Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 53,768
making use of the annual €3k small gift exemption to everyone you know
in reality most investors should be better off with an equity portfolio over these time frames
But if someone had a house and no other cash, then maybe it would be worth paying the insurance.
The figures supplied by Marc do not stack up for me. How could an insurance policy still be "profitable" to the consumer well into their 90's and not breaking even until >100 years old?
It would be much more interesting to see stats on the actual payouts for these types of policies and in particular, how many policies lapse due to non-payment of the premiums.
I think we are saying the same thing but I have phrased it poorly using break-even as it normally imples things get better beyond the breakeven point.Doesn't the chart state the opposite? Only if the customer lives to >100 do the cumulative premiums exceed the payout.
Another point to consider, while there will be some widowed/separated/single individuals, it doesn't make sense for anyone with a spouse to use one of these policies as it will be a CAT free inheritance. You should at least be waiting until you are widowed
But a lot of the value of the expected payout comes from the investment returns on the premiums, no?It would be the insurance companies break-even point when the consumer hits 102, hardly a viable business model.
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