SB - Explain
Agents
- NAIC LIBG
- Mass Mutual
- Van Mueller -
- China Video -
- SOA -
- 1974 - Albert Easton
(NG) Elements / Policy Mechanics / Responsibility
- NAIC
- LIBG
- IULWG - Guy
- GOV
- 197x-Cash Flow Elements
- SOA
- 198x - Turner - can be anything
- walter miller - you're kidding yourselves
Language
- NAIC
- LIBG
- 2013 state of the industry
- Actuarial
- AAA - 198x - doesn't work for UL
- SOA - 198x - we know what it means
Confusing - Premiums and Benefits
- NAIC
- 1988 - ULMR??
- LIBG - 1982 v 1996 v now
- Law
- Legal Case
- Johnston and johnston v Conseco
- Judge - going around in circle, at first principles there has to be an agreed upon Premium
- Johnston and johnston v Conseco
- Legal Case
- Agent
- Walker v LSW
- Agent - Minimum premium... why pay more. Gov says Guideline premium most
- Walker v LSW
Birth of Universal Insurance and Variable Insurance
- Prior to the 1980s, insurers sold primarily fixed-premium term and whole-life insurance to individual policyholders.
- With competitive pressures significantly reducing sales of whole-life products, insurers had little choice but to innovate in the 1980s to meet demand.
- They did so by redesigning whole-life into a hybrid product that included a traditional income protection component and a long-term investment component using market-based yields (and thus were interest rate–sensitive).
- The first of these new complex products, universal life insurance, revolutionized the industry.
- Its popularity was rooted in its flexibility.
- Universal life is permanent insurance combining term insurance with a cash account earning tax-deferred interest.
- Under most contracts, premiums and/or death benefits can fluctuate (within the contract’s bounds) with policyholder preference.
- The policy stays in effect as long as the cash value is sufficient to cover premiums.
- Additionally, the insurer usually guarantees the cash value will not fall below a minimum value.
- The cash value of the policy can also be used to pay the term insurance portion of the policy.
- Like whole-life, loans can be taken against the cash value of the policy.
- In general, products with interest-crediting rates set by insurers are retained on the general account.
- Thus, the reserves of most universal life policies are general
account liabilities. - An insurer’s profit comes in part from the spread between its return on general account assets and its set crediting rate paid out to the policyholder.
- Mortality and expense margins also contribute to an insurer’s bottom line.
(p17)
2013 - State of the Life Insurance Industry - NAIC
...why has the sailing been smooth for mature products similar to universal life insurance abroad, while in China things have been so turbulent?
2017/0623 - Strengthening Financial and Exchange Rate Frameworks ...
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