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Rising Interest rates & Par dividends discussion – The “smoothing effect” of the Par pool with dividends

Key Takeaways

Impact of Rising Interest Rates on Participating Whole Life Policies

  • Positive long-term impact:

    • Insurance companies invest primarily in fixed-income assets (like bonds and mortgages).

    • As market interest rates rise, new investments generate higher yields, which over time increase the returns in the participating account.

  • Stable returns through “smoothing”:

    • Insurers don’t react immediately to rate changes. They smooth returns over ~5 years.

    • This creates steady dividend payouts instead of volatile swings like in the stock market.

How the Insurance Company Operates Financially

  • Insurance companies function like banks in some ways:

    • Premiums are collected.

    • Funds are invested, especially into secure, cash-flowing assets (e.g., mortgages).

    • Dividends are distributed to policyholders from the surplus.

  • Mortgage lending is a major area:

    • Insurance companies lend on both residential and commercial real estate.

    • They benefit from secure cash flows and loan-to-value protections.

    • As mortgages renew at higher rates, insurers receive more income.

Policy Loans and Interest Rates

Policy loan interest rates may also rise over time—but:

  • Policyholders borrow from the insurer’s general fund, not from their own cash value.

  • If you borrow to pay off higher-interest debt (e.g., bank loans), policy loans can still be advantageous.

  • The strategy works best when you’re recapturing interest inside your own system vs. paying external creditors.

Dividend Scale Interest Rate vs. Market Rates

  • The dividend scale is a calculated figure, not a direct yield.

  • It incorporates:

    • Historical investment returns.

    • Expense and mortality assumptions.

    • Smoothing adjustments.

  • Despite market volatility (e.g., 2008 financial crisis), the participating accounts delivered positive returns due to their long-term, low-risk investment strategies.

Insurance Company Thinking: Long-Term Horizon

  • Unlike banks or investment firms that operate quarter-to-quarter, life insurers plan with 100-year timeframes.

  • Their management philosophy emphasizes stability, capital preservation, and predictable growth.

Visual Data Shared

  • Equitable Life’s historical dividend scale vs.:

    • 5-year Government of Canada bond yields.

    • 5-year GICs.

  • Clearly shows how insurer returns remain smoother and more stable, with gradual trends rather than spikes and crashes.

Final Thoughts

  • Rising interest rates are a net positive for policyholders in the long term, though there can be lag effects.

  • Mutual life insurance companies manage money conservatively and share profits through dividends.

  • Your policy is built to weather rate changes and remain a stable financial asset.