Life Insurance Policy Cash Outs Today!
1st Choice Funding's Financial Solutions Provide Cash to Life
Insurance Policy Holders Age 70+ Or Any Age With a Serious Illnesses No
Matter The Policy Type. Is Your Policy Too Expensive? Don't Let It
Expire Cash It In & Receive 2 - 4 Times More Money Than Your
Insurance Company Offers!
How does the Life Insurance Cash Advance Settlement program
work? Really quite simply as 1st Choice Funding has direct
relationships with private investors who purchase policies for 2-4
times more money than your insurance carrier ever will. After
purchasing the life insurance the investor becomes the beneficiary who keeps the
policy in force until collection upon death of the policy holder.
Note what respected Insurance Analyst
J.J. MacNab said on the subject of Cashing In a Life Insurance
Policy:
"The amount that different companies or
investors pay for the same policy vary widely so it's very
important to use a broker who shops around for the best investors
for the optimum in cash value. " -
In this arena 1st
Choice Funding leads the way.
WHO QUALIFY FOR A Life Insurance Cash Advance Settlements?
1. Seniors 70+- 1st Choice Funding
assists individuals who desire premium cash benefit while living
and who are age 70 or older and who
have currently in force a life insurance policy for at least the
last 2 years.
2. $150,000.00+ Policies-There is no maximum to the policy limit only a
minimum.
3. Any Age- For
those with serious illnesses who are in need of asset liquidation
and who irregardless of age have had a life policy in force for at
least 1 year.
4. Obtain The Last 5 years
Of Medical Records In order to expedite your request
for Cash Settlement, it is essential that you obtain from all
medical caregivers the last 5 years of medical records. This step
will save 3-4 months of waiting as medical facilities do not
expedite medical records requests from entities other than
individuals requesting their own records. Once we have this
information which you may fax or mail your information to
800.839.0939 or Mail to:1st Choice Funding, 17118 HH Hwy, Neosho,
MO 64850 your case will begin examination. Funding determinations
average 3-5 weeks.
WHEN LIFE THROWS CURVE BALLS- Life Insurance Cash Advance Settlements
Life is about change. Your personnel
circumstances may have changed dramatically since initially
purchasing life insurance coverage. If so you may no longer need,
want, desire or even afford a current life insurance policy. Why
would anyone let a policy lapse and loose 100% of an investment?
Because they don't know the options. But you are now learning how
to leverage yours.
Don't Loose 100% of Your Investment, Cash Your Policy In!
Experts agree that the Life Settlement Funding opportunity offered by 1st
Choice Funding makes good business sense for those whose
circumstances have changed and who no longer need their policy.
The bottom line; no matter your reason letting a policy lapse is
throwing away your hard earned cash!
There are many reasons
to cash in a life policy, perhaps 1 or more of the following
scenario's fits your circumstance:
Life Insurance Cash Advance Settlement REASONS FOR SELLING A Life Insurance POLICY
- Are The Premiums Too Expensive?
- Do You Want More Cash Surrender Value?
- Need A Cash Settlement?
- Have Too Much Insurance Coverage?
- Experienced A Sudden Change in Health?
- Need to Invest in Another Type of Policy?
- Has an Advisor Recommended Re-Investing?
- Is Your Policy Soon To Lapse?
- Don't Want to Loose All You've Invested?
- Tired of Paying the Premiums?
- No Longer Want Policy?
If you answered Yes to any of these questions 1st Choice
Funding is here to assist you in maximizing the cash surrender
value of your policy while eliminating the expensive of monthly
premiums. Are there any types of life policies that don't qualify?
NO. Unbelievable as it may seem, our program covers all policy
types. 1st Choice Funding's Life Settlement program offers cash
for Life Insurance policies that are current and that have been in
force 24 consecutive months.
Whole Life Universal Life
Variable Life Term Life Joint
Survivorship
The bottom line is life is about
change and with these changes comes differing needs for life
protection. Ask yourself:
Are YOUR Insurance Premiums Unaffordable?
Has Your Life Changed?
Has Your Health Taken A Turn For the Worse?
Is Your Policy Soon to Lapse?
Do You Have Too Much Life Insurance?
Has Your Family Size or Needs Changed?
Is Your Money Better Spent in a Tax Differed
Investment?
If you have said yes to one or more of these
questions we recommend that you carefully analyze the surrender
value 1st Choice Funding's Life Settlement Program
offers.
Life Insurance Cash Advance Settlement Senior Settlement Case
Studies
The following are excerpts from client
files involving the sale of life insurance policies owned by
seniors (names have been removed for confidentiality purposes).
Life Insurance Cash Advance Settlement CASE HISTORY 1 Client 70-year-old male with
health complications. Result: $1 million life insurance policy
with small cash value.
Insured sold the policy and
received $120,000.
Life Insurance Cash Advance Settlement CASE HISTORY 2 Client:
83-year-old female in relatively poor health. Result: $4
million life insurance policy with an annual premium of $168,000.
Insured sold the policy and received
$1,360,000.
Life Insurance Cash Advance Settlement CASE HISTORY 3 Client: 87-year-old
male & 82-year-old female. Result: $2.3 million
second-to-die policy with no cash value. The policy was no longer
required and was going to lapse.
Insured sold the policy
and received $300,000.
Life Insurance Cash Advance Settlement CASE HISTORY 4 Client:
71-year-old male in good health. Result: $4 million universal
life insurance policy with $200,000 in surrender value.
Insured sold the policy and received
$580,000.
Life Insurance Cash Advance Settlement CASE HISTORY 5 Client: 72-year-old male
in good health. Result: $850,000 term life insurance policy.
Insured sold the policy and received $110,500.
To Begin a Life Settlement
Request
1. In order to expedite your request for
Life Insurance Cash Advance Settlements, it's essential that you request and obtain from
all medical caregivers the last
5 Years of Medical
Records. This step will save 3-4 months of waiting
as medical facilities do not expedite medical records requests
from entities other than individuals requesting their own records.
2. When after obtaining your complete medical history for the last 5 years complete the application attached to this page and submit all information to:
1st Choice Funding 17118 HH Hwy
Neosho, MO 64850.
A funding determination is provided on
average in 3-5 weeks.
To Begin The Process Click Here For A Life Insurance Cash Advance Settlement Application
If this sounds interesting and you want more information note what respected author Jerome Corsi wrote about our program in a
renowned publication to financial experts, Broker World October 2002.
SENIOR SETTLEMENTS TO SELL OR NOT TO SELL?
By Jerome R. Corsi, Ph.D. Vice
President US Financial Marketing Group. Dr. Corsi holds a Ph.D.
from Harvard and has 25 years of experience in the Financial
Services field.
Life insurance has traditionally been sold as
property, an instant estate value created at the time of purchase
by the policy’s death benefit.
Whole life products were created to endow at age
100, when the cash value was projected to equal the death benefit
and the policy would be considered complete. Age 100 was picked as
a distant goal, an age few insured were expected to reach. Nearly
every insured could imagine that the maturity value of the policy
would be paid before the policy endowed, realizing a gain for the
estate over the premiums that had been paid. Until recently, few
anticipated that age 100 might be a realizable goal for an
increasing number of policyholders.
The thought to sell life insurance to a third
party began with Viatical Settlements. The market emerged as the
AIDS crisis began capturing headlines. Viatical Settlements were
for the terminally ill, those who needed cash today, to pay
medical bills and to meet financial demands prior to death. The
market initially looked important and promising. Then medical
treatments began to emerge for complex medical problems such as
AIDS and many forms of cancer that before had been considered
terminal. The entrance into the Viatical market of aggressive
marketers of questionable ethics invited many investors to
anticipate unrealizable gains, especially given the life extension
that medical wonders began to promise.
So why is the Senior Settlement market taking on
new interest in the life insurance industry today. An important
shift in perspective has begun to emerge. Investment trusts are
willing to purchase policies of seniors who are not terminally
ill. The market has expanded to include seniors who want to stop
paying high premiums for life insurance they no longer need.
Rather than let policies lapse, seniors have begun to explore
selling their life insurance for sizable gains, generally
exceeding any cash surrender value the policy may have. In recent
years, the Senior Settlement market has moved away from seeking
only policies with $1 million or more in face value. As seniors
are able to sell life insurance with as little as $100,000 in
death benefit, the market has expanded and a new opportunity for
retirement financial planning has begun to emerge.
The Retirement Planning Balance – Do I Have Too Much
Life Insurance?
During the growth years of a
family, the question “Do I have too much life insurance?” is
rarely asked. Life insurance agents are trained to illustrate loss
of income for a family’s breadwinner and spouse, both of whom
today are generally employed and working outside the home.
Projections of college education for the children run into
hundreds of thousands of dollars, to say nothing of mortgage that
commonly run six figures. Once a testimony to ego, having life
insurance coverage of $500,000 or more on an individual life in
the earnings years is no longer considered uncommon. As much life
insurance as the family can afford is not an unreasonable answer
to the question “How much is enough” in the economic environment
of the new millennium.
The focus changes dramatically as a family
approaches retirement. Premiums on many life insurance policies
sold in the 1970s and 1980s continue to remain substantial or even
increase as the insured approaches age 60. Many policies sold on
the theory of “disappearing” or reduced premiums have failed to
have the investment performance originally projected. Sadly, many
life insurance policyholders approach retirement with life
insurance premiums that amount to expensive liabilities to keep in
force coverage that is less needed every day. Faced with
burdensome life insurance premiums, many policyholders debate
whether to let their policies lapse, taking cash values or
non-forfeiture alternatives.
That the life insurance should be kept in force
at all costs is a debatable point. Yes, children and grandchildren
often stand to gain as beneficiaries. Yet the gain is not clear in
every instance. Why should a retired life insurance policyholder
keep in force a policy with $250,000 face value, for instance,
when a long-term care policy if owned as an alternative might end
up paying out $500,000 or more should the care situation
materialize at the end of the policyholder’s life. Even from an
estate position, the beneficiaries could stand more to gain from
the economic protection afforded by the long-term care rather than
see a parent’s estate be reduced to nothing by a long-term care
situation. The ultimate realization of a life insurance death
benefit may fail to replace the resources lost as the state
reduced a person’s holdings to nothing before providing Medicaid
benefits.
So the financial planning question is ultimately
one of balance. In the family growth years, maximizing life
insurance protection may well make sense. As a person ages and the
life horizon changes, an appropriate balance may well dictate less
life insurance, with the premium savings redirected to paying for
the now meaningful alternative of long-term care.
A skillful financial planner should able to
measure current estate values and objectives with a variety of
financial planning tools in hand. The appropriate mix includes
some life insurance and a well-crafted long-term care program,
together with a single premium immediate annuity or a Modified
Endowment Contract used as a funding vehicle for both the life
insurance coverage that is continued and the long-term care
program that is begun. This may be the more appropriate balance
required to answer the question “How much life insurance coverage
is enough?” for a person or family entering the retirement
years.
Facing Retirement Years: Cashing in Your Life Insurance
Reliable estimates
circulating in the life insurance industry suggest that there is
nearly $490 billion of life insurance in force today on Americans
over age 65. This is the largest growing segment of the life
insurance industry, just as the senior population is the fastest
growing demographic segment of the nation. By the year 2010,
Americans over age 65 may own nearly $1 trillion in life insurance
in force. Experts estimate that Senior Settlements of life
insurance may exceed $10 billion over the next five years,
reaching nearly $5 billion per year by 2010. A market of this size
represents a substantial opportunity both for agents with advanced
planning skills and for insurance companies seeking to position
creatively for the demographic bubble about to hit retirement
years.
Yet working successfully within the Senior
Settlements market requires skill. Simply suggesting to seniors
that they may realize cash gains from the sale of life insurance
may not be enough to invite them to seriously consider the
opportunity. Many savings-oriented seniors do not feel they need
more cash to meet living expenses. Windfalls may cause some
seniors to react negatively, feeling that having too much cash on
hand suddenly invites frivolous spending or risks loss. Moreover,
Senior Settlements involve psychological hurdles. The policy will
be sold to a third party who will own the maturity value of the
policy and will realize the gain at the death of the insured. This
may be an uncomfortable thought initially for seniors seeking to
sell their policies.
Many seniors make the decision to sell profitably
the now largely empty family home where the children were raised.
A residence more adapted by modern design and appliances to senior
living may profitably be sold, especially in today’s strong real
estate market. Seniors who move to more favorable climates or to
senior communities may realize a more enjoyable lifestyle made
possible by shedding the large family home that for decades had
been the family’s primary asset. Similarly the decision to sell a
large life insurance policy follows the same theme, namely
liquidating accumulated property that served a purpose during the
years when children were being raised but now can be sold
appropriately, with the cash repositioned to better serve the
different needs of retirement.
The decision to pursue a Senior Settlement gains
momentum when seniors appreciate fully the premium cost of
maintaining a large life insurance policy. Simply allowing the
policy to lapse, taking non-forfeiture values offered likewise
seems a waste, too little return on the many years over which
premiums have been faithfully paid. Nor does surrendering the
policy for the cash value make sense when a Senior Settlement can
result in substantially more cash than is available in policy’s
surrender value alone. The true property value of life insurance
is only realized by cashing in on the policy’s ultimate estate
value, the death benefit itself. The goal is to realize as much of
that value now, while the policyholder is still alive, hence the
importance of seriously considering selling the life insurance
policy, just as the large family home was sold. The goal is the
same – get maximum value now by selling an asset while the market
for the asset is good.
Senior Settlements:
The Art of Complementary Sales
Increasingly seniors recognize the
importance of long-term care insurance (LTC). The barrier to many
LTC sales is not the benefits of the coverage but the cost,
especially as the client approaches the years when the policy may
be most needed. A Senior Settlement may well free the cash needed
to fund long-term care.
Senior Settlements fits nicely
into a complementary suite of products designed for retirement
financial planning. The lump sum received from a Senior Settlement
may be used to purchase a Single Premium Immediate Annuity (SPIA)
or a Modified Endowment Contract (MEC). Both products can produce
a stream of income from a selected annuity pay-out structure. The
income received from the SPIA or the MEC can be targeted to pay
the LTC premium.
The MEC has additional benefits. By design, the
MEC includes just enough insurance to qualify the policy for
tax-deferred build-up of the cash value. The life insurance
coverage that is provided “reloads” the estate with a tax-free
death benefit for beneficiaries. Yet because of the reduced amount
of insurance packaged in the MEC, the cost of insurance is more
economically positioned. In this package, the MEC performs a
second purpose, capable of providing a tax-advantaged annuitized
pay-out that can be dedicated to paying LTC premiums.
The SPIA sold as a companion product to the
Senior Settlement – LTC package is an easier sale. The SPIA is a
more pure investment decision because the SPIA, unlike the MEC,
have no underwriting considerations that require physical exams.
The SPIA may well be the alternative when the client pursuing the
Senior Settlement has more serious health problems. Again, the
SPIA functions to be a repository for the lump sum received from
the Senior Settlement, placing the proceeds into a
savings-oriented tax-deferred setting, while providing an
immediate tax-advantaged annuitized pay-out structure to cover LTC
premiums.
These products looked at as a portfolio – Senior
Settlements plus the MEC, a SPIA alternative, and a LTC purchase –
provide a more comprehensive product mix available to balance the
retirement financial planning situation of a senior who has too
much life insurance given current needs. By looking at Senior
Settlement not as a stand-alone, the experienced financial planner
can approach a more complex range of senior financial planning
needs, preserving current estate values as well as seeking to
maximize estate values passed to beneficiaries.
The following cases illustrate how the sale of a life insurance policy
via a Senior Settlement can be combined with other
retirement-oriented financial products.
Life Insurance Cash Advance Settlement CASE HISTORY 1
Client: 63-year-old male in good health.
Result: $750,000 in a
universal life policy with $25,000 cash value. Insured sold the
policy and received $59,950. MEC Insured paid a $59,950 as a
single premium into a Modified Endowment Contract (MEC). The MEC
has a death benefit of $144,888. LTC Insured purchased a LTC
policy: $200 daily benefit for five years with 100% home health
care a 90 day waiting period and 5% compound inflation rider.
Annual premium is $2,810. MEC Pay-Out Strategy Insured elects a
payout option from the cash value of the MEC to correspond to the
premium requirements of the LTC policy. A gross annual policy loan
is made in the amount of $3,596 to net the $2,810 annual premium
(assuming a 28% tax bracket) required to fund the LTC policy
(loans from MECs are taxable distributions similar to how deferred
annuities function).
Life Insurance Cash Advance Settlement CASE HISTORY 2
Client: 58-year-old female with health problems.
Result: $1.5 million in term coverage. Insured
sold the policy and received $52,000. SPIA Insured paid a $52,000
into a Single Premium Immediate Annuity (SPIA) that generates
$4,063 annually with a 50.48% exclusion ratio. Assuming a 28% tax
bracket, the net annual distribution is $3,500. LTC Insured
purchased a LTC policy: $200 daily benefit for five years with
100% home health care, a 90 day waiting period and 5% compound
inflation rider. Annual premium is $2,416. SPIA Pay-Out Strategy
Insured elects a payout option from SPIA to correspond to the
premium requirements of the LTC policy.
Jerome R. Corsi holds a Ph.D. from Harvard University and has spent the past 25
years in the financial services industry.
Click Here To Request a Life Insurance Policy Cash Out
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