Entries in Urban Legend (9)
Don’t Mess With Taxes: Inaccuracies Abound in Structured Settlement Reporting
Wednesday, July 16, 2008 at 02:55PM I don’t know what it is about structured settlements and structured settlement factoring, but for some reason blatant inaccuracies seem more prevalent than truth in reporting on these topics. Personally I don’t think the facts are all that hard to get right, but maybe I’ve just been around too long.
The latest entry in the bad reporting category to catch my eye was Tim Grant’s piece in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, confusingly titled “Structured Settlements Of Money Take Away Risks Of Lump-Sum Payments” (first appearing in the Post-Gazette on June 25, 2008). You can read Mr. Grant’s article here.
Lest anyone should think I am picking on Mr. Grant, you should know that I sent him a personal email on June 25, 2008, which is copied below. Hearing nothing in response, I sent a letter to the editor of the Post-Gazette on June 30, 2008. Again, nothing (and my letter was not, to my knowledge, published). Is this willful blindness or something more sinister at work here?
Although Mr. Grant’s article is replete with error, one whopper stands out:
“Unlike lump sum settlements, payments from structured settlements are income tax free and the benefits are guaranteed for life by insurance companies.”
Many ill-informed commentators get confused about the tax treatment of structured settlement payments and factoring transaction lump sums. Breaking Mr. Grant’s assertion down to a simple form, he says that payments from structured settlements are income tax free (true), while lump sum payments are not (false). Lump sum payments in settlement of personal injury damages are income tax free under Internal Revenue Code 104(a)(2). Further, lump sums received from a factoring transaction are also income tax free, as was clarified over nine years ago by IRS Private Letter Ruling 1999-36030, and more recently by IRC 5891.
Manufactured confusion about taxes has long been used to scare people away from factoring. The bottom line is that income tax is not an issue to be concerned about, whether you are taking a lump sum in settlement of a personal injury claim at settlement, accepting payments over time in a structured settlement, or selling some or all of your future structured settlement payments.
The full text of my letter to Tim Grant:
As always I welcome your comments, questions and suggestions. You can reach me at mbracy@setcap.com.Mr. Grant:
I read with interest your story about structured settlements. I did, however, find some inaccuracies in the story of which you should be aware.
First, you state that “Unlike lump sum settlements, payments from structured settlements are income tax free and the benefits are guaranteed for life by insurance companies.” This sentence actually contains two inaccurate assertions: (1) that lump sum settlements are not tax free, and (2) the implication that all structured settlements are guaranteed for life. On the first point, under Internal Revenue Code § 104, all personal injury damage payments are excluded from income tax. This is true irrespective of whether the payment is a lump sum or received over time in a structured settlement [see IRC 104(a)(2)]. The second point, that structured settlement payments are guaranteed for life, is true in some circumstances but not all. Sometimes the payments are guaranteed for a time certain (for instance, 20 years), and then for the life of the payee thereafter, but this is not always the case. Many structured settlements are for a certain number of years only.
Finally, your story is replete with statements about the structured settlement payee’s inability to convert all or part of the future payments into either a present lump sum or to take a loan against the future payments. This is simply untrue. Forty-six states (including Pennsylvania) have structured settlement transfer laws which allow people, under some circumstances and with court approval, to sell future structured settlement payments, or to use the payments as collateral for a loan (see, e.g., the Pennsylvania Structured Settlement Protection Act, 40 P.S. 4001 et seq.).
I am general counsel to a company that provides such liquidity options to structured settlement recipients when needed. As your story accurately reports, structured settlements are a very valuable mechanism for settling personal injury lawsuits. In the vast majority of cases, the structured settlement works as planned. Occasionally, however, a life change or other unanticipated event occurs after the settlement and the payee finds that he or she needs more money than the periodic payments provide. In such circumstances, and within the rubrics of the various structured settlement transfer laws, part or all of the payee’s future payments can be sold (or pledged as security for a loan).
If you would like any further information on this topic, please feel free to visit our blog site (http://blog.setcap.com/), read the Wikipedia article on structured settlement transfers or “factoring”
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structured_settlement_factoring_transaction), or contact me. Thank you for your attention to this matter, and for writing about this important topic.
Matt Bracy
General Counsel
Settlement Capital Corporation
14755 Preston Rd., Ste. 130
Dallas , Texas 75254 972-450-5864
Misinformation and Misconception -- Part 2: The Broker’s Fees Debate
Thursday, January 31, 2008 at 11:24AM I have written before about the vast amount of misinformation out there on structured settlement factoring. But, misinformation is only part of the problem. Underlying some of the misinformation and some of the criticism of the factoring world is an inherent belief that factoring is evil (or at least very bad). Not that some factoring folks are bad, or that factoring is bad for some people, but that factoring in itself is, inherently and intrinsically, bad. This view is all too pervasive, and seeps into legitimate discussions about some factoring practices, unfairly coloring the discussion. Let me give an example.
John Darer, a structured settlement broker (that means he advises and helps people settle lawsuits and get into structured settlements), blogger extraordinaire and someone I admire has been engaging in a blog discussion about structured settlement brokers who accept referral fees for sending customers to factoring companies. This is an important discussion, and John has raised good points. However, intertwined in the dialogue and in some endorsements of John’s “clean vendor list” is the “factoring is evil” theme. The best example of this is Richard Halpern’s voiced support for eliminating factoring referrals, quoted by John in his December 13, 2007 posting. The discussion is whether structured settlement brokers should receive a referral fee for sending customers to factoring companies. John thinks not, as he sees this as “taking money out of the pockets of tort victims.” Mr. Halpern supports John’s position – or does he? “I applaud your call for all structured settlement brokers to sign your affidavit and to refrain from helping plaintiffs squander their money.” Mr. Halpern is apparently supporting a different plan, one that eliminates any referral to a factoring company at all – not simply refraining from taking a fee for doing so. That is clearly not what John is suggesting. Arguments about whether factoring leads to plaintiffs “squandering their money” should be considered independently and not mixed into this discussion.
I suggest that unless your “worldview” of factoring is clear, honest debates like this one can never go anywhere. Should factoring be abolished? If not, then at what level of involvement should various advisors be engaged? Who are these advisors? Several of John’s posts indicate that he thinks everyone who factors payments should be represented by an advisor. Who pays for that? Is there any difference between the payments that would need to go to such advisors and the payments to a broker who refers the business? They both would “take money out of the pockets of tort victims.” Is there a value being added, or otherwise a justification for the fee?
We’ve already said goodbye to 2007, let’s also say goodbye and good riddance to misinformation. Clear thinking and clear communication will help us all move our respective industries forward – beyond the misconceptions.
For more information on this topic and more, watch and/or listen to our latest video podcast.
Misinformation and Misconception
Monday, January 14, 2008 at 04:22PM When it comes to structured settlement factoring, terms and terminology get constantly mixed up, misquoted and misrepresented. Folks can’t seem to get it straight that “structured settlement brokers” are not in the factoring business and factoring companies are not in the structured settlement brokerage business. Misinformation is rampant. Depending on who you read and your perspective, factoring is evil, a necessary evil, a viable alternative, or the only way. Where is the truth in all this?
It seems the world’s understanding of structured settlement factoring, and the intersecting world of structured settlements, is in disarray. Why are the basic facts constantly misstated, overstated, understated or not stated at all? How can you explain the enormous quantity of misinformation on the internet?
The large volume of “information” on the internet concerning structured settlement factoring is undoubtedly a function of the high cost of terms like “sell structured settlement” for sponsor ads on Google and such. With lots of money to be made on the internet by simply getting people to click on ads, nature takes over and you then have many, many internet sites featuring information on how to “sell your structured settlement”. Naturally there is no real regulation or screening, and much of what is written about factoring is garbage. The volume of misinformation is astounding, with new entries nearly daily.
I have discussed such misinformation in the past. Another recent example is the “Ezine” article by Lance Winslow. Although Mr. Winslow has a very diverse background, and is a self-proclaimed Very Interesting Guy who traces his ancestry to the Mayflower, he knows little or nothing about structured settlements and factoring. For instance, Mr. Winslow’s short breezy article on structured settlement factoring states that you can use the money you generate from the factoring sale for "investing, buying a house or buying new car, plasma TV and other things humans want to make them happy.” I wonder if Mr. Winslow would like to come to court with me and explain how selling guaranteed, income tax-free payments and buying a plasma TV is in the “best interest” of the seller.
If you are involved in the structured settlement business, please take some time to educate yourself on what factoring really is, how it works and how courts influence the process and the underwriting.
More Old News
Friday, October 5, 2007 at 09:14AM In another example of how outdated or inaccurate information manages to stick around on the internet, I recently found an on-line article called, “Selling Your Structured Settlement.” This article is part of “ExpertLaw”, which purports to be an on-line expert witness source and also contains a sort of general “legal encyclopedia” of articles on various subjects.
Like the article I wrote about in my last post, unfortunately the author of this piece, Aaron Larsen, Esq. of Michigan, has not bothered to keep it up to date. Unlike the last article however, “Selling Your Structured Settlement” does contain a publication date (April, 2005). As much as I would like to give Mr. Larsen the benefit of the doubt, I’m afraid much of the misinformation contained in the article was as incorrect in 2005 as it is today.
I wrote to Mr. Larsen last month, pointing out that his article was “out of date” (at least) and offered to help him correct it. He has not taken me up on the offer, and as of today the article is still posted. In another attempt to clear the record, here are the points Mr. Larsen’s article has wrong:
1. “The best time to decide that a structured settlement is not right for you is before you consent to such a settlement.”
This is actually sound advice. However, it ignores the reality of structured settlements and factoring. In my experience and opinion, most structured settlements are entered into for good, well-thought out reasons. The structured settlement brokers and legal professionals who advise the personal injury plaintiff typically do a fine job of explaining the advantages and mechanics of a structured settlement. What most often prompts a person to seek to sell future payments, however, is not poor planning at the outset, but rather the occurrence of an unforeseen event. Most structured settlement factoring customers have experienced an unanticipated change in circumstances after the settlement is finalized. Structured settlement factoring provides flexibility when something unexpected comes up, like an illness in the family, the need for different housing or transportation, or the chance to buy a house or business. (See my earlier article entitled "The Need for Liquidity Options" for more on this).
2. “There are laws in approximately two thirds of the states which restrict the sale of structured settlements…”
Actually, there are currently structured settlement transfer laws in 46 states (92 percent) – far more than 2/3 (click here for a chart of all the states' transfer laws). Most of the laws (36) are based in whole or in substantial part on the model state law developed and approved by the National Conference of Insurance Legislators (NCOIL). Another 3 state laws pre-date the NCOIL model act, but are substantially the same as it.
3. “…and additional federal regulations apply to the sale of structured settlements.”
Almost got it right here. It’s actually a federal law (as in statute), not a regulation, found at 26 USC § 5891. Passed by Congress in 2001 and signed into law in 2002, the federal structured settlement protection act effectively governs all structured settlement factoring transactions. On its face it appears as simply a federal excise tax provision. You may choose to engage in a factoring transaction according to its terms or not, but if you do not, then an excise tax will be assessed. However, the innocuous wording of the statute belies the global effect it has, based on the severity of the excise tax itself. The excise tax under IRC 5891 is extremely punitive, rendering its provisions effectively mandatory.
IRC 5891 imposes a straightforward requirement on each factoring transaction: That it is approved under a “qualified order” by an “applicable state court” under an “applicable state statute”. Each of these terms has a specific meaning under the statute.
“Qualified Order” means an order or judgment from an “applicable state court” under the authority of an “applicable state statute” finding that the (1) transfer does not contravene any federal or state statute or order of any court or responsible administrative authority, and (2) the transfer is in the best interest of the annuitant/seller, taking into account the welfare and support of the payee’s dependents.
“Applicable State Court” means a state court in the state where the “applicable state statute has been enacted, or under some circumstances, the state where the annuitant/seller is domiciled.
“Applicable State Statute” means a state statute that governs the structured settlement transfer process in the state where the annuitant/seller is domiciled or, if none, then the state where either a party to the structured settlement or the insurance company that issues the annuity is domiciled.
4. “The insurance company that issued the annuities for the structured settlement may refuse to cooperate with the sale of a settlement, citing policy language and asserting that payments cannot be assigned.”
First, not to be too nit-picky, but it is not the sale of a “settlement” that occurs in a structured settlement factoring transaction. Rather, it is a “transfer of structured settlement payment rights” (see IRC 5891(c)(3)). While it is true that some insurance companies object to transfers, for a variety of reasons, it is not true as implied that such an objection somehow affects a veto of the transfer (except in Maine, which unfortunately does provide for such a veto). In the rest of the states, the judge will decide whether the transfer should be approved. For more information on antiassignment clauses in structured settlements, see my earlier post "Why You Can Assign Even When It Says You Can't".
5. “…there can be significant tax consequences associated with selling part or all of a settlement. It may be that, while payments made under the settlement were not taxed, the lump sum received through the sale of the settlement will be taxed.”
This is a whopper, and probably deserves its own article (which I hope to entitle “Don’t Mess with Taxes”). The purchase price paid to an annuitant/seller in a structured settlement factoring transaction is not taxable. As I mention in my last post, Old News:
It has been clear since at least 2002 with the passage of the federal Structured Settlement Factoring law that factoring purchase price payments to personal injury annuitants are not taxable. (IRC 5891(d)(1); see also Private Letter Ruling 1999-36030).
There seems to be an overabundance of incorrect information out there on structured settlements and factoring. Consumers and advisors need to be very cautious about where they educate themselves on these issues, and, as always, question the source. Since drafting this post I have already found more examples of misinformation posted by purported "experts". It looks like this will be a continuing blog theme, sadly.
For more information about structured settlement factoring and related issues, please contact me at mbracy@setcap.com or by phone at 800-959-0006.
Words Are Important: Politics and the Language of Structured Settlement Factoring
Tuesday, August 14, 2007 at 09:04AM As George Orwell implies in his famous essay “Politics and the English Language,” words used to describe things affect a kind of control over the things they describe. Language forms the basis of thought, since we think in words. Unless something can be named, we have difficulty holding it in our minds. The opposite can also be true: If a name of something becomes meaningless, the concept can be lost. “Since you don’t know what Fascism is, how can you struggle against Fascism?” notes Orwell. Often this use of language is purposeful and “political” (as in motivated by self-serving or partisan objectives). “Political language … is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.” It should be no surprise that word choice is linked to shading of the spin. Simply consider the various words available to describe the same person in the news today: Is he a “suicide bomber” a “homicide bomber” a “freedom fighter” or an “insurgent”? Each of these ways to characterize the same person is carefully chosen and filled with significance, and usually reflective of a particular perspective and agenda.
What on earth does any of this have to do with structured settlement factoring? As we have discussed several times in the past, the terminology used to describe this business can be misleading – purposefully misleading. Here are some examples:
1. Structured settlements are being “undone” by factoring:
This is not true. The structured settlement itself and the funding annuity are essentially left intact when a person elects to sell future payments. Further, and more to the point, the vast majority of factoring transactions only involve the sale of some of the future payments, with the remaining unsold payments continuing to go to the annuitant. “Undone” also connotes a retroactivity that very clearly does not come from a factoring transaction, but is the boogeyman of “negative tax consequences” from days gone by. Characterizing the factoring process as “undoing” a structured settlement casts the factoring industry against the primary structured settlement industry. That war has ended, although I suspect some long for the “good old days” and the fight. As with any who glamorize war, they are not the ones who were bloodied. True veterans of the factoring wars do not wish their return, and fashioned a workable peace that provides the framework for the factoring business today.
2. Factoring subjects the seller to “deep discounts”:
Vague and subjective terms like “deep” are subject to great interpretive variance. What may be a “deep” and unacceptable discount for some may be just fine for another. Most factoring discount rates today are in the 10-15% range. Is that “deep”? Yes, some are higher (and some are lower). Shorter term payment streams, where payments are close in time to the purchase, necessarily require a higher interest rate. Why? Think of it this way: If you took out a loan for $1,000, and the interest rate was 10% APR, but the loan was due in 6 months, the interest due at that time would be $51.05. Interest is the amount of money a lender makes from allowing you to use their money. From that amount, the lender needs to pay all overhead (salaries, leases, office equipment, etc.) and presumably make a profit. It is hard to imagine covering the expenses of the loan, let alone making a profit, from the $51.05 in interest in my example. Obviously, as time goes on the interest adds up, until it reaches a point where the profit justifies the transaction. Similarly, if a structured settlement payment or payment stream is due relatively soon, then the discount rate (analogous to the interest rate in the above example) must be high enough to produce enough profit to make the purchase worthwhile. The other factor prevalent in both examples is the lender’s or factoring company’s cost of funds. Factoring companies must borrow money to do business, like most other financial services companies.
3. Calculating factoring “deep discounts” … with bad math:
Concluding that there was a “deep discount” can often come from using bad math. Too commonly, a discount percentage is calculated by simply dividing the purchase price by the aggregate value of the future payments being sold. This “simple” calculation completely misses the most important element: The time value of money. A dollar in 20 years is not worth as much as a dollar today. By ignoring the time value of money, such calculations border on the ludicrous. Most unfortunately, the mathematically challenged who engage in this type of flawed analysis are sometimes judges.
4. Structured settlement annuitants are “irrational” “ignorant” or otherwise not able to care for themselves:
I find this mischaracterization the most enraging. It doesn’t take a very discerning eye to notice that when opponents of the factoring industry attack, often it is the seller/annuitant/former plaintiff that is pilloried. In court documents, legislative hearings, and blog and print articles, sellers of future payment rights are denigrated as incompetent imbeciles barely able to function in adult society. Here are some actual examples of how these annuitants are described:
“… factoring companies often charged sharp discounts to payees who were ill equipped to appreciate the value of their future payments or to understand the onerous terms of factoring agreements.”
“Factoring companies, commonly using phone banks, advertising and high-pressure sales to ‘buy’ a settlement for a small lump-sum, undermine these benefits and may exploit an injured person at a time when they need cash.”
“…it is estimated that more than half of the claimants squander their award themselves or lose it to family, friends, and the unscrupulous or even well-intentioned advisors…”
“About 90% of lump-sum recipients exhaust their awards within 5 years.”
Some of these statements were addressed in the only independent in-depth scholarly work on structured settlement factoring, Professor Adam Scales’s 2002 law review article, “Against Factoring? The Market in Tort Claims Has Arrived.” Prof. Scales notes the “generous helping of skepticism directed toward the habits of tort plaintiffs” which underlies many of these assumptions. “An essential element of the discussion has been the assumption that successful tort claimants simply cannot be trusted with large sums of money,” Scales writes. Most striking is Prof. Scales’s conclusion that these attacks against the annuitant are unfounded or, at best, not supported by any credible, relevant studies or evidence.
Portraying the structured settlement recipient as an incompetent boob has political and financial motivations. If you believe the charge, then surely someone must look after these poor wretches. To the rescue ride the many advisors and consultants who surely know better than the annuitant how they should spend their money. I am certainly not against advice, legal, financial or otherwise, but I am put-off by mischaracterizations and insults used to justify their functionality. The disingenuity of this tactic is brought to light when you consider that this “poor and inept” annuitant was once a tort plaintiff, who may or may not have been represented by counsel or a financial advisor when settling the tort claim (there is no requirement), and who typically did sign off on the settlement agreement resolving the dispute (usually without any judicial oversight). Alas, these poor folks must lose much competence from the settlement table to the factoring contract…
5. Structured Settlement factoring is an “impulse buy”:
Kirk Hughes has recently written on this, so I won’t belabor the point. I will point out that it is indeed difficult to imagine an “impulse buy” that involves (on average) a 3 month process, careful underwriting, a court appearance and “best interest” scrutiny.
In conclusion, I would simply and humbly suggest that persons interested in structured settlements, including factoring, guard against easy catch-phrasing and loosely reasoned terminology that forestall honest intellectual consideration. Rather, as Orwell suggests, send these phrases to the dustbin where they belong.
As always, we welcome comments on this article, or inquires regarding structured settlement factoring. You may contact me at mbracy@setcap.com, or by telephone at 800-959-0006.
Impulse Buy?
Friday, June 1, 2007 at 08:50AM When I think of an impulse buy, I think of the Mastercard Priceless Commercial “That would go Great with that!” where the woman gets a pedicure and then starts racking up charges to match her newly painted toes. Some have recently cited structured settlement factoring advertising as condoning impulse buying. Factoring structured settlement payments is anything but an impulse buy.
Last November, we wrote Structured Settlement Factoring Funding Times which will walk you through the 2 to 3 month process it takes to complete a transfer. The state statutes shoot down any idea that this is an impulse buy due to the fact that the spontaneity is destroyed by the 3 to 10 day mandatory rescission period from the time of the disclosure, a 20 day required notice period before the court date, the option to have the contract reviewed by a legal professional and the time it takes to gather and process all the required documents.
It is hard to imagine an impulse buy will ever be associated with the idea that one must seek a judge’s approval before making a purchase? Not only do those who wish to sell their payments have to go through 60 – 90 days of processing, but they must go before a judge to seek the courts approval to find that the structured settlement transfer is in their best interest taking into account the welfare and support of their dependents. How long do you think Mastercard would be in business if their customers had to go through this process to seek approval? Of course, Mastercard customers who have had some credit issues in the past are being charged rates in the upper teens to upwards of 20% with fees while settlement transfer rates start from the single digits and go up to the mid teens.
Structured Settlement Factoring Funding Times
Wednesday, November 8, 2006 at 11:40AM Many consumers want to know how long it really takes to complete a settlement factoring transaction. There are some companies that will inform potential customers that they can expect funds within 2-4 weeks. What they neglect to tell the customer is when they are starting the clock on the 2-4 week time frame.
Once the consumer and the settlement factoring company have agreed upon the pricing, the first step in the process is the disclosure statement. This must be sent out to the consumer prior to entering into a binding agreement. Most states follow the model act that requires the disclosure to be sent 3 days before signing the transfer agreement. Most of the other states require the disclosure to be received 10 days prior to incurring any obligation. There are less than a handful of states who do not have a waiting period at all.
Once the transfer agreements are sent, the consumers will usually take some time to review all the documents. While some states make it a requirement to seek independent legal or financial advise before signing the transfer agreement, the majority of state laws allows the consumer the option to determine if they need to seek this advise or not. The timing of this part of the process is completely up to the consumer. In general, it can take consumers one to two weeks to return the completed transfer agreement.
Once the transfer agreement is returned to the factoring company, some underwriting / due diligence is required to insure everything is in place for the court order process. The time is takes to complete this process will depend on how much documentation the factoring company needs to complete the transfer process. This process will vary from customer to customer as it can be difficult to obtain some of the necessary documents required to obtain the court approval. However, if a consumer is able to provide the factoring company copies of the required documents prior to or at the time they return the transfer agreement, the underwriting process can be completed in a matter of a couple of days. Typically, this will take anywhere between one to three weeks (even more depending on how long it takes to track down particular information and documents.)
Once the transaction is approved internally, the factoring company must submit this to the court for final approval in order to avoid significant taxes. The court must find that the transfer is in the best interest of the seller taking into account the welfare and support of their dependents. The paperwork can be sent to outside counsel within 24 – 48 hours from the time of the internal approval. The outside counsel will draft the petitions and orders to submit to the court. This process should not take more than a week.
The majority of state transfer statutes requires all interested parties are provided a minimum of 20 days written notice of the actual court hearing. Some states require less time and some require more time, but either way it is up to the court’s schedule as to when a hearing date will be set. Each court is unique in how the paperwork is submitted, processed and ultimately assigned a court date. This can sometime be scheduled out 21 –25 days and sometimes it is scheduled our 30 – 60 days. The factoring companies have no control over the court and judges schedules.
Assuming the transaction is approved, the factoring company will need the final signed order from the court. Obtaining the certified order can sometimes take a couple extra days depending on the court. Most factoring companies will be able to fund within 1 to 10 days of receiving the certified order depending on their internal funding abilities.
With all that said, it is easy to see that it is next to impossible to expect to receive your money within 2 to 4 weeks. However, it is important to keep realistic goals when considering selling your structured settlement payments. A typical transaction will take between 60 to 90 days from the time the disclosure is sent. This is industry norm. If anyone offers faster funding times, consider when they are starting the clock. In order to get a more realistic view of the timing requirements, you should check your state statute to see exactly what the requirements are. You can click here to see a list of all the state statutes.




