Life Insurance After Open Heart Surgery

A big question is what kind of surgery was it?

It is pretty easy to get a simplified issue life insurance policy after having a coronary bypass. And as the name says, you are guaranteed to qualify for a guaranteed issue policy.

If you want more than $50,000 of coverage, whether you qualify for that amount will depend on the age at which you had your open heart surgery, how many vessels were involved, whether there were any blockages later, and how your stress tests results are now.

If you smoke or have other health conditions, such as diabetes, you most likely will be declined for this type of medically underwritten policy. But if you were at an older age when you had your heart surgery, it was effective and not too extensive, there is a good chance that you can get the amount of coverage you desire.

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Understanding the Cost of Life Insurance

How Much Does It Cost To Buy Life Insurance?

There are several different types of life insurance available. Term Insurance, Universal Life, Indexed Universal Life and Whole Life are the main types.

Term life insurance will be the least expensive but it also offers the least flexibility in many ways. Term is just that – a definitive length of time. If you buy 10 year term and you die 10 years and one week later, it pays your beneficiaries nothing.

Universal Life can last your entire lifetime with little or no cash build-up inside the policy.

Indexed Universal Life and Whole Life can have significant cash build-up inside the policy which can be accessed through policy loans. This can be part of your strategy on paying for college, buying something major in your life or supplementing your retirement income.

The cost of life insurance is determined by the amount of coverage desired, age, gender, medical history and the results of a paramedical exam. There is no cost to you for applying or for the paramedical exam – the insurance company covers those costs for you. By way of example, a non-smoking 25 year old female in excellent health, rated Preferred Best can get $250,000 of 20 year term for about $135 per year.

I recommend you contact a knowledgeable, independent life insurance agent who can explain the different types of life insurance in more detail and help determine which is most appropriate for your needs. An independent agent will be able to let you pick from dozens of insurance companies available.

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Is Theft Covered on Renters Insurance?

Theft coverage will respond if there is evidence of a theft. For example a broken door lock or other evidence that someone gained access to your premises. The broader coverage available from some carriers can include mysterious disappearance which is basically that the insured item is not where you believed it to be and therefore has been possibly stolen or you simply do not understand how it disappeared. Mysterious disappearance is generally more expensive than theft , and is generally purchased in-connection with protecting valuable articles of jewelry, watches  and furs or other property that have their own sub limits in a homeowners or renters policy. Read the policy relative to how jewelry , watches and fine arts are protected and if it does not sound like enough coverage talk to your agent.

Renters Insurance can be bought HERE

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Nationwide home prices continue to edge towards peak level

Nationwide home prices continue to edge towards peak level
US home prices were up 1.1 per cent in August compared to July and up 6.2 per cent year-over-year.

CoreLogic forecasts that prices will continue to gain over the next 12 months with an average rise of 5.3 per cent year-over-year from August 2016 and a monthly rise of 0.4 per cent from August 2016 to September 2016.

“Home prices are now just 6 percent below the nominal peak reached in April 2006,” said Dr. Frank Nothaft, chief economist for CoreLogic. “With prices forecasted to increase by 5 percent over the next year, prices will be back to their peak level in 2017.”

CoreLogic’s president and CEO Anand Nallathambi warned that the continued rise was impacting housing affordability in many markets.

JR Ewing’s famous home is on the market, kind of
It was the biggest TV show of its time and now the setting for some of the most famous scenes in ‘Dallas’ is on the market.

Millions worldwide tuned in to the ups and downs of the Ewing family in the seventies and eighties and central to the show was the family’s luxurious Southfork ranch.

However, as is often the case with TV the Ewing ranch seen on screen was two separate properties. The outside scenes were filmed in Parker, TX and that home is now used as a tourist attraction and conference center.

The home that is now being marketed, according to TopTenRealEstateDeals.com was used for many of the inside scenes.

The estate at North Dallas Preston Hollow comprises a 10,341 Georgian mansion set on 4.3 acres. It has five bedrooms and seven bathrooms, elevator, billiards room, media room and wet bar. There is a pool, spa and fire pit.

The estate is listed with Allie Beth Allman of Allie Beth Allman & Associates at $12.95 million.

Former Barry Manilow estate adds $11 million to value
Barry Manilow’s former home in Malibu could be about to sell for $11 million more than the singing legend sold it for 4 years ago.

The oceanfront property became Manilow’s home in 2003 but he sold it in 2012 for $5.5 million and the new owners have remodeled and renovated it and are now hoping to pick up $16.7 million according to Realtor.com.

With access to a private beach, 5 bedrooms and 4.5 bathrooms, stunning views of the ocean and a spa; the home is described by Coldwell banker Previews International agent Jade Mills as a “one-of-a-kind beach retreat.”

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Largest Life Insurance Company

There are many ways to categorize the largest Life Insurance Companies. Based on market share and premium revenue, I estimate the largest Life Insurance company to be American General, followed by MetLife in the number 2 slot. Hartford is third followed by Northwestern Mutual as number 4 and Prudential finishing as number 5.

Looking for Life Insurance?

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U.S. mortgage investigation

Deutsche Bank AG’s shares and its riskiest bonds dropped the most since the Brexit vote after the lender said the U.S. Justice Department is seeking $14 billion to settle a probe tied to mortgage-backed securities, more money than the bank is willing to pay.

“Deutsche Bank has no intent to settle these potential civil claims anywhere near the number cited,” the company said in a statement early Friday in Frankfurt. “The negotiations are only just beginning. The bank expects that they will lead to an outcome similar to those of peer banks which have settled at materially lower amounts.”

Chief Executive Officer John Cryan, 55, has struggled to boost profitability by selling risky assets and eliminating jobs as unresolved legal probes and claims add to concerns that the lender will be forced to raise capital. Reaching a mortgage deal would clear a major hurdle for Deutsche Bank, which has paid more than $9 billion in fines and settlements since the start of 2008, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“While this number seems very large, it’s obviously a first negotiation point,” Chris Wheeler, an analyst at Atlantic Equities, told Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television. “There’s going to be an awful lot of management time spent on it to get to a sensible number.”

Deutsche Bank fell as much as 8.8 percent, the biggest intraday drop since June 27, and was down 8.7 percent at 11.96 euros at 2:41 p.m. in Frankfurt. Other European lenders under investigation in relation to residential mortgage-backed securities also declined, with UBS Group AG down 2.9 percent and Credit Suisse Group AG slipping 5.2 percent. Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc slumped 4.5 percent, while Barclays Plc fell 2.8 percent.

The bank’s 1.75 billion euros ($2 billion) of 6 percent additional Tier 1 bonds, the first notes to take losses, fell 5 cents to 78 cents on the euro, the biggest drop since the U.K. voted to leave the European Union in June. Deutsche Bank’s 650 million pounds ($852 million) of 7.125 percent notes fell 5 pence to 81 pence on the pound, also a record fall.

“They are dropping like a stone,” said Tomas Kinmonth, a credit strategist at ABN Amro Bank NV in Amsterdam. “The fine, even if reduced, could surpass all provisions held by the bank.”

DOJ Negotiations

Germany’s government expects a “fair outcome” in the U.S. probe, a spokeswoman for the Finance Ministry in Berlin said on Friday.

Germany’s largest lender confirmed that it had started negotiations with the Justice Department to settle civil claims over the bank’s issuing and underwriting of residential mortgage-backed securities from 2005 to 2007. The Wall Street Journal reported the $14 billion claim on Thursday.

Bank of America Corp. paid $17 billion to reach a settlement in a similar case in 2014, the biggest such accord to date. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. agreed to a $5.1 billion settlement with the U.S. earlier this year, including a $2.4 billion civil penalty and $875 million in cash payments, to resolve U.S. allegations that it failed to properly vet mortgage-backed securities before selling them to investors as high-quality debt. The settlement included an admission of wrongdoing.

Opening bids from U.S. entities are often very high compared to the final outcome, analysts at Bank of America Merrill Lynch wrote in a note to investors. “A similar phenomenon is possible with the DoJ and Deutsche Bank.”

The Justice Department, in concluding previous investigations into the sale of mortgage-backed securities that soured during the financial crisis, typically has presented initial penalties higher than what banks ultimately paid, people familiar with those negotiations have said. The sides may negotiate over the final tab, as well as what conduct the bank will acknowledge and whether individuals will be sanctioned.

‘Shareholder Money’

Justice Department spokesman Peter Carr declined to comment on the negotiations.

JPMorgan Chase & Co. analysts wrote in a note to clients earlier Thursday that a settlement of about $2.4 billion “would be taken very positively,” and that an agreement exceeding $4 billion would pose questions about Deutsche Bank’s capital positions and force it to “build additional litigation reserves.” The lender’s common equity Tier 1 ratio, a key measure of financial strength, was at 10.8 percent at the end of June.

“In defense of protecting its shareholders’ money, Cryan is well within his rights in negotiating a more equitable and just settlement with the U.S. government, and calling this one a punishment that’s several orders of magnitude greater than the crime,” said Tony Plath, a finance professor at the University of North Carolina. Plath expects a final settlement of about $4 billion to $5 billion.

Settlement Goal

Cryan has said that he aims to settle major outstanding legal issues as soon as possible as part of his wider overhaul. Deutsche Bank had 5.5 billion euros set aside for settlements and fines at the end of June, with Chief Financial Officer Marcus Schenck saying in July that the lender will probably face “material” litigation charges in the second half.

In addition to the U.S. mortgage investigation, Deutsche Bank faces litigation and regulatory probes relating to issues such as foreign-currency rate manipulation and precious metals trading. The German bank is a party to 47 civil actions concerning the setting of interbank lending benchmarks, according to its 2015 annual report published in March.

“Obviously I don’t like this amount, it’s too high and it seems that with every settlement, the DOJ wants to get more from European companies,” said Andreas Domke, a portfolio manager at Allianz Global Investors, which owns shares in the lender. “It’s good that Deutsche Bank is pushing back.”

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Car Insurance Claims Being Investigated

Fraud is so out of control, that they have to investigate certain claims. During the claims process, companies have their set of “red flags” that triggers further investigation. As long as you have nothing to hide, you shouldn’t worry about it too much.

They may ask for things such as:
-bank statements
-proof of residency
-receipt from last oil change
-etc., etc., etc.

Sometimes innocent minor things can trigger a red flag, and it ends up being no big deal. Other times, fraud is suspected. And sometimes, a high dollar amount of loss can trigger an investigation simply for due diligence.

So don’t sweat it. If you have nothing to hide, give them what they want and you should be fine.

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9 retirement moves other countries get right

Some of the recent changes Norway made to its retirement system have been beneficial not just to would-be retirees but also to their employers. (Photo: iStock)

Other countries are ahead of the U.S. on the retirement curve. In fact, according to the Melbourne Mercer Global Pension Index (MMGPI), the U.S. doesn’t even make the top 10—and that’s not good news.

Despite the fact that the U.S. has Social Security, Americans aren’t well prepared for retirement, by any means, since workers aren’t saving enough to see themselves safely through retirement and many have no retirement savings at all. Rising health care costs could gobble up all the money many people have without even trying hard, and cost-of-living increases don’t even pay for a small part of the rise in seniors’ living expenses.

And half of American workers do not have pensions—which leaves them wholly dependent on their own savings efforts and whatever they might get from Social Security. Social Security was born on August 14, 1935. Photo: AP

In the wake of the Great Recession, and with lower-salary jobs, workers are finding it even harder to save than before—aside from the fact that many were demoralized by the destruction of value by the Great Recession of what they had managed to save.

Then there’s the fact that Social Security itself is under threat from a new Republican administration that sees it as a drag on the economy rather than a financial assist to elderly people who have paid into the system all their lives.

Why is America in such bad shape with regard to retirement? Part of the problem is its migration away from pensions.

While Bernie Sanders horrified many in the U.S. when he suggested we’d do well to emulate the Scandinavian model of higher taxes and higher services (one of which is pension coverage), the practical Scandinavians had already proven that their public policies are both effective and efficient.

The Huffington Post reported that some of the recent changes Norway specifically made to its retirement system have been beneficial not just to would-be retirees but also to their employers. Other countries, too, have taken steps to improve their retirement systems that could help our own.

Here’s a look at nine of those actions.

Image of man holding testing device near his eye. Photo: AP

9. Eliminating means testing.

In 2011, Norway, which took the top spot in the 2016 Natixis Global Retirement Index Report, did away with means testing based on employment earnings. That meant that Norwegians could keep working while still receiving retirement benefits, and not be penalized.

That resulted in more Norwegians working after claiming retirement benefits—and that’s something that could be useful here.

An analysis by the Economic Policy Institute found that U.S. workers frequently stay employed even after claiming early retirement benefits—and EPI economist Monique Morrissey estimated in a report that nearly half of individuals and married couples age 62 to 64 also had earnings from work and those earnings made up nearly one-fourth of their income.

Morrissey wrote, “Many people use retirement benefits to supplement income from a full- or part-time job and therefore are not ‘retired’ in the conventional sense.”

In addition, the Huffington Post pointed out that means testing for Social Security, which withholds a portion of benefits if earnings exceed $15,720 in 2016 for those who claim before normal retirement age, “exacts an unnecessary financial penalty for those who need to supplement their work income in their early 60s.”

 Allowing pensions to continue to grow while workers delay claiming, is another strategy to help retirement. (Photo: Getty)

8. Allowing pensions to continue to grow till age 75 as long as workers delay claiming.

If Norwegian workers postpone claiming retirement benefits till they turn 75, rather than claiming early at age 62, their pensions will be worth more by the time they do file for benefits.

While Social Security allows benefits to rise till age 70 if workers do not claim and continue to work, what pension plans the U.S. has don’t generally provide a similar benefit.

For the sake of productivity, many countries have helped older people stay in the labor force. (Photo: Getty)

7. Increase labor force participation at older ages.

The MMGPI said that because of demographic shifts that are exerting pressure on countries’ retirement systems, countries need to increase participation in the labor force by older people.

Norway found that the elimination of means testing and the provision for pensions to continue to grow when benefits claims are delayed accomplish this—in fact, those who continued in the workforce after claiming benefits at age 62 rose by 13 percent.

In the U.S. many older workers are already staying in the workforce out of necessity.

But those who would like to continue to work part-time but don’t want to lose benefits to means testing, or who would like the opportunity to further grow their pensions, would be likely to seize the opportunity to keep working. Since the MMGPI said that for people aged 55–64, the participation rate should be at least 65 percent, this is something to consider.

Singapore has a three-pronged retirement system called the Central Provident Fund, to which all Singaporeans and their employers contribute. (Photo: AP)

6. Mandatory savings.

Singapore has a three-pronged retirement system called the Central Provident Fund, to which all Singaporeans and their employers contribute.

The Ordinary Account portion is specifically for expenditures such as investment, education, CPF insurance or home purchase. The Special Account portion is retirement money, with investments in retirement-related financial products. The money in the third segment, the Medisave Account, is for medical expenses such as hospitalization costs and approved medical insurance.

A 2013 HSBC survey found that the country is one of the best prepared for retirement, with 88 percent of respondents saying they’d saved enough to retire comfortably.

Improving retirees' net replacement income is another strategy. (Photo: iStock)

5. Improved net replacement rate.

While some countries in the MMGPI will obviously have to fall near the bottom of the list, that doesn’t mean they can’t improve. India is one of those, having improved its net income replacement rate.

According to MMGPI, for a pension system to be adequate, it should provide an income replacement rate, after tax, at retirement of at least 70 percent for a full-time worker on a median income.

One way to improve the net replacement rate in the U.S. might be to switch to the Consumer Price Index for the Elderly (CPI-E), which focuses more on the expenses specific to that age group, when calculating increases to Social Security.

Poverty in old age is a reality in many first-world countries in addition to the U.S. (Photo: AP)

4. Support for the poor.

One country that has strengthened its already strong system is Singapore, which boosted its level of support for the poor.

MMGPI said that a pension system’s adequacy comes in part from providing a minimum pension for the poor that “represents a reasonable percentage of average earnings in the community.”

Bringing back private pensions might be a pipe dream but it's a real strategy for other countries. (Photo: iStock)

3. Bringing back private pension plans.

MMGPI said that, in order for a retirement system to be sustainable, at least 70 percent of the working-age population should be members of private pension plans.

Since in Norway, Sweden, Denmark (which finished at the top of the MMPGI report both overall and for sustainability), Germany and the rest of the major industrial nations’ public- and private-sector workers are covered by some kind of pension, an incentive to American businesses to revive the practice might be in order.

When Malaysians retire, medical care is free with their retirement plan. (Photo: AP)

2. Free medical care.

While Malaysia placed lower on the MMPGI list than the U.S., one thing it does for its people is to provide free medical care at government hospitals as part of its retirement plan.

Considering that the cost of medical care in retirement in the U.S. can cost a retired couple in the neighborhood of a quarter-million dollars (enough to wipe out the entire retirement savings of many), any future changes to or replacements for the Affordable Care Act, Medicare or Medicaid should consider that.

 Financial education, most agree, is a worthy goal for all adults. (Photo: Getty)

1. Better financial education.

Not only is education essential in helping people to prepare for retirement, but policymakers also need to understand the complexities of a retirement system. Otherwise, the consequences could be severe.

To that end, Denmark, which has been so successful at preparing its people for retirement, is warning politicians and policymakers in the country that they may face a backlash from people who stand to lose heavily if risk continues to be privatized.

Bloomberg reported that Denmark’s life insurers hold more than $650 billion in assets, but are pursuing riskier investments in the quest for higher returns.

However, changes made to financial regulations in the wake of the 2008 crisis mean that individuals are being pushed out of defined benefit plans and into defined contribution plans, where those riskier investments could endanger workers’ ability to retire should that risk come home to roost.

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Does Life Insurance Test For Marijuana

In most states, they do test for the active ingredient in marijuana. Typically through bodily fluids such as blood and urine.

Any presence used to be a decline. Now recreational marijuana users are considered at the same rate as cigarette smokers by many companies. Heavy users are often rated or declined.

It is very important that you are truthful when you complete your application for insurance to avoid problems at claim time.

As an independent life insurance broker, who represents several companies, I can help you find the right policy at the right price.

If you have further questions, or feel that I could be of assistance, please do not hesitate to contact me.

http://www.InsurancePricedRight.com

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Don’t Underestimate the Importance of Using an Agent When Selling Your Home

When a homeowner decides to sell their house, they obviously want the best possible price with the least amount of hassles. However, for the vast majority of sellers, the most important result is to actually get the home sold.

In order to accomplish all three goals, a seller should realize the importance of using a real estate professional. We realize that technology has changed the purchaser’s behavior during the home buying process. For the past three years, 92% of all buyers have used the internet in their home search according to the National Association of Realtors’ most recent Profile of Home Buyers & Sellers.

However, the report also revealed that 95% percent of buyers that used the internet when searching for a home purchased their home through either a real estate agent/broker or from a builder or builder’s agent. Only 2% purchased their home directly from a seller whom the buyer didn’t know.

Buyers search for a home online, but then depend on an agent to find the actual home they will buy (53%), to negotiate the terms of the sale & price (48%), or to help understand the process (60%).

The plethora of information now available has resulted in an increase in the percentage of buyers that reach out to real estate professionals to “connect the dots.” This is obvious, as the percentage of overall buyers who used an agent to buy their home has steadily increased from 69% in 2001.

Bottom Line

If you are thinking of selling your home, don’t underestimate the role a real estate professional can play in the process.

 

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