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Archive for the ‘Stats’ Category


One in Three Life Insurance Policies Go Unclaimed

Monday, September 20th, 2010

unclaimed-changeUnder the terms of U.S. unclaimed property law, unclaimed financial assets, including life insurance, are considered ‘abandoned’ when no contact can be made with the owner or beneficiary for a lengthy period of time. There are many reasons why this happens:

  • A divorce or marriage, leading to a name change
  • A house move where no forwarding address has been left
  • Illegible or badly written records
  • Transient lifestyles such as those in the military
  • And, most common of all: The heir or beneficiary has died without the knowledge of the life insurer.

According to NAUPA (National Association of Unclaimed Property Administrators) state departments across America are sitting on $32.877 billion in unclaimed funds, including life insurance benefits. The New York department holds a staggering $9.9 billion worth of unclaimed assets, and the state of California $5.4 billion.

Life Insurance Policies One of the Biggest areas of Unclaimed Assets

Figures from demutualized Life Insurers show that after becoming public companies, they needed to find millions of policy holders and beneficiaries – totaling $4 billion in unclaimed assets. On demutualization, John Hancock found it did not have current addresses for 400,000 current policy holders; Prudential did not know the whereabouts of 1.2 million of its policyholders, and Met Life held $2.7 billion worth of unclaimed demutualized assets.

Government takes control of Unclaimed Life Policy Funds after 3-5 Years

When a life insurance company receives notification of the death of the policy holder the law states that any unclaimed assets from the demutualization have to be placed in a government trust, if, the listed beneficiaries cannot be found. If there has been no notification that a life insurance policy holder has died and the policy owners cannot be traced, then Life Insurers tend to hold onto life policies until the owner would have reached 100 years of age before handing funds over to the treasury.

Could You be Missing Out on a Payout from an Unclaimed Life Insurance Policy?

If you think you might be a beneficiary of an unclaimed life insurance policy it is worth investigating. It’s worth remembering that even if the Life Insurer holding your potential funds no longer exists there will still be the possibility of a payout of up to $300,000 because the funds should have been placed in a state insurance guaranty association.

Sources

  • NAUPA
  • MSN Money: Unclaimed Billions How Much Is Yours? Liz Pullman Weston

Creative Commons License photo credit: swanksalot

It’s Life Insurance Awareness Month: Do You Have Coverage?

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

Life Insurance Awareness MonthThe recent recession has led to a U.S. public that is more cautious about its spending habits. In many ways, this is a good thing – people are saving more and spending less. However, the unwanted knock-on effect of this uncertainty about finances is that ownership of life insurance has hit an all time low, according to NYSE: Unum (one of the world’s largest insurers).

This is unfortunate because as Debbie Cecil, director of life products at Unum says “Life Insurance is one of the building blocks of a solid financial plan.” But due to the economy “many people are just turning away from pursuing this type of coverage.”

U.S. Public has put Life Insurance on the Back Burner

Also, according to financial services consulting and research firm LIMRA the reason more than 40% of Americans have not bought a life insurance policy  is that other priorities such as paying off debt or saving for retirement have become top of the list. This is why 11 million fewer American households are covered by life insurance than six years ago.

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Researchers Believe Genes May Hold the Key to Longevity

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

Recent research carried out by the Boston Medical Centre, University of Boston, shed new light on the role genetics play in the aging process. The study, entitled the “New England Centenarian Study,” is the largest study of people who have reached the age of 100, and includes data from as far back as 1995.

It was found that 77% of the 1000 participants possessed 150 genetic variants in common, so-called ‘longevity genes’. From this research it may be concluded that the presence of these genes in individuals could possibly indicate an increased potential to live to the age of 100.

Environmental Influences also Play a Significant Part in Lifespan

Simply possessing these genes does not insure you are going to live a long, fruitful life. Environmental factors play a huge role in determining ones life expectancy. Factors such as smoking, becoming overweight, and diet will all play a part in determining how long a person will live – which are the same factors life insurance companies have to take into account when assessing a person’s insurance premiums. It is also worth noting that although it seems 77% of people made it to the age of 100 with genetic factors helping them, 23% did it without.

‘Longevity’ Genes may Suppress Harmful ‘Aging’ Genes

Exactly what part these genes play in increasing lifespan is not entirely known. Previously it was thought some people lived longer because they lacked some of the harmful genes which hasten the onset of aging diseases; this new research tells us that in fact longer-lived people possess all the harmful genes, along with the 150 newly identified ones.

This would seem to indicate that ‘longevity genes’ have an ability to suppress harmful genes, somehow limiting their power to trigger aging illnesses in individuals. It was also discovered that in 90% of the centenarians studied none suffered from any typical age-related illnesses, such as Alzheimer’s or dementia, until after the age of 93.

Implications for Medicine and Life Insurance

This study has big implications for preventative medicine in the area of aging related disease. It is hoped that further research will be extended in order to focus on different nationalities including the Japanese, believed to have the longest life expectancies of people on the planet. This type of research will also be of great interest to life insurance companies – access to this type of new genetic information might give life insurers a more informed way of assessing risk; knowing that potential life insurance customers have genes which make them likely to live to 100 might reduce life insurance premiums for them since a payout on their life insurance might be a long way off.

Better rates on life insurance would be great – but being told you possess ‘longevity genes’ can’t really be topped.

Life Insurance is a Necessity for Soldiers in Afghanistan

Friday, June 25th, 2010
Life insurance is even more vital for soldiers whose family relies on their financial support.

Life insurance is even more vital for soldiers whose family relies on their financial support.

Life insurance may be an afterthought for much of the general public, but for many young soldiers in the battlefields abroad, it’s a vital tool to help protect the financial security of a soldiers’ family and loved ones.

In a recent statement, defense secretary Robert Gates has warned that the U.S. public needs to see evidence that efforts to make a strategic breakthrough in Afghanistan are working if both countries are to continue to suffer the losses of young soldiers. According to Gates “the public expects to see us moving in the right direction.” We could no longer be expected to “tolerate the perception of a stalemate where we are losing young men.”

Stanley McChrystal, former U.S. commander of NATO forces is, however, said to be confident that there will soon be “sufficient progress” to “validate the strategy.” Belying this aspiration is a recent operation to clear insurgents from Marjah and parts of Helmand – both UK and US sources agree this has not gone according to plan, and soldiers on these battlefields may face a higher risk of death on the lines.

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Chantix, Suicide, and Life Insurance

Thursday, November 20th, 2008
Chantix Smoking and Suicide

The headline “suicide” probably jumped out at you like a red flag in front of a mad bull. Suicide is nothing to take lightly, and it certainly isn’t in this case here. Chantix, an anti-smoking drug created by the pharmaceutical mega-giant Pfizer, has been linked to cases of depression, psychiatric problems and even suicide. Maybe you have never heard of the drug, but you probably know someone in your life who is a smoker. If they have ever thought of quitting, pass this vital information along to them.

What is Chantix?

According to drugs.com, Chantix “is used as a smoking cessation medicine or treatment. It is used together with behavior modification and counseling support to help you stop smoking cigarettes. Chantix works in the brain to block the pleasurable effects of smoking. This helps to decrease your desire to keep smoking.” That right there might be a warning sign for some: “works in the brain.” Taking a drug like this is no lighthearted undertaking; it literally affects the way your mind thinks and feels about smoking, and obviously other things in your life as well, and as you will see below, has had disastrous side effects.

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* My-Life-Insured.com provides free information concerning insurance products and services but is not an agency or an insurer. Not all products and services are available in all states, and no guarantees regarding same are made herein. Please speak to your insurance agent for more information.
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