Life settlement funds: good investment, ghoulish, or a death bubble?
Filed under: Insurance, Retire, Insurance-life
Investors large and small are looking for a new way to return to the juicy profit level of sub-prime's heyday, and one product beginning to gain popularity is life settlement funds, AKA Grim Reaper funds.
In a life settlement, investors pay the elderly cash today in return for the money from their life insurance when they pass. Yes, it sound ghoulish, but when has that been an impediment on Wall Street? With $26 trillion of life insurance currently in effect, the prospects are enormous.
In the same way that mortgages were bundled and turned into securities, companies such as Credit Suisse are buying up quantities of policies to create funds. Investors are hoping for returns as generous as 20-40%. Last year, seniors sold life settlements with a face value of $11.8 billion. But I have some serious reservations above this investment vehicle.
You'll recall that the sub-prime mortgage fiasco was due in large part to fraud on behalf of those selling mortgages to anyone with a pulse, regardless of qualifications. Viaticals were a precursor to life settlements. In the 1980s, investors bought the right to life insurance settlements from AIDS victims who they expected would die soon, never expecting that the cocktail would kills their profits.
This seamy business attracted scam artists like flies to a dump. In a 2000 Florida court case the jury found that almost half of the viaticals offered as investments by companies in that state were fraudulent. Can the life settlement industry avoid the same fate?
Accurately projecting the life span of those from whom the policies are purchased is a key to the profitability. What happens if our medical care changes substantially? What if we cure cancer? What if the swine flu turns dramatically more deadly? These factors add risk to the investment. The industry plans to manage these risks by doing a better job of vetting those buying and selling the settlements, and creating bundles of policies that include a wide variety of diseases and maladies.
The return on investment also depends on the dependability of the insurance companies to pay claims. As we've seen, the fortunes of these companies are deeply intertwined with the general economy, and if some were to go bust, so would the life settlement funds that depend on their payments.
Ironically, one of the biggest customers for such a product? Public and private retirement funds, which already stand to benefit most from early death.
Don't be surprised if, in a few years, pundits begin to talk about a death bubble. I just don't want to be on one. Or in one.



Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
9-16-2009 @ 3:39PM
brian clark said...
I couldn't agree more http://functionsofinvestments.blogspot.com/
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9-30-2009 @ 3:54AM
Travis said...
This article really puts a negative feel on life settlements and can make anyone thinking of settling their life insurance a fool. However my father had a positive experience after he sold his 5 million policy for 1.2 million. He lost his business and needed the money. We think its a life saver. Id suggest reading a positive story or do your own research. We found help from Bob at http://lifesettlementexpert.com
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10-16-2009 @ 3:21PM
Matthew Realist said...
Be very careful when investing in Life Settlements. This is not a investment to go and put your retirement in. Some manipulative, fraudulent, greedy financial advisers convinced my Father to put all his money in life settlements and it turned out being a ponzi scheme. Very sad situation.
Stick with investments that have the words, "Federal Guarantee" AKA the Bank LOL. Keep your financial mind tight, snakes are around every corner.
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