Death Bond

Death Bond

A death bond is a type of asset-backed security (ABS) derived by pooling transferable life insurance policies, which are then repackaged into bonds and sold to investors. A death bond is a type of asset-backed security (ABS) derived by pooling transferable life insurance policies, which are then repackaged into bonds and sold to investors. A death bond is an asset-backed security (ABS) derived by pooling transferable life insurance policies, which are then repackaged into bonds and sold to investors. A death bond is similar to mortgage-backed securities (MBS) except that they are backed by life insurance policies which are then combined, repackaged into bonds, and then are finally sold to investors. Life settlement companies purchase existing life insurance policies (known as viaticals) and then sell them to financial institutions, who then repackage them in order to create the investment product called a death bond.

A death bond is an asset-backed security (ABS) derived by pooling transferable life insurance policies, which are then repackaged into bonds and sold to investors.

What Is a Death Bond?

A death bond is a type of asset-backed security (ABS) derived by pooling transferable life insurance policies, which are then repackaged into bonds and sold to investors. When the seller(s) of a death bond dies, the buyer(s) receives the benefits from the insurance policy.

A death bond is an asset-backed security (ABS) derived by pooling transferable life insurance policies, which are then repackaged into bonds and sold to investors.
Death bonds can provide diversification for the portfolios of investors with holdings in commodities, housing, and other financial markets.
A death bond's yield is correlated to the insured person's longevity.

How a Death Bond Works

Life settlement companies purchase existing life insurance policies (known as viaticals) and then sell them to financial institutions, who then repackage them in order to create the investment product called a death bond. The settlement company will pay more than the cash surrender value (the death benefit, which is always less than the face value) of the insurance policy to the seller.

A death bond is similar to mortgage-backed securities (MBS) except that they are backed by life insurance policies which are then combined, repackaged into bonds, and then are finally sold to investors.

Death bonds can trace their origins to viatical settlements in the 1980s. Spurred by the onset of the AIDS epidemic, terminally ill patients sold their life insurance policies to pay for their desperately needed, expensive medications. Their policy payments were taken over by the purchasers, who would receive the policy paid in full when the patients died.

Death bonds are unusual instruments because they are less affected by standard financial risks. One risk of holding a death bond lies with the underlying insured person. If the person lives longer than expected, the bond's yield will begin declining. However, because death bonds are created from an underlying pool of assets, the risk associated with one policy is spread out. Diffused risk makes the instruments more stable.

Viatical Settlements

A death bond is often securitized from a pool of viatical settlements. A viatical settlement is an arrangement in which someone who is terminally or chronically ill sells their life insurance policy at a discount from its face value for ready cash. In exchange for the cash, the seller of the life insurance policy relinquishes the right to leave the policy's death benefit to a beneficiary of their choice.

The buyer of a viatical settlement pays the seller a lump sum cash payout and pays all future premiums left on the life insurance policy. The buyer becomes the sole beneficiary and cashes in the full amount of the policy when the original owner dies.

In many states in the U.S., companies that buy viatical settlements to sell to investors are licensed by state insurance commissioners. For more information and a list of state insurance regulators, visit the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC).

Advantages and Disadvantages of Death Bonds

Related terms:

Asset-Backed Security (ABS)

An asset-backed security (ABS) is a debt security collateralized by a pool of assets. read more

Beneficiary

A beneficiary is any person who gains an advantage or profits from something typically left to them by another individual. read more

Bond : Understanding What a Bond Is

A bond is a fixed income investment in which an investor loans money to an entity (corporate or governmental) that borrows the funds for a defined period of time at a fixed interest rate. read more

Bond Market

The bond market is the collective name given to all trades and issues of debt securities. Learn more about corporate, government, and municipal bonds. read more

Death Benefit

A death benefit is a payout to the beneficiary of a life insurance policy, annuity or pension when the insured or annuitant dies. read more

Face Value

Face value is the nominal value or dollar value of a security stated by the issuer, also known as "par value" or simply "par." read more

Fixed Income & Examples

Fixed income refers to assets and securities that bear fixed cash flows for investors, such as fixed rate interest or dividends. read more

L Bond

An L bond, classified as an alternative investment, is a bond that finances the purchase of life insurance policies on the secondary market. read more

Life Settlement

A life settlement is the selling of one's life insurance policy to a third party for a one-time cash payment. read more

Life Insurance Guide to Policies and Companies

Life insurance is a contract in which an insurer, in exchange for a premium, guarantees payment to an insured’s beneficiaries when the insured dies. read more