Advisors who sell long term care insurance sometimes sound like evangelists for change who are frankly tired of crying in the wilderness.
The wilderness in this case is LTCI sales, which dropped each year since 2000, until this year. Now specialists in LTCI have the feeling that time and the tides might finally have changed in their favor.
Other trends that might yield higher LTCI sales include unprecedented longevity; Medicaid, the poster child for crumbling government entitlement programs; an industry shakeout now in the rear-view mirror; and rising corporate interest in offering LTCI as an employee benefit.
These trends also include recognition by advisors and clients alike that for many aging baby boomers the time is coming to transition from an investment and income orientation to a retirement-asset protection strategy.
The trends mean clients ought to be asking, "What can I do to hold on to my assets rather than turning them all over to a nursing home?"
One problem for LTCI sales has been that clients have not been asking this question. Advisors should be asking it for them. Or perhaps, some judges have concluded, must. "Most advisors have not been held to legal or professional account for giving bad advice about long term care," Seattle-based Center for Long-Term Care Reform president Stephen A. Moses has written. "This safe harbor of public ignorance and judicial indifference will not continue much longer, however."
In the meantime, building bridges with advisors and other professionals has become a preoccupation of LTCI educators, consultants and vendors, despite their low numbers. "There is only something like 8,000 of these experts in the entire country, and there are many, many, many millions of people who need to have this conversation," says Jeremy Pincus, principal of Lexington, Mass.-based Forbes Consulting Group.
Partnership efforts, he says, so far have been "grassroots — people just trying different things without any particular master plan," trying to grapple with "financial advisors who are basically skeptical. The subject makes them nervous."
Phyllis Shelton, president of Hendersonville, Tenn.-based LTC Consultants, agrees that things would be different "if the investment people could understand that without LTCI they're going to have less money because they're going to have less assets under management. And should a client say, "?I'm going to self-insure,' well, the investment analysts ought to have alarm bells go off," Shelton says.
Why? Because paying full price for care is much more expensive than buying insurance. Around-the-clock care today in most parts of the country can easily cost $120,000 per year, and that is projected to triple in the next 20 years.
Potential partners
Shelton has studied the issue and submits a list of professionals to partner with: financial advisors, commission and fee-based; property and casualty insurance agents; health insurance agents; benefits consulting firms; accountants; LTC providers; attorneys; bank trust officers; and social workers.
Jay Grubb, president of Buford, Ga.-based asset manager Key Financial Partners, adds another to that list. "Ask your current client, ?Hey, do you mind if I call your attorney or your CPA and tell them I did a good job for you?'"
That's a powerful way to bring in a professional partner, he says, "because if you call the CPA and say, ?Mr. Jones wanted me to give you a call to tell you that he is extremely happy with his long term care plan, which protects his assets. I would love to sit down with you for 15 to 20 minutes to see if there are any other clients you might have in mind for my services.' That is a pretty good call right there," Grubb adds. "It works about 75 percent of the time."
Some advise cold-calling. Building alliances, partnerships or networks with fellow professionals is not brain surgery. After all, "Every aspect of my business comes from a referral from another professional — everything," Grubb says.
"Let me tell you how beautiful the long term care (insurance) referral is for someone like a CPA, an attorney or another financial advisor," Grubb continues. "It's a very non-threatening referral. The CPA's No. 1 concern is that they don't want to lose that client's trust. If they refer the client to me, I'm going in there and showing the client how to protect what they worked their whole entire life from losing."
The LTCI expert/advisor relationship "brings value to that relationship with the CPA. He says, ?You really need to deal with this with Jay.' In turn it makes him look like the good guy because he is looking out for his client."