An Investment Advisor Takes Another Look at Life Insurance

A Win-Win for the Clients and the Firm
A well-funded life insurance policy gives its owner a range of options for generating the kind of lifelong income that could allow the advisors to stay the course of the investment portfolio. The advisor’s firm has many clients who’ll experience a significant reduction in income (and an increase in tax rates) when one of the spouses dies. While long-term cash flow projections can be somewhat reassuring, their reliance on so many assumptions still leaves plenty of uncertainty and cause for concern. The policy can address this shortfall, both empirically and emotionally. In turn, by shoring up the survivor’s finances, the survivor will have less of a need to draw down on the portfolio, meaning the advisor’s AUM. That also means the advisor will have much more to manage for the next generation. Having the life insurance in place seems to make sense for both the clients and the firm.
The Interview Process
So, they ask, “Assuming we think we’d like to add permanent life insurance to our service offering, how should we do it? How can we proceed in a way that won’t make today’s solution tomorrow’s problem? After getting more background on the firm, who in the insurance business they’d talked with and so forth, here’s what I told them:
Take your time! Two or three brokerage general agencies are vying for your business. It’ll take a while for you to complete your due diligence.
Before you contact the BGAs to initiate discussion, ask your attorneys and perhaps your compliance people to check them out thoroughly. Also, check with the references each has given you. And when you do, have a list of questions ready so you can cover all critical aspects of their relationship with the BGA. A less conventional suggestion is to follow the BGAs on social media to see whether you’re comfortable with what they post. You might be impressed by their substantive messaging and thought leadership or turned off by their overly aggressive pushing of a given product or planning concept.
After the initial presentations, ask those who passed the audition to return and take you, personally, through the kind of fact-finding interview they would take any prospect. Tell them up-front that the interview should have a comprehensive personal financial planning orientation, not an estate planning orientation. The former will dovetail nicely with your clients’ interests and concerns, whereas estate planning won’t. What’s more, because a life insurance presentation based on comprehensive financial planning is far more nuanced and technically challenging than one based on estate planning, your request will be a good test of the BGA’s staff’s skill set and flexibility. See “Is Your
I sense that an advisor’s choice of a BGA and, for that matter, their decision to proceed in this new endeavor will be based on extensive due diligence but perhaps even more on gut feelings about how confident they are in the BGA’s organization and the quality of its people.
About the Author
Charles L. Ratner
Charles L. Ratner is a commentator on life insurance and estate planning based in Cleveland, Ohio.
Source: https://www.wealthmanagement.com