Clients can recover
significant wealth that may be
trapped in unneeded life insurance.
New
Value in Old Policies
BY NEIL
ALEXANDER
any clients have life insurance policies
they view as unnecessary because they no longer meet
their original need. As estate tax rules change and the
policies clients purchased to pay these taxes become
unnecessary, this trend is likely to increase. JE McGowan
Consulting estimates the potential secondary market for
life insurance policies exceeds $18 billion annually.
Before clients abandon old policies, CPAs should step in
and help them recover the potentially significant wealth
that may be trapped there. Allowing unneeded policies to
lapse can be a costly mistake. CPAs can help both
individual and corporate clients or employers sell the
right to collect on these otherwise dormant assets in the
aftermarket. Determining if selling a policy is a good
idea is a relatively easy process for CPAsand
potentially lucrative for policyholders.
A
GROWING MARKET
The growth in the secondary market for
life insurance policies has soared over the last decade.
In 1990, only six companies made an
active secondary market. They purchased about 500
policies with a face value of between $40 million and $50
million.
Today, the Federal Trade Commission
estimates that $500 million in life insurance policies
are sold annually on the secondary market. With companies
entering and leaving the market, its difficult to
estimate the number of active participants.
Actuarial data suggest 40% of all
policies on people age 65 and older will not be held to
maturity.
The National Association of
Insurance Commissioners estimates that in 1996 nearly
$1.5 trillion face amount of life insurance policies
expired, lapsed or was cancelled by policyholders; each
policy was a potential source of wealth had the owner
sold it on the secondary market.
Consumers have long viewed life
insurance merely as a means of providing liquidity to pay
estate taxes, to protect surviving family members, to
fund buy/sell agreements or to meet other business needs.
Based on this narrow view its no wonder so many
CPAs fall into the trap of agreeing to allow unneeded
policies to lapse or be surrendered for just their cash
values. This is especially true if the coverage is no
longer necessary and the premiums have become burdensome.
However, this may be bad advice since such policies often
have a secondary market value far exceeding their cash
value.
Case study. A
76-year-old man owned a policy with an $8 million face
amount and a $795,000 cash surrender value. He sold the
policy for $2.3 million rather than let it lapse, cancel
it or take the cash value. Had he not sold it, he would
have left at least $1.5 million on the table.
HOW
TO IDENTIFY THE RIGHT CIRCUMSTANCES
Many types of insurance policies
qualify for settlement, including term, whole, variable
or universal life, any type of survivorship, adjustable
life, joint first to die, group (if convertible) and
retired lives reserve. The aftermarket for life insurance
operates in two areasviatical and lifetime
settlementseach with different tax implications.
Viatical settlements involve
the sale of a policy insuring the life of someone who is
either terminally or chronically ill. Proceeds are free
of federal income tax and state income tax in some states
(such as New York and California) since they are
considered a death benefit.
Lifetime settlements are for
people without the health problems required for viatical
settlements but with a life expectancy of 15 years or
less. According to current mortality tables, this means
males age 70 or older and females age 74 or older.
Sometimes the insured has simply outlived his or her
family or beneficiaries. Clients should also consider
selling an unneeded life insurance policy when they can
use the proceeds to:
Liquefy an otherwise dormant asset.
Fund new, more cost-effective life
insurance coverage.
Create funds to make other
investments.
Fund an outright charitable gift or
charitable trust.
Make cash gifts to other family
members.
Corporations should consider selling
unnecessary life insurance policies on employees
lives if:
The company has been sold to a
third party and the policies original purpose was
to fund a buy/sell agreement on one partners death.
The insured key person retires or
is no longer involved in the business.
The policy is part of litigation
among partners.
The company must sell assets to
raise cash.
The policy was purchased to fund
deferred compensation or other benefit programs that have
now changed.
Businesses may also benefit from
selling a policy in the secondary market to
Purchase an interest in another
enterprise.
Facilitate the transfer of a
business to the next generation.
Repay debt.
Buy back stock from a partner or
shareholder.
BUYERS
CRITERIA
While there is no size limit on
policies a consumer can sell in the secondary market, the
usual face value is around $1 million. Many buyers,
however, routinely purchase policies worth significantly
more. Companies will even buy a partial interest in a
policy. The lower the cost to carry the policy and the
faster the expected payment, the more attractive an offer
a policy is likely to attract. Companies that buy life
insurance policies in the aftermarket use these criteria
to determine the price to offer:
Policy face value. Depending
on the buyer, the minimum face value is seldom below
$250,000or $500,000 for some buyers.
Insureds age. The
older the insured, the higher the offer.
Health impairments. The
more severe the health condition, the higher the likely
offer.
Existing policy structure.
Existing policy value.
Existing policy premium. The
potential buyer uses this to determine the cost of
maintaining the policy until it pays off.
TRANSACTION
MECHANICS
Once a buyer has expressed interest,
selling a life insurance policy requires no medical exam.
Here are the usual steps to close the deal.
The seller submits to the buyer the
necessary paperwork, including an application, a copy of
the life insurance policy, an in-force ledger (an annual
schedule of policy details) to age 95, an authorization
form, a copy of any trust agreement if the policy is
trust-owned and the insureds medical records for
the past two years.
The buyer extends an offer to buy
the policy and the seller accepts.
A closing occurs with all documents
signed.
The funds are deposited in an
escrow account until the change of beneficiary and
ownership is recorded.
When the policy transfer is
official, the funds in escrow are wired to the insured.
Payment structures. Payment
terms are generally flexible to meet the sellers
needs. The most common payment methods include lump sum,
installments (to defer taxes) and annuities.
Case study. An
82-year-old woman sold a policy on her life for $900,000
that had a face amount of $5 million but a nominal cash
surrender value of just $2,500. Without the sale, she
would have walked away from almost $698,000.
PROFESSIONAL
DUE DILIGENCE
Its important for CPAs to
understand both the market and the players clients are
dealing with. Life settlements are unregulated and
involve substantial sums of money. Not all transactions
are fair. A Texas man was indicted for buying policies
from AIDS patients without paying them. On the flip side,
The Los Angeles Times reported the arrest of
several AIDS patients who concealed their condition to
get insurance coverage with the intent of selling it in
the aftermarket. Indeed, sophisticated buyers are
sometimes wary of policy sellers who are HIV positive.
With recent advancements in AIDS drugs, the life
expectancy of these individuals is such that investors
often receive little or no profit.
CPAs should use these due diligence
guidelines to help judge the deal and the buyer.
Gauge the market by obtaining
offers from two or three companies.
Check with your state attorney
generals office or insurance department for any
complaints against the possible buyer.
Verify that the buyer has the money
to buy the policy readily available. Reputable companies
usually have cash on hand.
Select or insist on a buyer who
uses a reputable, independent financial institution to
hold the money in escrow until the change of ownership
closes.
Make sure terms of the contract
specify timely payment from the escrow
agentgenerally no more than two or three business
days after change of ownership.
Determine and disclose to your
client the possible tax consequences of the transaction
and implications for public assistance benefits as a
result of the sale.
Consult legal counsel regarding
probate and estate considerations arising from the
transaction. By definition, life settlements remove life
insurance benefits from the original beneficiarys
estate.
Determine the buyers process
of administering policy investments. Some buyers contact
the insured on a monthly basis to verify that he or she
is still living; needless to say, some clients may find
this distasteful.
TAX
IMPLICATIONS
To the individual policy sellers, life
settlements usually involve three layers of taxation:
Zero taxup to the
owners basis, since it is a return of capital.
Ordinary incomefrom the basis
to the policys cash surrender value.
Long-term capital gainsfrom
the higher of either the cash surrender value or the
federal income tax basis to the net settlement proceeds,
since this is a capital asset.
WHATS
NEXT?
By putting some research and thought
into the disposition of unneeded life insurance policies,
CPAs can help clients and employers realize extraordinary
value from the growing secondary market. The exhibit
below includes a list of resources where CPAs can get
additional information on the legal, ethical and tax
implications of selling life insurance policies. 
| Sources of Additional
Information |
|
Federal Trade Commission
600
Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20580
www.ftc.gov
Coventry Financiala policy buyer
www.coventryfinancial.com
Legacy Benefits Corp.a policy buyer
www.legacybenefits.com
Viaticus division of CNAa policy buyer
www.hinetworth.com
American Council of Life Insurers
1001 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Washington, DC 20004-2599
www.acli.com
National Association of Insurance Commissioners
444 North Capitol Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20001
www.naic.org
|
National Association of People with AIDS
1413 K Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20005
www.napwa.org National Viatical
Association
1200 G Street, N.W., Suite 760
Washington, DC 20005
www.nationalviatical.org
North American Securities Administrators
Association
10 G Street N.E., Suite 710
Washington, D.C. 20002
www.nasaa.org
Viatical Association of America
1200 19th Street, N.W., Suite 300
Washington, DC 20036
www.cais.com/viatical
Your state attorney general
Your state insurance commissioner
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Neil Alexander, CFP, is founder and
president of Alexander Capital Consulting, LLC, in Los
Angeles. His e-mail address is nalex@alexcap.com.
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