Sunday, December 30, 2012

FUNNY: 127-year old woman calls 115-year old man a "youngster"

The Daily Mail reports that Japan's Jiroemon Kimura is calling out China's Luo Meizhen:

China and Japan are constantly struggling over territory, politics and economic dominance - but now it appears the two Asian giants could have found another topic to fight about.

Earlier this month a Japanese man was officially declared the world's oldest living person at 115, but China is fielding an alternative candidate for the title.


Jiroemon Kimura, a former postman who was born on April 19, 1897, was named the world's oldest person by Guinness World Records after the death of American Dina Manfredini.

He lives in Kyotango and has 14 grandchildren, 25 great-grandchildren and 13 great-great-grandchildren.

Hopefully both bought whole life -- and not term -- life insurance!


Tuesday, September 11, 2012

The world's oldest woman had a lifetime annuity

Jane-Ling Wang is a professor of statistics at the University of California, Davis. One of her areas of focus is aging research.

In a recent article, she describes an annuity contract paid out to a person who turned out to be the world's oldest woman:

Jeanne Louise Calment, the world's longest living person (who died at the age of 122) was born in Arles, France on February 21, 1875 and died on August 4, 1997 in a nursing home in Arles. She was born in the year Bizet’s “Carmen” was first staged and Tolstoy published Anna Karennina, and a year before Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone. She also witnessed the aeroplane and the cinema. At the age of 13, she met Vincent Van Gogh in Arles and wasn’t impressed by him.


...Jean Calment came from a bourgeois family and never has to work. Her husband, a cousin, was a prosperous storeowner who offered her a life of ease revolving around tennis, bicycling, swimming, roller skating, piano and opera. In later years, Calment lived mostly off the income from her apartment, which she sold cheaply to a lawyer when she was 90.

Andre-Francois Raffray, who apparently relied on the actuarial table, signed a contingency contract with Calment and agreed to pay a life annuity of 2,500 francs ($500) a month under a deal to make him the owner of Calment's flat when she dies. Yet, he died at 77 and his family was still paying for more than a year unitl she died. Altogether, they paid more than 900,000 francs ($180,000), three times the value of the house.

In today's financial world, an annuity can be used to provide a steady income stream for life.

For more information about annuity products and how they can complement a retirement plan, contact your XYZZY representative today.

Inspirational Quote o' the Day

“By failing to prepare, you are preparing to fail.” - Benjamin Franklin

What was the biggest life insurance policy issued 95 years ago?

The New York Times states that a banker took out a $2.5 million life insurance policy... in 1917.


According to Dave Manuel's Inflation Calculator, that policy would translate to about $45 million today!

Do you know how much life insurance you need? Ask an XYZZY agent today.


The 10 Most Dangerous Professions

Each year the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) publishes a list of the deadliest professions. For those of you who watch the reality TV show Deadliest Catch, the #1 most dangerous job should come as no surprise:

1. Fishermen (116 deaths per 100,000 workers): As the BLS writes:

Fishers and related fishing workers often work under hazardous conditions, and transportation to a hospital or doctor often is not readily available when injuries do occur. The crew must guard against the danger of injury from malfunctioning fishing gear, entanglement in fishing nets and gear, slippery decks, ice formation, or large waves washing over the deck. Malfunctioning navigation or communication equipment may lead to collisions or shipwrecks.

The rest of the top 10?

2. Logging workers (91.9)
3. Airplane pilots and flight engineers (70.6)
4. Farmers and ranchers (41.4)
5. Mining machine operators (38.7)
6. Roofers (32.7)
7. Sanitation Workers (29.8)
8. Truck drivers and delivery workers (21.8)
9. Industrial machine workers (20.3)
10. Police officers (18.0)

Whether you work in a dangerous job or not, reviewing your life insurance needs with a XYZZY Life representative can help you assess where you stand on protecting your loved ones.