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With-profit endowment policies
A with-profit endowment policy is a contract written
by a life assurance company to pay a fixed sum called
the basic sum assured, plus accumulated profits that
are declared annually, to an assured person on a fixed
date in the future (or to his/her estate if the person
dies prematurely), provided that the premiums have been
paid as required by the contract.
There are two types of with-profit endowment. The first
is called a full with-profit endowment. This is the
most expensive type and guarantees to pay at least the
value of your loan on maturity. Much more common is
a low cost with-profit endowment. This also has a guaranteed
maturity value, but it starts as only a fraction of
the loan amount and there is no certainty that it will
end up be enough to repay your loan.
With both types, the accumulated profits are added
to the fund by way of bonuses awarded each year. The
size of these bonuses depends on the performance of
the investment fund - in effect, the owners of the policies
are participating in the profits of the life company.
Once added, these bonuses cannot be taken away. There
are three types of bonuses:-
Reversionary bonuses
These bonuses are declared annually as cash values computed
as percentages of the basic sum assured and of bonuses
declared in previous years. Once granted, these bonuses
are guaranteed, cannot be withdrawn and are also known
as attaching bonuses.
Special bonuses
These are one-off bonuses, granted at the discretion
of the life company and are also guaranteed. For example,
if a friendly society converts to a public company they
may grant such special bonuses to each policy in force,
instead of issuing free shares in the new company.
Terminal bonuses
Most life companies currently grant an additional bonus
at the end of the life of a policy. In essence this
is a loyalty bonus designed to encourage the policy
holders to keep the policies in force until the maturity
date. The size of the terminal bonus is dependent upon
the investment conditions prevailing at the time of
maturity, as well as upon the investment performance
of the life company. Although it can be a large part
of the final sum paid out, it is not guaranteed.
There is also a final bonus that depends partly on
the performance of the fund over the entire term. The
terminal bonus may represent a large portion of payout
and is guaranteed to be at least enough to repay the
soan.
- There is a possibility that the bonuses
will take the maturity value above the level required
to pay back the loan. This would result in a tax-free
cash surplus, which you can spend on whatever tickles
your fancy.
- The maturity value grows throughout
the life of the policy. The size of the final or terminal
bonus makes it rare to be able to cash in this type
of endowment policy early without losing out. You
may end up getting back less than you put in.
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