Class 7 Insurance and Risk Management - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 60
About This Presentation
Title:

Class 7 Insurance and Risk Management

Description:

Introduction to the Personal Auto Policy ... Auto racing. Scuba diving. Hang-gliding. Travel or residence in a dangerous country ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:220
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 61
Provided by: Geor300
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Class 7 Insurance and Risk Management


1
Class 7Insurance and RiskManagement
  • George D. Krempley
  • Bus. Fin. 640
  • Winter 2008

2
Agenda
  • Review
  • Types of Life Insurance
  • Life Insurance Contractual Provisions
  • Taxation of Life Insurance
  • Calculation of Life Insurance Premiums
  • Introduction to the Personal Auto Policy

3
Exhibit 11.6 Comparison of Major Life Insurance
Contracts
4
Exhibit 11.4 Two forms of Universal Life
Insurance Death Benefits
5
Life Insurance Contractual Provisions
  • Ownership Clause
  • Entire Contract Clause
  • Incontestable Clause
  • Suicide Clause
  • Grace Period
  • Reinstatement Clause

6
Life Insurance Contractual Provisions (cont.)
  • Misstatement of Age Clause
  • Beneficiary Designation
  • Change of Plan Provision
  • Exclusions and Restrictions
  • Assignment Clause
  • Policy Loan Provision
  • Automatic Premium Loan

7
Change of Plan Provision
  • Purpose Provide flexibility to policyowner to
    respond to changing needs for insurance
  • Allows exchange of present policy for different
    contract

8
Change of Plan Provision Rules
  • Change to higher-premium policy
  • Policyowner pays difference in policy reserve of
    new policy versus original contract
  • No evidence of insurability required

9
Change of Plan Provision Rules
  • Change to lower-premium policy
  • Insurer refunds difference in cash values
  • Evidence of insurability is required
  • Reduced cash value increases insurers net amount
    at risk
  • Lower premium policy provides higher pure
    insurance protection

10
Exclusions and Restrictions
  • Suicide clause
  • First two years only (most contracts)
  • Whole Life Policy in Appendix C has one-year
    suicide clause (See p. 681)
  • War clause
  • Excludes payment if insured dies as a direct
    result of war
  • Purpose To reduce adverse selection
  • Not contained in all policies

11
Exclusions and Restrictions (cont.)
  • Aviation exclusion variations
  • Exclude aviation deaths other than as fare-paying
    passenger on regularly schedule airline
  • Exclude military aviation or cover at additional
    premium only
  • Exclude private pilot not meeting certain flight
    standards, or charge higher premium

12
Exclusions and Restrictions (cont.)
  • Hazardous activities may be discovered in initial
    underwriting
  • Auto racing
  • Scuba diving
  • Hang-gliding
  • Travel or residence in a dangerous country
  • Underwriter may exclude or cover only with
    payment of extra premium

13
Payment of Premium
  • Payment modes Annual, semi-annual, quarterly or
    monthly
  • Carrying charge is relatively expensive
  • Example p.249
  • Annual premium 1,000
  • Semiannual premium 520
  • Apparent charge 4 40/1000
  • Effective carrying charge
  • 16.7 40/(1000-520) x 2

14
Assignment Clause
  • Life Insurance policy is freely assignable
  • Two types of assignment
  • Absolute assignment
  • Collateral assignment

15
Absolute Assignment
  • All ownership rights are transferred to a new
    owner
  • Church
  • Charity
  • Educational Institution
  • Insured
  • Beneficiary
  • New owner receives all ownership rights in the
    policy

16
Collateral Assignment
  • Policyowner assigns policy as collateral for a
    loan
  • Previously, American Bankers Association
    assignment form was typically used.
  • Now, insurers generally use their own collateral
    assignment forms.
  • Collateral assignment confers limited rights in
    the policy
  • Assignee entitled to receive death proceeds only
    to extent of loan
  • Balance of proceeds are paid to beneficiary

17
Impact of Assignment Clause
  • If Insurer is notified of assignment,
  • A new contract exists between insurer and
    assignee
  • Insurer recognizes assignees rights as superior
    to beneficiarys rights
  • If Insurer is not notified of assignment,
  • Proceeds are paid to named beneficiary
  • Insurer is relieved of any further obligation
  • Even if a valid assignment is in existence

18
Policy Loan Provision
  • Allows policyowner to borrow the cash value
  • The policyowner must pay interest on the loan to
    offset the loss of interest to the insurer
  • A policy could lapse if the policyowner does not
    repay a loan and the total indebtedness exceeds
    the available cash value
  • Advantages
  • Low annual percentage rate
  • No paperwork, no credit check
  • Flexibility in repaying, no fixed repayment
    schedule
  • Disadvantages
  • Heavy borrowing may cause policy to lapse
  • Amount of protection is reduced

19
Automatic Premium Loan
  • Under the automatic premium loan provision, an
    overdue premium is automatically borrowed from
    the cash value after the grace period expires
  • Purposeto prevent the policy from lapsing
  • Main disadvantages
  • Policyowner may become lazy and exhaust some or
    all of the cash values
  • If cash values are reduced, amount of protection
    is reduced
  • If cash values become exhausted, policy will lapse

20
Use of a Trust
  • Alternative to Settlement Option
  • Desirable when
  • Amount of insurance is substantial
  • Judgment in amount and timing of pay-outs is
    required
  • Example situations
  • Minor children
  • Mentally handicapped adult
  • Disadvantages
  • Must pay trustees fee
  • Returns not guaranteed

21
Additional Life Insurance Benefits
  • Other benefits can be added to a life insurance
    policy for an additional premium
  • Waiver-of-Premium
  • Guaranteed Purchase Option
  • Double Indemnity Rider
  • Cost-of-Living Rider
  • Accelerated Death Benefits Rider

22
Waiver of Premium Provision
  • If the insured becomes totally disabled, all
    premiums coming due during the period of
    disability are waived.
  • In many current waiver-of-premium provisions,
    total disability means that
  • Because of disease or bodily injury, the insured
    cannot do any of the essential duties of his or
    her job, or of any job for which he or she is
    suited based on schooling, training, or
    experience.
  • If the insured can perform some but not all of
    these acts and duties, the disability is not
    considered to be total, and premiums will not be
    waived.
  • If the insured is a minor and is going to school,
    premiums are waived if the minor is unable to go
    to school.

23
Waiver of Premium Provision
  • Another definition of total disability found in
    some policies is more liberal.
  • Total disability is initially defined in terms of
    your own occupation.
  • For the first two years, total disability means
    the insured cannot work in the occupation that he
    or she had at the time the disability occurred.
  • After the initial period expires, the definition
    becomes stricter. The insured is considered
    totally disabled only if he or she cannot work in
    an occupation for which he or she is qualified by
    education, training, and experience.

24
Guaranteed Purchase Option
  • Permits the policyowner to purchase additional
    amounts of life insurance at specified times in
    the future without evidence of insurability, up
    to some maximum age
  • The option guarantees the purchase of specified
    amounts of life insurance in the future even
    though the insured may become uninsurable
  • Example (p.260 of text) The guaranteed purchase
    option allows additional purchases of life
    insurance when the insured attains the ages of
    25, 28, 31, 34, 37, 40, 43 and 46.
  • Amount is limited to face amount of basic policy
    in this case, 25,000
  • Total amount of additional insurance that can be
    purchased without evidence of insurability
    200,000

25
Additional Life Insurance Benefits
  • The accidental death benefit rider doubles the
    face amount of life insurance if death occurs as
    a result of an accident
  • Also known as double indemnity
  • The cost-of-living rider allows the policyowner
    to purchase one-year term insurance equal to the
    percentage change in the consumer price index
    with no evidence of insurability
  • The accelerated death benefits rider allows
    insureds who are terminally ill to collect part
    or all of their life insurance benefits before
    they die
  • Forms include a terminal illness rider,
    catastrophic illness rider, and long-term care
    rider

26
Additional Life Insurance Benefits
  • A viatical settlement is the sale of a life
    insurance policy by a terminally ill insured to
    another party, typically an investor group, who
    hopes to profit by the insureds early death
  • A life settlement is the sale of a life insurance
    policy by a policyowner who no longer needs or
    wants the insurance
  • These options create a moral hazard problem, and
    may not be adequately regulated by the states

27
Taxation of Life Insurance
  • Life insurance proceeds paid in a lump sum to a
    designated beneficiary are generally received
    income-tax free
  • The interest component of periodic payments is
    taxable as ordinary income
  • Premiums are generally not deductible
  • Dividends are not taxable, but interest on
    dividends retained is taxable
  • If a policy is surrendered for its cash value,
    any gain is taxable as ordinary income

28
Taxation of Life Insurance
  • Proceeds from a life insurance policy are
    included in the gross estate of the insured for
    federal estate-tax purposes if
  • the insured has any ownership interest
  • they are payable to the estate
  • The proceeds may be removed from the gross estate
    if the policyowner makes an absolute assignment
    of the policy to someone else
  • The policyowner must make the assignment more
    than three years before death

29
Taxation of Life Insurance
  • A federal estate tax is payable if the decedent's
    taxable estate exceeds certain limits
  • A tentative tax on the taxable estate value is
    calculated
  • The gross estate includes property you own,
    one-half of the value of property owned jointly
    with your spouse, life insurance death proceeds
    in which you have ownership interest
  • The gross estate may be reduced by certain
    deductions, such as a marital deduction, in
    determining the taxable estate
  • The taxable estate may be reduced or eliminated
    by a tax credit called a unified credit
  • The amount of property exempt from taxation will
    increase in the future
  • Federal estate taxes are scheduled to expire in
    2010
  • Tax will be reinstated in 2011 unless Congress
    acts

30
Exhibit 13.7 Calculating Federal Estate Taxes
31
Premium Calculations in Life Insurance
  • The net single premium (NSP) is defined as the
    present value of the future death benefit
  • The NSP is based on three assumptions
  • Premiums are paid at the beginning of the policy
    year
  • Death claims are paid at the end of the policy
    year
  • The death rate is uniform throughout the year

32
Calculating the Net Single Premium for Term
Insurance
  • For yearly renewable term insurance, the cost of
    each years insurance is easily determined

33
Exhibit 13A.1 Commissioners 2001 Standard
Ordinary (CSO) Table of Mortality, Male Lives
(selected ages)
34
Calculating the Net Single Premium for Term
Insurance
  • For a five-year term policy, the cost of each
    years mortality must be computed separately for
    each of the five years and then added together to
    determine the NSP

35
Exhibit 13A.3 Calculating the NSP for a Five-Year
Term Insurance Policy, Male, Age 32
36
Calculating the Net Single Premium for Ordinary
Life Insurance
  • For an ordinary life insurance policy, the cost
    of each years mortality must be computed
    separately for each year to the end of the
    mortality table, and then added together to
    determine the NSP

37
Calculating the Net Annual Level Premium
  • The net annual level premium is calculated using
    a formula
  • If premiums are paid for life, the premium is
    called a whole life annuity due
  • If premiums are paid for only a temporary period,
    the premium is called a temporary life annuity due

38
Policy Reserves
  • Under the level-premium method for paying
    premiums, premiums paid during early years are
    higher than necessary to pay death claims
  • The excess premiums are reflected in the policy
    reserve
  • Policy reserves are a liability item on the
    insurers balance sheet that must be offset by
    assets equal to that amount
  • The policy reserve is the difference between the
    PV of future benefits and the PV of future net
    premiums
  • The policy reserve has two purposes
  • It is a formal recognition of the insurers
    obligation to pay future claims
  • It is a legal test of the insurers solvency

39
Exhibit 13A.4 Prospective Reserve Ordinary Life
Insurance (1980 CSO mortality table)
40
Personal Auto Policy
  • Part A Liability Coverage
  • Part B Medical Payments Coverage
  • Part C Uninsured Motorists Coverage
  • Part D Coverage for Damage to Your Auto
  • Part E Duties After an Accident or Loss
  • Part F General Provisions

41
Personal Auto Policy Basics
  • The 2005 Personal Auto Policy (PAP) is widely
    used throughout the US
  • Drafted by the ISO, it replaces the 1998 form
  • Eligible vehicles include
  • A four-wheeled motor vehicle owned or leased by
    the insured for at least six consecutive months
  • A pick-up or van with a gross vehicle weight
    rating of 10,000 pounds or less
  • Cannot be used for deliveries, with some
    exceptions

42
Personal Auto Policy Basics
  • Autos covered by the policy include
  • Any auto shown in the declarations
  • A newly acquired auto
  • Coverage depends on whether it is an additional
    vehicle or a replacement vehicle and whether the
    declarations indicates at least one auto for
    collision coverage
  • A trailer owned by the named insured
  • A temporary substitute vehicle, which is a
    nonowned auto or trailer used temporarily because
    of mechanical breakdown, repair, servicing, loss,
    or destruction of a covered vehicle

43
Part A Liability Coverage
  • Liability coverage (Part A) is the most important
    part of the PAP
  • It protects a covered person against a suit or
    claim arising out of the ownership or operation
    of a covered vehicle
  • The coverage is usually written in split limits,
    where the amounts of insurance for bodily injury
    liability and property damage liability are
    stated separately
  • For example, split limits of 250/500/100 mean
    that you have bodily injury coverage of 250,000
    for each person, a maximum of 500,000 of bodily
    injury coverage per accident, and a maximum of
    100,000 for property damage liability
  • The insurer also agrees to provide defense and
    pay all legal defense costs for claims covered by
    the policy
  • Defense costs are covered in addition to the
    policy limits

44
Combined Single Limit
  • A single limit applies to both bodily injury and
    property damage.
  • The total limit applies to the entire accident.
  • There is no separate limit for each person.

45
Split Limit Example
  • 250,000/500,000/100,000
  • 250,000 each person
  • 500,000 each accident
  • 100,000 for property damage
  • Practioners frequently write 250/500/100

46
Combined Single Limit Example
  • 500,000 CSL
  • Single limit of liability applies to both bodily
    injury and property damage.

47
Part A Liability Coverage
  • In addition to the policy limits and legal
    defense, certain supplementary payments can be
    paid, including
  • The cost of a bail bond
  • Premiums on appeals bonds
  • Interest accruing after a judgment
  • Loss of earnings (200/day)
  • Other reasonable expenses

48
Part A Liability Coverage
  • Exclusions to the coverage include
  • Intentional injury or damage
  • Property owned or transported
  • Property rented, used, or in the insureds care
  • Bodily injury to an employee
  • Use as a public livery or conveyance
  • Vehicles used in the auto business
  • Vehicles with fewer than four wheels
  • Vehicle furnished for the insureds regular use

49
Definition of You
  • The Named Insured shown in Declarations
  • The Spouse of Named Insured if a resident of the
    same household

50
Definition of Insured Part A
  • You or any resident family member for the
    ownership, maintenance and use of any auto or
    trailer
  • Any person using the named insureds covered auto
  • Any person or organization, but only for
    liability arising out of an insured persons use
    of a covered auto on behalf of that person or
    organization.
  • Any person or organization legally responsible
    for the named insureds or family members use of
    any auto or trailer (other than a covered auto or
    one owned by that person or organization)

51
Part A Out of State Coverage
  • If an accident occurs in another state, and the
    financial responsibility law in that state has
    higher liability limits than shown in the
    declarations, the PAP automatically provides the
    higher limits
  • That is, PAP policy automatically adjusts to
    comply with
  • Financial responsibility law, or
  • No-fault law of another state.

52
Part A Other Insurance
  • If two auto policies cover a loss to an owned
    automobile, each company pays its pro rata share
    of the loss.
  • If the insured is driving someone elses car and
    has an accident, the insureds policy is excess
    and the insurance on the borrowed car is primary.

53
Exhibit 22.1 Primary and Excess Insurance
54
Part B Medical Payments
  • Medical payments coverage covers all reasonable
    medical and funeral expenses incurred by an
    insured in an accident
  • Two groups are eligible for coverage
  • The named insured and family members are covered
  • While occupying any motor vehicle, or
  • As pedestrians when struck by a motor vehicle
  • Other persons occupying a covered auto are
    covered
  • But not covered in a nonowned vehicle
  • Covers medical services rendered within three
    years from the date of the accident
  • Coverage is not based on fault

55
Part B Medical Payments
  • Exclusions to the coverage include injuries
    sustained
  • While occupying a vehicle with fewer than four
    wheels
  • While operating the vehicle as a public livery or
    conveyance
  • When the vehicle is used as a residence
  • When the vehicle is used without a reasonable
    belief of permission
  • When the vehicle is competing in a race
  • If more than one auto policy covers a loss
  • The insurer pays its pro rata share of the loss
    for an owned vehicle
  • The insurance coverage is excess over any other
    insurance for a nonowned vehicle

56
Part C Uninsured Motorists Coverage
  • The uninsured motorists coverage pays for the
    bodily injury caused by an uninsured motorist, by
    a hit-and-run driver, or by a negligent driver
    whose insurance company is insolvent
  • In some states, property damage is also covered
  • The uninsured motorist must be legally liable
  • The coverage applies to
  • The named insured and family members
  • Any other person while occupying a covered auto
  • Any person legally entitled to recover damages
    (e.g., a surviving spouse)

57
Uninsured Motorists Background
  • According to the Insurance Research Council, an
    estimated 14.6 of US drivers are uninsured.
  • Wide variation among the states
  • 26 Mississippi
  • 4 Maine

58
Part C Uninsured Motorists Coverage
  • Pays for bodily injury (and property damage in
    some states) caused by
  • An uninsured motorist
  • Hit and run driver
  • Negligent driver whose insurance company is
    insolvent
  • Negligent driver who has insurance, but the
    amount is less than required by the states
    financial responsibility law

59
Part C Uninsured Motorists Coverage
  • Coverage does not apply when
  • An insured is injured in, or by, a vehicle owned
    by the named insured, but not insured under the
    policy
  • There is primary coverage under another policy
  • The vehicle is used as a public livery or
    conveyance
  • Does not apply to a carpool
  • When workers compensation benefits are applicable
  • There are several limitations when more than one
    uninsured motorist coverage provision applies to
    a loss
  • For example, if an insurer provides coverage on a
    vehicle not owned by the named insured, the
    insurance provided is excess over any collectible
    insurance provided on a primary basis

60
Part C Uninsured Motorists Coverage
  • Underinsured motorists coverage can be added to
    the PAP to provide more complete protection
  • In general, the maximum amount paid is the
    underinsured motorists coverage limit stated in
    the policy less the amount paid by the negligent
    drivers insurer
  • Coverage is typically added as an endorsement
  • Some states make it mandatory, while others make
    it optional
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com