In a prior post, we used Allan Sloan’s article on the Treasury bond market to discuss the impact on preneed insurers and their funeral home clients. The Treasury market has forced preneed insurers to lower their policy returns, which has a direct impact on the profitability of funeral homes. To make insurance funding more profitable
Funeral
Chasing Preneed’s Bad Apples
In September of last year, the Columbus Dispatch published a story critical of the Ohio State Board of Funeral Directors and Embalmers. Examining the Board’s efforts to address preneed fraud, the story reported that prosecutions of funeral directors were more the result of consumer complaints than Board inspections. That must have struck a nerve…
The High Cost of Litigation: Copy Charges
The Special Deputy Receiver for National Prearranged Services recently filed a Bill of Costs with the Federal trial court. The Bill of Costs seeks to recover copy charges of more than $500,000 from a former NPS trustee. Those costs do not include attorneys’ fees. Litigation can be very costly.
Missouri’s preneed regulators are keenly aware…
Preneed Trust Shortages: Missouri’s Income Withdrawals
Prior to Missouri re-writing its preneed law in 2009, preneed sellers could draw off realized income so long as the withdrawal did not reduce the trust’s fair market value below trust deposits. Seeking income, many Missouri sellers directed their trustees to invest in bonds. As interest rates declined during the early part of the prior…
Preneed Trust Options: Administrative Limitations
The Memorial Business Journal’s July 10th story on the NFDA 2014 consumer survey included a commentator’s suggestion that preneed funding has declined because so few options are offered the consumer. The story’s commentators interpreted the decline in preneed funding as reflecting fewer consumers being motivated by price guarantees, and those that might be, need…
Talk of a Lifetime: Restarting the Prearrangment Process
One message that can be taken from the FAMIC’s Talk of a Lifetime campaign is that funeral directors need to re-think their prearrangement procedures. Perhaps too much emphasis has been given to preneed, and not enough to the planning process. Prearrangement marketing and procedures have often been crafted by the funeral home’s preneed funding agent. …
The Fed’s Tapering Plan: A Bumpy Road for Death Care Trusts?
It has been almost ten years since the return on Government bonds fell below 5%. But bond returns did not hit bottom until four years later when the sub-prime mortgage market collapsed. Those conditions threatened the nation’s credit markets, and so, in 2008, the Federal Reserve Board initiated a stimulus program involving the purchase of…
Form 1041QFT: Reducing Tax Liabilities
Tax day is only a week away, and preneed trust returns will look a little different this year. As we reported back in December, the IRS took the position that preneed trusts are subject to the Medicare Tax used to fund the Affordable Health Care Act. Accordingly, Federal Form 1041QFT now requires the reporting of…
MyRA: Is preneed headed in a similar direction?
President Obama used his State of the Union address to unveil a new type of retirement account dubbed “MyRA”. Recognizing that Americans are woefully unprepared for their retirement years, the President believes the MyRA offers individuals a safe option to induce them to begin saving for those golden years. A CNBC report provides an explanation…
Missouri and the Investment Advisor: A Chinese Wall
Among the rule proposals suggested by the Division of Professional Registration to the State Board of Embalmers and Funeral Directors was the following definition of “External Investment Advisor”:
any licensed, qualified investment advisor approved and authorized by the trustee of the preneed trust and who holds no personal interest in any assets of the preneed …