Life Settlements
CASE STUDIES
Some companies has negotiated
millions of dollars in life settlement proceeds for senior policyholders.
These seniors have used the funds to offset living expenses, improve their
quality of life after retirement, pay for health care expenses and
assisted living stays, purchase vacation homes, and fund alternative
financial planning products like annuities, long term care insurance and
even replacement life insurance coverage. In each case, a life
settlement was much more financially beneficial than lapsing, canceling or
surrendering the policy.
Below are a few examples in
which a life settlement was the best option for the policy owner.
-
Term Conversion:
Mr. Wilson's 20-year term
policy was reaching its conversion deadline. He was now 79 and was
recently diagnosed with coronary artery disease. Mr. Wilson could not
afford to convert the policy and letting his $250,000 policy lapse would
leave him nothing.
Mr. Wilson applied to
Welcome Funds and his policy was sold for $75,000. Mr. Wilson was able
to recover all of the premiums he had paid into the policy, plus a
handsome profit. He used the proceeds to pay off some debts, go on
vacation, and add more funds to his retirement portfolio.
- Unplanned
Health Change:
Dave was 76 and had just suffered a heart
attack, which left him permanently disabled. His family was unprepared
for this unfortunate turn of events. After learning of the Medicaid
requirements and the cost of a care facility, the family was unsure how
they were going to pay for his care.
Fortunately, the staff at the care
facility offered the life settlement option to Dave’s family when they
found out about his $500,000 insurance policy. The family soon sold that
policy for a $250,000 settlement, and eliminated the premium payments.
These funds covered the three years Dave resided in the facility before
his passing. The remaining cash was distributed to Dave’s original
beneficiaries.
-
Additional Insurance
Needed:
An elderly couple had a $2.2
million policy held in an insurance trust that covered the wife. Due to
savvy investing decisions, their estate had increased considerably and
now the death benefit on the policy was inadequate. The premiums on
this policy were also escalating and the policy was becoming outdated.
Their estate planner decided
to sell the policy to help fund the purchase of a $4 million dollar
joint survivorship policy. Welcome Funds was able to negotiate a
$440,000 purchase price. Since the husband was in perfect health, the
premiums on the survivorship policy were very affordable, even lower
than the original policy.
- Key-Man:
A company owns a $4 million
dollar policy on an executive who had retired 4 years prior. The
surrender value was $440,000 and since the company no longer wished to
make the $80,000 p/y premium payments, a surrender was being considered.
Their financial advisor
immediately recommended a life settlement. The company was offered
$880,000 for the sale of the policy and netted $800,000 after taxes,
almost doubling the cash surrender value!
* In this case, the
surrender value in the policy was lower than the $480,000 cost basis.
Therefore, there was a capital gains tax of $80,000 on the $400,000
income generated (the difference between the settlement amount and the
cost basis).
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