Archive for the ‘Life Insurance Quote’ Category

Life insurance quotes and life settlements

Friday, June 11th, 2010

In all the insurance markets, there is one underlying truth. The insurance companies are for profit and they will always act in their own best interests and not yours. For planning purposes, you should always assume there are better ways of doing things than the ways suggested by your own insurer. Let us take the question of the cash value in permanent life policies. All these policies have a value. If you approach your insurer and ask how this value can be realized during your lifetime, two answers are given. The first is the option to surrender the policy. This is an early termination of the policy. Thus, the insurer is no longer obliged to pay the sums estimated or guaranteed at the end of your life, but pays you a proportion of those benefits based on the amount you have paid in. The second option is a loan. This can either be a loan of some or all of the cash value, or it can be a free-standing loan with the cash value account used as collateral. Obviously, loans come with interest obligations attached. Borrowing your own cash value attracts a lower rate. Free-standing loans have higher rates. What, if anything, is wrong with these options?
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The best way to realize the value of a life insurance policy

Monday, March 1st, 2010

When people are younger and feeling the need to protect the long-term financial interests of their new families, they buy life insurance. Years then pass. Many policyholders remain financially secure and, when life finally ends, pass on significant benefits to their dependents. But a proportion of people find their financial position worsens when they retire. With no regular source of income, savings can run down and, if a family or health emergency strikes, the continued occupation of the home can come under threat. When people look at the assets they hold, they see the life insurance policy. Does it hold any value? The answer you get depends on who you ask. The insurance company that sold the policy will discuss two possibilities. The first assumes the policy has a cash value. The company will allow you to draw down on that value or to use it as collateral for a loan. The second is the so-called “cash surrender value” (CSV). This terminates the contract you have with the insurer and, because it is no longer obliged to pay out, it returns some or all of the money you have paid as premiums over the years.
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