Q: Anxiety about large rate increases and “use it or lose it” are two of the biggest obstacles in making the stand-alone LTCI sale. How can agents address these objections?
Hughes
I am wondering if that is the biggest obstacle for consumers or advisors? As advisors, we definitely have to be comfortable with talking about rate increases. Whether it is legacy blocks of business or new carrier entrance into the long term care space, we need to understand why this happens. As for consumer, they need to understand that LTCI is a health insurance product—and just like all other health lines, these can take increases. The great thing is that LTCI policies don’t take rate increases every year, but when they do it is all at one time or maybe spread out over three years as we are seeing today. Now I will admit, a policy sold in 2007 that takes a 90 percent rate increase is effectively about a 13 percent increase each year, and that’s hard to stomach, but a policy sold in 2000 that takes a 15 percent increase over three years (45 percent total increase) is effectively a 2.6% increase annually. What we should be telling our consumers is that if we had to mentally factor in a two to three percent increase every year, would that still be “doable”? Most of the time you should get a yes. If not, then maybe we should question the suitability. We’ve seen carriers come out with step-rated inflation and why that hasn’t taken off is interesting to me. Wouldn’t this be a win-win to the carrier and client, where they can control the stopping point if they wanted to freeze the growth and freeze the premium? I find reassurance in a Society of Actuaries pricing study that shows policies sold in 2000 had a 40 percent likelihood of a future rate increase compared to policies sold in 2007 with a 30 percent likelihood and in 2014 with a 10 percent likelihood. And here we are in 2017.
As for the “use it or lose it,” that objection is easily overcome today since we have some wonderful solutions based around life insurance that offer a death benefit if you never need long term care—because we all know with 100 percent certainty that life is fatal.
Smith
Use it or lose it is not really lose it anymore, it is more like you get what you paid back in the form of benefits. This may ease some of the regret, knowing you have paid LTCI premiums for years, only to discover you may no longer be able to afford the policy. So, you either drop the coverage or reduce the benefits to fit your budget. Keeping the plan in force, even at a reduced rate, is a smart thing to consider. Something is always better than nothing when it comes to LTCI.
Hogan
Large Rate Increases—We point to the latest study from the Society of Actuaries, Long-Term Care Insurance: The SOA Pricing Project, showing agents that the potential rate increases on products sold today is very slim as well as discuss the past and why we have large rate increases on the older products. The conclusion “New Policy Pricing: Today’s Environment” (on pg. 8) states that:
“Carriers that are considering entering the LTC market or have discontinued selling LTC products should welcome the current pricing environment. To be clear, this paper does not claim that today’s LTC products will not need future rate increases. Rather, based on an analysis of pricing assumptions and historical experience, we conclude that LTC policies priced today are significantly less likely to need future premium rate increases than any earlier product generation.”
You can find the full study at https://www.soa.org/Files/Sections/ltc-pricing-project.pdf.
Use it or Lose it—We address this primarily with the use of the Shared Care Rider or showing, side-by-side, a comparison of traditional LTCI with a GUL compared to a hybrid. The traditional with a GUL is likely to be similar cost, yet if the insured goes on claim he will not cannibalize the death benefit.