Lincoln Benefit Life Company, a subsidiary of the Allstate Company, says it will no longer sell long term care insurance policies under its own brand.
The decision, which becomes effective Oct. 31, will not affect its existing LTC insurance customers, the company says. LifeCare Assurance, a third-party administrator that has handled the Lincoln Benefit product since it was launched in 1997, will continue to service the policies.
The decision to leave the LTC market is part of Allstate's plan to simplify its lineup with a limited portfolio of strong products, explains John Lounds, senior vice president of product management, Allstate Life Insurance Company, Northbrook, Ill.
Since the end of 2000, Allstate has discontinued more than 100 products. The strategy has strengthened its business units, Lounds says.
Lincoln Benefit will continue to market a broad line of fixed and variable life insurance, and fixed and variable annuities.
Allstate says it understands many of its customers and agents still want LTC insurance and plans to offer such a product through a third-party carrier. It has yet to name that carrier, however.
The unit sold the LTC policies through appointed independent financial representatives and Allstate's exclusive agencies and financial professionals.
The product and its administrator, LifeCare Assurance, actually have performed well, Allstate says. The decision to pull it has more to do with the type of product LTC insurance represents rather than its actual performance.
"Lincoln Benefit Life's focus is on developing and offering retirement savings and life products, and we want to focus more of our attention and resources on our core product lines," Lounds explains.
He says dropping LTC insurance will have no impact on Allstate's earnings because it didn't keep the business on its books. It reinsured all the business through LifeCare and another carrier, Employers Reinsurance Corp., a subsidiary of General Electric Company, Fairfield, Conn.