Chapter 4: Third-Party Ownership & Life Settlements
Life Settlement Example
Example: A person, age 70, owns a $1,000,000 life insurance policy. He recently sold his business for $5,000,000 and decided he no longer needed the insurance coverage. The cash value is $390,000, which the insurance company would give the policyowner if he cashed in the policy. A life settlement provider may offer him, after reviewing his medical records, $575,000 for the policy. Once ownership is transferred and the policyowner has received the funds, the life settlement company will assume premium payments until the insured dies, at which time the life settlement company will receive the proceeds of the policy - $1,000,000.
KNOW THIS
In a life settlement, the owner sells an existing life policy to a third party.
Third-party owner
Most insurance policies are written where the insured and owner of the policy is the same person. However, there are situations in which the contract may be owned by someone other than the insured. These types of contracts are known as third-party ownership. Third-party owner is a legal term used to identify an individual or entity that is not an insured under the contract, but that has a legally enforceable right under it. Most policies involving third-party ownership are written in business situations or for minors in which the parent owns the policy.
Life Settlement Contract
establishes the terms under which the life settlement provider will pay compensation to the policyowner, in return for the assignment, transfer, sale, or release of any portion of any of the following: The death benefit; Policy ownership; Any beneficial interest; or Interest in a trust or any other entity that owns the policy.
Insured
is the person covered under the policy that is considered for sale in a life settlement contract.
The term business of life settlement
refers to any activity relating to the solicitation and sale of a life settlement contract to a third party who has no insurable interest in the insured.
The term life settlement
refers to any financial transaction in which the owner of a life insurance policy sells a life insurance policy to a third party for some form of compensation, usually cash. A life settlement would require an absolute assignment of all rights to the policy from the original policyowner to the new policyowner.
The term owner
refers to the owner of the life insurance policy who seeks to enter into a life settlement contract. The term does not include an insurance provider, a qualified institutional buyer, a financing entity, a special purpose entity, or a related provider trust.
Life Settlement Provider
is a person (other than the owner) who enters into a life settlement contract with the owner.
Life Settlement Broker
is a person who, for compensation, solicits, negotiates, or offers to negotiate a life settlement contract. Life settlement brokers represent only the policyowners, and have a fiduciary duty to the owners to act according to their instructions and in their best interest.
Life Expectancy
is an important concept in life settlement contracts. It refers to a calculation based on the average number of months the insured is projected to live due to medical history and mortality factors (an arithmetic mean).