Key man Insurance
A key person can be anyone from a director to
an ordinary employee with special expertise such as a research
scientist.
A death or serious illness of this key person can have serious
financial consequences for a business, such as :
- Falling profits while the business attempts to resume normal
trading
- Loss of working capital if overdrafts are called in by lenders
and lines of credit are suspended
- Unwanted changes in the balance of shareholder control within
a company
- Difficulties and conflicts in realising fair value for inherited
shareholdings and partnership shares
The solution lies in legal agreements governing the disposal
of share holdings and partnership shares, financed through appropriate
life and critical illness insurance policies, set up tax-efficiently.
The key contracts of insurance are life and critical illness
policies.
Life Insurance policies pay
benefits on death.
Critical Illness policies pay out on the diagnosis
of any of a series of serious medical conditions specified on
the policy, such as heart attacks, strokes, most forms of cancer,
multiple sclerosis and permanent total disability.
The smaller the enterprise, the more vulnerable
it is likely to be to the loss of key personnel through death
or serious illness. The death or permanent incapacity of a sole
trader, for example, can literally entail the death of the business.
Key person policies
The company or firm insures the lives of key individuals for
a capital sum (ie the "sum assured") commensurate
with the estimated financial loss to the business in the event
of the employee's death or serious illness.
Key person insurance is complex and should not be undertaken
without taking professional advice as to the correct sums assured,
the most suitable policies to use and the tax treatment of premiums
and claims.
Pryce Warner International Group will
be pleased to advise you.