Sunday, September 30, 2012

Understanding Term Insurance

It was the battle cry of mutual-fund purveyors back in the ’80s and ’90s: “Buy term and invest the difference!” The rationale was to pay less for your life insurance by buying term insurance rather than permanent insurance, then taking the money that you saved on the premium and buying mutual funds or other securities. The goal was to grow the investment fund enough to replace the term insurance amount and then some by the increasing investment fund.

This usually did not work out so well for people. One obvious reason, of course, is that the investments may not have grown and held their value as hoped for. Probably the more common reason was the lack of rigorous self-discipline: It was always easier to spend these excess dollars on some current need or want and plan on making up for the skipped savings the next month. Too often that never happened.

The weakness of term insurance is that, while it is cheap in the short term, it is the most expensive way to buy life insurance in the long term. It is cheap because it almost never pays a death benefit. When the premium goes up after the initial 10- or 20-year guaranteed period, the policy owner can no longer afford the coverage and drops it. And this is done at an age when the risk of dying has never been greater. Insurers love to sell term insurance because only 2 percent of these policies ever pay a death benefit. The rest represent pure profit for the insurers.

Term insurance can be appropriate in some circumstances, when there is an immediate need for a lot of protection but a lack of funds to pay for the better, permanent coverage. For example, a few years ago my married son had a baby on the way and a modest income. It was better for him to get term than to go without. So, he got $500,000 worth, but he needs to convert it to permanent coverage soon

Term insurance gets very expensive by the time people reach their 50s and 60s and that people eventually have to drop these policies because of that cost. But it is exactly at those ages and beyond that people start needing home health care or nursing-home care.

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Term Insurance

Life insurance is about risk — the risk that you will die at an inappropriate time. Now, there is one sure thing: We will all die sometime. So you’re hedging your timing bets with money to replace your “value” to those who depend on your current — and future — earnings.
 
How much insurance do you need? Think about what your dependents would endure over the years without your earnings stream.
 
Term life insurance is the least expensive and simplest form of insurance. The premium dollars you pay to buy this insurance cover the “mortality costs” — the likelihood that you will die this year.
 
There is no extra cash buildup within the policy. Ordinarily, as you get older the cost of life insurance should rise, along with the likelihood of your death. But the insurance industry has gotten around this issue by creating “level term” — a guarantee that the annual cost will remain the same for 10, 20, or even 30 years.
 
With term insurance, as long as you keep paying the annual premiums (which you may pay monthly, or quarterly), the policy will stay“in force” — protecting you and paying the death benefit to your designated beneficiaries.
 
The problem with term insurance is that the term ends — and it may leave you uncovered for insurance in 20 or 30 years, when you are not healthy enough to qualify for a new policy. That’s why many people turn to various forms of “whole life” insurance, which will cover your entire lifetime.
 
With these policies you pay higher premiums, but some of that money is “saved” inside the policy, earning interest or invested to build up even more cash. Then in future years, you can borrow out some of the excess cash — or use it to pay premiums when you’re older and have stopped working.
One warning: Many of these whole life, investment-linked, or universal life, or universal variable life policies are shown with “illustrations” of money growing inside the policy to pay premiums when you are retired. But illustrations are not guarantees. And in this low-interest rate environment, it’s wise to ask for an insurance checkup to make sure you are paying enough in premium to keep the policy going in later years.
 
Go view www.LifeHappens.org — a non-profit devoted to educating consumers about life insurance.

10,000 Agents on Payroll

Reliance Life Insurance (R-Life) on Thursday announced that it has hired over 10,000 advisors so far in the current fiscal and is set to appoint 40,000 more in the next six months as part of its plans to strengthen base in Tier II and Tier III cities.

In a statement, Reliance Life Insurance President & Executive Director Malay Ghosh said, "We have added close to 10,000 insurance advisors in the past few months and are targeting to recruit 40,000 more by the end of the current financial year to increase our reach."

"Semi-urban and rural regions are on our radar for recruitment of these insurance advisors. We are attempting to create a stronger footprint across India with a view to enhancing the width and depth of our reach across the country," Ghosh said, adding that the move will strengthen the company’s distribution network and help in new customer acquisition. Reliance Life is part of Anil Ambani-led Reliance Group's financial services arm Reliance Capital.

8% Investment Tax Removed

INSURANCE industry players are encouraged with the Government’s proposal to remove 8% investment income tax on deferred annuity.

In Budget 2013, the Government had also proposed to introduce insurance schemes for hawkers, small business owners, farmers and fishermen, with total yearly allocation amounting to about RM298mil. The Government proposed a group insurance coverage scheme of RM5,000 for hawkers and small business owners registered with the Companies Commission of Malaysia. The Government will allocate RM16mil a year under the scheme.

For fishermen, the Government introduced a scheme with a RM100,000 maximum coverage, and an allocation of RM230mil in 2013 as an incentive for fish landing as well as payment of living allowances for the fishermen.

Another group insurance coverage scheme of up to RM15,000 will be allocated for almost 242,000 armed forces and police personnel.

The Government will also provide insurance coverage of up to RM100,000 for all school children travelling by school buses with permits, in the event of accidents. 

Friday, September 28, 2012

Exporting Takaful To Indonesia

Malaysian Islamic insurers are expanding into neighboring Indonesia to tap growth three times as fast as in their home market, where Standard & Poor’s predicts tighter rules will curb expansion.

Great Eastern Takaful Sdn Bhd, the Shariah-compliant subsidiary of Malaysia’s biggest insurer that already has a Jakarta-based unit, will target low-income people in Southeast Asia’s largest economy, Chief Executive Officer Mohamad Salihuddin Ahmad said in a Sept. 13 interview. Etiqa Takaful Bhd wants to buy an Indonesian Islamic insurer, Chief Commercial Officer Shahril Azuar Jimin said in an interview last week.

Shariah-compliant life insurance assets in Indonesia, which has the world’s largest Muslim population, rose by an average of 53 percent over the last five years to 7.3 trillion rupiah (US$760 million), finance ministry data show. That compares with 18 percent growth in Malaysia to RM14.4 billion (US$4.7 billion), according to central bank figures. Expansion in the so-called takaful industry in Malaysia could slow due to new rules on fees and investments, a Sept. 24 S&P report said.

“Malaysia has become very costly for takaful operators after the central bank released an operating framework,” Abdul Rauf Rashid, the country managing partner at Ernst & Young LLP in Kuala Lumpur, said in a Sept. 13 interview. “Companies that are more aggressive in their expansion are seeking green fields. Indonesia, especially, has a lot of growth potential.”


“What is tricky for companies going into Indonesia is that buying a company with a license is not cheap, because the market has already adjusted for the growth potential,” Ernst & Young’s Abdul Rauf said. “But has Indonesia ticked all the boxes required to realize that potential?

Humble Rice


When someone gets diarrhoea - the solution is so easy. The most potent is Rice, but not in the usual form we eat it in, and neither would rice porridge work too well.

The secret is in rice water.
 
Take a handful of rice and boil it in a large saucepan with lots of water. Like three or four large glasses. Then allow it to cool down . Drink lots of it so that enough rice water goes to line your guts from throat to other end (appx 10 to 12 metres of it).

How does it work? Even Prof Wong Hock Boon doesn't know. Read the article by going to this site: 
http://rehydrate.org/dd/dd06.htm#page2

Humble Ginger

Being stricken with cancer is everybody’s worse nightmare but a recent study conducted at the University of Michigan’s Comprehensive Cancer Center has found that ginger powder induces death in cancer cells.

Kills cancer cellsThis was especially so in all ovarian cancer cells to which ginger powder was applied. While still requiring more extensive research before coming anywhere close to being accepted by the medical community, it is a ray of hope that the treatment of cancer doesn’t necessarily have to be limited to chemotherapy and radiation alone.

Another piece of promising news is that ginger is effective in slowing the growth of colorectal cancer cells. This study was conducted at the University of Minnesota and offers a much kinder, natural alternative in the treatment of cancer.
Besides these breakthroughs in cancer research, ginger has for long been beneficial as a remedy for a wide spectrum of ailments. Here are a few that you may already have heard of.

Lowers stress levelsThe next time you are sick to your stomach with worry, have a ginger drink. Gingerol, the potent antioxidant in ginger also helps cleanse the harmful chemicals that build-up in our bodies when we’re stressed. Some studies also suggest that just a whiff of ginger uplifts your mood too. A wonderful way to de-stress would be to chop up some ginger and drop it into hot water with a slice of lemon. Or have it the traditional Malaysian way – teh halia kurang manis!

Aids digestionDietician Alice Mackintosh told the Daily Mail, “Ginger helps stimulate the taste buds, triggering digestive secretions.” This knobby root deftly improves the absorption and assimilation of nutrients in our bodies, easing any form of stomach discomfort in the process. Incidentally ginger also helps impede motion sickness, beat heartburn and reduce flatulence too. The best way to enjoy it is by mixing a teaspoon of ginger juice with lime juice in water. Bring to a boil then mix with a bit of honey. Yum!

Eases inflammationIf you suffer from rheumatoid arthritis, osteoarthritis or joint inflammation due to injury, a good natural remedy would be ginger. Chew on some or grate some into your drink to relieve pain and discomfort. If it’s your throat that’s inflamed, a warm ginger drink with honey three times daily will soothe your throat and boost your immune system, possibly preventing a relapse.

Effective painkillerGot a headache? Instead of popping a pill, try applying some ginger juice on your forehead instead. If it’s a toothache that’s ruining your day, some ginger juice on your cheek or jaw area is claimed to soothe the pain.

Aphrodisiac effectSome quarters believe that ginger has a stimulant effect that makes it an effective anti-impotence drug. While some suggest adding ginger juice to hot tea with a little raw honey, others say a teaspoon of ginger juice in a half-boiled egg with a spoon of honey taken on an empty stomach every night for a month does the trick. Any brave men out there to prove this right? Beats relying on that blue pill every time!

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Life Insurance Claim

A life insurance claim arises on the death of an individual (life assured) covered under a life policy. The nominee or assignee of the policy, who is entitled to receive the benefits, needs to inform the insurance company about the loss. The intimation of death should be in writing and accompanied by a copy of death certificate. It should contain details such as date, place and cause of death. This needs to be submitted at the nearest branch office of the insurance company.

Claim form On receipt of the intimation of demise, the branch office provides the relevant claim form to the applicant. This claim form needs to be filled and submitted to the insurance company along with the necessary documents.

Documents
The insurance company may require the death certificate, policy document, deeds of assignments/ re-assignments, if any, legal evidence of title, if the policy is not assigned or nominated, medical attendant's certificate and other documents as applicable.

Processing
The insurance company may appoint an investigator to ascertain the validity of the claim. If it is found to be valid, the amount is paid, otherwise a repudiation letter is sent to the claimant, listing the reason for rejection.

Points to note
The insurance agent has to help the assured's family to deal with the insurer and fulfil the formalities of a claim. The life insurance policy documents should not be kept in safe deposit lockers as these are usually sealed temporarily on the owner's death and may delay the settlement of claim.

In case there is no nomination or assignment in a policy, the benefit will be paid out only after the claimant has provided documentary proof of entitlement.

LIAM Proposal For 2013 Budget

The Life Insurance Association of Malaysia (LIAM) has proposed the government give a separate tax relief of RM6,000 on insurance premiums alone in Budget 2013. In a statement today, LIAM said currently, a yearly tax relief of RM6,000 was given on the aggregate of insurance premiums and Employees Provident Fund (EPF) contributions.

Its president, Vincent Kwo, said the amount has remained constant for a number of years. "With rising wage level, the EPF contributions have taken up a substantial portion of the RM6,000, leaving an ever-diminishing amount left to be claimed as tax relief on insurance premiums," he said.

Kwo said this would put more money back into the pocket of the rakyat to relieve them of their financial burden and also to encourage them to have a better financial plan for the future.

On the medical and education insurance, he said, with rising medical costs, the current tax relief of RM3,000 was insufficient to cater the needs of a typical family. "We hope that this can be increased to RM6,000," he said. He said with the ageing population and rising costs, a private pension scheme was required to supplement the income for the current generation who would retire in future years.

"For private pension schemes to take off, as evidenced from other overseas markets, we believe the government will need to provide tax incentives to pension scheme contributors," he said. Kwo hoped that government would extend the current tax relief of 10 years and remove the eight per cent tax on the annuity fund to be similar to the private retirement scheme, which was tax-free.

He said while other similar investment vehicles, such as unit trusts, were exempted from paying tax on investment income, this was not the case for the rakyat's investment income in the life insurance fund."Currently, investment income in the life insurance fund is taxed at eight per cent. This is not benefiting the policyholders. We look forward to the removal of the tax in this category,"

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Liberalising Life Insurance Industry

Bank Negara Malaysia is considering more flexibility for the insurance industry and insurance companies in order to formulate a commission structure which is suitable with their respective business philosophies.

Bank Negara Deputy Governor Datuk Muhammad Ibrahim said the consideration would be based on the Financial Sector Plan 2011-2020 and was also in line with current economic developments.

He was optimistic, by allowing the insurance industry to determine its own commission structure, it would be just as transparent as the existing commission structure.

“Liberalising the commission structure is not a new issue, it has been practised in many countries in the region.

“As such, it is important for agents to be able to operate in a transparent and liberal environment,” he told 500 participants at the Bumiputera Life Insurance Agents Convention 2012.

However, Muhammad said the interest of the general public must always be protected so that they do not shoulder any unreasonable cost and are well informed to make timely decisions.

He said under the Financial Sector Plan, Bank Negara would encourage insurance and takaful industries to offer more options in the form of micro products to those who have less access to financial services.

“Insurance services will be made available more efficiently by way of cost, easy accessibility, easy to understand and convenient to apply for compensation,” he said.

Muhammad also said the central bank would allow insurance companies to provide training and flexible development for insurance agencies in order to assist new agents entering the industry.

The move, mooted by Bank Negara, is aimed at strengthening the insurance industry in Malaysia.

“Incentive packages are also being considered in order to encourage life insurance agents to upgrade their productivity, expertise and professionalism in a move to upgrade their service,” Muhammad added.

Friday, September 21, 2012

Malaysia Top Killer

Malaysia’s National Heart Association has reported that heart disease is the top killer of Malaysian women and two and a half times more common than all cancers. The association’s president Azhari Rosman dispelled the common perception that only older men were prone to heart diseases and strokes.

“Cancer does not take as many lives as cardiovascular diseases. Women also tend to dismiss pain more easily than men and generally have a higher pain threshold.”

Azhari said the latest 2011 National Health and Morbidity Survey (NHMS IV) had revealed that Malaysian women had the highest body mass index (BMI) in Southeast Asia.

“Obesity is the harbinger of many conditions,” he said. “The NHMS IV study reports that out of 17,000 women surveyed, 29.4 percent were overweight while 15 percent were obese.”

The study’s results have highlighted what health professionals say is the need to boost women’s health education in order to prevent heart disease and other preventable diseases.

“We are continuing our efforts to push new modes of teaching within the ministry and through the public, including in schools,” said health consultant for the ministry of health Mariam Arashi.

She told Bikyamasr.com that “the growing number of women who are dying from heart disease shouldn’t happen and this is the responsibility of us in the government to get the numbers to drop through education.”

She argued that exercise and other preventative measures can be taken by women to reduce their risk.
“It’s all about getting them to know what they can do to help their bodies,” she added.

Do Not Procrastinate

Farmers who wait for perfect weather never plant.  If they watch every cloud, they never harvest.

Friday, September 14, 2012

Insurer Shifted Risk To Policyholder

The insurance industry has a dirty little secret that threatens the retirement plans of millions of unsuspecting families. The problem is buried in the fine print of universal life policies, widely promoted since the 1980s as a new and improved version of the old-fashioned whole life insurance product our grandparents relied on as the surest way to save for retirement.

Based on my experience as a financial advisor, most people have no idea about what they’ve already lost and will discover in time that there was no “sure” in their insurance. Instead, the insurance companies shifted their risk on to to their policyholders.
 
The new and improved universal whole life policies were designed to take advantage of high interest rates and growth in stock prices to reduce premiums and boost cash values—the term for the built-in savings component of a life policy. That was the same argument the financial industry used to kill off the defined-benefit pension plans our grandparents relied on in order to sell a new generation of savers on the idea that 401-Ks had the potential for higher returns. Those higher returns might have come true had the assumptions panned out, but instead they failed in the biggest possible way.
Universal policies became attractive because they offered a higher rate of return (the dividend) on the savings component than one could get from old-fashioned whole life. The trade-off was that, unlike old-fashioned whole life, the effective premiums for the universal policy death benefit rise as the policyholder ages.
 
The insurance companies set a minimum premium payment based on a policyholder’s age at the time, and then used prevailing returns on stocks and bonds to argue that there would be enough profit on investments to cover both the rising premiums and the guaranteed dividend on the cash value. In theory, the stock market would pay the added premium costs and the dividends. Millions bought universal life policies on the basis of those projections.
 
But most skipped the fine print, signed the papers, and squirreled them away in their safe deposit boxes where they’ve been for decades. Hidden in those policies was this potential time bomb: if the projected investment returns fail to materialize, the insurance company can make up the difference by reducing the cash value—taking money out of your cash value savings account—right down to zero, if necessary. And when that’s exhausted, they can require the policyholder to make up the difference in the death benefit premiums, or risk the policy expiring worthless.
 
Unlike the 1980s and 1990s when many universal policies were sold, today’s interest rates languish at historic lows. In the past twelve years the stock markets have suffered two historic collapses. For those reaching retirement age now—coupled with the housing bust and a crippled economy—this is a recipe for failure, and it’s starting to hit home. Universal life policyholders who faithfully paid all the minimum premium payments all those years are discovering that the cash values that were to be their retirement nest eggs are nearly exhausted, and many are having to cough up huge payments just to keep the death benefit from lapsing.
 
For example, people who bought universal life policies when they were in their early thirties, with a $100,000 death benefit, might have faithfully paid minimum premiums of about $3,500 year in and year out thinking all was well and they were building their nest eggs. When they were younger and cheaper to insure, they were——those premiums went into the cash value buckets and earned untaxed dividends.
 
But as they got older, the “real” premium—the cost of insuring them—rose. A person in his or her late 50s might have a policy whose cost of insurance—the real premiums—have doubled. Five years further on, the real premium could jump to tens of thousands of dollars.
 
Most policyholders don’t realize they have a problem, until one day they need the cash value or discover that they will be left without even the life insurance.
 
How we got here is depressingly familiar in an age of financial mis-engineering. Up until the advent of universal whole life, the predominant form of life insurance for the middle class was participating—or mutual—whole life, where policyholders are treated as mutual owners of a non-public insurance company.
 
In such a policy, premium payments never change and accumulate like cash in a bank account earning modest dividends—guaranteed by the company—that are not taxed. Policyholders can borrow the money they paid in anytime for any purpose, no questions asked, which in turn reduces the death benefit to compensate. Policyholders can repay the loans later and the death benefits go back up again. In effect, policyholders are borrowing from and repaying themselves just as they do with any bank or investment account.
 
Universal life is a modern invention that takes the “sure” out of insurance by tying the benefits to the performance of stock and bond markets. In contrast, mutual whole life has ancient roots, enduring the millennia because it’s a simple and safe way to grow a nest egg while providing for one’s heirs. The practice of pooling resources this way dates as early as Roman times when people formed burial clubs to pay funeral and living expenses for member families. The earliest mutual life insurance companies in the U.S. date to the 1700s, formed by church groups to benefit their congregants in time of need.
 
By the mid-twentieth century, the mutual insurance industry had become the Rock of Gibraltar in the financial lives of millions of Americans. Mutual insurance companies invested their members’ premiums so conservatively that the industry survived the Great Depression intact. Those old-fashioned values have persisted and that’s why most mutual insurance companies came through the recent Great Recession with their blue-chip ratings unsullied while publicly-owned stock companies had to be bailed out to avoid bankruptcy.
 
I know all this because I am a reformed universal life believer. In the 1980s I became successful by helping clients replace their old reliable mutual whole life policies with the new and improved universals. By the 1990s, when some of my clients began to reach retirement age, the hidden flaws showed up when the projections fell below their targets.
 
I felt betrayed by the companies that had persuaded me that universal life was a better policy because stock markets historically averaged a better return. I wondered what I’d done wrong, so I went back and studied the fine print, discovering that these policies were written to shift risk from the company to the policyholder. Universal life policies allow companies to raise premiums or siphon off cash values if they can’t make enough from investments to meet their costs and still earn a profit.
 
That uncertainty is exactly the opposite of what whole life is supposed to accomplish—a savings nest egg that will be there no matter what happens.
 
Universal life policyholders who want to learn where they stand can request from their insurance companies two in-force ledger illustrations: one showing the state of the benefits at the current premium; the other showing the cost to keep a policy in force to age 100.
 
There are some alternatives and options for universal life policyholders, depending on how insurable they still are and other circumstances. In some cases, it’s possible to keep a policy in force at the current premium by reducing the death benefit.
 
For those interested in buying the right kinds of life insurance for their situations, start by determining whether a product being offered is from a mutual life insurance company that will be owned by you, or by a stockholder-owned company that is obligated above all to earn a profit for somebody else. Knowing the difference could determine the quality of your retirement.

Thursday, September 13, 2012

PruClinic Launched - A Great Product

It is now possible to claim on personal insurance coverage for the cost of visiting clinics — under a new medical rider launched by Prudential Assurance Malaysia Bhd last month.

This claim is possible only if the applicant already has a life insurance policy with Prudential Malaysia.

Also, the claim is only allowed if the applicant goes to any of the about 2,200 general practitioner clinics signed up with Prudential Malaysia.

This new medical rider, called PRUclinic care, is offered to its policyholders aged between one and 60 and will cover RM1,500 worth of clinical treatments annually for a two-year benefit term.

Chief marketing officer Fiona Liao said in a statement the PRUclinic care rider is available with premiums starting from RM188 a year and involves the issue of a cashless card that will be recognised at its panel clinics.

She said the new offer ensures the healthcare needs, especially for young families, are covered.

“More and more people are feeling the financial pinch from visiting their local clinic due to the escalating cost of medicine and consultation fee, which is why we created PRUclinic care.

“Besides families, it is suitable for self employed individuals and even small and medium enterprises who wish to offer medical coverage to their employees.”

PRUclinic care can be purchased together with PAMB’s PRUlink one, PRUlife ready and PRUmy child investment-linked insurance plans.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Sukuk At Retail Level

Retail investors can now invest in Malaysian government bonds and sukuk with the launch of the retail bonds and sukuk framework by the Securities Commission (SC) yesterday. By next year, this access will be expanded to include issuances by public-listed companies and banks.

Relevant guidelines and regulations are expected to be issued in January. The SC said the retail bonds and sukuk framework allows retail investors to invest directly in bonds and sukuk. The framework enables retail bonds and sukuk to be issued and traded either on the exchange (Bursa Malaysia) or over-the-counter (OTC) via appointed banks.

The SC has approved Bursa Malaysia's rules and listing requirements to facilitate the offering of retail bonds and sukuk. "The retail bonds and sukuk framework is intended to meet retail investors' demand for access to a wider range of investment products. Issuers will now also have access to a larger pool of investors," said SC chairman Datuk Ranjit Ajit Singh.

He said during the introductory phase, retail investors will be able to invest in bonds and sukuk issued or guaranteed by the Malaysian government. Such issuances will naturally be subject to their own funding needs and requirements.

This phased approach will provide retail investors time to familiarise themselves with investing and trading in bonds and sukuk, the SC said. It added that the SC, Bursa and market will work closely to enhance the level of awareness among investors in the bond and sukuk market.

Banking and financial institutions welcomed the framework, saying that it is a much-awaited move that will lead to the widening of the range of investible assets for retail investors.

Saturday, September 8, 2012

RM6,000 Is Not Enough

Higher deductions for Employees Provident Fund (EPF) and life insurance: The current tax relief of RM6,000 for EPF and life insurance is inadequate. For most families in the middle-income bracket, their EPF deductions alone are more than RM6,000 per annum. This amount should be raised to at least RM10,000.
 

Wanna Claim - Die Fast

Terms and conditions of terminal illness payouts on life cover should be reformed to take into account advances in medicine, it is argued.
 
Life insurance policyholders may not be covered under terminal illness cover because they are living too long. The standard terms and conditions for terminal illness benefit on life cover is that if the policyholder is diagnosed with a terminal illness then if their life expectancy is less than 12 months, the policy pays out straightaway.

The idea of terminal illness benefit is that as the policy is going to pay out anyway, then it might as well pay out when the policyholder can benefit from it.

Better life expectancy

However, if life expectancy is 12 months or more then payout s are not made until the policyholder dies. But terminal illness insurance policyholders could be left ineligible for cover because they are not dying quickly enough.

The standard wording of policies says policyholders must be given less than 12 months to live in order to qualify as a terminal illness case.

But advances in medical science mean even those with serious conditions have prolonged life expectancy and increasingly, people are living longer beyond diagnosis, reports Financial Times Adviser.

Die quicker

This means that in theory, someone with a terminal illness who has 18 months left on their life insurance policy could miss a payout if they live beyond the end of the term.

Someone in this position would not be able to renew cover once their life cover expires - and as they won't get a payout under terminal cover, their family will get nothing.

The paper says: "Put bluntly, they would be better off dying sooner." It adds that there could be the situation where dying policyholders refuse treatment so they can get a payout.

Andy Milburn, acting head of marketing at Ageas, told the paper that "this is not what insurance should be for" and added he would like to see the industry have a discussion about changing the wording on terminal illness payments.

Non Disclosure - Upturned by Thai Court

The business of life insurance today in Thailand is very competitive. Insurance companies advertise heavily via radio, TV, newspapers, websites, billboards and other media channels, attempting to convince consumers that purchasing an insurance policy is a simple and quick thing to do.

For example, consumers may be able to purchase a life insurance policy over the internet or phone without meeting with an insurance broker in person. This convenient way of entering into insurance contracts leads to carelessness, whether intentionally or unintentionally, in disclosing all relevant facts. It also gives insurance companies the opportunity to refuse coverage or payment under a policy in the future.

In practice, the insurance company will ask the applicant to complete a form in which the applicant must declare all health and medical information and other important facts. Providing untrue or half-true information or failing to disclose important facts could release the insurance company from liability under the policy.

The insured person is responsible for disclosing all facts that would affect the insurer's decision regarding coverage and insurance premiums. Section 865 of the Civil and Commercial Code (CCC) stipulates the following:

If at the time of making the contract, the assured, or, in case of insurance on life, the person upon whose life or death the payment of the sum payable depends, knowingly omits to disclose facts that would have induced the insurer to raise the premium or to refuse to enter into the contract or knowingly makes false statements in regard to such facts, the contract is voidable.

If such right of avoidance is not exercised within one month from the time when the insurer has knowledge of the ground of avoidance or within five years from the date of the contract, such right is extinguished.

The law does not define the facts that "would have induced the insurer to raise the premium or to refuse to enter into the contact". However, the Supreme Court has decided that such facts include the following:

- Health and medical information. The insurance company will demand a higher premium or refuse coverage if the insured person has a serious disease such as HIV/Aids, cancer, chronic renal disease, diabetes or cardiac disease.

- Capacity to pay the premium. Capacity to pay the insurance premium is a factor that may affect an insurance company's decision to cover an individual. The Supreme Court made this ruling in the context of a case where the insured person made false statements regarding his career and falsely confirmed he paid the premium himself. In fact, the insured was unemployed, and someone else paid the premium.

Health and medical information is the most important factor. However, there are limits on the instances when an insurance company can deny coverage for reasons of nondisclosure of medical information.

In Dika Decision 2295/2545, the Supreme Court determined the insurance company was still liable under the life insurance policy even though it found after the insured's death that the insured did not reveal he suffered from hypoglycaemia and had been admitted to the hospital several times for that condition. The insurer informed the court that if it had known of the health condition, it would have refused to insure this person.

Nevertheless, the Supreme Court held that revealing such a health problem would not have caused the insurance company to refuse coverage, as the insured's death was due to a motorcycle accident and not derived from his health problem. In addition, the insurer's doctor had completed a checkup of the insured person and made no comment.

An insurance company is also entitled to void or terminate a policy within one month from the date that the said information becomes known to the company, according to the second paragraph of Section 865 of the CCC. This provision was tested in Dika Decision 4379/2530, in which the Supreme Court held that the insurer was still liable under the policy, as it did not terminate or void the contract within one month after discovering the insured person had falsely confirmed he was healthy and did not disclose he had epilepsy.

If the insurer in this case had exercised its right of avoidance within one month from the date of knowing the false information, then it would not have been required to pay compensation under the insurance policy.

In sum, the consumer should take care to reveal all important information regarding his or her health or medical history and capacity to pay premiums before entering into any life insurance contract. This is to prevent the contract from being voidable.

The promptness and ease in obtaining a life insurance policy may not guarantee that the insured or beneficiary will be compensated promptly and easily when filing a claim for compensation under said policy.

MDRT - Malaysia Ranked 8th

Malaysian life insurance and financial advisors is currently ranked at eighth spot out of 81 member countries worldwide with the largest number of Million Dollar Roundtable (MDRT) members.
Manmohan Abdullah, Zone chairman, Southeast Asia, MDRT Membership Communications Committee (MDRT MCC), said Malaysia had 935 MDRT members, of which 52 were Court of the Table (COT) members while nine were Top of the Table (TOT) members.

He said Malaysia stood at number eight in the list which was headed by the US, followed by South Korea, Japan, India, Hong Kong, China and Canada.

“We are very fortunate to have such large financial professionals in the country and region,” Manmohan said in a statement yesterday.

He added that MDRT had created various channels of improvement for the life agency force and financial advisors nationwide such as mentoring programme, development supporting programme for agents who would like to obtain MDRT recognition, MDRT Network Channel for MDRT members all over the world to communicate and share information and knowledge to catapult their level of production.

Therefore, Manmohan said insurance companies in Malaysia were advised to work together with MDRT MCC Malaysia to increase the MDRT pools within their organisations to better enhance professionalism for each of the company agency force.

MDRT is an international, independent association that represents the world’s best sales professionals in life insurance-based financial services industry.

The membership is very much about promoting, demanding excellence from members in the area of client service and productivity and all this must be delivered within a framework of the highest ethical standards.

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Prudential Exit Taiwan

Prudential Plc, Britain's largest insurer, is offering its entire stake in Taiwan-listed China Life Insurance Co Ltd in a deal worth about US$160 million (S$200 million), IFR reported on Tuesday, citing a term sheet of the transaction.

Prudential is offering 179.5 million shares in China Life Insurance in a range of T$26.05 (S$1.09) to T$26.3, the equivalent of a discount of 2 per cent to 3 per cent to Tuesday's close of T$26.85, added IFR, a Thomson Reuters publication.

No Pay - It is Collision Not Accident

He had been speeding in a part of town which was built-up, and where traffic was to be expected at all hours. He also failed to stop at the traffic lights, which had been red for a "significant" period of time.

These are some of the reasons why the vehicle insurer of Ferrari driver Ma Chi, 31, is withdrawing its coverage for the crash in May, which left three dead.The reasons were outlined in a defence and counter-claim filed in the High Court on Monday by lawyers acting for AXA Insurance Singapore.

The document said: "Ma Chi was doing an act which he knew or ought to have known was courting imminent danger to himself and others." The crash, it added, was "highly probably, foreseeable and to be expected".
In the counter-claim, the insurer's lawyers said that the incident was due to a "collision", not an accident. In the insurance industry, this means that the driver was aware that his actions would cause an accident, thereby voiding the insurer's liability to make a payout.

It also stated that amounts from claims made for those injured or killed in the crash should come from Mr Ma's estate.

On May 12, Mr Ma allegedly beat a red light and crashed into a ComfortDelGro taxi, which then hit a motorcycle at the junction of Rochor Road and Victoria Street. Mr Ma, a financial investor from Sichuan, died at the scene while cabby Cheng Teck Hock, 52, died in hospital along with his Japanese passenger, Ms Shigemi Ito, 41. Both the motorcyclist and a female passenger in the Ferrari were injured.

According to a Health Sciences Authority toxicology report dated June 5, Mr Ma had not consumed alcohol before getting behind the wheel. AXA first informed Mr Ma's family of its decision to repudiate its liability in July. Last month, the family - through its lawyer, Mr Wendell Wong- filed a suit asking the High Court to rule that the crash was indeed an accident.

Great Eastern - Agency Not Happy

Twenty- four life insurance agents led by Great Eastern Life Field Force and Agents Association of Malaysia (Gelfaam) Miri chairlady Tan Ah Choo (in a picket in front of the Great Eastern Life Assurance (Malaysia) Berhad Miri branch office recently. The aim of the picketing is to request Great Eastern to remove the CEO for allegedly not settling the long outstanding contractual issues of agents. It was estimated that one third of Gelfaam members in Miri participated in the nationwide protest which was held together with Group Sales Managers Association.

Changing Market

9 Things will dissapear in our liftime. Whether these changes are good or bad depends in part on how we adapt to them. But, ready or not, here they come.

The Post Office - They are so deeply in financial trouble that there is probably no way to sustain it long term. Email, Fastway, Fed Ex, and UPS have just about wiped out the minimum revenue needed to keep the post office alive. Most of your mail every day is junk mail and bills.

The Cheque - Britain is already laying the groundwork to do away with cheque by 2018. It costs the financial system billions of dollars a year to process cheques. Plastic cards and online transactions will lead to the eventual demise of the cheque. This plays right into the death of the post office. If you never paid your bills by mail and never received them by mail, the post office would absolutely go out of business.

The Newspaper The younger generation simply doesn't read the newspaper. They certainly don't subscribe to a daily delivered print edition. That may go the way of the milkman, butcher, baker and fruit and veg man. As for reading the paper online, get ready to pay for it. The rise in mobile Internet devices and e-readers has caused all the newspaper and magazine publishers to form an alliance. They have met with Apple, Amazon, and the major cell phone companies to develop a model for paid subscription services.

The Book
You say you will never give up the physical book that you hold in your hand and turn the literal pages. Many said the same thing about downloading music from iTunes because they wanted hard copy CD. When they discovered they get albums for half the price without ever leaving home to get the latest music they changed their minds. The same thing will happen with books. You can browse a bookstore online and even read a preview chapter before you buy. And the price is less than half that of a real book. Just think of the convenience! Once you start flicking your fingers on the screen instead of the book, you find that you are lost in the story, can't wait to see what happens next, and you forget that you're holding a gadget instead of a book.

The Land Line Telephone Unless you have a large family and make a lot of local calls, you don't need it anymore. Most people keep it simply because they've always had it. But you are paying double charges for that extra service. All the cell phone companies will let you call customers using the same cell provider for no charge against your minutes

Music This is one of the saddest parts of the change story. The music industry is dying a slow death. Not just because of illegal downloading. It's the lack of innovative new music being given a chance to get to the people who would like to hear it. Greed and corruption is the problem. The record labels and the radio conglomerates are simply self-destructing. Over 40% of the music purchased today is "catalogue items," meaning traditional music that the public is familiar with. Older established artists. This is also true on the live concert circuit. To explore this fascinating and disturbing topic further, check out the book, "Appetite for Self-Destruction" by Steve Knopper, and the video documentary, "Before the Music Dies."

Television Revenues to the networks are down dramatically. Not just because of the economy. Many people are watching TV and movies streamed from their computers. And they're playing games and doing lots of other things that take up the time that used to be spent watching TV. Prime time shows have degenerated down to lower than the lowest common denominator. Cable rates are skyrocketing and commercials run about every 4 minutes and 30 seconds. It's time for the cable companies to be put out of our misery. People will choose what they want to watch online and through Netflix.

The "Things" That You Own Many of the very possessions that we used to own are still in our lives, but we may not actually own them in the future. They may simply reside in "the cloud." Today your computer has a hard drive and you store your pictures, music, movies, and documents. Your software is on a CD or DVD, and you can always re-install it if need be. But all of that is changing. Apple, Microsoft, and Google are all finishing up their latest "cloud services." That means that when you turn on a computer, the Internet will be built into the operating system. So, Windows, Google, and the Mac OS will be tied straight into the Internet. If you click an icon, it will open something in the Internet cloud. If you save something, it will be saved to the cloud. And you may pay a monthly subscription fee to the cloud provider. In this virtual world, you can access your music or your books, or your whatever from any laptop or handheld device. That's the good news. But, will you actually own any of this "stuff" or will it all be able to disappear at any moment in a big "Poof?" Will most of the things in our lives be disposable and whimsical? It makes you want to run to the cupboard and pull out that photo album, grab a book from the shelf, or open up a CD case and pull out the insert.

Privacy
If there ever was a concept that we can look back on nostalgically, it would be privacy. That's gone. It's been gone for a long time anyway. There are cameras on the street, in most of the buildings, and even built into your computer and cell phone. But you can be sure that 24/7, "They" know who you are and where you are, right down to the GPS coordinates, and the Google Street View. If you buy something, your habit is put into a zillion profiles, and your ads will change to reflect those habits. "They" will try to get you to buy something else. Again and again.

Networking

The word – “networking” makes many people confused as many see it as a business activity to serve oneself and we need to act in a different way. Many view it as insincere at best, manipulative at worst. In fact, networking is supposed to be genuine and friendly.

Reid Hoffman, the guru of networking and also the co-founder of LinkedIn, said that building a genuine relationship with another person depends on at least two abilities. The first is seeing the world from another person’s perspective; the second ability is being able to think about how you can collaborate with and help the other person rather than thinking about what you can get.

These two abilities are the foundations to get the best out of networking. Networking is about making connections and building mutually beneficial, enduring relationships. At the end of the day, it is not just about who you know, but more importantly who knows you.

10 tips on Networking

1. Have a plan – know what you want to achieve after the networking sessionSet a goal and be prepared in any networking session. Are you going to look for job opportunities, project funding or a co-founder?

2. Be clear about what you doTell a story about yourself in 60s. Include your most up-to-date works and what you are looking for.

3. It’s far more important to understand their needs before you tell them about your needsPeople are selfish. We always care about ourselves first. So, show interest to other’s needs and they will do the same.

4. You don’t need to know the most people, just the right peopleMore is not always the better. It is more meaningful to connect with five people who can actually help you rather than getting 50 business cards without much interaction.

5. Start by offering praise, not requesting helpEveryone loves to be praised – but do it genuinely. Get to know each other more before start requesting for help.

6. Remember namesA person’s name is to that person the sweetest and most important sound in any language– Dale Cargenie.

7. Ask open-ended questionsAn open-ended question requires an answer greater than a single word or two. A closed-ended question can be answered with a simple “Yes,” “No,” or other very simple answer.
Perhaps the most famous (or infamous) open-ended question is “How does this make you feel?”

8. Be a connecter – Try to provide as much value as you possibly can – networking is about helping others tooDon’t hesitate to share your network or connect two persons you know personally – if they could be a great partner in business or building new friendships. Yes, networking is about helping each other.

9. Don’t worry about rejection. It’s OK to get a No
You’ll meet people who can’t or don’t want to help you. That’s the reality of life. Just don’t take it too seriously. Move on.

10. Follow upRelationships are living, breathing things. Feed, nurture, and care about them; they grow. Neglect them; they die. You might be nodding your head at the importance of staying in touch. Send a follow up email or a thank you note after your encounter

Sunday, September 2, 2012

Clawback Agent's Commission

The financial planning community has come out in force to slam the FSC’s "ridiculous" plans to claw back life insurance commissions for policies that lapse within three years.

The FSC’s latest proposed anti-churning measures have opened up a can of worms amongst Australia’s financial planning community, many of whom are despairing at the potential financial punishment that they could face simply for doing their job properly.

The new proposals suggest that planners face commission clawbacks of 100% for policies that lapse within one year, 75% within two years and 50% within three years.

However, Wealth Professional readers have descended upon our online forum in their droves to pick holes in the FSC’s plans.

“The insurance companies improve their products every year or so in an attempt to win the Life Company of the year award. As an adviser are we to ignore industry information and not bring these enhancements to the clients’ attention? Please advise!” wrote Scott.

“On occasion, despite receiving advice to the contrary, a client will decide to cancel their insurance policy for reasons only understood by them. This decision may be beyond the adviser's control, and has nothing to do with churning. Despite this, the FSC is proposing to financially penalise the adviser! Come on John Brogden – give us a break!” added Louisa Jammal.

Meanwhile, Paul Bilson claimed that the life insurance companies are far from blameless.
“We already have 100% clawback in the first year but to be penalised 2 + 3 years after you do all the work for the client due to unforseen changes in their circumstances is blatantly unfair. The insurance companies have been ruthless trying to take over other policies and business from competitors and then try to paint advisers in a poor light – who can forget the offers from a large Insurance Company to take over AIG/AIA business when the parent company was in diabolicals in America, despite the fact all of their insurance liabilities were covered under APRA? Very disappointing,” he wrote.

Daniel also put the insurers in his crosshairs, writing that they “are increasing their premiums exponentially this is one way to recover costs,” adding that “the adviser pays again!”.

There was also significant concern over the way in which the FSC’s proposals could in fact end up punishing financial advisers for fulfilling their duty to act in their clients' best interests.

“What about clients best interest?” asked a reader calling themself The X factor. “Are we to not recommend upgrades because of clawbacks? What happens when the client takes the adviser to task because the adviser has put his own interest first (of not losing the commission). Also watch how individual insurance companies will waive the clawback when it suits it (especially when insurance is revamped). Ridiculous and unworkable, let’s face it advisers will not wear it.”

Commenting on Synchron director Don Trapnell’s suggestion that – should the FSC proposition to have a three-year responsibility period be universally adopted – Synchron will consider making a formal complaint to the ACCC for anti-competitive behaviour, Meike - Suggars & Associates, said the following:

“I'd support the complaint to ACCC. How are we meant to run a viable business if we can't bank on income until 3 years after the work was done? That's completely unrealistic and certainly does not work in the best interest of the client. They'll be sent off to 'direct insurers' who are purely transactional and don't offer the ongoing service that often results in a policy upgrade. Without this ongoing service, the client is likely to be left with a policy that no longer protects their circumstances the way it should.”

Credit Life Insurance

Finance managers sometimes refer to it as “credit life”, and it’s essentially a decreasing term life insurance policy that can be added to a car finance contract. “Decreasing” means that the payout amount is designed to cover the loan balance at any given point in the loan term. As the loan is paid down, the insurance coverage also decreases to match the loan balance.

“Term” refers to a policy that covers a fixed period, is non-renewable and builds no cash value (you can’t borrow against it). In addition, its cost is not tied to credit underwriting scores and, in some states, age  limitations are placed on borrowers.

How to buy
If you elect to get credit life insurance you’ll need to do so at the time you sign the loan documents. The monthly cost is based on the beginning loan balance and the premium is added to the amount financed, raising the monthly car payment.

The pros and cons
Only you can decide if you need credit life insurance. Here are some points to consider:

The good:
1. Peace of mind – if you should die before the loan is paid off, the insurance coverage will pay the remaining balance and your estate won’t be responsible for any balance due

2. Convenience – since the insurance premium is included in your car payment, there is no additional bill you need to pay.

The bad:
1. Cost – typically, credit life insurance is more expensive to buy than a comparable decreasing term life policy.
2. Interest expense – because it becomes part of the loan, interest is charged on the policy cost.
3. Single borrowers - if there is no co-signer and you’re single, even if you were to die your family cannot be held responsible for any loan balance.

When To Buy Life Insurance

Life insurance primary purpose is to protect those left behind when a loved one dies, it also plays an important role in tax planning. Remember, all things being equal, the younger you are, the lower the ongoing cost of the premiums. And females pay less, since the mortality tables tell us they live longer.

My friend recently lost her spouse. A basic funeral — pine box, one-day visitation, service and cremation — cost $5,500. Most people need to earn more than $7,000 to generate $5,500. However, life insurance costs only pennies on the dollar, and the death benefit is tax free.

There comes a point in your life, when you might still be your parents’ kid, but you are also an adult. Someone age 19. High school complete. Been working at a part-time job. Out drinking with your friends on the weekend. Going to college in a couple of weeks.

While statistics say the chance of bad things happening when you’re young is remote, you never know. Take responsibility. A 19-year-old non-smoking male pays about $25 a month for $25,000 of whole life insurance. The premium never goes up. The insurance never runs out.

Somewhere on the horizon, not very far out, in all likelihood, you’re going to hook up with someone, and you will begin to procreate. The little rugrats are going to be looking at you for love and support.

If you or your spouse are taken out of the picture, the results will be devastating. Don’t let the financial world change too. Your family should still be able to stay in the home and play hockey or take piano lessons.

Some people think their group insurance is all they need. They would be wrong. People change jobs and companies change benefit packages. You are responsible for you.

A 26-year-old guy in great health can buy $500,000 of term life insurance where the premium won’t change for 20 years for less than $30 a month. If he ramps it up to $80 a month, he can have all his premiums back if he doesn’t die before the end of the 20 years. The death benefit is tax free.

You’ve more than replaced the next 10 years of income if you earn $1,000 a week. To say nothing of the interest.

You buy a house and take out a mortgage? Take the mortgage insurance from the bank. Normally, these group rates are favourable.

Personal mortgage life insurance on the other hand is less attractive. Instead, every five years you might want to buy $250,000 of additional term insurance. A 31-year-old male pays $30 a month for this coverage with the premium guaranteed for 10 years.

At some point, your child rearing responsibilities will lessen. Should you cancel the insurance? Probably not.

Instead, you might want to start exchanging it for some permanent insurance. You know that small apartment building you bought that you’re so proud of, since you appear to be a financial genius? At your death, it’s considered sold, and generally the profits are taxable.

Can you say fire sale? Don’t let your heirs have to sell it or any other investments to pay the tax man. Instead, let the discounted dollars of the tax free life insurance proceeds clean up your estate.

And if you leave them more than is needed, it’ll be a nice problem for them to solve while they are grieving your loss

AIA Goes iPOS

AIA Singapore has launched what it touts to be the insurance industry's first interactive point-of-sale (iPOS) system. It is aimed at helping agents cut down time in getting their policy applications submitted and enable customers to receive insurance advice and coverage as quickly as within a day.

AIA is the first insurer globally to launch a standalone, mobile point-of-sale system via an app running on Apple's iPad tablet. The app will help facilitate the whole process from fact-finding and analysis of the customer's financial health to recommendation of suitable policies and submission, Tan said.

The Singapore office spearheaded the project as it was a critical market for AIA and is one of the most connected countries in the world. Customers here would be familiar with the use of e-signatures to seal the policy application, and there was a ready pool of talent locally to help the company develop the system. This "multimillion dollar" project is not limited to Singapore though, but will span the whole Asia-Pacific, or specifically, the 14 markets in which AIA has an operational presence.

The next markets to receive the app will be Malaysia, Indonesia and Hong Kong, but the system will have to be localized to suit the market's regulatory requirements and needs. This means the rollout will be carried out within the next 12 to 18 months.

Cutting down time, paper
One of the key advantages of the iPOS tool is cutting down the time agents need to submit financial health reviews and policy forms to their agency leaders for review and approval. Without this, the underwriting process cannot be initiated. With the paper-and-pen method, AIA's financial services consultants will have to lug around stacks of forms and advisories to present to potential clients, and need to frequently return to the office to get the required approvals and receipts for customers.

The iPOS method is expected to cut the whole submission process time down from 1 to 2 days to just a few hours.

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Will - Last Testament

 
There’s something about writing a will that puts people off. It’s almost taboo is some households with many scoffing at the very idea or labelling others as morbid for thinking about death. However such is life that you could meet your untimely end even when you’re young and carefree.

In January 2007, a local daily reported there were RM40 billion worth of assets unclaimed by heirs of deceased Malaysians simply because there was no will that stipulated who got what and how.

Instead of having everything you own end up in limbo, why not consider the many benefits of having a legal will written.

A will is simply a written legal document that facilitates the distribution of assets to our loved ones upon your demise. Should you die without a will, your assets and belongings are frozen until all the nitty-gritty is sorted out. This process can take anywhere from a few months to a few years except in the case of insurance and EPF savings where the nominees are the beneficiaries. Now if you haven’t even nominated someone yet for these, do it today!

Wills aren’t just to instruct over the inheritance of cash and property. Many families have gold and precious stones, expensive silver, antique furniture or sentimental possessions like books, paintings or even cutlery.

Have we not heard of or experienced for ourselves squabbling family members tearing at each other’s throats for a piece of property, no matter how inconsequential or inexpensive, simply because the deceased failed to write a will?

Writing a will gives you the power to put your preferences onto paper effectively leaving no room for any undesirable character to weasel his way in and take off with your precious loot. You can also appoint your preferred executors (preferably a well organised, business minded person) and trustee to manage and distribute your estate as well as appoint a guardian should you have children below 18 years of age.

You wouldn’t want your kids to end up with the wicked uncle who thinks child labour is admirable, would you?

A will also minimises legal formalities and expenses and allows the administration and distribution of assets to the intended parties to be carried out with relative ease. Translated that means no legal delays, no family squabbles… possibly no slit throats either.

If you’re thinking about writing a will, don’t do a homemade version. These can be disastrous from a legal point of view. Important details could be left out or the way you phrase your wishes could leave it open to interpretation. Best to consult your solicitor or a professional will writer who will cover all angles.

By the way, your will isn’t only about the handing out of assets or possessions to intended family, friends or charitable organisations. Your will can also stipulate specific funeral arrangements, like your wish to be buried or cremated.

Some people also stipulate the kind of music they wish played at their funerals or the kind of flowers that should be arranged on their caskets. Maybe you’d like 100 doves to be released at your gravesite… clearly the choice is yours and yours alone but only if you have a will!