Posts Tagged ‘life settlements’

Second-hand but first risk

Wednesday, November 17th, 2010

Published: August 6 2010 18:56

By Matthew Vincent, Financial Times

Trading in second-hand life insurance policies is expanding rapidly due to increased interest from banks and institutional investors, according to specialist brokers and fund managers. But independent financial advisers warn that this is still too risky an asset class for private investors to buy into.

Earlier this week, research commissioned by fund manager Managing Partners revealed that banks including HSBC, Credit Suisse, Citibank, and Allied Irish were now investing in traded life policy funds, or “life settlements“. These funds aim to generate returns by buying life insurance policies from older US citizens, maintaining the premiums on them, and receiving the proceeds when the policyholders die.

Seven out of 10 life settlement brokers in the US expect to see more policies being traded over the next five years, the research found – suggesting further growth in funds. Managing Partners said that five of the world’s top 20 banks were now investors in its own fund, which has seen assets under management rise from $176m in June 2009 to $190m in June 2010.

Later in the week, SL Investment Management, one of the biggest life settlement providers outside the US, announced it was acquiring two other firms to create a traded life policy “super-power”. Patrick McAdams, investment director at SL Investment Management and chairman of the European Life Settlement Association forecast further growth in trading. “It is a growing market – demographics will support the supply of policies.”

However, the author of the research, professor Merlin Stone, also warned that “this relatively new asset class is creating several dangers for unwitting investors”. Similarly, four of largest independent financial adviser (IFA) groups in the UK cite risk factors as the reason they still refuse to recommend traded life policy funds.

Longevity risk – miscalculating when a traded life policy pays out – can dramatically affect a fund’s performance. “For this type of investment to work, they must be valued accurately, and this entails the difficult job of getting mortality assumptions correct,” says Darius McDermott of Chelsea Financial Services. “Should subjects live longer, it will reduce the return on the investment.” Adrian Lowcock of Bestinvest says: “With valuations based on actuarial calculations on life expectancy, if these are wrong then they could be revalued very quickly.”

Liquidity risk – not being able to sell fund holdings to return cash to investors – can also mean that investors lose money. “If there were a run on these types of fund, assets cannot be sold to meet redemptions,” says Danny Cox of Hargreaves Lansdown. “While the fund has positive cash flows everything in the garden is rosy; however if this were to reverse, there is the potential for values to collapse.”

Charges levied on traded life policy funds have been called into question, too. “The FSA has raised concerns that the commission is too high . . . if the products are as good as the sales literature, suggests then the commissions being paid wouldn’t need to be so high to incentivise people to sell,” argues Lowcock.

Managing Partners has proposed a six-point check list – covering risk, charges, fees and regulation – to help private investors avoid unsuitable products. But Hargreaves Lansdown, Bestinvest, Chelsea Financial Services and Towry say they will not recommend funds to clients. “We are extremely uncomfortable with these investments, and would not wish to be involved,” says Andrew Wilson of Towry.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/ff89b8e0-a182-11df-9656-00144feabdc0.html

Life Policy Group comments: some interesting comments in this article not least those of Adrian Lowcock´s – ‘if the products are as good as the sales literature, suggests then the commissions being paid wouldn’t need to be so high to incentivise people to sell,” argues Lowcock. He is surely well aware that the smaller funds have always needed to deliver better value than their established larger cousins but are unable to do so until they have a track record, and they can´t get this until someone sells the product. The large fund creates impetus by massive marketing spend, these costs all come from the fund. The smaller fund pays that same marketing money directly to the broker and allows that broker to determine whether he keeps it or credits it to the investor – some do, some don´t

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Life settlements are DOA as an investment

Sunday, August 22nd, 2010

Commentary: Betting on someone’s life could put your portfolio six feet under

By Robert Powell
BOSTON (MarketWatch) — Life settlements are not wildly popular investments. But they are wild investments. And to that end, federal regulators and lawmakers are fast at work trying to tame these slippery products, which promise a much higher return over more traditional conservative offerings.

A life settlement is a transaction in which an individual with a life insurance policy sells that policy to another person, who then assumes responsibility for paying the premiums.

Last week, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) warned consumers about participating in life-settlement transactions “due to a lack of clear, consistent state oversight.” The Securities and Exchange Commission recommended that life settlements be clearly defined as securities so that the investors in these transactions are protected under the federal securities laws. Read the SEC report at this website.

Commentary by Life Policy Group:
A well balanced and reasoned article.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/life-settlements-are-doa-as-an-investment-2010-07-29

Lifemark $60m rescue loan withdrawn

Sunday, August 22nd, 2010

By Katrina Baugh

Lifemark, one of the life settlements groups behind Keydata, could be facing liquidation after US hedge fund CarVal pulled a $60m rescue offer.

CarVal entered a six-week exclusivity period with Luxembourg-based Lifemark last month to try and thrash out a deal but this has failed, according to the Life Settlements Wire.

It had already stumped up £3.5m in short-term loans to Lifemark, which ran bonds backing Keydata plans owned by 23,000 customers who invested £350m.

Read original article here

States pitted against federal regulators over life settlements

Sunday, August 22nd, 2010

By Darla Mercado
A recommendation by an SEC task force that life settlements be treated and regulated as securities has raised concerns that another turf battle may be brewing between state insurance regulators and federal securities cops.
“We generally have concerns when the federal government pre-empts state authority, and this would be no exception to that, but we’ll reserve judgment until we see what action the federal government will take,” said Connecticut’s insurance commissioner, Thomas R. Sullivan, who is also chairman of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners’ Life Insurance and Annuities Committee.


Commentary by Life Policy Group:

The media and political coverage of the industry and its predilection with ‘bad’ news has created an impression of an industry filled with fraudulent practice and consequently confidence is low. Perhaps these changes will help to raise the industry profile and give investors and regulators more comfort.
Read original article here

Will SEC’s Life Settlement Proposal Kill Industry?

Sunday, August 22nd, 2010

Critics say plan to treat all life settlements as securities will shrink the industry – or worse; others say it’s not so

By Darla Mercado

On Thursday, a government task force recommended treating life settlements as securities, thus bringing the instruments under tighter regulatory scrutiny.

On Friday, some market participants backed the idea. But others bashed the plan, claiming that such a proposal would place sizable burdens on providers — and offer little added protection for institutional investors.

Commentary by Life Policy Group:
At this stage unfortunately regulation is needed which may ‘kill off’ some of the smaller players in the market, but it may well produce a more settled and professional industry. These developments are all part of the industry growing up and very much echo the experience of the UK secondary market which began its development perhaps ten tears earlier than the US life settlement market.
Read original article here