Well, actually you have to account for a 0 day waiting period in all settings so it might be 4-5% at best if you push a traditional policy ep down to 30 days AND buy a waiver of HC EP rider. And this will be with just a handful of companies today that many agents do not even write (NY Life, Mass Mutual), Single female applicant rates with Transamerica, Genworth, John Hancock, Northwestern, Mutual of Omaha....might need 7% return or more. So, Moneyguard is reasonable approach when faced with some companies' pricing. And Moneyguard is fixed and guaranteed. I know Scott you feel a traditional policy will never have a rate increase today but consumers and agents sometimes feel otherwise.
That is incorrect, Jack.
None of the single premium products have a zero day elimination period.
The Elimination Period is no less than the entire amount of the single premium that was deposited into the product.
And there is an "annual premium" for each of these products. The annual premium is equal to the earnings they are losing by not investing the money themselves.