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Tuesday, November 22, 2005

Sunday, September 4, 2005

4 Reasons to opt out of ElderShield

BY LARRY HAVERKAMP
Jan 27, 2004

REMEMBER ElderShield? 

It pays you $300 per month for up to five years if you have three of the six serious disabilities required to make a claim.

The scheme was launched in Oct 2002.

A huge number of people have enrolled so far - 740,000 - probably because it is an opt-out scheme.

In an opt-out scheme, you automatically purchase ElderShield using funds from your Medisave account unless you specifically tell the insurer, 'No, I don't want it'.

Promoting it are Ministry of Health (MOH) and insurance providers GreatEastern Life and NTUC Income.

It is the CPF Board's only opt-out scheme that benefits private companies.


FEWER OPT OUT 

ElderShield has jumped back into the news. New data shows that fewer people are opting out when they reach the sign-up age of 40.

An MOH spokesperson says this is because people understand ElderShield better.

Maybe.

But it all comes down to a choice between putting your money in Medisave or ElderShield.

I choose Medisave and advise you to opt out of ElderShield.

Here's why:


MEDISAVE PAYS MORE

First, the chances of your needing ElderShield are small until you reach your 70s.

By then, the Medisave used to pay ElderShield premiums would have grown to about as much as an average ElderShield payout.

The other posibility is you will never make an ElderShield claim. In that case too, Medisave is the best choice.


HIGHER RISK

Second, ElderShield doesn't decrease your financial risk. It increases it.

The reason is simple: If you put your money in ElderShield, you must take it out of Medisave or use cash.

And if you take it out of Medisave, it won't be there should you need it.

Buying ElderShield means you will have extreme disabilities covered. That's good.

But you will have less money for the more common medical bills that can be paid through Medisave.


INSURANCE OR SAVINGS?

Third, it may be incorrect to call ElderShield 'insurance'.

Most insurance pays you a large sum of money when a disaster strikes.

ElderShield pays a small amount.

This makes it more like a savings policy, but an unusual one. You get back your savings only if you make a claim.

But the chances of a successful claim are small.

How small? Just-released data shows that after one year, only 400 people have received ElderShield payouts.

That's 400 out of 740,000 policyholders, which comes to just one out of every 1,850.

The number of claims will increase as the population ages.

But here is the biggest shocker: Even people making a successful claim are unlikely to get back more than their premiums plus interest.


MORE TRANSPARENCY?

Fourth, being an opt-out scheme for all CPF members makes ElderShield a sure-win for insurers NTUC Income and GreatEastern Life.

Should ElderShield meet a higher standard of transparency than other insurance?

For instance, it is useful to know the actuarial estimate of expected payouts over a person's lifetime.

So far, MOH has declined to provide this data.


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All about mobility 

TO make an ElderShield claim, you must be unable to perform three of six daily activities like mobility, bathing, feeding, getting out of bed, dressing and toileting.

How likely is a successful claim?

The Ministry of Health and the two insurers won't say, but consider this: If you are paralyzed from the waist down and confined to a wheelchair, you would think that would give you one disability, lack of mobility.

Sorry, that's wrong.

Because you can't move around in your wheelchair, you do not lack mobility, according to ElderShield.

You don't qualify for even one of the three disabilities needed for a successful claim.


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Safer to leave money in Medisave 

TO receive an ElderShield payout, the disability must be so severe that many policyholders will not live long enough to collect the maximum payout of $300 per month for five years.

Most will collect payouts for less than three years (36 months).

For payouts of 36 months x $300 per month = $10,800 total payout.

Imagine a woman named Mrs Tan.

She turns 40, does not opt out of ElderShield and chooses a one-time payment of $3,000 for lifetime ElderShield coverage.

If left in Medisave earning 4 per cent per year, $3,000 would have grown to $10,800 - matching her ElderShield payout - by age 72.

Most severe disabilities occur after age 72.

After 72, she will receive more money by simply leaving her money in Medisave, even if she later makes a successful ElderShield claim.

This shows that even when an ElderShield payout occurs, it will likely pay less than simply leaving the money in Medisave earning 4 per cent interest.

Link:
http://z13.invisionfree.com/projectsgx/ar/t8.htm

Sunday, August 7, 2005

Equity Risk Premium - STI versus ERP

The excess return that an individual stock or the overall stock market provides over a risk-free rate. This excess return compensates investors for taking on the relatively higher risk of the equity market. The size of the premium will vary as the risk in a particular stock, or in the stock market as a whole, changes; high-risk investments are compensated with a higher premium.

Also referred to as "equity premium".

The reason behind this premium stems from the risk-return tradeoff, in which a higher rate of return is required to entice investors to take on riskier investments. The risk-free rate in the market is often quoted as the rate on longer-term government bonds, which are considered risk free because of the low chance that the government will default on its loans. On the other hand, an investment in stocks is far less guaranteed, as companies regularly suffer downturns or go out of business.

If the return on a stock is 15% and the risk-free rate over the same period is 7%, the equity-risk premium would be 8% for this stock over that period of time.