by Structured Settlement Watchdog
Here are fast facts and statements to set you straight on some of the dubious claims made by individuals and companies to investors in structured settlement payment rights (also known as structured settlement receivables).
Seven Facts about Structured Settlement Receivables
- Buying structured settlement annuity payments (receivables)is not the same as buying an annuity policy
- Selling structured settlement annuity payments (receivables) is not the same as selling an annuity policy
- Buying structured settlement payment rights (receivables) is not buying an annuity policy
- Selling structured settlement payment rights (receivables) is not selling an annuity policy
- Buying a subset of assigned structured settlement payments rights (receivables) is not buying an annuity policy
- Selling a subset of structured settlement payment rights (receivables) is not selling an annuity policy
- A structured settlement transfer is not a transfer of an annuity policy
Just because they say it doesn't make it so
- Something the insurance agent calls a "secondary market annuity", if it originated from someone else's structured settlement or lottery winnings is not an annuity policy
- Something the financial adviser calls a "secondary market annuity", if it originated from someone else's structured settlement or lottery winnings is not an annuity policy
- Something the settlement planner calls a "secondary market annuity", if it originated from someone else's structured settlement or lottery winnings, is not an annuity policy
- What somebody who gives a lot of money to be a partner of your trial lawyer association calls a "secondary market annuity" or " SMIA", if it originated from someone else's structured settlement or lottery winnings, is not an annuity policy
- What someone at your country club calls a secondary market annuity is not an annuity if it originated from someone else's structured settlement or lottery winnings.
- If your accountant tells you to buy what they call a secondary market annuity, be forewarned that it's not an annuity policy
- An annuity is not a transaction
- Selling structured settlement payments is not restructuring your settlement. The settlement agreement does not change.
Verify Insurance Coverage
If you decide to buy structured settlement payment rights, you should confirm the existence of errors & omissions insurance that expressly includes factored structured settlement investments as a covered product.
- Be sure to get evidence from the policy form. It is possible that the settlement planner or financial adviser will try to claim that their advice on the specific product is covered under their policy, pointing to annuities as a covered product.
- Since investments in structured settlement payment rights are not investments in annuities there may in fact be no insurance coverage at all.
- Even where they are covered products, errors & omissions policies generally do not cover insolvencies.
Don't count on state insolvency schemes to provide a safety net either as 40/50 states at time of this post's latest update, expressly exclude such investments with 2 states having such exclusions under consideration. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners is aggressively encouraging its members to adopt the 2017 revisions to the Life & Health Guaranty Associations Model Act (#520), which provides for a retroactive exclusion. In plain words, you're not safe if you acquired one of the investments prior to your state's adoption of the revisions.
E&O Insurance Policies May Exclude Annuities Below a Certain A.M. Best rating
Many E&O policies require a minimum A.M. Best rating. A credit rating agency assesses the creditworthiness of an obligor as an entity or with respect to specific securities or money market instruments. A credit rating agency may apply to the SEC for registration as a nationally recognized statistical rating organization ("NRSRO"). While a securitization from JG Wentworth may be rated, random factored structured settlement payments are unlikely to have such a rating.
Last updated February 8, 2024
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