Variable life insurance sales with single premiums included at 10% for the 38 companies reporting in the VALUE survey for the 1st quarter of 2007 were $641.7 million, a 9.8% increase from 1st quarter 2006 sales, which were $585 million.
Compared to 4th quarter 2006 sales of $660 million, 1st quarter sales were 2.8% lower.
(Sales include first-year annualized premium, drop-in premiums and 10% of single premiums.)
The market estimate for the 1st quarter of 2007 with single premiums included at 10% is $685 million, up from $625 million the previous year.
Variable life sales with single premiums included at 100% for the companies in the VALUE survey for the 1st quarter of 2007 were $651.4 million, a 3.5% decrease from 4th quarter 2006, which had sales of $675 million, and a 9.7% increase over 1st quarter 2006 sales, which were $594 million.
The market estimate for the 1st quarter of 2007 with single premiums included at 100% is $705 million, up from $650 million the year before.
For the 1st quarter of 2007, the top 5 companies/fleets–John Hancock, Hartford Life, RiverSource, Pacific Life and Lincoln National–captured 53% of all variable life sales (including single premiums at 10%), while the top 10 companies/fleets garnered 77% of VL sales.
For the 1st quarter of 2007, New York Life ranked among the top 10 companies, displacing Minnesota Life.
For the companies in the survey, the number of flexible-premium contracts issued during the 1st quarter of 2007 decreased 15% from the number issued during the 1st quarter of 2006. The average face amount increased 21% to $447,262.
The single-premium VL market continues to suffer. The total premium for single-premium products for the 7 companies in the VALUE survey for the 1st quarter of 2007 was $5.4 million, compared to $8.3 million the year before.