Term Life Insurance
- ART - Annual Renewable Term
- BTID - Buy Term and Invest the Difference
- Term-ites
- A.L. Williams
- Primerica
- Decreasing Term
- Deposit Term Life Insurance
- Group Term
- Indeterminate Premuim Yearly Renewable Term
- Level Premium Term
- Mortgage Insurance
- Participating Term Life Insurance
- Term Conversions
- 1975 - SOA - An Approach to Reserve for Term Insurance Conversion, Society of Actuaries - 36p
- Term to 100
- Term Universal Life Insurance
- YRT - Yearly Renewable Term
- 1973 - SOA - Price Disclosure and Cost Comparison, Society of Actuaries - 186p
- 1980 - SOA - Pricing a Select and Ultimate Annual Renewable Term Product, by Jeffery Dukes & Andrew M. MacDonald, Society of Actuaries - 38p
- 1984 - SOA - Individual Term Portfolio Management, Society of Actuaries - 22p
- 1991 - SOA - Individual Life Product Development Update, Society of Actuaries - 34p
- 1994 - SOA - What's New with Term Insurance?, (rsa94v20n21), Society of Actuaries - 20p
- 2005 - SOA - Term Mortality and Lapses, Society of Actuaries - 5p
- Let us look at the question of splitting a life policy into its term and savings elements as an example of injecting the consumer's viewpoint into the current "great debate."
- Let us assume that a customer wishes to buy insurance protection for a ten-year period and wants to pay level annual premiums.
- He can purchase a ten-year term policy or a ten-year endowment policy.
- From a consumer's viewpoint the savings element in the ten-year endowment policy is obviously the difference in premiums between the two contracts.
- If a customer wants thirty years of protection, and wants to pay level annual premiums, then he might choose between two policies: a thirty-year term with minimum cash values and a thirty-year endowment policy.
- Despite the fact that there are cash values in the thirty-year term contract, from a consumer's viewpoint it has no savings element.
- All of the premium is required to provide the thirty years of protection.
- The savings element in the thirty-year endowment is the difference in the premiums of the two contracts.
-- Paul Overberg
1973 - SOA - Price Disclosure and Cost Comparison, Society of Actuaries - 186p
- First, with respect to the new term policies, we are seeing a definite shift in the term marketplace, away from the ART policies, which emphasized low first-year cost, toward the newer level term policies, which emphasize low average cost.
- Features frequently associated with these newer level term policies are: term periods from 7-15 years, with 10 years definitely predominating; low, competitive "current" premiums; muitiyear premium guarantees, (at the "current" level) often for the full term; reentry options at the end of the first term period, usually requiring evidence of insurability; and automatic renewal on a YRT basis at the end of the level term period.
- There are alternative designs such as: five-year level term policies, where the premium rates for the first renewal period (years 6-10) is also guaranteed at issue resulting in a full 10-year premium guarantee of a step-rated premium; 10- or 15-year level term policies without a YRT renewal option, both with and without the reentry option; premium guarantee periods, shorter than the level term period, combined with a premium bail-out (the premium bail-out is the refund of one year's premium, if the rates for the nonguaranteed portion of the level term period are raised above the initial projected level); and optional guaranteed reentry rider, marketed with some of these products.
-- Pamela M. Crane
1991 - SOA - Individual Life Product Development Update, Society of Actuaries - 34p
- William K. Tyler: As Denise mentioned, during 1984, the term "rate war" of the previous years has seemed to stop in its tracks to a large degree.
- Walter MILLER: I would like to ask Bill, where did you derive the statistic that the average term policy lasts two years?
- MR. TYLER: That information came from a LIMRA survey. I am not sure exactly what their statistical base was for making that conclusion, but it sounds long to me.
- Denise FAGERBERG: I think Dr. Arthur Williams at Penn State University did a survey for LIMRA and found the average term policy was in force 22 months before it lapsed.
- MR. MILLER: The average term coverage stays in force longer than that but transmutes itself in interesting ways in different companies.
- That is part of what we are here to cry on each others shoulders about.
1984 - SOA - Individual Term Portfolio Management, Society of Actuaries - 22p