a. The death benefit will be adjusted to the amount that the insured could obtain for her correct age.
How well did you know this? Not at alla. The proceeds are paid to the insured estate
How well did you know this? Not at alla. Absolute assignment
How well did you know this? Not at alla. Pay a reduced death benefit
How well did you know this? Not at alla. Statements made by the applicant that are true to the best of the applicant’s knowledge
How well did you know this? Not at alla. When a suicide is committed within a specified period of time after the policy is purchased (usually 2 years)
How well did you know this? Not at alla. Collateral assignment
How well did you know this? Not at alla. Paid-up additions
How well did you know this? Not at alla. To allow the insured to return the policy with a full refund
How well did you know this? Not at alla. To prevent the unintentional lapse of a policy because of nonpayment of the premium
How well did you know this? Not at alla. Waiver of premium
How well did you know this? Not at alla. If the beneficiary dies shortly after the payments begin, the balance of the principle will be forfeited
How well did you know this? Not at alla. No. Beneficiaries do not have insurable interest in the insured
How well did you know this? Not at alla. Paid-up additions
How well did you know this? Not at alla. It will be paid to the insured’s estate
How well did you know this? Not at alla. Contingent beneficiary
How well did you know this? Not at alla. To determine how the death benefit will be paid to the beneficiary
How well did you know this? Not at alla. When the primary beneficiary dies before the insured
How well did you know this? Not at alla. A promise to pay policy benefits
How well did you know this? Not at alla. The contingent beneficiary
How well did you know this? Not at alla. War and military service
b. Hazardous occupation
c. Aviation
a. Yes, since the suicide was committed long after the restricted period
How well did you know this? Not at alla. The insurer will pay a benefit to twice the face amount
How well did you know this? Not at alla. Other-insured rider
How well did you know this? Not at alla. Cash surrender
b. Reduced paid-up
c. Extended term
a. Cash surrender
How well did you know this? Not at alla. Extended term
How well did you know this? Not at alla. The dividend is applied to the next year’s premium (it reduces the next year’s premium)
How well did you know this? Not at alla. Lump-sum cash
b. Fixed period
c. Fixed amount
d. Life income
e. Interest only
a. Lump sum payment
How well did you know this? Not at alla. The longer the period selected the smaller each installment will be
How well did you know this? Not at alla. Policy proceeds are retained by the insurance company; only the interest is paid to the beneficiary
a. Settlement options
a. The annuitant assumes the risks on investment
b. The payments that the annuitant invests into the variable annuity are invested in the insurer’s separate account. The separate account under many annuities provides the annuitant with a dozen or more investment options ranging from “money market funds” to “growth stock funds” to “precious metal funds”. Therefore, the annuitant assumes the risk of the investment.
a. Coverage ends and the policy cannot be reinstated
b. Once the cash surrender value option is selected, the coverage is terminated and the policy cannot be reinstated
a. A STOLI policy
b. Stranger-originated life insurance (STOLI) policies are usually purchased by people who have no relationship with the insured with the intention of selling them for life settlements.
a. It has the highest amount of insurance protection
b. Under this option the insurer uses the policy cash value to convert to term insurance for the same face amount as the former permanent policy. The duration of the new term coverage lasts for as long a period as the amount of cash value will purchase.
a. Paid-up option
b. With the paid-up option, the insurer can accumulate dividends at interest and then use them in addition to interest and the policy’s cash value to pay the policy earlier than planned. This is different from paid-up additions, in which the dividends are used to buy additional policies that increase the face amount of the original policy.
a. It needs IRS approval
b. Nonqualified retirement plans do not meet the IRS requirements for favorable tax treatment of deductions and contributions; therefore, they do not need to be approved by the IRS.
b. The face of the term policy would be the same as the face amount provided under the whole life policy.
a. Insuring clause
b. The insuring clause contains the company’s promise to pay
a. The same face amount than the whole life policy
b. Under this option the insurer uses the policy cash value to convert to term insurance for the same face amount as the former permanent policy
a. 5 days
b. Consumers must be advised that they have a right to request additional information concerning investigative Consumer Reports and the insurer or reporting agency has 5 days to provide the consumer with the additional information
a. An insured borrows money from the bank and makes a collateral assignment of a part of the death benefit to secure the loan
b. A collateral assignment is the transfer of some or all of the death benefit of the policy to a creditor as security for a loan, but does not give the creditor the rights of ownership. In the event of the insured’s death the creditor would only be able to recover the portion of the policy’s proceeds equal to the creditor’s remaining interest in the loan
a. Charge a higher premium
b. The premium rate will be adjusted to reflect the insurer’s increased risk
a. Debtor in creditor
b. The three recognized areas in which insurable interest exists are as follows: a policy owner insuring his or her own life, the life of a family member (relative or spouse), or the life of a business partner, key employee or someone who has a financial obligation to them. A debtor does not have an insurable interest in the creditor
a. It has a guaranteed minimum interest rate
b. While equity indexed annuities earn higher interest rates than fixed annuities both types of annuities guarantee a specific minimum interest rate
a. 3 Days
b. Investigative Consumer Reports cannot be made unless the consumer is advised in writing about the report within 3 days of the date of the report was requested.
a. The customer’s associates, friends and neighbors provide the report’s data
b. Both consumer reports and investigative consumer reports provide additional information from an outside source about a customer’s character and reputation and both types of reports are used under the Fair Credit Reporting Act. The main difference is that the information for investigative consumer reports is obtained through an investigation and interviews with associates, friends and neighbors of the consumer.
a. For 20 years or until death, whichever occurs first
b. Under 20-pay life policy all of the premiums necessary to cause the policy to endow at the insured’s age 100 are paid during the first 20 years; however, if the insured dies before all of the planned premiums are paid, the beneficiary will receive the face amount as a death benefit.
a. Comparative interest rate
b. Comparative interest rate examines the rate of return that must be earned on a hypothetical side fund in a buy-term-invest-the-difference plan so that the value of the side fund will be exactly equal to the surrender value of the higher premium policy at a designated point in time.
a. A salaried employee who advertises and solicits insurance
b. A person does not require an insurance producer license if he or she only advertises without intent to solicit insurance. However, once there is solicitation a license is required.
a. The license holder’s sister-in-law
b. A temporary license holder sale to a family member or an individual the temporary license holder has an employment or business relationship with will not pay commission
a. Within 2 months
b. Upon receipt of a written proof of death and the right of the claimant to the proceeds the insurer must pay death claims within 2 months.
b. The Insurance Commissioner must examine each insurer at least once every 5 years
a. Counselor
b. A life insurance counselor is someone who for a fee or commission offers to examine a life insurance, an annuity or pure endowment policy and gives advice, recommendations or information regarding the policy’s terms, conditions, benefits, coverage or premium.
a. Cost Comparison methods
b. Cost comparison methods are used to compare the cost of one life insurance policy against another in order to guide prospective purchasers to policies that are competitively priced
a. Premium amounts and surrender values
a. To allow the consumer to compare the costs of different policies
a. When the agent delivers the policy, collects the initial premium and the applicant completes an acceptable Statement of Good Health
a. As of the application date
a. Disclose commissions earned from the sale of the policy
a. Policy summary
a. Pay the policy proceeds only if it would have issued the policy
a. The date of medical exam
a. At the time of application
a. Insurable interest
a. After the insurer receives that application, it is forwarded to the underwriting department. After the application is approved and the policy is issued, the policy is delivered either in person or by mail.
a. The Medical Information Bureau
a. Charge higher premium
a. Insurers are barred from requesting HIV testing
b. It is common for insurers to require HIV testing when an applicant seeks a policy with a large face amount. The insurer must abide by a variety of rules created by its respective state.
a. No; self-inflicted injuries are usually excluded
b. Deaths that result from self-inflicted injuries, or from war, or as a result of certain hobbies or avocations such as flying are usually not covered under the accidental death rider (although they would be covered under the base policy unless specifically excluded).
a. The primary beneficiary died before the insured
b. According to the “common disaster” clause if it cannot be determined who died first the insured or the primary beneficiary it will be assumed the primary beneficiary died first so the proceeds go to the contingent beneficiary. Proceeds will go to the insured’s estate only if there is no contingent beneficiary.
a. Variable life
b. Variable life products are considered securities. The sale of a variable life policy must be preceded or accompanied by a prospectus filed with the SEC.
a. The cash value in the policy
b. Consideration is the value offered by the insured to the insurer and vice versa. The insured makes accurate statements in the application and remits premium payments. In exchange, the insurer provides benefits as stipulated in the contract.
a. A policy is reissued with a reduction in cash value
b. Replacement means any transaction in which new life insurance or a new annuity is to be purchased and it is known or should be known to the proposing producer tha by reason of the transaction, existing life insurance or annuities have been or will be converted to reduce paid-up insurance, continued as extended term or otherwise reduced in value by the use of nonforfeiture benefits or other policy values.
a. If HIV is present the person may be rated but they cannot be declined.
b. A person with HIV can be declined
b. An individual life insurance policy will not lapse for up to 31 days after the premium due date
a. It does not have a guaranteed death benefit
b. Straight Life (also called Ordinary Life or Continuous Premium Whole Life) charges a level annual premium for the lifetime of the insured and provides a level, guaranteed death benefit. If the insured lives to age 100 the policy endows (matures) and the face amount is paid to the insured at that time. During the insured’s lifetime the straight life policy builds cash value. The insurer guarantees the cash value and death benefit under a straight life policy.
a. The owner of a shop