Page 293 - DCOM304_INDIAN_FINANCIAL_SYSTEM
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Indian Financial System




                    Notes            Surrender Charges
                                     Policies with annual premium of above ` 25,000 will suffer lower charges but the maximum
                                     charges are almost twice that in the other case. The new rule is far superior to the practice
                                     of deducting 30-40 per cent of the first year's premium when the policy holder discontinues
                                     the premium within the first three years.

                                     The minimum three-year lock-in period in ULIP, which actually triggered this episode,
                                     would henceforth be extended to five years. The biggest advantage of the change is that
                                     policyholders, instead  of suffering higher upfront charge, would  henceforth pay  the
                                     distribution charges evenly till the lock-in period, thereby a higher amount of the premium
                                     will go towards investment.
                                     Continuing its macro management of the net yield  to policyholders,  the regulator  has
                                     fixed net yields for periods less than 10 years. In its earlier guidelines it has prescribed the
                                     difference between gross  yield (return) to net  yield at  300 basis points (3  percentage
                                     points) for a policy maturity of 10 years and 225 basis points for maturity above 15 years.
                                     Now, a difference of 400 basis points has been prescribed for five years, which gradually
                                     reduces to 300 basis points in the tenth year. The charges still appear higher in comparison
                                     to mutual funds that are allowed annual expenses of 2.25 per cent (mortality charges, if
                                     added, will further increase charges).

                                     According to the  new regulation,  unit-linked pension  plans would  carry a  minimum
                                     guarantee of 4.5 per cent (if all premiums are paid) and no partial withdrawal will be
                                     allowed during the accumulation period.
                                     It appears attractive but there is catch, IRDA retains the right to review this guaranteed
                                     rate according to macroeconomics developments.  This means that the  return can vary
                                     over the term of the policy and investors will not be sure of the maturity value. On vesting
                                     date policyholders can commute up to one-third of the accumulated value as lump sum.
                                     As insurers are required to guarantee the return, major portion of the premium may find
                                     its way into debt instruments.

                                     If the pension plan without any rider is not generating a minimum return of at least 8 per
                                     cent that has been guaranteed under PPF (it has favourable tax treatment in the proposed
                                     Direct Taxes Code compared to these pension plans) investor interest in pension plans is
                                     likely to wane at least for those investing up to ` 70,000 towards retirement.
                                     What to do?

                                     With the new set of guidelines, new products may appear more attractive than older ones.
                                     Investors who bought ULIPs in earlier years may be tempted to surrender their products
                                     in favour of new ones. Should they?
                                     It may not be prudent to close the existing policy in favour of new products that are likely
                                     to be launched from September mainly on account of charges.

                                     Consider this,  an investor invested  `  1 lakh on June  2009. After deducting  premium
                                     allocation charge of 30 per cent, the rest would have been invested in equity. Assume in
                                     the one year the investment has grown at 30 per cent and the current value is ` 91,000 (risk
                                     charge is ignored for the calculation). If the policyholder surrenders it he would suffer a
                                     charge of 30 per cent of the first year premium – ` 30,000. The fund value of ` 61,000 will be
                                     transferred to suspense account for next two years without any accretion, after which he
                                     will be  paid the  sum. Alternatively  if he  is continuing the existing policy for another
                                     9 years and if it earns 10 per cent net of charges, the maturity value will be ` 16.4 lakh.

                                                                                                         Contd...




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