One of the more challenging aspects of advising clients about life insurance is helping them to recognize that life insurance is an "asset," rather than an "expense." For many people, this view is a bit of a foreign concept in a world where other types of insurance (auto, homeowners, health and liability, just to name a few) merely reimburse the policyholder for a contemporaneous, out-of-pocket, economic loss that the policyholder hoped would never occur – leaving the policyholder in the same economic position as he or she was in before the loss took place. Life insurance is unique in the sense that it covers a loss that is certain to eventually occur: It is not a question of whether the policyholder will have a claim, but instead when. As long as the policy is maintained, the stream of premium payments will ultimately result in the policyholder's receipt of the death benefit, which allows for a rate-of-return calculation that is inapplicable to other types of coverage.
Cash value of life insurance
The investment nature of some life insurance policies is more obvious than others. Policies that are designed to build cash value, such as whole life, variable life and indexed universal life, allow the policyholder to access a return on their investment without having to wait for any loss to occur. Inside build-up (net of surrender charges) is fully liquid, enabling such policies to be listed on a balance sheet and easily compared to alternate uses for the dollars that were utilized to pay premiums – such as stocks, bonds or mutual funds. This analysis is probably a fair measuring stick when determining the value of the policy to the insured, but because it overlooks the present value of the death benefit, it understates the value of the policy to the beneficiaries.
Life insurance purchased exclusively for death benefit
Life insurance policies purchased exclusively for the death benefit also have real economic value. The most common example of this is a policy that is issued with a "no lapse guarantee" (sometimes referred to as an "NLG Policy"). Under this type of policy, the insurance carrier guarantees payment of a specified death benefit so long as the policyholder makes all scheduled premium payments in a timely manner. While NLG Policies often have little or no cash surrender value, they provide the policyholder with certainty that neither the death benefit nor future premiums will be affected by market performance, changes in interest rates, or changes in policy charges. The only unknown variable remaining is timing – when the death benefit will be received and how many premiums must be paid until then. This makes it possible to calculate, with reasonable certainty, the rate of return that would be earned on the premiums paid if the insured died in any given year. Moreover, because life insurance proceeds are not subject to income tax (except in cases where an existing policy has been "transferred for value"), the return on premiums is an after-tax return, which should be adjusted to its pre-tax equivalent before comparing the projected return on a life insurance policy to the projected return of other investments.
Consider a healthy 52-year-old male who was recently offered a preferred rating on a $1,000,000 NLG life insurance policy. For an annual premium of $9,098, the insurance carrier guaranteed that neither the annual premium amount nor the amount of the death benefit would ever change. If we assume that an alternate investment of the same dollars would generate growth taxed at a blended rate of 28 percent (federal and state), the economics of this policy can be illustrated by the following table: