Subscribe

Goldman Sachs abandoning life settlements market

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. has retreated even further from the life settlements arena, shutting down Longmore Capital, its life settlements provider, according to reports.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. has retreated even further from the life settlements arena, shutting down Longmore Capital, its life settlements provider, according to reports.
The move essentially marks Goldman Sachs’s full exit from the secondary life settlements market, said Michael DuVally, a spokesman for the firm. He said that the decision to shut down the life settlements provider was a “commercial decision.”
“Basically when we entered in 2006, we thought the life settlements market had the potential to grow into a large institutional market, but at the present time we don’t see it growing beyond the size it has right now,” Mr. DuVally added.
Goldman’s decision to shut down Longmore Capital arrives about a month after the investment bank’s decision to shut down its QxX mortality index.
Launched in January 2008, the QxX index tracked the lives of 46,000 people over 65 with a primary impairment (other than AIDS or HIV). Goldman followed that with the release of the QxX.LS.2 index in December 2008, with another pool of 65,655 people over 65 with conditions that included cancer and diabetes.
That market never took off, however, and industry observers said that few trades were made on the index.
Longmore Capital is currently winding down

Related Topics:

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Stuck in the middle

Newly elected Finra board member whose firm is connected to a bribery scandal says the matter should have no effect on his ability to serve.

Fighting for market share in the LTC business

A handful of publicly held life insurers dominate the market for traditional long-term-care insurance, but mutual life insurers are beginning to make inroads with agents and financial advisers.

Breaking up is hard to do – especially with annuities

When a client came to his office bearing her new divorce decree, adviser Dale Russell became the bearer…

Longevity insurance promising – but higher rates would help

The Treasury Department and the Internal Revenue Service like it, as do many estate-planning experts. Now all…

Long-term care: Cutting back coverage

When a 74-year-old client visited Ellen R. Siegel six years ago with news of an upcoming 12% rate increase on the premium of her long-term-care insurance, the adviser knew she had to navigate the potential benefit cuts with the precision of a surgeon.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print