Posts tagged: Life Settlements

Feb 04 2010

Life Settlements – Wall Street’s Next Bubble?

Life Settlements -cash offer

Would you sell your life insurance to a stranger? Millions would, and Wall Street wants a piece of the action.

A life settlement is the process by which an individual, usually of senior status or declining health, sells his life insurance policy to a settlement company in exchange for a lump sum. The settlement company then sells the policy or shares of the policy to investors, who then become the beneficiary when the insured senior passes away.

It’s marketed as a win-win because the senior receives an immediate settlement for a life insurance policy he would otherwise never benefit from, and the investor receives the potential for very high returns on his money.

Regardless of what your moral view may be on such a transaction, it is big money and that means Wall Street wants a piece of the action.

Investment banks plan to purchase these life insurance policies, and package them up for resale as bonds to institutional investors – pension plans, hedge funds, etc..

This is very similar to the securitization of sub-prime mortgages in the last decade. The thinking is that the risk of loss (i.e. the original elderly policy holder outlives his policy, and the investors lose money) is spread out among many investors.

As I said, the potential market for this is apparently pretty big. Industry predictions are that the market for these bonds could be a large as $500 billion, and firms like Credit Suisse Group (CS) have been entering the life settlement arena.

Also, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) has been developing an index of life settlements for trade, effectively allowing investors to bet on whether the insured senior will out live his policy or die sooner than expected.

While the potential for systemic collapse, like that caused by defaults in the sub-prime mortgage business, seems limited there are risks and repercussions involved with life settlement bonds.

For example, the trend of average life span is moving upward suggesting that the odds of the insured outliving the policy rises year after year. Additionally, the fact that the policies are now held by institutions and trusts that have no limit of mortality means that insurance companies will likely being paying out more claims than they would if the policy holder remained the insured. This will likely cause a rise in life insurance rates.

source


Related Posts
  • Tips on Speculating in the Stock Market. I usually feel more in line with value investor Ben Graham's line of thinking, but after reading Jim Cramer's Real Money, I have come to see that there is a time and place for some of the speculator's techniques. Just because favor one school of thought, doesn't mean another doesn't......
  • 2010: The year of the ROTH. This is a friendly reminder for anyone with retirement savings who is concerned about paying higher taxes in retirement: new tax rules remove earnings limits on Roth IRAs. Prior to the start of 2010, you could not open a Roth IRA if: Your individual adjusted gross income was $120,000 or......
  • How to buy low and sell high - for real! The number one reason people don't buy low and sell high is emotion. Emotions cloud our thinking, and make us do things we wouldn't think of doing otherwise. Think of the fall of 2008 into spring 2009 when the market was shedding hundred of points on a daily basis. I......
  • A Sample ETF Portfolio for 100% Foreign Exposure. Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) offer broad diversity in a single package, and if the ETF is an index fund then they carry added tax benefits when compared to actively manage mutual funds. When ETFs first hit the investment scene, they were simple index tracking funds. They mainly targeted passive investors.......
  • Best ETF's For... Kiplinger has released their annual "best of" edition, where they rate the best of just about everything. One of the categories is ETF's. I thought I'd share the picks, and some thoughts on them here, but you should check out the complete issue if you get a chance. Best ETF......

Related Websites
  • Just How Safe is Your Money Right Now? Even after the government took the opportunity to step in and bail out one of our largest insurance companies, the stock market still managed to find a way to completely tank, because many investors were not persuaded that this intervention was going to protect their investments. This is when you......
  • Investing for Baby Boomers - A Book Review "You're Fifty - Now What?  Investing for the Second Half of Your Life" (Charles R. Schwab) I admit it, I'm a baby boomer.  That means I read books with words like "fifty" in the title, including this one.  It could have been titled "Investing for Baby Boomers" (as I've listed it in the......
  • Festive Link Love Carnivality #17 Been kind of a slow week. I think it's a little post 4th of July/Summeritis that I have.  I'm loving coming home and it's still full daylight out with all the kids out playing.  It's like, yeah I have to work but I still get some play time too! ......
  • Leaking your Way to the Poorhouse Today's guest post is by Wade W. Slome, CFA, CFP® (www.Sidoxia.com), author of How I Managed $20,000,000,000.00 by Age 32 We are living through unprecedented times in our economic history and the urge to give into the all-consuming panic spreading across the airwaves is very tempting. Unfortunately, succumbing to the......
  • Life Insurance is Not an Investment from ezinsurance.com.au: There is no doubt that investing for the future is important, but insurance shoppers need to know the difference between investing and buying insurance. This article explores the reasons why life insurance may not be the best investment. While the subjects of life insurance and investments often become......
Search Engine Submission - AddMe