1 / 11

Overview of Issues for Interim Charge Related to Insurance Funded Prepaid Funeral Contracts

Overview of Issues for Interim Charge Related to Insurance Funded Prepaid Funeral Contracts. Texas Department of Banking April 2008. Prepaid Funeral Contracts. Purpose of Chapter 154 of the Texas Finance Code (TFC):

afia
Download Presentation

Overview of Issues for Interim Charge Related to Insurance Funded Prepaid Funeral Contracts

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Overview of Issues for Interim Charge Related to Insurance Funded Prepaid Funeral Contracts Texas Department of Banking April 2008

  2. Prepaid Funeral Contracts • Purpose of Chapter 154 of the Texas Finance Code (TFC): • Provide a regulatory framework to give the public an opportunity to arrange and pay for funerals in advance of need. • Provide all safeguards necessary to protect and assure that the prepaid funds are available at a future date to pay for prearranged funeral services. • Two regulatory objectives to achieve purposes of Chapter 154: • Make sure a prepaid contract is performed in accordance with its terms, meaning the funeral goods and services selected by a purchaser are provided as specified in the contract. • Make sure funds are available at a future date to pay for the contracted goods and services at the time of need.

  3. Prepaid Contract Industry Statistics (As of 12/31/2006) • Insurance is total value of insurance policy/PFC contract while trust is amount paid in to date on contract.

  4. Options to Fund Prepaid Contracts PrePaid Funeral Customer wishes to prearrange and prepay for specific funeral goods and services Two options to fund the prepaid funeral contract: (1) trust-funded; or (2) Insurance funded Trust Seller / Funeral Provider Insurance Seller Subsidiary of Insurance Company Funeral Provider Financial Institution (funds deposited) Insurance Company (issues insurance policy)

  5. Typical Sale of a Trust-Funded Prepaid Funeral Contract (1) Ms. Smith visits a funeral home and selects the items for her funeral. Ms. Smith signs a contract and pays the funeral home. (2) A funeral home representative signs the contract and deposits 90% of Ms. Smith’s money into a restricted bank / trust account for her funeral when she passes away. The funeral home can keep up to 10% of the contract price for its overhead costs. The funeral home is also the Department’s permit holder.

  6. Typical Sale of an Insurance-Funded Prepaid Funeral Contract (2) If the agent is not an employee of the funeral home, the agent is required to get the funeral home to also sign the contract as the provider only. (4) The Permit Holder sends Ms. Smith’s money and application to the insurance company to issue the policy to fund the contract. The insurance company will typically pay the agent a sales commission up to 30% of the face amount of the policy.

  7. Concerns with Insurance Funded Prepaid Funeral Contracts • Insurance-Funded Permit Holders: • claim they have no responsibility or ability to maintain records or verify that a prepaid funeral contract (PFC) is properly honored at the time of need. No contractual agreements are made between the funeral provider and the permit holder. Example - At the time of need, a funeral provider who sold the prepaid contract as the insurance funded permit holder’s agent overcharges a family $500 for a casket specified and purchased on the prepaid contract. The insurance funded permit holder states it is not responsible for the actions of funeral providers and is not responsible to refund any overcharges.

  8. Concerns with Insurance Funded Prepaid Funeral Contracts • Insurance-Funded Permit Holders: • have abandoned their permits, leaving no entity to maintain the records or take responsibility to verify that the prepaid funeral contracts are properly honored at the time of need. Examples - Magna Financial Services, Inc. abandoned insurance funded permit in 2001 with 1,169 outstanding contracts representing a total death benefit of $4,087,660. IEIS Fidelity Plan, Inc. abandoned permit in 2004 with 1,957 outstanding contracts representing a total death benefit of $6,948,575.

  9. Concerns with Insurance Funded Prepaid Funeral Contracts • The prepaid funeral contract is not “linked” to the policy. • The policy is not required to pay any growth and can leave the funeral provider with less than sufficient funds to pay for the funeral at the time of need. • There are no consumer disclosures that tell the purchaser: • He may be buying more insurance than is necessary to fund a prepaid funeral contract. • Depending on his age, health and type of policy issued, he may pay substantially more than actual prepaid contract total. • Cancellation cash surrender values are substantially less than amounts paid in. • He may lose his policy benefits when he assigns the policy back to the permit holder.

  10. Total Death Benefits of Insurance Funded Prepaid Funeral Contracts

  11. Number of Outstanding Insurance Funded Prepaid Funeral Contracts

More Related