as a perfect investment strategy. As the Dow Jones Industrial Average sits at about 65 percent of its value from 18 months ago, now is an ideal time to learn about the proven benefits, strengths, and versatility of life insurance and annuity investing.

IF IT’S GOOD ENOUGH FOR BANKERS . . .

According to government disclosures, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has a majority of his liquid wealth—between $1 million and $2 million—invested in fixed and variable annuities, which are contracts issued exclusively by life insurance companies that promise guaranteed rates of interest.

What’s more, the 401(k) Thrift Plan for Employees of the Federal Reserve System, according to a 2009 first-quarter Fed report covering 22,000 Fed employees, has 75 percent of its assets—that’s $3.2 billion—invested in its fixed-income fund, which is invested exclusively in annuity contracts underwritten by major U.S. life insurance companies guaranteeing principal and an interest rate of 5.8 percent.

And this is not a new trend. A Deloitte audit affirms that in 2007 and 2006, Fed employees overwhelmingly chose fixed-income annuity funds over volatile mutual funds.

The nation’s large banks invest immense sums of their Tier 1 capital reserves—a bank’s most important asset and a key measure of its strength—into permanent life insurance underwritten by major life insurance companies. (See sidebar “Banking on life insurance” for more details.)

Why do banks look to insurance companies for sound investment? Unlike banks, life insurance companies do not use excessive leverage. If a bank has $1 million on deposit, it can lend out up to $10 million to the public. This leverage is called “fractional reserve lending,” and it can lead to instability. Indeed, excessive leverage is a major reason why banks are failing today and have throughout history.

However, if a life insurance company has $1 million on deposit, that company may loan no more than $920,000, and usually only a fraction of that. As such, life insurers are 100 percent reserve-based lenders, which makes them stable institutions in down economies.

WHY LIFE INSURANCE?

There are two basic types of life insurance: term life, which is essentially a rented policy for a specified period of time; and permanent or “cash-value” life, which is insurance for as long as you live. While a mix of both types of policy proves valuable for most investors, financial rewards are attainable only with permanent life policies. Following are some of the key benefits of investing in permanent life insurance and annuities:

Safety. Permanent life and annuities, when backed by the general account of a life insurance company, contain financial guarantees, are protected by state guarantee funds, and adhere to strict investment portfolio standards. Enormous losses in today’s stock market illuminate the dangers of investing without guarantees. During the Great Depression, when more than 10,000 banks failed, 99.9 percent of consumers’ savings in life insurance and annuities remained safe with legal reserve life insurance companies.

Earnings in addition to guaranteed rates. Although additional earnings above guarantees are not assured, most life companies paid additional earnings even during the Great Depression.

Permanent life insurance and annuities are savings systems. A major problem today in financial planning is that 401(k) and mutual fund marketers have successfully blurred the difference between “saving” and “investing.” When one saves, money is safe and liquid. When one invests, 100 percent of your money is at risk 100 percent of the time.

When you save through permanent life insurance and annuities backed by the insurance company’s general account, your funds are safe, liquid, and tax-favored.

Valuable tax benefits. Savings and earnings within permanent life insurance and annuities grow tax-deferred, and loans from insurance are not taxed as ordinary income. What’s more, insurance proceeds are received income-tax-free and, in most cases, estate-tax-free.

Asset protection. Although asset-protection privileges for lawsuits and bankruptcy vary from state to state, life insurance and annuity assets are a favored asset in all states. States with particularly strong asset protection for life insurance and annuities for today’s physician include Arizona, Florida, Michigan, New York, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas.

Income-tax-free death benefit. Life is a gamble. The greatest risk we face is the risk of premature death. Protecting those people or causes we love with life insurance is a wise allocation of resources.

When the Reverend Jerry Falwell died in 2007, he left $34 million in life insurance to pay off Liberty University’s debts, strengthen that school’s endowment, and provide funding for a Thomas Road Baptist Church. Newer annuities also offer additional life insurance benefits.

Professional money management. Savings within a life insurance company are professionally managed to secure the highest rate of return with the maximum amount of safety. You will enjoy diversification by industry as well as by geography.

Unlike some retirement plans, you have access to your money in a life insurance policy through loans and other options. Today, money within a qualified retirement plan (e.g., pension, 401(k), 403(b), IRA) is money in a straitjacket until retirement. Unfortunately, your money is still subject to market risk, inflation, and lost opportunity cost. Not so with permanent life insurance or annuities that are backed by the insurer’s general account.

Life insurance and annuities can perform additional economic jobs as well. By attaching riders onto base life insurance and annuities, they can provide additional benefits for disability protection, long-term care, critical illness, and retirement funding.

Life insurance and annuities are wills unto themselves. They are able to accommodate multiple and complex beneficiaries, and can be easily changed without legal costs. At your death, they also bypass probate—thus avoiding legal bills, appraisal costs, taxes, and other expenses common even to midsized estates. States with particularly onerous probate costs include California, Connecticut, and Georgia.

GUIDELINES FOR INVESTING

Life insurance and annuity purchases are some of the most important financial decisions you can make. Do not purchase either of them if you plan to do it for only a year; there are costs associated with any investment, and these are long-term planning tools.

Finally, this author prefers mutual life companies over publicly traded stock-based life insurers (although stock companies can be well-run and offer investors great value). Why mutual companies? A mutual company is not a publicly traded entity and does not succumb to the continuous demands and whims of Wall Street. Mutual companies, although not entirely unscathed, have for the most part dodged the stock market meltdown that has hammered their publicly traded counterparts.

Mutual companies, often criticized for being too prudish and conservative, are now pillars of strength. With a mutual company, a physician is technically an owner in the company and receives the profits of the company through dividends and interest—not stock.

If a mutual company does go public at a later date, its investors can enjoy potential rewards of cash, additional insurance, or shares of the new public company—while still maintaining their initial insurance and annuities.

It is wise to work with an adviser who has expertise not just in life insurance and annuities, but who has a working knowledge of taxes, risk management, investments, and economics. Insure your life as you would insure the economic replacement value of your automobile, home, or practice. Your human life is the greatest economic value of them all—the creator of all property values.

As a general rule, the economic replacement value for life insurance for a physician under 40 is 20 to 25 times his annual income. Physicians who are young will need large amounts of term life insurance—pure death benefit protection. As cash flow improves and debts such as student loans are paid down, purchasing permanent life insurance makes economic sense.

When buying life insurance and annuity products with savings components, purchase products that are backed by the general account of the company first. Why? The general account is the heart of any life insurance company and, by design, one of the safest depositories for savings in America today. By choosing general-account-backed products first, all financial risks are shifted onto the insurance company.

When allocating funds to life insurance and annuities as an asset class, a commitment of 10 to 30 percent of one’s portfolio is prudent, since these instruments have stable value and are easily convertible into cash. The nation’s large banks consistently invest between 10 to 30 percent of their reserves—hundreds of millions of dollars—into life insurance and annuity products. There’s every reason for you to do the same.

Send your feedback to meletters@advanstar.com

For more than two and a half decades, Barry James Dyke has advised individuals and corporations about financial planning, employee benefit plans, investments, and other economic issues. He is the author of the book The Pirates of Manhattan, which illuminates the reasons for today’s financial crisis and how to protect your assets in the days ahead. Learn more at http://www.thepiratesofmanhattan.com.

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Insurance – A Financial Bunker For Scary Times

Insurance – A Financial Bunker For Scary Times
John E. Girouard 02.10.09, 6:30 PM ET

Suppose there was a financial instrument with a track record stretching back 1,400 years; that was so solid it could survive the Great Depression intact; that earned untaxed interest at a competitive rate; that could be borrowed against at will regardless of credit conditions; and that could be used by individuals as well as major corporations and banks as a safe harbor during economic turmoil?

You’d call it a financial bunker for scary times, and you’d be talking about mutual whole life insurance.

This is not the life insurance that only pays when you die. Mutual whole life is the kind of insurance our parents and grandparents owned in the good old days before the stock market began to boom in the 1980s and 1990s. Mutual whole life saw our elders through thick and thin, and after several decades of being muscled aside by the allure of the stock market, it’s making a big comeback.

Mutual whole life policies have been an essential part of my financial planning practice for many years. But I’m astonished at how few of the many investment advisers I meet understand how mutual whole life policies work, or don’t offer them to clients because they aren’t sexy or new.

Mutual whole life fell so far out of favor in the 1990s that insurer Swiss Re issued a report in 1999 headlined, “Are mutual insurers an endangered species?” Not anymore.

Mutual life insurance is making a comeback now that our speculative economy has blown up and financial disaster is driving people away from risk and back to basics. Forbes magazine reported in December (“Mutual Respect”) that two of the larger mutual insurance companies, Guardian Life and New York Life, reported double-digit growth in sales of individual life policies.

Mutual or “participating” whole life insurance is the closest thing to owning your own bank. As New York Life has said in its ads, “We’re Main Street. Not Wall Street.” The concept of mutual insurance is rather simple, especially compared with the complex annuity products that were so popular until recently. And the benefits include all those listed in my opening paragraph.

Here, for the curious and the uninformed, is Mutual Whole Life 101, or The Life Insurance Policy for the Living:

You Own The Bank: Mutual insurance companies are owned by the people who buy the policies. These companies are the modern equivalent of mutual “societies” among European trade guilds of the 1600s. Guild members pooled their money to help each other and their families in times of sickness or death. Because mutual companies have no shareholders, they serve one constituency–the policyholders. Mutuals have no need to report good earnings every three months to justify a stock price, so there is no pressure for them to take on extra risk to make a profit.

Your Premium Payments Belong To You: Unlike traditional term insurance, the premiums you pay for your mutual whole life policy belong to you in the form of the accumulated “cash value” of your policy. On top of that, the cash value of the accumulated premiums earns interest at a rate set once each year. In 2008, Guardian Life paid a record 7.3% dividend interest, and those earnings are untaxed! That’s spectacular compared with last year’s over 30% decline in the stock markets, bank CDs paying under 2% taxable, or money market rates under 1% taxable.

You Can Borrow Back Your Premium Payments: Because your premiums “belong” to you as a policyholder-owner of the company, you can borrow them back any time you want for any reason you need, regardless of your creditworthiness. The death benefit of the life insurance will be reduced by the amount you borrow, and you will lose the interest you would have earned. But you can choose to pay the interest as you would for any loan, except you are paying yourself instead of the stockholders of a bank. If you pay the loan back as well, the death benefit goes back up.

Mutuals Offer Ironclad Guarantees: Few people realize that the insurance industry, dominated by mutuals, was the one sector that made it through the Great Depression without a disaster and with policyholders financially intact. The cash value and the death benefit are guaranteed and tightly regulated by the states. That means your cash value is there regardless of market conditions, and when you die your heirs will receive the full face value of the policy. While stockholder-owned insurance companies saw their values fall sharply last year (remember when we taxpayers bailed out AIG?), the top mutually-owned insurers saw their book values remain stable or rise.

Even Banks and Corporations Buy Mutual Policies: One of the lesser-known aspects of mutual insurance is that major corporations and banks buy policies on the lives of their employees and use the cash value to fund employee benefits and as a safe harbor for working capital. By some estimates Fortune 500 companies and large banks have policies covering some 5 million employees. Instead of doing what banks say–put your money in our CDs at low rates so we can turn around and lend your money out at a profit to us–do what banks do.

Mutual Insurance Is One Leg of The Money Stool: Investing should be approached as a three-legged stool. One leg is the money you need to live on in the near future (cash in the bank), one leg is the money you invest for long-term growth (equities) and one leg is the financial bunker you can retreat to when the rest of the world is falling apart and you can’t sleep. Mutual whole life got our grandparents through the Great Depression, and it’s going to get a lot of the people through our current calamity.

John E. Girouard (www.johngirouard.com) is author of The Ten Truths of Wealth Creation, CEO of Capital Asset Management Group in Bethesda, Md., and founder of the Institute for Financial Independence, which provides investor education programs to financial professionals.

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