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  • News From Press Life insurers selling policies that die early

    Life insurers selling policies that die early

    Source: Mint Apr 19, 2016

    What are the chances that a poorly understood and badly sold life insurance policy will run its course? Pretty slim, according to the life insurance industry experience in India. Poor selling practices—long-term policies being sold as short-term policies, lack of communication of policy benefits, poor understanding of costs, risks and returns and lack of comparison—have resulted in many customers choosing to cut losses by lapsing policies, which results in poor persistency metrics.

    Persistency measures how long customers stay with their policies, by looking at the number of renewal premiums. According to figures of financial year 2015, as reported by the insurance regulator in its handbook of statistics, the industry, on an average, reported a persistency of 59% in the 13th month, i.e., after a year of sale. In other words, out of 100, just 59 policies got renewed. In fact, the average persistency for the 61st month is about 22%, which means by the end of the fifth year, only 22 policies got renewed.

    India compares badly with the rest of the world. The 13th month persistency in member countries of Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development is above 90% and about 65% for the 61st month.

    For insurance, persistency is a key driver. So, a poor show hurts long-term prospects. “Depending upon the products and embedded surrender costs, insurers may make profits for the short term. But over the long-term, low persistency means not being able to achieve economies of scale and continued expense overruns,” said Sanket Kawatkar, principal and consulting actuary, life insurance (India), Milliman India Pvt. Ltd.

    Poor persistency affects customers as well since insurance products are typically front loaded. So, if you discard it in a couple of years, you lose a lot of money (in traditional plans) due to high surrender costs.

    Insurers don’t hold shoddy sales practices as the only reason for low persistency. Others, such as ticket size, also have an effect.

    Method of calculation

    Persistency ratio shows the leakages in year-on-year renewals of life insurance policies. It can be calculated both in terms of amount of premiums and number of policies. In its handbook, the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (Irdai) has considered the number of policies as it feels the persistency on premium gets skewed if one policy with a large premium gets lapsed. Leakages on account of death or maturity are not factored, but single-premium policies and paid-up policies are included. Single-premium policies don’t lapse since the money is paid upfront. A sizeable portfolio of these may give an insurer better persistency. But paid-up policies have a surrender value. These don’t lapse but are kept in force to the extent of the paid-up sum assured or reduced sum assured. But these categories dilute persistency numbers. “If you only look at policies that are due to get renewal premiums, persistency numbers will be sharper. Those that don’t need further payments don’t really reflect persistency,” said Vighnesh Shahane, whole time director and chief executive officer, IDBI Federal Life Insurance Co. Ltd.

    Current rules dictate that persistency has to be calculated on an absolute basis. This method calculates the leakages of the policy from the base year or the year of sale. For instance, if the insurer sold 100 polices and 70 policies got renewed after a year or in the 13th month, the 13th month persistency would be 70%. After the second year or in the 25th month, if 60 policies got renewed then the 25th month persistency would be 60%.

    Persistency reported in the handbook is of different cohorts of policies. The 13th month persistency represents policies sold a year back, 25th month persistency represent policies sold two years back and so on. Even as these are different cohorts, persistency ratios under the absolute method normally decreases in the subsequent years.

    Report card

    In terms of 13th month persistency, 16 insurers improved their track record in FY15 compared to 11 in FY14. But the average has improved by just a percentage point from 58% to 59% in FY15. “Performance gap is only increasing as some companies are focussing on improving their persistency intelligently. Even then, the overall numbers are not encouraging,” said Kapil Mehta, co-founder, SecureNow Insurance Broker Pvt. Ltd. “Since the industry has moved to selling traditional plans, poor persistency means that customers, despite high surrender charges, are willing to lapse policies. This indicates that customers are buying without understanding the product and the industry is still focussing aggressively on first-year sale,” he added.

    We haven’t considered the weighted average, although that way the numbers will improve as they will tend to gravitate towards the persistency performance of insurers that have large market shares. For instance the Life Corporation of India (LIC), which has the highest market share, reported a 13th month persistency ratio of 66%, while this is 70% for some of the top private insurers (see table).

    The picture is worse at 61 months. A back of the envelope average calculation shows that the industry was able to retain 22 out of 100 policies sold five years back, losing a huge 78 policies on the way. We haven’t compared these numbers with FY14 because in FY14 some insurers were still reporting persistency on a reducing balance basis. This method shows persistency to be better since it takes the previous year as the base. “Our 13th month persistency is improving, but why the 61st month remains low is because these were policies sold before February 2010. They were largely Ulips (unit-linked insurance plans), which, according to our experience, are not easily understood by customers. Further, we had a large proportion of third-party channels such as brokers and corporate agents who didn’t do a great job of explaining Ulips. But now we have changed our channel mix and product mix with over 80% of the business being traditional so our persistency should improve,” said Anup Rau, chief executive officer and executive director, Reliance Life Insurance Co. Ltd.

    Insurers expect the 61st number to improve drastically in FY16. “Policies sold post-2010 (when product reforms kick started) have shown better persistency, which is evident in the improvement of 25th, 37th and 49th month persistency figures. The 61st month persistency still reflects policies that were sold before 2010. Hence, this will also improve after a year,” said Anuj Agarwal, chief executive officer and managing director, Bajaj Allianz Life Insurance Co. Ltd.

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    3 Comments
    Rajesh Kumar Bhatt · 8 years ago `
    About LIC Your thinking are bad. Agent selling needbase plan. We decide due to reauirement of investor who want short term or long term. Mis-shelling in MF too much. Insurance policy is debt fund like we ATM CARD. KINDLY change your thinking about LIC And LIC AGENT. IN THE COUNTRY ONLY AND ONLY LIC agent good services provider. By mis selling no company servive long term . LIC run since 1956. This is the symble of my good services.
    SANDEEP KULWADE · 8 years ago
    My friend there are very few agents in industry who continues their profession throughout the life.

    The ratio of mis-selling in life insurance is very high as compare to any other counterparts

    If mis-selling not persist then why an individual would have under insured. And policy lapsation would be very few.

    Reply
    Harshad Ashar · 8 years ago `
    Can we get the lapsation data of each company. i.e. report card per company. This will probably one more criteria to rate the company while purchasing their products.
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