Disability, Life, and Anti-Money Laundering

Table of Contents

 

Chapter 1 - Protecting Income: Disability Insurance

1

 

Assessing Contributions

4

 

Canada’s Disability Insurance Plan

7

 

STD and LTD Benefits

9

 

Disability Impacts the Family

10

 

Historically Speaking

11

 

Disability Statutes and Programs

14

 

Council of Canadians with Disabilities

15

 

Employment Issues Facing Those with a Disability

17

 

Disability Costs to Society

18

 

Disability and Human Costs

19

 

Disability and Physical Costs

20

 

Disability and Social Interaction

21

 

Disability and the Resulting Financial Costs

21

 

Insuring Disability Through Private Insurance

22

 

Earned Income is an Asset

23

 

Defining Disability for Insurance Purposes

24

 

“Regular Occupation” Definition

24

 

“Transitional Your Occupation” Definition (TYO)

26

 

“Modified Own Occupation” Definition

26

 

“Disability in Any Occupation” Definition

27

 

Involuntary Unemployment

27

 

Can the Policy Be Canceled or non-Renewed by the Insurer?

28

 

Policy Elimination Period

28

 

Disability Benefit Period

29

 

Occupational Classification

29

 

General Description of Occupational Classes (Chart)

31

 

Benefit Limitations Based on Occupational Classes (Chart)

32

 

The Uninsurable

33

 

Partial Disability

34

 

Medical Underwriting

35

 

Financial Underwriting

37

 

Guaranteed Future Insurability

38

 

Renewability

39

 

Policy Pricing

39

 

Group Disability Insurance

39

 

Disability Insurance and Hobbies

40

 

Selecting Financially Strong Insurance Companies

41

 

Insurance Rating System Criteria

41

 

The Insurance Rating System’s Values

41

 

Is the Rating Trustworthy?

42

 

Financial Security Ratings

44

 

Insurer Risk

45

 

Ethical Issues Relating to the Financial Industry

45

 

Suitability

49

 

Conflicts of Interest

49

 

Prioritizing the Needs of the Client

49

 

Canadian Council of Insurance Regulators (CCIR)

49

 

Face-to-Face Presentations

49

 

Adequate Communication Skills

50

 

Finding the Right Products

51

 

Full Disclosure

51

 

Recognizing and Addressing a Conflict of Interest

52

 

Placing the Client’s Interests First

53

 

CCIR Considers Issues in the U.S.

55

Chapter 2 - Life Insurance

56

 

Insurance Agents

56

 

Life Insurance Contracts (terminology)

57

 

Life’s a Gamble

58

 

Defining Risk

59

 

Comfort Level

60

 

Insurance Risks, Perils, & Hazards

61

 

Chance of Loss

61

 

Morale & Moral Hazards

61

 

Law of Large Numbers

62

 

Types of Risk

62

 

Investment Risk

63

 

Issuance

64

 

Insurable Interest in Life Insurance

65

 

A Fairytale Case Study

67

 

Stranger-Originated Life Insurance (STOLI)

68

 

Charitable Use of STOLIs

70

 

Life and Viatical Settlement Agreements

72

 

Definitions

72

 

Understanding the Viatical Product

74

 

How do Viatical Settlements Work?

75

 

Purchasing Partial Policies

75

 

Viatical Participant Confidentiality

75

 

Paying the Viator

76

 

Buyer’s Remorse

76

 

Following Payment for the Life Policy

76

 

Checking Health Status through Physicians

77

 

Extra Policy Benefits

77

 

Other Available Options (Besides Selling the Policy)

77

 

What Every Policyowner Needs to be Aware Of

77

 

Viatical Settlement Development

78

 

Medical Underwriting

79

 

Insurance Underwriting

80

 

Consumer’s View

81

 

Policy Ownership Transfer

83

 

Policy Premium Payments

83

 

Outstanding Policy Loans

86

 

Additional Investment Fees

86

 

Escrow Trust Accounts

87

 

Viatical and Life Settlement Disclosures

88

 

Personal Information Protection & Electronic Documents Act

89

 

Insurance Policy Effective Dates

91

 

Material Facts

91

 

Beneficiary Designations in General

92

 

Estate Creation

94

 

Changing Social Times

94

 

Two Basic Insurance Terms: Premium & Peril

95

 

Betting Against the Insurance Company

95

 

Good Financial Plans Involve Life Insurance Contracts

96

 

The Intent

96

 

Estate Planning: Procedures, Not Products

97

 

Providing for Others Through Planning

98

 

Using Discipline to Achieve Security

99

 

Clarifying Client Objectives

99

 

The Need for Broader Knowledge

99

 

Basic Goals of Life Insurance

100

 

Life Insurance Trusts

100

 

Trust Beneficiaries

101

 

Kinds of Life Insurance

101

 

An Estate Planning Tool

101

 

Term Insurance: No Money, Just Coverage

102

 

Whole Life Insurance: the Granddaddy

103

 

Endowment Insurance: Forced Savings

103

 

Universal Life: Separating Expenses

104

 

Variable Universal Life (VUL): Few Guarantees

104

 

Survivorship Life: Insuring Two or More People

106

 

Single Premium Whole Life: One Payment

107

 

Buy-Sell Agreements

107

 

Annuities

108

 

Annuity Terminology

109

 

General Policy Provisions

112

 

Planning for Increased Life Spans

113

 

Longevity Risk

114

 

Variable Annuities (Segregated Funds)

114

 

Maturity Guarantees / Death Benefit Guarantees

115

 

Performance of Funds is Not Guaranteed

115

 

Types of Contracts

116

 

Registered Retirement Savings Plans (RRSP) Section 146 of the Income Tax Act

117

 

Non-Registered Annuities

118

 

Prescribed Treatment / Non-Prescribed Treatment

119

 

RRSP Types

120

 

Contributions

121

 

Spousal RRSP

122

 

Taxation of Deferred Annuities

122

 

The Decision to Buy

122

 

Life Income Funds

123

 

Immediate Annuities

124

 

Payout Options

124

 

Single Life Payout Option

125

 

Joint-and-Survivor Payout Option

126

 

Installment Refund Life Payout Option

126

 

Variable Annuity Payout Option

127

 

Term Certain Payout Option

127

 

Other Products

127

 

Dollar Cost Averaging

128

 

Annuity Beneficiary Designations

128

 

Annuity Contingent Beneficiaries

129

 

The Insurance Contract

130

 

Deposits

131

 

Surrender Penalties

131

 

Retirement Savings Plan (RSP) Endorsements

132

 

Switches

132

 

Investment Options

133

 

Product Suitability

134

 

Saving Adequately

134

 

The Reason for the Goal (the Reward)

134

 

Determining Goals

137

 

Basic Product Information Requirements

139

 

Determining Product Suitability

139

 

Product Replacement

141

 

Identifying Suitability Issues

142

 

It is Not a Liquidity Issue, But Rather a Suitability Issue

143

 

A Comprehensive Financial Plan

144

 

The Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada (IIROC)

146

 

  Overview: Our requirements are not “one-size-fits all”

146

 

  Know-your-Client

147

 

      What is the KYC obligation?

147

 

      What types of KYC information must be collected?

147

 

      What specific KYC information must be collected for suitability determination purposes?

149

 

      Is the KYC obligation the same for all accounts?

154

 

      Who carries out the KYC process?

155

 

      Interactions with the client

155

 

      Use of one set of KYC information for multiple accounts

157

 

      Additional considerations for managed accounts

158

 

      What questions should be asked when inheriting a client relationship?

158

 

      What if the client won’t provide the information?

158

 

      How often must client information be updated?

159

 

      Is there anything that should not be done?

160

 

  Suitability

161

 

      What is the suitability determination obligation?

161

 

      How should a suitability determination be carried out?

163

 

      What is the difference between account appropriateness and suitability?

165

 

      When must a suitability determination be made?

167

 

      Can suitability be assessed on a combined basis for multiple accounts?

169

 

      What are the obligations when a client has accounts at multiple dealers?

170

 

      Under what circumstances can household account suitability determinations be performed?

171

 

      What are the obligations when a client has accounts in separate business lines at the same dealer?

171

 

      Who can assess suitability?

173

 

      What if a client wants to make an unsuitable trade?

173

 

      Is there anything that Dealers and Registered Individuals should not do?

173

 

      IIROC review of a Registered Individual’s or Dealer’s suitability determination

173

 

  Applicable Rules

174

 

  Previous Guidance Note(s)

174

 

Annuity Surrender Values and Penalties

174

 

Financially Sound Insurers

175

Chapter 3 - Anti-Money Laundering

176

 

Client Due Diligence

178

 

Determining Identification in a Face-to-Face Interview

178

 

Identification of New Business Clients

179

 

Confirming the Client’s Business

180

 

Collection of Beneficial Owner & Director Information

180

 

Not-For-Profit Organizations

180

 

Exceptions to Requirements for Business Clients

181

 

Third-Party Determination

181

 

Politically Exposed Foreign Person (PEP) Requirement

182

 

Retention of Client Records

182

 

Suspicious Transactions

182

 

“Red Flag” Indicators

183

 

Tipping Off

183

 

Large Cash Transaction Reporting

183

 

The Proceeds of Crime and Terrorist Financing Administrative Monetary Penalties Regulations

183

 

Terrorism Produces Insurer Risk

184

 

Proceeds of Crime and Terrorist Financing Act

185

 

Object of the Act

185

 

Company Objectives

187

 

Policy Application

187

 

Restricted Businesses and Entities

188

 

AML Education

188

 

A Change in Thinking

188

 

Product Identification

190

 

Money Laundering Indicators Not Unique to Insurance Products

194

 

Characteristics of the Money Launderer

194

 

Last Page

196

 

 

United Insurance Educators, Inc.

PO Box 1030

Eatonville, WA 98328

 

(800) 735-1155