Mutual of Omaha has changed long-term care insurance underwriting and agent commission rules, the company says in a bulletin sent to LTCI agents. The company's announcement is just part of a recent wave of carriers modifying or entirely dropping out of the LTCI space.
Mutual of Omaha, a major LTCI provider, says it will cut first-year gross commissions on new LTCI policy sales by 15 percent in most states and by 10 percent in two.
Mutual of Omaha also is tightening underwriting requirements, the company says. Mutual of Omaha says, for example, that any applicants with a history of schizophrenia will be considered uninsurable and that those who have received Social Security Disability Insurance benefits within the previous 5 years will be considered uninsurable.
Recommended For You
Mutual of Omaha hopes to increase commissions in about 9 to 12 months, but future adjustments in the commission schedule are subject to change at Mutual of Omaha's discretion, the company says.
"The need for Long Term Care Insurance has never been stronger, and Mutual of Omaha is committed to solving for this need," the company says.
Mutual of Omaha will apply the current compensation rate to applications signed and dated on or before July 29, the company says.
Mutual of Omaha has been selling LTCI coverage since 1987.
Several LTCI brokers have posted copies of the bulletin on their websites.
Mutual of Omaha told Connecticut earlier this year that it planned to increase rates on several LTCI plans sold in that state by an average of about 33%.
Other LTCI insurers have responded to the recent drop in interest earnings on bond investment portfolios, new data on LTCI claims experience, and bond and securities analyst skepticism about LTCI products by dropping or narrowing LTCI product lines.
- A unit of Prudential Financial Inc. said earlier this year that it would discontinue sales of new individual LTCI policies and then dropped sales of new group LTCI products.
- American General, has discontinued what apparently was a small LTCI programs.
- Genworth Financial Inc. has said that it wants to stay in the LTCI market, but it has announced significant changes to producer compensation levels and product prices,and the company says it plans to increase prices on many older policies by about 50% over 5 years.
- Transamerica Long Term Care, recently notified producers that it was increasing the cost of new coverage and adjusting product features.
Richard McKenney, the chief financial officer of Unum Group Corp., a company that discontinued LTCI sales at the end of 2011, said during his company's second-quarter earnings call earlier this week that the low interest rate environment continues to hurt the company's closed block of LTCI business and could force the company to add to the reserves backing its own LTCI policies.
The Federal Reserve Board has been doing what it can to keep interest rates low to help banks, corporate borrowers and home buyers.
Low rates hurt the performance of insurance products which commit insurers to paying streams of benefits over long periods of time, such as LTCI policies and long-term disability policies, by reducing the amount of interest insurers can earn on policy reserves invested in government bonds, highly rated corporate bonds, and other instruments viewed by regulators and rating agencies as being especially safe.
© 2025 ALM Global, LLC, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to [email protected]. For more information visit Asset & Logo Licensing.