We conceived of Meanwhile three years ago, between Thanksgiving and Christmas 2021. In January 2022, we raised our first seed round from Sam Altman and Lachy Groom. We knew very little about long-term insurance; now, we know a lot and have a licensed and regulated life insurer. That's part of the entrepreneurial journey.
I use the phrase long-term insurance because “life insurance” encompasses many things—it can include protection, savings, retirement products, insurance bonds, tax and estate planning, investment accounts wrapped in insurance products, etc.
To me, the space is endlessly fascinating. Ambition and actuarial science don’t naturally go hand-in-hand, however. Max and I understood early, though, right from that Holiday season, that this space could keep our curiosity and attention for decades to come. This is an ancient financial service. The world is underinsured and our goal is to serve a billion people. Every double-click led to more places to explore. Every topic is a rabbit hole.
To many people, though, long-term insurance is opaque and, worse, dull. What about it keeps my interest? It’s partially the simple humanity of it — living and dying, uncertainty, and risk. It’s a philosophical study of how we all have an asset we don’t often think about: our own mortality and longevity. Turn that around; we all have a liability we don’t manage — the slight chance we’ll die before we should or live longer than we expect with our savings.
Actuarial science may seem dry, but there is riveting pure math in estimating mortality, probability distributions of our demise, discounting and present values of the far future, estimating returns on investments, liquidity management, and the impact — oh, the impacts — of simple assumptions, both right and wrong.
Underwriting is the complex question of estimating someone’s longevity given the information received and a struggle against adverse selection. On one level, insurance product designs are a game-theoretic competition between the insurer and the insured, and on another, they are a simple and critical financial service provided to policyholders.
Principal-agent problems are everywhere. Policyholders want both prudence and returns from insurers. Insurers want to make money (even the mutuals). Regulators want to protect policyholders but depend on insurers for their financial stability and economic impact. Insurers want policies sold carefully (adverse selection!), and agents (the people who sell policies) want them bought for commissions no matter what. The agent is literally an agent against the principal of the policyholder and will sometimes sell the highest commission products instead of the best one for the user’s needs.
Insurance is good for society, so governments give it tax incentives, leading to another game of cat and mouse to be navigated and managed.
Life insurers are permanent capital, free to invest with long time horizons (see my post on life insurance and abundance).
Then, there are insurers' pure tech and operations— well, okay, maybe that only excites me.
The point is that there is just SO MUCH there. Without writing a textbook, this post attempts to explain the basics with an eye toward the United States. I go over why users buy life insurance and annuities, how regulators think about life insurance, and how insurers conceptualize and operate their business.
In the future, I’ll write about the problems in the space, and how and why we use digital money.
The job to be done by a life insurer
Life insurance is a critical financial service. Life insurers have unique ways to support users in managing the financial risks associated with major life events, saving for their or their beneficiaries’ futures, and optimizing investments for tax purposes.
Why users buy life insurance
None of us knows when we will die, but we can be confident that we will.
Policyholders buy protection from the uncertain timing and impact of their mortality through a contract with life insurance companies that promises a payout upon death. When the insured dies, the policy's beneficiaries receive the payout. A policyholder might be of prime working age with young children, so although they have a low statistical likelihood of death, that event would be catastrophic to the family. Insurance protects the people they love.
Governments have decided that adequately insuring individuals against their mortality risk is good for society. This has led most countries with developed tax regimes to offer generous tax benefits to insurance products. These tax benefits themselves become a reason to buy life insurance contracts for tax and estate planning purposes, even for users who are wealthy enough that they do not need to provide financial protection for their families through insurance.
In the United States, for example, death benefits to beneficiaries are income tax-free, and policies' (cash) surrender value grows tax-deferred. Policy loans taken from (cash) surrender values are also tax-free.
Why users buy annuities
The flip side of mortality risk is longevity risk: none of us knows if we will live longer than expected. An individual might outlive their savings. Like mortality, though, predicting aggregate longevity becomes easy as the number of individuals increases. Annuities are contracts that provide fixed payouts for life based on an initial investment.
Governments have decided that supporting individuals in adequately saving for retirement is good for society. This has led most countries with developed tax regimes to offer generous tax benefits to annuities. So much so that many annuities are used as retirement accounts and are never actually annuitized—users do not elect to transform them into fixed payouts for the remainder of their lives and keep them as tax-efficient retirement accounts.
For example, in the United States, money invested in an annuity grows tax-deferred before payouts begin. If a potential user has maxed out their other retirement product options — like an IRA or a 401(k) — an annuity is a tax-advantaged structure for their retirement savings.
The business of life insurance
Life insurers make long-term promises to their policyholders. The life insurance business is about accurately modeling the underwriting risks taken in products, distributing those (profitable) products widely and efficiently, and managing the balance sheet prudently for appropriate returns.
Long-term liabilities come with long-term assets to support them. In recent years, many asset managers have realized the opportunity to manage an insurance company's long-term permanent capital. Apollo, Brookfield, KKR, Blue Owl, and others have set up life reinsurers or direct insurers for this purpose.
How life insurers make money
Life insurers make money in three ways: charging premiums that exceed the actuarial cost of mortality or longevity coverage (underwriting income), investing assets for returns that exceed guarantees and promises made (investment income), or through other fees.
Underwriting income
When a life insurer designs a product, they must decide how much to charge for the protection they provide. Pricing differs for applicants of various ages, sexes, and risk classes (due to health or smoker status, for example). Accounted within that pricing is a range of assumptions around the acquisition cost of the policy, operations and technology expense, capital and reserve requirements, lapses (a user surrendering their policy before they die), and much more. After all those assumptions are set, any pricing that exceeds those expenses is underwriting profit. Products are sometimes sold at an underwriting loss, with investment gains making up the difference.
Investment income
Insurers invest the premiums they receive. Returns above their promises and guarantees are investment income (analogous to net interest income in banking). For example, in a fixed deferred-annuity product, the life insurer might promise a crediting rate of 5% but design its investment portfolio to support those promises at 7% returns. The 2% difference is the margin to the company.
Fee income
Life insurers charge fees and expenses for some products. Annuities, for example, frequently have a management fee or expenses load. Universal life policies might have an administrative fee above and beyond the cost of insurance.
How life insurers operate
Life insurers are contractually required to meet their promises to policyholders. To do that prudently, they must understand the risks they are taking. Actuarial science is concerned with carefully managing insurance liabilities and the reserve set aside from premiums to pay future claims.
Insurance companies and their actuaries also carefully model investment risks. Regulators closely oversee them, setting strict guidelines on the types of investments they can make and the amount of capital they must maintain and hold.
Insurers manage many trillion dollars globally and have long-term liabilities to match long-term assets. There is nothing like demand deposits in insurance; without that promise of liquidity, insurers are not subject to “run risk” like banks are (in theory, there can be “mass lapses” which insurers have to model and protect against).
Reserves
Reserves are the portion of premiums an insurer sets aside for future claims. For a rough approximation, the reserve amount equals the present value of the expected value of potential future payouts subtracted from the present value of the expected value of possible future premiums.
Capital
Insurance companies hold capital in addition to their reserves to account for risks beyond payout liabilities. Such risks can include investment performance, interest rate shocks, and the stickiness of the capital base itself. Those risks and their probabilistic potential impact on the balance sheet are calculated, and a capital requirement is calculated given the assets (investments) and liabilities (guarantees to policyholders). If capital exceeds regulatory requirements, given all the risks, the company is solvent. Otherwise, it is insolvent, and regulators will act.
Governance, risk, and compliance
Insurance companies are tightly regulated due to the long-term financial guarantee made to policyholders and the opportunity for investment and operational mismanagement. This leads to various regulatory requirements around board and internal governance, enterprise risk (including underwriting, financial, credit, financial crime, operational, and other risks), and compliance with relevant reporting and due diligence regulations and laws.
Reinsurance
Reinsurers provide insurance to insurers. They can take on all or only part of a carrier's obligations. Life insurers can use reinsurance to protect against excess individual and collective risks or to free up regulatory capital.
Insurance carriers can also operate in the same group as reinsurers, typically consolidating risk across carriers and centralizing the balance sheet into regulatory jurisdictions with favorable capital and investment rules (like Bermuda).
How insurers distribute their product
In many jurisdictions, including the United States, licensed agents must sell life insurance. Life insurers can either distribute through a captive agency (as New York Life and Northwestern Mutual primarily do) or work with third-party distribution.
Third-party distributors can be independent or closely affiliated with a bank or wealth management company. Independent third-party distributors include brokerages (including MGAs and BGAs), independent marketing organizations (IMOs), and field marketing organizations.
Whether captive or third-party, agents are frequently held at arm’s length with little to no practical support, tooling, or software to make their jobs easier.