Structured Settlement | Lump-Sum Settlement | Annuity

 

 

   
   
   

Important Links
Glossary



 

Glossary



Annuity
An annuity is a stream of periodic payments (monthly, quarterly, semi-annually, annually) made by a life insurance company. Payments can be made for a specified period of time, or for a person's entire lifetime, no matter how long that is.

Assignment
Assignment occurs when the defendant or casualty insurer providing the settlement money cannot or will not own your structure. Should this happen, a separate insurer will step in to own your structure, which allows you to receive your payments tax free. This process releases the casualty insurer from the ongoing liability for the structure payments, because this liability is taken on by the new insurer. You still require the consent of the casualty insurer to have a structure.

Canada Revenue Agency ("CRA")
Formerly known as Canada Customs and Revenue Agency ("CCRA"); formerly known as Revenue Canada, Taxation.

Cohort
In statistics and demography, a cohort is a group of subjects, most often humans from a given population, defined by experiencing an event (typically birth) in a particular time span.

Deferred Annuity
An annuity which begins making payments at a fixed future date. Funds are placed with a life insurer, then held by that insurer until payments begin. Interest accumulates during this deferral, so that payments are higher than if the annuity began paying immediately. A deferred annuity is useful where money for specific requirements will be needed at a future date.

Guarantee Period
Applies to life annuities, to provide a time period during which payments will be made regardless of whether the recipient is alive or not. It is designed to provide benefits to the estate of the injured party in most cases, or to the casualty insurer in others.

Immediate Annuity
An annuity which begins to make periodic payments within one year of money being placed with a life insurer. It usually starts in 30 days and usually pays monthly.

Impairment Rating
An impairment rating is a number of years that each life insurer adds to an injured person's actual age, in order to create an artificial age for the purpose of providing structured settlement quotations based on someone's lifetime. The result is that the cost to provide a specific monthly payment for the person's lifetime is reduced. In the reverse, the monthly payment that can be generated based on a set funding amount is increased.

Indexed Payments
Payments which increase at either a fixed rate, or at a rate tied to a specific index such as the Consumer Price Index (CPI). The purpose of indexing is to provide protection against increasing costs.

Joint and Last Survivor Annuity
Payments are based on the lives of two or more people. Payments will continue as long as any one of them is alive. Once the first person dies, payments to the survivor(s) may stay at the same amount or be reduced, depending upon the terms of the contract.

Life Annuity
An annuity which pays for the lifetime of the person receiving payments. There is normally a period during which payments will be made regardless of whether the recipient is alive or not. This is called a guarantee period, and it ensures that payments will continue for some minimum length of time.

Lump-sum Payment
Single payments, at specific future dates. This feature is used to provide large sums for specific needs such as replacement of vans or electric wheelchairs. These are usually combined with periodic payments.

Non-Commutable
Canada Revenue Agency requires that a structured settlement cannot be changed or cashed in.

Temporary Life Annuity
Stops paying on the earlier of death or after a set number of years. This option may or may not contain a guarantee period.

Term Certain Annuity
Pays for a set period of time, after which payments stop. All payments are guaranteed to be made, even if the recipient dies before the end of the fixed term.


 

   

   

Why does a company want to buy my structured settlement
Why Companies Want to Purchase Your Structured Settlement
Why a structured settlement payment is a popular choice
Which structured settlement broker is right for me
What are annuity buyouts
Types of Annuity Settlement Options
The skinny on getting cash for a structured settlement payment
Structured Settlement Loans
Structured Settlement Broker
Structured Settlement Benefits
Structured Settlement Annuity
Structured Settlement Annuities
Selling Structured Settlements
Sell Structured Settlements
Sell Annuity
Reasons to Sell a Structured Settlement
Lump Sum Payment Options
Lump sum Distribution
Lump Sum Annuity
Lawsuit Settlement Funding
Lawsuit Loans
Is selling a structured settlement a good investment decision
How to Sell an Annuity
How to Sell a Structured Settlement
How to sell a structured settlement payment
How Long Does it Take to Cash Out my Structured Settlement
How a structured settlement annuity works
Do I really need a structured settlement company
Cash for Structured Settlement
Annuity settlement options explained
3 Reasons Not to Sell a Structured Settlement

 

This is website is designed and published to gather some knowledge about Structured Settlement | Lump-Sum Settlement | Annuity
Please contact the specialist for your specific needs.
The information provided here may not be suitable for you since information are collected from different source.  
Copyrights © www.nirob.com 2011