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Hybrid Long Term Care/Life Insurance Policies (WSJ)

  • FAMILY VALUE

  • September 28, 2012, 5:24 p.m. ET

  • Does Long-Term Care Mix With Life Insurance?



    With long-term-care insurance premiums climbing by double digits and several insurers exiting the business in the past two years, many families are turning to an alternative: using life insurance with long-term-care benefits.
     
    But buyers of life-combo products are facing sharp premium increases—or trimmed benefits—in the coming months, thanks to a new accounting rule that affects the type of life insurance often used with long-term-care riders. 
    Life insurance policies with long-term-care riders, known as "hybrid" products, have taken off in the past few years, as reported in last week's Weekend Investor. Sales jumped 56% last year, according to Limra, an industry-funded research group.
    One reason is that they overcome one of the biggest stumbling blocks for buyers of long-term-care policies—writing a big check for a product you hope you will never use. By pairing life insurance with long-term-care benefits, you can lock in a payout for your spouse, children or other heirs, even if you don't use the long-term-care benefit.

     

    As with traditional long-term-care insurance, hybrid policies typically kick in when the policyholder needs help with two "activities of daily living," such as eating or bathing. They either pay you a set amount each month or reimburse long-term-care expenses, but they might not cover care for cognitive loss and could have waiting periods.
    "Be careful, because not all long-term-care benefits are created equal," says Katherine Lanious, president of Capital Insurance Insights, a life-insurance wholesaler in
    Naples, Fla.
    The living benefits in these hybrid products are typically limited to the amount of the death benefit. That can be much less than those of a typical long-term-care policy, which generally covers all qualified expenses up to a maximum amount for two to five years. The long-term-care benefits can add as much as 20% to the basic premium of an insurance policy, insurers and planners say.
    There is another big unknown: Many hybrid products have been around for only a few years, so the people selling them have less experience with clients who have tried to collect the benefits.

     

    On Sept. 12, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners revised an actuarial guideline, effective in January, to ensure appropriate reserves for the type of life insurance often used with long-term-care riders—"universal life" policies with secondary guarantees. Such policies provide permanent coverage throughout your lifetime.

    Insurance companies haven't yet said how much premiums will go up, but wholesalers and brokers are coming up with their own predictions. Estimates range from 5% to 20%, according to several analysts and insurance executives.
    "For any of the guaranteed policies, you're going to see the increase," Ms. Lanious says. "They haven't released the figures yet, but it's likely it will be 25% on average."
    A few carriers have told Joseph Lucey, president of Secured Retirement Advisors in St. Louis Park, Minn., that they are expecting 5% to 10% increases "across the board" next year, he reports. "There are going to be people who wait till next January and wish they'd bought the insurance earlier," he says.
    Irvin Schorsch III, president of Pennsylvania Capital Management, a wealth-management firm in Jenkintown, Pa., says he has been filling in clients on the fence about long-term-care coverage since learning about the new reserve requirements and advising them to consider buying coverage this year.
    Steve Katz, owner of three restaurants outside Philadelphia and one of Mr. Schorsch's clients, is researching the hybrid policies now and, in light of possible premium increases, plans to buy one before Dec. 31, he says.
    "I turned 55 this year, my wife turned 55 a couple weeks ago, and we just had our first grandchild," he says. "It's definitely in the forefront of our minds right now."
    Even with prices going up, some advisers are finding strategic ways to use the life-combo policies, including the following:
    Designating one pot for long-term care. Mr. Lucey says he often recommends the policies for clients who already have enough savings to cover long-term care because they can use the life insurance to create a tax-free bucket. That way, "your family's not out there trying to figure out which asset to liquidate first to pay it," he says.
    "When families don't make any plans for long-term care, all of a sudden they're in a situation where they're liquidating IRAs and paying huge taxes, and the markets aren't always going to work on their side," Mr. Lucey says.
    Avoiding future premium rises. Charles W. Bruton Jr., an investment adviser in Downingtown, Pa., says he quit recommending traditional long-term-care insurance policies to clients several years ago because the premium increases were becoming more common, and more significant. One client's long-term-care insurance bill climbed more than 45% last year, he says.
    With the life-combo products, the rates are guaranteed to stay the same. "The beauty of it is you don't have to worry about the insurance company coming back and raising the premiums," Mr. Bruton says.
    Estate planning. If the long-term-care rider is what is called an "indemnity" benefit, not an expense reimbursement, you generally are allowed to put the insurance policy in an irrevocable trust and still use the accelerated death benefit for long-term care.
    Then, when you die, your heirs get whatever benefit is left tax-free, and it isn't counted as part of your estate.
    You have to have the indemnity rider to do this, Ms. Lanious says. With an indemnity plan, the benefit is paid to the owner of the policy, which is the trust. If the benefit is paid directly to the insured person, the trust could be disqualified.
    —Email: familyvalue@wsj.com
    A version of this article appeared September 29, 2012, on page B8 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Does Long-Term Care Mix With Life Insurance?.

    Long Term Care Insurance Alternatives (WSJ)

  • WEEKEND INVESTOR

  • Updated September 21, 2012, 6:29 p.m. ET

  • Long-Term-Care Insurance: Weighing the Alternatives


    Long-term-care insurance is the financial equivalent of gum surgery: something that is often seemingly necessary, but just as often avoided at all costs.
    Now, to add to its unpopularity, soaring prices are prompting consumers to rethink how much coverage they need and to experiment with other types of policies.
    [image]

     

    Long-term-care policies help pay for nursing-home, assisted-living and home care costs. In just the past year, premiums have risen by as much as 17%, according to the American Association for Long-Term Care Insurance, a trade organization for insurance agents.
    In one recently publicized case, an Illinois couple, Bob and Cheryl Levy, saw their combined bill jump by 90%—to more than $7,000 annually. Given the spiraling costs, Mr. Levy decided to keep the policy, but cut back on some of the coverage to hold the premium to the same amount.
    "I was not about to double my payment," he says of the increase he and wife faced.
    The increases help explain why the number of policy buyers has fallen, say experts who track the industry. Limra, an industry-funded research group, puts the decline at 38% since 2004.
    Another reason for the decline: Insurers are pulling back. Five firms, citing higher-than-expected claims costs and lower-yielding investments as interest rates stay at low levels, have left the business or dialed back since 2010, including MetLife, MET -0.17%Guardian Life, John Hancock, Unum Group UNM +1.64%and Prudential Financial, PRU +0.33%according to Moody's Investors Service.
    Yet the need for some kind of long-term-care planning remains greater than ever, experts say. Seventy percent of individuals over age 65 will require prolonged care at some point during their lives, according to the National Clearinghouse for Long Term Care Information website, which is maintained by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
    Fortunately for those who hope to buy long-term coverage, a growing number of alternatives to traditional insurance are gaining in popularity. Sales of hybrid products—those that combine some type of life insurance with a long-term-care benefit—have been rising as traditional policies have faded. Limra says sales of such "life combination" products jumped 56% in 2011, the third consecutive year of double-digit gains.

    Soaring Costs

    With waves of baby boomers retiring, the number of long-term-care seekers is expected to rise to 15 million by 2020—50% more than in 2010, according to the federal Administration on Aging. Meanwhile, the cost of that care is also expected to soar—and it is already plenty pricey for many Americans, with a year in a nursing home easily topping $80,000, according to some reports.
    "A long-term care event is one of the few things that can completely derail your retirement plan," says Jeremy Kisner, president of SureVest Capital Management, a financial-advisory firm in Phoenix.
    Typical of the new breed of policies is New York Life's Asset Preserver, a universal-life offering that allows money paid into the policy—as a single upfront premium—to be tapped for long-term care. (If you don't use the benefit in your lifetime, it is payable to your beneficiaries.)
    Chris Blunt, president of New York Life's insurance group, credits the lack of a use-it-or-lose-it element—a much-disliked facet of older policies—for the fact that sales have tripled since 2007. "People hate paying for something they think they will never use," he says.

    Reduced Benefits

    Financial advisers are also increasingly telling clients to forget another aspect of the old policies: that they will cover everything you might need in terms of care. Now more consumers are eyeing policies in which the daily care benefit is dramatically reduced from standard rates—often to as little as $100—which, say pros, should be enough to provide some hedge against inflation.
    It isn't a perfect solution, says Ray Smith, an insurance broker who heads the Long Term Care Specialist agency in Aurora, Colo. "Almost any long-term-care insurance is better than no long-term-care insurance," he says.
    Still, the concept of self-insurance is getting attention these days. The idea is that instead of paying those increasingly higher premiums, would-be policyholders can simply increase their retirement nest eggs and use some of their savings for long-term care, if necessary.
    The problem, say critics of the approach, is that it requires more money than most Americans can afford to sock away. But those same skeptics acknowledge that many people with a sizable retirement kitty—say, $2 million or more—have already hit the mark where insurance is no longer absolutely necessary.
    Write to Charles Passy at charles.passy@dowjones.com
    A version of this article appeared September 22, 2012, on page B8 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Long-Term-Care Insurance: Weighing the Alternatives.