0001193125-11-123774.txt : 20110503
0001193125-11-123774.hdr.sgml : 20110503
20110503152914
ACCESSION NUMBER: 0001193125-11-123774
CONFORMED SUBMISSION TYPE: 424B3
PUBLIC DOCUMENT COUNT: 1
FILED AS OF DATE: 20110503
DATE AS OF CHANGE: 20110503
FILER:
COMPANY DATA:
COMPANY CONFORMED NAME: LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE CO
CENTRAL INDEX KEY: 0000910739
STANDARD INDUSTRIAL CLASSIFICATION: LIFE INSURANCE [6311]
IRS NUMBER: 470766853
STATE OF INCORPORATION: NE
FISCAL YEAR END: 1231
FILING VALUES:
FORM TYPE: 424B3
SEC ACT: 1933 Act
SEC FILE NUMBER: 333-158192
FILM NUMBER: 11804972
BUSINESS ADDRESS:
STREET 1: P O BOX 80469
STREET 2: 2940 SOUTH 84TH ST
CITY: LINCOLN
STATE: NE
ZIP: 68501
BUSINESS PHONE: 4024794061
MAIL ADDRESS:
STREET 1: PO BOX 80469
STREET 2: 206 S 13TH STREET
CITY: LINCOLN
STATE: NE
ZIP: 68501
424B3
1
d424b3.txt
CONSULTANT I
LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE COMPANY
Supplement Dated May 1, 2011
To the following Prospectuses, as supplemented
CONSULTANT SOLUTIONS (CLASSIC, PLUS, ELITE, SELECT) PROSPECTUS DATED MAY 1, 2011
CONSULTANT I PROSPECTUS DATED MAY 1, 2011
LBL ADVANTAGE PROSPECTUS DATED MAY 1, 2004
CONSULTANT II PROSPECTUS DATED MAY 1, 2004
PREMIER PLANNER PROSPECTUS DATED MAY 1, 2004
The following information supplements the prospectus for your variable
annuity contract issued by Lincoln Benefit Life Company.
SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION
ABOUT LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE COMPANY
INDEX
PAGE
----
Item 3(c) Risk Factors............................................................... 1
Item 11(a) Description of Business.................................................... 8
Item 11(b) Description of Property.................................................... 10
Item 11(c) Legal Proceedings.......................................................... 10
Item 11(e) Financial Statements and Notes to Financial Statements..................... 10
Item 11(f) Selected Financial Data.................................................... 44
Item 11(h) Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of
Operations............................................................... 44
Item 11(j) Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk................. 59
Item 11(k) Directors, Executive Officers, Promoters and Control Persons............... 59
Item 11(l) Executive Compensation..................................................... 61
Item 11(m) Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management............. 87
Item 11(n) Transactions with Related Persons, Promoters and Certain Control Persons... 89
Other Information...................................................................... 91
ITEM 3(C). RISK FACTORS
This document contains "forward-looking statements" that anticipate results
based on our estimates, assumptions and plans that are subject to uncertainty.
These statements are made subject to the safe-harbor provisions of the Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. We assume no obligation to update any
forward-looking statements as a result of new information or future events or
developments.
These forward-looking statements do not relate strictly to historical or
current facts and may be identified by their use of words like "plans,"
"seeks," "expects," "will," "should," "anticipates," "estimates," "intends,"
"believes," "likely," "targets" and other words with similar meanings. These
statements may address, among other things, our strategy for growth, product
development, investment results, regulatory approvals, market position,
expenses, financial results, litigation and reserves. We believe that these
statements are based on reasonable estimates, assumptions and plans. However,
if the estimates, assumptions or plans underlying the forward-looking
statements prove inaccurate or if other risks or uncertainties arise, actual
results could differ materially from those communicated in these
forward-looking statements.
In addition to the normal risks of business, we are subject to significant
risks and uncertainties, including those listed below, which apply to us as an
insurer and a provider of other financial services. These risks
constitute our cautionary statements under the Private Securities Litigation
Reform Act of 1995 and readers should carefully review such cautionary
statements as they identify certain important factors that could cause actual
results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements and
historical trends. These cautionary statements are not exclusive and are in
addition to other factors discussed elsewhere in this document, in our filings
with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") or in materials
incorporated therein by reference.
CHANGES IN UNDERWRITING AND ACTUAL EXPERIENCE COULD MATERIALLY AFFECT
PROFITABILITY OF BUSINESS CEDED TO ALLSTATE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY ("ALIC")
Our product pricing includes long-term assumptions regarding investment
returns, mortality, morbidity, persistency and operating costs and expenses of
the business, which is ceded to ALIC. We establish target returns for each
product based upon these factors and the average amount of capital that we and
ALIC must hold to support in-force contracts taking into account rating
agencies and regulatory requirements. We monitor and manage our pricing and
overall sales mix to achieve target new business returns on a portfolio basis,
which could result in the discontinuation or de-emphasis of products or
distribution relationships and a decline in sales. Profitability from new
business emerges over a period of years depending on the nature and life of the
product and is subject to variability as actual results may differ from pricing
assumptions. Additionally, many of our products have fixed or guaranteed terms
that limit our ability to increase revenues or reduce benefits, including
credited interest, once the product has been issued.
ALIC's profitability depends on the adequacy of investment spreads, the
management of market and credit risks associated with investments, the
sufficiency of premiums and contract charges to cover mortality and morbidity
benefits, the persistency of policies to ensure recovery of acquisition
expenses, and the management of operating costs and expenses within anticipated
pricing allowances. Legislation and regulation of the insurance marketplace and
products could also affect the profitability of our business ceded to ALIC.
CHANGES IN RESERVE ESTIMATES MAY ADVERSELY AFFECT OUR OPERATING RESULTS CEDED
TO ALIC
The reserve for life-contingent contract benefits is computed on the basis
of long-term actuarial assumptions of future investment yields, mortality,
morbidity, persistency and expenses. We periodically review the adequacy of
these reserves on an aggregate basis and if future experience differs
significantly from assumptions, adjustments to reserves may be required which
could have a material adverse effect on our operating results ceded to ALIC.
CHANGES IN MARKET INTEREST RATES MAY LEAD TO A SIGNIFICANT DECREASE IN THE
SALES AND PROFITABILITY OF SPREAD-BASED PRODUCTS CEDED TO ALIC
Our ability to manage our spread-based products, such as fixed annuities, is
dependent upon maintaining profitable spreads between investment yields and
interest crediting rates on business ceded to ALIC. When market interest rates
decrease or remain at relatively low levels, proceeds from investments that
have matured or have been prepaid or sold may be reinvested at lower yields,
reducing investment spread. Lowering interest crediting rates on some products
in such an environment can partially offset decreases in investment yield.
However, these changes could be limited by market conditions, regulatory
minimum rates or contractual minimum rate guarantees on many contracts and may
not match the timing or magnitude of changes in investment yields. Decreases in
the interest crediting rates offered on products could make those products less
attractive, leading to lower sales and/or changes in the level of policy loans,
surrenders and withdrawals. Non-parallel shifts in interest rates, such as
increases in short-term rates without accompanying increases in medium- and
long-term rates, can influence customer demand for fixed annuities, which could
impact the level and profitability of new customer deposits. Increases in
market interest rates can also have negative effects on the business ceded to
ALIC, for example by increasing the attractiveness of other investments to our
customers, which can lead to higher surrenders at a time when our fixed income
investment asset values are lower as a result
2
of the increase in interest rates. This could lead to the sale of fixed income
securities at a loss. For certain products, principally fixed annuity and
interest-sensitive life products, the earned rate on assets could lag behind
rising market yields. We may react to market conditions by increasing crediting
rates, which could narrow spreads and reduce profitability on the business
ceded to ALIC.
A LOSS OF KEY PRODUCT DISTRIBUTION RELATIONSHIPS COULD MATERIALLY AFFECT SALES,
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS AND CASH FLOWS CEDED TO ALIC
Certain products are distributed under agreements with other members of the
financial services industry that are not affiliated with us. Termination of one
or more of these agreements due to, for example, a change in control of one of
these distributors or market conditions that make it difficult to achieve our
target return on certain products, resulting in relatively uncompetitive
pricing, or a decision by us to discontinue selling products through a
distribution channel, could have a detrimental effect on our sales, results of
operations or cash flows ceded to ALIC if it were to result in an elevated
level of surrenders of in-force contracts sold through terminated distribution
relationships.
CHANGES IN TAX LAWS MAY DECREASE SALES AND PROFITABILITY OF PRODUCTS CEDED TO
ALIC
Under current federal and state income tax law, certain products we offer,
primarily life insurance and annuities, receive favorable tax treatment. This
favorable treatment may give certain of our products a competitive advantage
over noninsurance products. Congress from time to time considers legislation
that would reduce or eliminate the favorable policyholder tax treatment
currently applicable to life insurance and annuities. Congress also considers
proposals to reduce the taxation of certain products or investments that may
compete with life insurance or annuities. Legislation that increases the
taxation on insurance products or reduces the taxation on competing products
could lessen the advantage or create a disadvantage for certain of our products
making them less competitive. Such proposals, if adopted, could have a material
adverse effect on ALIC's profitability and financial condition or our ability
to sell such products and could result in the surrender of some existing
contracts and policies. In addition, changes in the federal estate tax laws
could negatively affect the demand for the types of life insurance used in
estate planning.
RISKS RELATING TO INVESTMENTS
WE ARE SUBJECT TO MARKET RISK AND DECLINES IN CREDIT QUALITY WHICH MAY
ADVERSELY IMPACT INVESTMENT INCOME, CAUSE ADDITIONAL REALIZED LOSSES, AND CAUSE
INCREASED UNREALIZED LOSSES
We are subject to the risk that we will incur losses due to adverse changes
in interest rates or credit spreads. We are subject to risks associated with
potential declines in credit quality related to specific issuers or specific
industries and a general weakening in the economy, which are typically
reflected through credit spreads. Credit spread is the additional yield on
fixed income securities above the risk-free rate (typically defined as the
yield on U.S. Treasury securities) that market participants require to
compensate them for assuming credit, liquidity and/or prepayment risks. Credit
spreads vary (i.e. increase or decrease) in response to the market's perception
of risk and liquidity in a specific issuer or specific sector and are
influenced by the credit ratings, and the reliability of those ratings,
published by external rating agencies.
A decline in market interest rates or credit spreads could have an adverse
effect on our investment income as we invest cash in new investments that may
earn less than the portfolio's average yield. In a declining interest rate
environment, borrowers may prepay or redeem securities more quickly than
expected as they seek to refinance at lower rates. An increase in market
interest rates or credit spreads could have an adverse effect on the value of
our investment portfolio by decreasing the fair values of the fixed income
securities that comprise a substantial majority of our investment portfolio. A
decline in the quality of our investment portfolio as a result of adverse
economic conditions or otherwise could cause additional realized losses on
securities.
3
DETERIORATING FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE IMPACTING SECURITIES COLLATERALIZED BY
RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE LOANS MAY LEAD TO WRITE-DOWNS AND IMPACT
OUR RESULTS OF OPERATIONS AND FINANCIAL CONDITION
Changes in residential or commercial mortgage delinquencies, loss severities
or recovery rates, declining residential or commercial real estate prices and
the quality of service provided by service providers on securities in our
portfolio could lead us to determine that write-downs are necessary in the
future.
CONCENTRATION OF OUR INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO IN ANY PARTICULAR SEGMENT OF THE
ECONOMY MAY HAVE ADVERSE EFFECTS ON OUR OPERATING RESULTS AND FINANCIAL
CONDITION
The concentration of our investment portfolio in any particular industry,
collateral types, group of related industries or geographic sector could have
an adverse effect on our investment portfolio and consequently on our results
of operations and financial condition. Events or developments that have a
negative impact on any particular industry, group of related industries or
geographic region may have a greater adverse effect on the investment portfolio
to the extent that the portfolio is concentrated rather than diversified.
THE DETERMINATION OF THE AMOUNT OF REALIZED CAPITAL LOSSES RECORDED FOR
IMPAIRMENTS OF OUR INVESTMENTS IS HIGHLY SUBJECTIVE AND COULD MATERIALLY IMPACT
OUR OPERATING RESULTS AND FINANCIAL CONDITION
The determination of the amount of realized capital losses recorded for
impairments vary by investment type and is based upon our periodic evaluation
and assessment of known and inherent risks associated with the respective asset
class. Such evaluations and assessments are revised as conditions change and
new information becomes available. We update our evaluations regularly and
reflect changes in other-than-temporary impairments in our results of
operations. The assessment of whether other-than-temporary impairments have
occurred is based on our case-by-case evaluation of the underlying reasons for
the decline in fair value. There can be no assurance that we have accurately
assessed the level of or amounts recorded for other-than-temporary impairments
taken in our financial statements. Furthermore, historical trends may not be
indicative of future impairments and additional impairments may need to be
recorded in the future.
THE DETERMINATION OF THE FAIR VALUE OF OUR FIXED INCOME SECURITIES IS HIGHLY
SUBJECTIVE AND COULD MATERIALLY IMPACT OUR OPERATING RESULTS AND FINANCIAL
CONDITION
In determining fair values we generally utilize market transaction data for
the same or similar instruments. The degree of management judgment involved in
determining fair values is inversely related to the availability of market
observable information. The fair value of assets may differ from the actual
amount received upon sale of an asset in an orderly transaction between market
participants at the measurement date. Moreover, the use of different valuation
assumptions may have a material effect on the assets' fair values. The
difference between amortized cost and fair value, net of deferred income taxes,
is reflected as a component of accumulated other comprehensive income in
shareholder's equity. Changing market conditions could materially effect the
determination of the fair value of securities and unrealized net capital gains
and losses could vary significantly. Determining fair value is highly
subjective and could materially impact our operating results and financial
condition.
RISKS RELATING TO THE INSURANCE INDUSTRY
OUR FUTURE RESULTS ARE DEPENDENT IN PART ON OUR ABILITY TO SUCCESSFULLY OPERATE
IN AN INSURANCE INDUSTRY THAT IS HIGHLY COMPETITIVE
The insurance industry is highly competitive. Our competitors include other
insurers and, because many of our products include a savings or investment
component, securities firms, investment advisers, mutual funds, banks and other
financial institutions. Many of our competitors have well-established national
reputations and market similar products. Because of the competitive nature of
the insurance industry, including competition for producers such as exclusive
and independent agents, there can be no assurance that we will continue to
4
effectively compete with our industry rivals, or that competitive pressures
will not have a material adverse effect on our business or operating results
ceded to ALIC. Furthermore, certain competitors operate using a mutual
insurance company structure and therefore may have dissimilar profitability and
return targets. Our ability to successfully operate may also be impaired if we
are not effective in filling critical leadership positions, in developing the
talent and skills of our human resources, in assimilating new executive talent
into our organization, or in deploying human resource talent consistently with
our business goals.
DIFFICULT CONDITIONS IN THE ECONOMY GENERALLY COULD ADVERSELY AFFECT OUR
BUSINESS AND OPERATING RESULTS
As with most businesses, we believe difficult conditions in the economy,
such as significant negative macroeconomic trends, including relatively high
and sustained unemployment, reduced consumer spending, lower home prices, and
substantial increases in delinquencies on consumer debt, including defaults on
home mortgages, and the relatively low availability of credit could have an
adverse effect on our business and operating results.
General economic conditions could adversely affect us in the form of
consumer behavior and pressure investment results. Consumer behavior changes
could include decreased demand for our products. In addition, holders of some
of our interest-sensitive life insurance and annuity products may engage in an
elevated level of discretionary withdrawals of contractholder funds. Our
investment results could be adversely affected as deteriorating financial and
business conditions affect the issuers of the securities in our investment
portfolio.
THERE CAN BE NO ASSURANCE THAT ACTIONS OF THE U.S. FEDERAL GOVERNMENT, FEDERAL
RESERVE AND OTHER GOVERNMENTAL AND REGULATORY BODIES FOR THE PURPOSE OF
STABILIZING THE FINANCIAL MARKETS AND STIMULATING THE ECONOMY WILL ACHIEVE THE
INTENDED EFFECT
In response to the financial crises affecting the banking system, the
financial markets and the broader economy in recent years, the U.S. federal
government, the Federal Reserve and other governmental and regulatory bodies
have taken actions such as purchasing mortgage-backed and other securities from
financial institutions, investing directly in banks, thrifts and bank and
savings and loan holding companies and increasing federal spending to stimulate
the economy. There can be no assurance as to the long term impact such actions
will have on the financial markets or on economic conditions, including
potential inflationary affects. Continued volatility and any further economic
deterioration could materially and adversely affect our business, financial
condition and results of operations.
LOSSES FROM LITIGATION MAY BE MATERIAL TO OUR OPERATING RESULTS OR CASH FLOWS
CEDED TO ALIC
As is typical for a large company, our ultimate parent The Allstate
Corporation and its subsidiaries are involved in various legal actions,
including class action litigation challenging a range of company practices and
coverage provided by our insurance products. In the event of an unfavorable
outcome in one or more of these matters, the ultimate liability may be in
excess of amounts currently reserved and may be material to our operating
results or cash flows ceded to ALIC for a particular annual period.
WE ARE SUBJECT TO EXTENSIVE REGULATION AND POTENTIAL FURTHER RESTRICTIVE
REGULATION MAY INCREASE OUR OPERATING COSTS AND LIMIT OUR GROWTH
As an insurance company with separate accounts that are regulated as
investment companies, we are subject to extensive laws and regulations. These
laws and regulations are complex and subject to change. Moreover, they are
administered and enforced by a number of different governmental authorities,
including state insurance regulators, state securities administrators, the SEC,
the FINRA, the U.S. Department of Justice, and state attorneys general, each of
which exercises a degree of interpretive latitude. Consequently, we are subject
to the risk that compliance with any particular regulator's or enforcement
authority's interpretation of a legal issue may not result in compliance with
another's interpretation of the same issue, particularly when compliance is
judged in hindsight. In addition, there is risk that any particular regulator's
or enforcement authority's interpretation of a
5
legal issue may change over time to our detriment, or that changes in the
overall legal environment may, even absent any particular regulator's or
enforcement authority's interpretation of a legal issue changing, cause us to
change our views regarding the actions we need to take from a legal risk
management perspective, thus necessitating changes to our practices that may,
in some cases, limit our ability to grow and improve the profitability of our
business ceded to ALIC. Furthermore, in some cases, these laws and regulations
are designed to protect or benefit the interests of a specific constituency
rather than a range of constituencies. For example, state insurance laws and
regulations are generally intended to protect or benefit purchasers or users of
insurance products. In many respects, these laws and regulations limit our
ability to grow and improve the profitability of our business ceded to ALIC.
In recent years, the state insurance regulatory framework has come under
public scrutiny and members of Congress have discussed proposals to provide for
federal chartering of insurance companies. We can make no assurances regarding
the potential impact of state or federal measures that may change the nature or
scope of insurance regulation.
REGULATORY REFORMS, AND THE MORE STRINGENT APPLICATION OF EXISTING REGULATIONS,
MAY MAKE IT MORE EXPENSIVE FOR US TO CONDUCT OUR BUSINESS
The federal government has enacted comprehensive regulatory reforms for
financial services entities. As part of a larger effort to strengthen the
regulation of the financial services market, certain reforms are applicable to
the insurance industry, including the establishment of a Federal Insurance
Office within the Department of Treasury.
These regulatory reforms and any additional legislation or regulatory
requirements imposed upon us in connection with the federal government's
regulatory reform of the financial services industry and any more stringent
enforcement of existing regulations by federal authorities, may make it more
expensive for us to conduct our business.
REINSURANCE MAY BE UNAVAILABLE AT CURRENT LEVELS AND PRICES, WHICH MAY LIMIT
OUR ABILITY TO WRITE NEW BUSINESS
Market conditions beyond our control impact the availability and cost of the
reinsurance we purchase. No assurances can be made that reinsurance will remain
continuously available to us to the same extent and on the same terms and rates
as is currently available. If we were unable to maintain our current level of
reinsurance or purchase new reinsurance protection in amounts that we consider
sufficient and at prices that we consider acceptable, either ALIC would have to
accept an increase in exposure risk, or we would have to reduce our insurance
writings, or develop or seek other alternatives.
REINSURANCE SUBJECTS US TO THE CREDIT RISK OF OUR REINSURERS AND MAY NOT BE
ADEQUATE TO PROTECT US AGAINST LOSSES ARISING FROM CEDED INSURANCE, WHICH COULD
HAVE A MATERIAL ADVERSE EFFECT ON OUR OPERATING RESULTS CEDED TO ALIC
The collectability of reinsurance recoverables is subject to uncertainty
arising from a number of factors, including changes in market conditions,
whether insured losses meet the qualifying conditions of the reinsurance
contract and whether reinsurers, or their affiliates, have the financial
capacity and willingness to make payments under the terms of a reinsurance
treaty or contract. Our inability to collect a material recovery from a
reinsurer could have a material adverse effect on operating results ceded to
ALIC.
A LARGE SCALE PANDEMIC, THE CONTINUED THREAT OF TERRORISM OR ONGOING MILITARY
ACTIONS MAY HAVE AN ADVERSE EFFECT ON THE LEVEL OF CLAIM LOSSES WE INCUR AND
CEDE TO ALIC, THE VALUE OF OUR INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO, OUR COMPETITIVE POSITION,
MARKETABILITY OF PRODUCT OFFERINGS, LIQUIDITY AND OPERATING RESULTS
A large scale pandemic, the continued threat of terrorism, within the United
States and abroad, or ongoing military and other actions and heightened
security measures in response to these types of threats, may cause
6
significant volatility and losses in our investment portfolio from declines in
the equity markets and from interest rate changes in the United States, Europe
and elsewhere, and result in loss of life, disruptions to commerce and reduced
economic activity. Some of the assets in our investment portfolio may be
adversely affected by reduced economic activity caused by a large scale
pandemic or the continued threat of terrorism. Additionally, a large scale
pandemic or terrorist act could have a material adverse effect on the sales,
profitability, competitiveness, marketability of product offerings, liquidity,
and operating results.
A DOWNGRADE IN ALIC'S FINANCIAL STRENGTH RATINGS MAY HAVE AN ADVERSE EFFECT ON
OUR COMPETITIVE POSITION, THE MARKETABILITY OF OUR PRODUCT OFFERINGS, AND OUR
LIQUIDITY, OPERATING RESULTS CEDED TO ALIC AND FINANCIAL CONDITION
Financial strength ratings are important factors in establishing the
competitive position of insurance companies and generally have an effect on an
insurance company's business. On an ongoing basis, rating agencies review the
financial performance and condition of insurers and could downgrade or change
the outlook on an insurer's ratings due to, for example, a change in an
insurer's statutory capital; a change in a rating agency's determination of the
amount of risk-adjusted capital required to maintain a particular rating; an
increase in the perceived risk of an insurer's investment portfolio; a reduced
confidence in management or a host of other considerations that may or may not
be under the insurer's control. The insurance financial strength ratings of
ALIC from A.M. Best, Standard & Poor's and Moody's are subject to continuous
review, and the retention of current ratings cannot be assured. A downgrade in
any of these ratings could have a material adverse effect on our sales, our
competitiveness, the marketability of our product offerings, and our liquidity
and operating results ceded to ALIC.
CHANGES IN ACCOUNTING STANDARDS ISSUED BY THE FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS
BOARD ("FASB") OR OTHER STANDARD-SETTING BODIES MAY ADVERSELY AFFECT OUR
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS AND FINANCIAL CONDITION
Our financial statements are subject to the application of generally
accepted accounting principles, which are periodically revised, interpreted
and/or expanded. Accordingly, we are required to adopt new guidance or
interpretations, or could be subject to existing guidance as we enter into new
transactions, which may have a material adverse effect on our results of
operations and financial condition that is either unexpected or has a greater
impact than expected. For a description of changes in accounting standards that
are currently pending and, if known, our estimates of their expected impact,
see Note 2 of the financial statements.
THE CHANGE IN OUR UNRECOGNIZED TAX BENEFIT DURING THE NEXT 12 MONTHS IS SUBJECT
TO UNCERTAINTY
We have disclosed our estimate of net unrecognized tax benefits and the
reasonably possible increase or decrease in its balance during the next 12
months in Note 10 of the financial statements. However, actual results may
differ from our estimate for reasons such as changes in our position on
specific issues, developments with respect to the governments' interpretations
of income tax laws or changes in judgment resulting from new information
obtained in audits or the appeals process.
THE OCCURRENCE OF EVENTS UNANTICIPATED IN OUR DISASTER RECOVERY SYSTEMS AND
MANAGEMENT CONTINUITY PLANNING OR A SUPPORT FAILURE FROM EXTERNAL PROVIDERS
DURING A DISASTER COULD IMPAIR OUR ABILITY TO CONDUCT BUSINESS EFFECTIVELY
The occurrence of a disaster such as a natural catastrophe, an industrial
accident, a terrorist attack or war, events unanticipated in our disaster
recovery systems or a support failure from external providers, could have an
adverse effect on our ability to conduct business and on our results of
operations ceded to ALIC and financial condition, particularly if those events
affect our computer-based data processing, transmission, storage, and retrieval
systems. In the event that a significant number of our managers could be
unavailable in the event of a disaster, our ability to effectively conduct our
business could be severely compromised.
7
ITEM 11(A).DESCRIPTION OF BUSINESS
Lincoln Benefit Life Company ("Lincoln Benefit") was incorporated under the
laws of the State of Nebraska in 1938. Lincoln Benefit is a wholly owned
subsidiary of Allstate Life Insurance Company ("ALIC"), a stock life insurance
company incorporated under the laws of the State of Illinois. ALIC is a wholly
owned subsidiary of Allstate Insurance Company ("AIC"), a stock
property-liability insurance company organized under the laws of the State of
Illinois. All of the outstanding capital stock of Allstate Insurance Company is
owned by Allstate Insurance Holdings, LLC, which is wholly owned by The
Allstate Corporation (the "Corporation" or "Allstate"), a publicly owned
holding company incorporated under the laws of the State of Delaware. The
Allstate Corporation is the largest publicly held personal lines insurer in the
United States. Widely known through the "You're In Good Hands With Allstate(R)"
slogan, Allstate is reinventing protection and retirement to help individuals
in approximately 16 million households protect what they have today and better
prepare for tomorrow. Customers can access Allstate products and services such
as auto insurance and homeowners insurance through more than 13,000 exclusive
Allstate agencies and financial representatives in the United States and
Canada. Allstate is the 2/nd/ largest personal property and casualty insurer in
the United States on the basis of 2009 statutory direct premiums earned. In
addition, according to A.M. Best, it is the nation's 16/th/ largest issuer of
life insurance business on the basis of 2009 ordinary life insurance in force
and 21/st/ largest on the basis of 2009 statutory admitted assets.
8
In our reports, we occasionally refer to statutory financial information.
All domestic United States insurance companies are required to prepare
statutory-basis financial statements. As a result, industry data is available
that enables comparisons between insurance companies, including competitors
that are not subject to the requirement to prepare financial statements in
conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States
of America ("GAAP"). We frequently use industry publications containing
statutory financial information to assess our competitive position.
We provide life insurance, retirement and investment products. Our principal
products are interest-sensitive, traditional and variable life insurance, and
fixed annuities including deferred and immediate. We sell products through
multiple intermediary distribution channels, including Allstate exclusive
agencies and exclusive financial specialists and independent agents (including
master brokerage agencies). Through March 31, 2010, we also sold products
through broker-dealers. Although we continue to service in force contracts sold
through this distribution channel, we no longer solicit new sales through
direct relationships with broker-dealers.
We compete on a wide variety of factors, including the scope of our
distribution systems, the type of our product offerings, the recognition of our
brands, our financial strength and ratings, our differentiated product features
and prices, and the level of customer service that we provide.
The market for life insurance, retirement and investment products continues
to be highly fragmented and competitive. As of December 31, 2010, there were
approximately 470 groups of life insurance companies in the United States, most
of which offered one or more similar products. In addition, because many of
these products include a savings or investment component, our competition
includes domestic and foreign securities firms, investment advisors, mutual
funds, banks and other financial institutions. Competitive pressure continues
to grow due to several factors, including cross marketing alliances between
unaffiliated businesses, as well as consolidation activity in the financial
services industry.
We have reinsurance agreements whereby all premiums, contract charges,
interest credited to contractholder funds, contract benefits and substantially
all expenses are ceded to ALIC and non-affiliated reinsurers. Assets that
support general account product liabilities are owned and managed by ALIC under
the terms of the reinsurance agreements.
Lincoln Benefit is subject to extensive regulation, primarily at the state
level. The method, extent and substance of such regulation varies by state but
generally has its source in statutes that establish standards and requirements
for conducting the business of insurance and that delegate regulatory authority
to a state regulatory agency. In general, such regulation is intended for the
protection of those who purchase or use insurance products. These rules have a
substantial effect on our business and relate to a wide variety of matters,
including insurance company licensing and examination, agent licensing, price
setting, trade practices, policy forms, statutory accounting methods, corporate
governance, the nature and amount of investments, claims practices,
participation in guaranty funds, reserve adequacy, insurer solvency,
transactions with affiliates, the payment of dividends, and underwriting
standards. For a discussion of statutory financial information, see Note 11 of
the financial statements. For a discussion of regulatory contingencies, see
Note 9 of the financial statements. Notes 9 and 11 are incorporated in this
Item 11(a) by reference.
In recent years, the state insurance regulatory framework has come under
increased federal scrutiny. Legislation that would provide for increased
federal regulation of insurance, including the federal chartering of insurance
companies, has been proposed. Moreover, as part of an effort to strengthen the
regulation of the financial services market, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act was enacted. Hundreds of regulations must be
promulgated and implemented pursuant to this new law, and we cannot predict
what the final regulations will require but do not expect a material impact on
Lincoln Benefit's operations. The new law also creates the Federal Office of
Insurance ("FIO") within the Treasury Department. The FIO will monitor the
insurance industry, provide advice to the new Financial Stability Oversight
Council, represent the U.S. on international insurance matters and study the
current regulatory system and submit a report to Congress
9
in 2012. In addition, state legislators and insurance regulators continue to
examine the appropriate nature and scope of state insurance regulation. We
cannot predict whether any specific state or federal measures will be adopted
to change the nature or scope of the regulation of insurance business or what
effect any such measures would have on Lincoln Benefit.
ITEM 11(B).DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY
Lincoln Benefit occupies office space in Lincoln, Nebraska and Northbrook,
Illinois that is owned by Allstate Insurance Company. Expenses associated with
these facilities are allocated to us on a direct basis.
ITEM 11(C).LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
Information required for Item 11(c) is incorporated by reference to the
discussion under the heading "Regulation and Compliance" and under the heading
"Legal and regulatory proceedings and inquiries" in Note 9 of the financial
statements.
ITEM 11(E).FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE COMPANY
STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS AND COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
-----------------------
2010 2009 2008
($ IN THOUSANDS) ------- ------- -------
REVENUES
Net investment income............................. $12,067 $11,783 $13,940
Realized capital gains and losses................. 694 1,480 5,952
------- ------- -------
INCOME FROM OPERATIONS BEFORE INCOME TAX EXPENSE.. 12,761 13,263 19,892
Income tax expense................................ 4,451 4,634 6,918
------- ------- -------
NET INCOME........................................ 8,310 8,629 12,974
------- ------- -------
OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS), AFTER-TAX
Change in unrealized net capital gains and losses. 4,584 5,783 (4,351)
------- ------- -------
COMPREHENSIVE INCOME.............................. $12,894 $14,412 $ 8,623
======= ======= =======
See notes to financial statements.
10
LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE COMPANY
STATEMENTS OF FINANCIAL POSITION
DECEMBER 31,
-----------------------
2010 2009
($ IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PAR VALUE DATA) ----------- -----------
ASSETS
Investments
Fixed income securities, at fair value (amortized cost $304,848 and
$299,787).................................................................. $ 320,456 $ 308,343
Short-term, at fair value (amortized cost $11,593 and $8,557)................ 11,593 8,557
----------- -----------
Total investments........................................................ 332,049 316,900
Cash............................................................................ 3,550 10,063
Reinsurance recoverable from Allstate Life Insurance Company.................... 18,365,058 18,689,074
Reinsurance recoverable from non-affiliates..................................... 1,906,574 1,766,824
Other assets.................................................................... 105,159 110,400
Separate accounts............................................................... 2,017,185 2,039,647
----------- -----------
TOTAL ASSETS............................................................. $22,729,575 $22,932,908
=========== ===========
LIABILITIES
Contractholder funds............................................................ $17,247,071 $17,633,027
Reserve for life-contingent contract benefits................................... 3,011,317 2,805,387
Unearned premiums............................................................... 19,478 21,656
Deferred income taxes........................................................... 5,833 3,300
Payable to affiliates, net...................................................... 4,931 14,749
Current income taxes payable.................................................... 4,386 4,656
Other liabilities and accrued expenses.......................................... 93,507 97,513
Separate accounts............................................................... 2,017,185 2,039,647
----------- -----------
TOTAL LIABILITIES........................................................ 22,403,708 22,619,935
----------- -----------
COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENT LIABILITIES (NOTE 9)
SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY
Common stock, $100 par value, 30 thousand shares authorized, 25 thousand shares
issued and outstanding........................................................ 2,500 2,500
Additional capital paid-in...................................................... 180,000 180,000
Retained income................................................................. 133,222 124,912
Accumulated other comprehensive income:
Unrealized net capital gains and losses...................................... 10,145 5,561
----------- -----------
Total accumulated other comprehensive income............................. 10,145 5,561
----------- -----------
TOTAL SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY............................................... 325,867 312,973
----------- -----------
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY............................... $22,729,575 $22,932,908
=========== ===========
See notes to financial statements.
11
LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE COMPANY
STATEMENTS OF SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
---------------------------
2010 2009 2008
($ IN THOUSANDS) -------- -------- --------
COMMON STOCK...................................... $ 2,500 $ 2,500 $ 2,500
-------- -------- --------
ADDITIONAL CAPITAL PAID-IN........................ 180,000 180,000 180,000
-------- -------- --------
RETAINED INCOME
Balance, beginning of year........................ 124,912 116,283 103,309
Net income........................................ 8,310 8,629 12,974
-------- -------- --------
Balance, end of year.............................. 133,222 124,912 116,283
-------- -------- --------
ACCUMULATED OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
Balance, beginning of year........................ 5,561 (222) 4,129
Change in unrealized net capital gains and losses. 4,584 5,783 (4,351)
-------- -------- --------
Balance, end of year.............................. 10,145 5,561 (222)
-------- -------- --------
TOTAL SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY........................ $325,867 $312,973 $298,561
======== ======== ========
See notes to financial statements.
12
LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE COMPANY
STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
-----------------------------
2010 2009 2008
($ IN THOUSANDS) -------- --------- --------
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES
Net income............................................................ $ 8,310 $ 8,629 $ 12,974
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by (used in)
operating activities:
Amortization and other non-cash items.............................. 1,241 932 143
Realized capital gains and losses.................................. (694) (1,480) (5,952)
Changes in:
Policy benefit and other insurance reserves.................... 4,240 19,349 (5,052)
Income taxes................................................... (205) (2,174) 2,065
Receivable/payable to affiliates, net.......................... (9,818) (21,280) 14,117
Other operating assets and liabilities......................... (943) 369 (24,195)
-------- --------- --------
Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities......... 2,131 4,345 (5,900)
-------- --------- --------
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
Proceeds from sales of fixed income securities........................ 27,166 46,330 101,584
Collections on fixed income securities................................ 38,691 35,334 7,693
Purchases of fixed income securities.................................. (71,478) (151,234) (64,497)
Change in short-term investments, net................................. (3,023) 72,143 (54,347)
-------- --------- --------
Net cash (used in) provided by investing activities......... (8,644) 2,573 (9,567)
-------- --------- --------
NET (DECREASE) INCREASE IN CASH....................................... (6,513) 6,918 (15,467)
CASH AT BEGINNING OF YEAR............................................. 10,063 3,145 18,612
-------- --------- --------
CASH AT END OF YEAR................................................... $ 3,550 $ 10,063 $ 3,145
======== ========= ========
See notes to financial statements.
13
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
1. GENERAL
BASIS OF PRESENTATION
The accompanying financial statements include the accounts of Lincoln
Benefit Life Company (the "Company"), a wholly owned subsidiary of Allstate
Life Insurance Company ("ALIC"), which is wholly owned by Allstate Insurance
Company ("AIC"). All of the outstanding common stock of AIC is owned by
Allstate Insurance Holdings, LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of The Allstate
Corporation (the "Corporation"). These financial statements have been prepared
in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United
States of America ("GAAP").
To conform to the current year presentation, certain amounts in the prior
years' financial statements and notes have been reclassified.
The preparation of financial statements in conformity with GAAP requires
management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts reported
in the financial statements and accompanying notes. Actual results could differ
from those estimates.
NATURE OF OPERATIONS
The Company sells life insurance, retirement and investment products. The
principal products are interest-sensitive, traditional and variable life
insurance and fixed annuities including deferred and immediate.
The Company is authorized to sell life insurance and retirement products in
all states except New York, as well as in the District of Columbia, the U.S.
Virgin Islands and Guam. For 2010, the top geographic locations for statutory
premiums and annuity considerations were California, Florida and Texas. No
other jurisdiction accounted for more than 5% of statutory premiums and annuity
considerations. All statutory premiums and annuity considerations are ceded
under reinsurance agreements. The Company distributes its products through
multiple distribution channels, including Allstate exclusive agencies, which
include exclusive financial specialists, and independent agents (including
master brokerage agencies).
The Company has exposure to market risk as a result of its investment
portfolio. Market risk is the risk that the Company will incur realized and
unrealized net capital losses due to adverse changes in interest rates and
credit spreads. The Company also has certain exposures to changes in equity
prices in its equity-indexed annuities and separate accounts liabilities, which
are transferred to ALIC in accordance with reinsurance agreements. Interest
rate risk is the risk that the Company will incur a loss due to adverse changes
in interest rates relative to the interest rate characteristics of its interest
bearing assets. This risk arises from the Company's investment in
interest-sensitive assets. Interest rate risk includes risks related to changes
in U.S. Treasury yields and other key risk-free reference yields. Credit spread
risk is the risk that the Company will incur a loss due to adverse changes in
credit spreads. This risk arises from many of the Company's primary activities,
as the Company invests substantial funds in spread-sensitive fixed income
assets.
The Company monitors economic and regulatory developments that have the
potential to impact its business. The ability of banks to affiliate with
insurers may have a material adverse effect on all of the Company's product
lines by substantially increasing the number, size and financial strength of
potential competitors. Furthermore, federal and state laws and regulations
affect the taxation of insurance companies and life insurance and annuity
products. Congress from time to time considers legislation that would reduce or
eliminate the favorable policyholder tax treatment currently applicable to life
insurance and annuities. Congress also considers proposals to reduce the
taxation of certain products or investments that may compete with life
insurance or annuities. Legislation that increases the taxation on insurance
products or reduces the taxation on competing products could lessen the
advantage or create a disadvantage for certain of the Company's products
14
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
making them less competitive. Such proposals, if adopted, could have an adverse
effect on the Company's and ALIC's financial position or ability to sell such
products and could result in the surrender of some existing contracts and
policies. In addition, changes in the federal estate tax laws could negatively
affect the demand for the types of life insurance used in estate planning.
2. SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
INVESTMENTS
Fixed income securities include bonds, residential mortgage-backed
securities ("RMBS"), commercial mortgage-backed securities ("CMBS") and
asset-backed securities ("ABS"). Fixed income securities, which may be sold
prior to their contractual maturity, are designated as available for sale and
are carried at fair value. The difference between amortized cost and fair
value, net of deferred income taxes, is reflected as a component of accumulated
other comprehensive income. Cash received from calls, principal payments and
make-whole payments is reflected as a component of proceeds from sales and cash
received from maturities and pay-downs is reflected as a component of
investment collections within the Statements of Cash Flows.
Short-term investments, including money market funds and other short-term
investments, are carried at fair value.
Investment income consists primarily of interest and is recognized on an
accrual basis using the effective yield method. Interest income for certain
RMBS, CMBS and ABS is determined considering estimated principal repayments
obtained from third party data sources and internal estimates. Actual
prepayment experience is periodically reviewed and effective yields are
recalculated on a retrospective basis when differences arise between the
prepayments originally anticipated and the actual prepayments received and
currently anticipated. For other-than-temporarily impaired fixed income
securities, the effective yield method utilizes the difference between the
amortized cost basis at impairment and the cash flows expected to be collected.
Accrual of income is suspended for other-than-temporarily impaired fixed income
securities when the timing and amount of cash flows expected to be received is
not reasonably estimable.
Realized capital gains and losses include gains and losses on investment
sales and write-downs in value due to other-than-temporary declines in fair
value. Realized capital gains and losses on investment sales include calls and
prepayments and are determined on a specific identification basis.
The Company recognizes other-than-temporary impairment losses on fixed
income securities in earnings when a security's fair value is less than its
amortized cost and the Company has made the decision to sell or it is more
likely than not the Company will be required to sell the fixed income security
before recovery of its amortized cost basis. Additionally, if the Company does
not expect to receive cash flows sufficient to recover the entire amortized
cost basis of a fixed income security, the credit loss component of the
impairment is recorded in earnings, with the remaining amount of the unrealized
loss related to other factors recognized in other comprehensive income ("OCI").
RECOGNITION OF PREMIUM REVENUES AND CONTRACT CHARGES, AND RELATED BENEFITS AND
INTEREST CREDITED
The Company has reinsurance agreements whereby all premiums, contract
charges, interest credited to contractholder funds, contract benefits and
substantially all expenses are ceded to ALIC and non-affiliated reinsurers (see
Notes 3 and 8). Amounts reflected in the Statements of Operations and
Comprehensive Income are presented net of reinsurance.
Traditional life insurance products consist principally of products with
fixed and guaranteed premiums and benefits, primarily term and whole life
insurance products. Premiums from these products are recognized as
15
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
revenue when due from policyholders. Benefits are reflected in contract
benefits and recognized in relation to premiums, so that profits are recognized
over the life of the policy.
Immediate annuities with life contingencies provide insurance protection
over a period that extends beyond the period during which premiums are
collected. Premiums from these products are recognized as revenue when received
at the inception of the contract. Benefits and expenses are recognized in
relation to premiums. Profits from these policies come from investment income,
which is recognized over the life of the contract.
Interest-sensitive life contracts, such as universal life and single premium
life, are insurance contracts whose terms are not fixed and guaranteed. The
terms that may be changed include premiums paid by the contractholder, interest
credited to the contractholder account balance and contract charges assessed
against the contractholder account balance. Premiums from these contracts are
reported as contractholder fund deposits. Contract charges consist of fees
assessed against the contractholder account balance for the cost of insurance
(mortality risk), contract administration and surrender of the contract prior
to contractually specified dates. These contract charges are recognized as
revenue when assessed against the contractholder account balance. Contract
benefits include life-contingent benefit payments in excess of the
contractholder account balance.
Contracts that do not subject the Company to significant risk arising from
mortality or morbidity are referred to as investment contracts. Fixed
annuities, including market value adjusted annuities, equity-indexed annuities
and immediate annuities without life contingencies, are considered investment
contracts. Consideration received for such contracts is reported as
contractholder fund deposits. Contract charges for investment contracts consist
of fees assessed against the contractholder account balance for maintenance,
administration and surrender of the contract prior to contractually specified
dates, and are recognized when assessed against the contractholder account
balance.
Interest credited to contractholder funds represents interest accrued or
paid on interest-sensitive life contracts and investment contracts. Crediting
rates for certain fixed annuities and interest-sensitive life contracts are
adjusted periodically by the Company to reflect current market conditions
subject to contractually guaranteed minimum rates. Crediting rates for indexed
annuities are generally based on an equity index, such as the Standard & Poor's
("S&P") 500 Index.
Contract charges for variable life and variable annuity products consist of
fees assessed against the contractholder account balances for contract
maintenance, administration, mortality, expense and surrender of the contract
prior to the contractually specified dates. Contract benefits incurred for
variable annuity products include guaranteed minimum death, income, withdrawal
and accumulation benefits.
REINSURANCE
The Company has reinsurance agreements whereby all premiums, contract
charges, interest credited to contractholder funds, contract benefits and
substantially all expenses are ceded to ALIC and non-affiliated reinsurers (see
Notes 3 and 8). Reinsurance recoverables and the related reserve for
life-contingent contract benefits and contractholder funds are reported
separately in the Statements of Financial Position. Reinsurance does not
extinguish the Company's primary liability under the policies written.
Therefore, the Company regularly evaluates the financial condition of its
reinsurers and establishes allowances for uncollectible reinsurance as
appropriate.
Investment income earned on the assets that support contractholder funds and
the reserve for life-contingent contract benefits is not included in the
Company's financial statements as those assets are owned and managed by ALIC
under the terms of the reinsurance agreements.
16
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
INCOME TAXES
The income tax provision is calculated under the liability method. Deferred
tax assets and liabilities are recorded based on the difference between the
financial statement and tax bases of assets and liabilities at the enacted tax
rates. The principal assets and liabilities giving rise to such differences are
unrealized capital gains and losses on investments. A deferred tax asset
valuation allowance is established when there is uncertainty that such assets
will be realized.
RESERVE FOR LIFE-CONTINGENT CONTRACT BENEFITS
The reserve for life-contingent contract benefits payable under insurance
policies, including traditional life insurance and life-contingent immediate
annuities, is computed on the basis of long-term actuarial assumptions of
future investment yields, mortality, morbidity, policy terminations and
expenses (see Note 7). These assumptions, which for traditional life insurance
are applied using the net level premium method, include provisions for adverse
deviation and generally vary by characteristics such as type of coverage, year
of issue and policy duration.
CONTRACTHOLDER FUNDS
Contractholder funds represent interest-bearing liabilities arising from the
sale of products such as interest-sensitive life and fixed annuities.
Contractholder funds are comprised primarily of deposits received and interest
credited to the benefit of the contractholder less surrenders and withdrawals,
mortality charges and administrative expenses (see Note 7). Contractholder
funds also include reserves for secondary guarantees on interest-sensitive life
insurance and certain fixed annuity contracts and reserves for certain
guarantees on variable annuity contracts.
SEPARATE ACCOUNTS
Separate accounts assets are carried at fair value. The assets of the
separate accounts are legally segregated and available only to settle separate
account contract obligations. Separate accounts liabilities represent the
contractholders' claims to the related assets and are carried at an amount
equal to the separate accounts assets. Investment income and realized capital
gains and losses of the separate accounts accrue directly to the
contractholders and therefore, are not included in the Company's Statements of
Operations and Comprehensive Income. Deposits to and surrenders and withdrawals
from the separate accounts are reflected in separate accounts liabilities and
are not included in cash flows.
Absent any contract provision wherein the Company provides a guarantee,
variable annuity and variable life insurance contractholders bear the
investment risk that the separate accounts' funds may not meet their stated
investment objectives. The risk and associated cost of these contract
guarantees are ceded to ALIC in accordance with the reinsurance agreements.
ADOPTED ACCOUNTING STANDARD
DISCLOSURES ABOUT FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENTS
In January 2010, the Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") issued
new accounting guidance which expands disclosure requirements relating to fair
value measurements. The guidance adds requirements for disclosing amounts of
and reasons for significant transfers into and out of Levels 1 and 2 and
requires gross rather than net disclosures about purchases, sales, issuances
and settlements relating to Level 3 measurements. The guidance also provides
clarification that fair value measurement disclosures are required for each
class of assets and liabilities. Disclosures about the valuation techniques and
inputs used to measure fair value for
17
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
measurements that fall in either Level 2 or Level 3 are also required. The
Company adopted the provisions of the new guidance as of December 31, 2010,
except for disclosures about purchases, sales, issuances and settlements in the
roll forward of activity in Level 3 fair value measurements, which are required
for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2010. Disclosures are not
required for earlier periods presented for comparative purposes. The new
guidance affects disclosures only; and therefore, the adoption had no impact on
the Company's results of operations or financial position.
PENDING ACCOUNTING STANDARD
CONSOLIDATION ANALYSIS CONSIDERING INVESTMENTS HELD THROUGH SEPARATE ACCOUNTS
In April 2010, the FASB issued guidance clarifying that an insurer is not
required to combine interests in investments held in a qualifying separate
account with its interests in the same investments held in the general account
when performing a consolidation evaluation. The guidance is effective for
fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2010 with early adoption permitted.
The adoption of this guidance is not expected to have a material impact on the
Company's results of operations or financial position.
3. RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
BUSINESS OPERATIONS
The Company uses services performed by its affiliates, AIC, ALIC and
Allstate Investments LLC, and business facilities owned or leased and operated
by AIC in conducting its business activities. In addition, the Company shares
the services of employees with AIC. The Company reimburses its affiliates for
the operating expenses incurred on behalf of the Company. The Company is
charged for the cost of these operating expenses based on the level of services
provided. Operating expenses, including compensation, retirement and other
benefit programs, allocated to the Company were $204.8 million, $202.9 million
and $227.0 million in 2010, 2009 and 2008, respectively. Of these costs, the
Company retains investment related expenses on the invested assets of the
Company. All other costs are ceded to ALIC under the reinsurance agreements.
BROKER-DEALER AGREEMENTS
The Company has a service agreement with Allstate Distributors, LLC
("ADLLC"), a broker-dealer company owned by ALIC, whereby ADLLC promotes and
markets products sold by the Company. In return for these services, the Company
recorded expense of $6.9 million, $4.6 million and $5.1 million in 2010, 2009
and 2008, respectively, that was ceded to ALIC under the terms of the
reinsurance agreements.
The Company receives distribution services from Allstate Financial Services,
LLC ("AFS"), an affiliated broker-dealer company, for certain variable life
insurance contracts sold by Allstate exclusive agencies. For these services,
the Company incurred commission and other distribution expenses of $8.5
million, $9.1 million and $18.4 million in 2010, 2009 and 2008, respectively,
that were ceded to ALIC.
REINSURANCE
The following table summarizes amounts that were ceded to ALIC and reported
net in the Statements of Operations and Comprehensive Income under the
reinsurance agreements:
2010 2009 2008
($ IN THOUSANDS) ---------- ---------- ----------
Premiums and contract charges.............. $ 782,113 $ 734,369 $ 691,267
Interest credited to contractholder funds,
contract benefits and expenses........... 1,683,487 1,621,011 1,468,505
18
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
Reinsurance recoverables due from ALIC totaled $18.37 billion and $18.69
billion as of December 31, 2010 and 2009, respectively.
INCOME TAXES
The Company is a party to a federal income tax allocation agreement with the
Corporation (see Note 10).
INTERCOMPANY LOAN AGREEMENT
The Company has an intercompany loan agreement with the Corporation. The
amount of intercompany loans available to the Company is at the discretion of
the Corporation. The maximum amount of loans the Corporation will have
outstanding to all its eligible subsidiaries at any given point in time is
limited to $1 billion. The Corporation may use commercial paper borrowings,
bank lines of credit and repurchase agreements to fund intercompany borrowings.
The Company had no amounts outstanding under the intercompany loan agreement as
of December 31, 2010 and 2009.
4. INVESTMENTS
FAIR VALUES
The amortized cost, gross unrealized gains and losses and fair value for
fixed income securities are as follows:
GROSS UNREALIZED
AMORTIZED --------------- FAIR
COST GAINS LOSSES VALUE
($ IN THOUSANDS) --------- ------- ------- --------
DECEMBER 31, 2010
U.S. government and agencies..... $ 70,426 $ 3,513 $ (383) $ 73,556
Municipal........................ 2,999 177 -- 3,176
Corporate........................ 154,261 9,345 (19) 163,587
Foreign government............... 4,998 92 -- 5,090
RMBS............................. 55,376 2,429 (3) 57,802
CMBS............................. 8,523 427 (87) 8,863
ABS.............................. 8,265 117 -- 8,382
-------- ------- ------- --------
Total fixed income securities. $304,848 $16,100 $ (492) $320,456
======== ======= ======= ========
DECEMBER 31, 2009
U.S. government and agencies..... $ 79,982 $ 1,852 $ (283) $ 81,551
Municipal........................ 2,999 96 -- 3,095
Corporate........................ 131,466 6,192 (85) 137,573
RMBS............................. 66,326 1,733 (84) 67,975
CMBS............................. 10,520 57 (873) 9,704
ABS.............................. 8,494 -- (49) 8,445
-------- ------- ------- --------
Total fixed income securities. $299,787 $ 9,930 $(1,374) $308,343
======== ======= ======= ========
19
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
SCHEDULED MATURITIES
The scheduled maturities for fixed income securities are as follows as of
December 31, 2010:
AMORTIZED FAIR
COST VALUE
($ IN THOUSANDS) --------- --------
Due in one year or less................ $ 4,501 $ 4,585
Due after one year through five years.. 151,933 159,481
Due after five years through ten years. 76,126 81,207
Due after ten years.................... 8,647 8,999
-------- --------
241,207 254,272
RMBS and ABS........................... 63,641 66,184
-------- --------
Total............................... $304,848 $320,456
======== ========
Actual maturities may differ from those scheduled as a result of prepayments
by the issuers. Because of the potential for prepayment on RMBS and ABS, they
are not categorized by contractual maturity. CMBS are categorized by
contractual maturity because they generally are not subject to prepayment risk.
NET INVESTMENT INCOME
Net investment income for the years ended December 31 is as follows:
2010 2009 2008
($ IN THOUSANDS) ------- ------- -------
Fixed income securities.............. $12,480 $12,098 $13,302
Short-term and other investments..... 21 107 992
------- ------- -------
Investment income, before expense. 12,501 12,205 14,294
Investment expense................ (434) (422) (354)
------- ------- -------
Net investment income......... $12,067 $11,783 $13,940
======= ======= =======
REALIZED CAPITAL GAINS AND LOSSES
The Company recognized net realized capital gains of $694 thousand, $1.5
million and $6.0 million in 2010, 2009 and 2008, respectively. Realized capital
gains and losses in 2010 and 2009 did not include any other-than-temporary
impairment losses and therefore, none were included in other comprehensive
income. No other-than-temporary impairment losses were included in accumulated
other comprehensive income as of December 31, 2010 and 2009.
Gross gains of $652 thousand, $1.5 million and $8.2 million were realized on
sales of fixed income securities during 2010, 2009 and 2008, respectively.
There were no gross losses realized on sales of fixed income securities in 2010
and 2008. Gross losses of $3 thousand were realized on sales of fixed income
securities during 2009.
20
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
UNREALIZED NET CAPITAL GAINS AND LOSSES
Unrealized net capital gains and losses included in accumulated other
comprehensive income are as follows:
GROSS UNREALIZED
FAIR --------------- UNREALIZED NET
VALUE GAINS LOSSES GAINS (LOSSES)
($ IN THOUSANDS) -------- ------- ------- --------------
DECEMBER 31, 2010
Fixed income securities............................... $320,456 $16,100 $ (492) $15,608
Short-term investments................................ 11,593 -- -- --
-------
Unrealized net capital gains and losses, pre-tax... 15,608
Deferred income taxes.............................. (5,463)
-------
Unrealized net capital gains and losses, after-tax. $10,145
=======
GROSS UNREALIZED
FAIR --------------- UNREALIZED NET
VALUE GAINS LOSSES GAINS (LOSSES)
-------- ------- ------- --------------
DECEMBER 31, 2009
Fixed income securities............................... $308,343 $ 9,930 $(1,374) $ 8,556
Short-term investments................................ 8,557 -- -- --
-------
Unrealized net capital gains and losses, pre-tax... 8,556
Deferred income taxes.............................. (2,995)
-------
Unrealized net capital gains and losses, after-tax. $ 5,561
=======
CHANGE IN UNREALIZED NET CAPITAL GAINS AND LOSSES
The change in unrealized net capital gains and losses for the years ended
December 31 is as follows:
2010 2009 2008
($ IN THOUSANDS) ------- ------- -------
Fixed income securities................................. $ 7,052 $ 8,895 $(6,691)
Short-term investments.................................. -- 2 (2)
------- ------- -------
Total................................................ 7,052 8,897 (6,693)
Deferred income taxes................................... (2,468) (3,114) 2,342
------- ------- -------
Increase (decrease) in unrealized net capital gains and
losses................................................ $ 4,584 $ 5,783 $(4,351)
======= ======= =======
PORTFOLIO MONITORING
The Company has a comprehensive portfolio monitoring process to identify and
evaluate each fixed income security whose carrying value may be
other-than-temporarily impaired.
For each fixed income security in an unrealized loss position, the Company
assesses whether management with the appropriate authority has made the
decision to sell or whether it is more likely than not the Company will be
required to sell the security before recovery of the amortized cost basis for
reasons such as liquidity, contractual or regulatory purposes. If a security
meets either of these criteria, the security's decline in fair value is
considered other than temporary and is recorded in earnings.
If the Company has not made the decision to sell the fixed income security
and it is not more likely than not the Company will be required to sell the
fixed income security before recovery of its amortized cost basis, the
21
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
Company evaluates whether it expects to receive cash flows sufficient to
recover the entire amortized cost basis of the security. The Company calculates
the estimated recovery value by discounting the best estimate of future cash
flows at the security's original or current effective rate, as appropriate, and
compares this to the amortized cost of the security. If the Company does not
expect to receive cash flows sufficient to recover the entire amortized cost
basis of the fixed income security, the credit loss component of the impairment
is recorded in earnings, with the remaining amount of the unrealized loss
related to other factors recognized in other comprehensive income.
The Company's portfolio monitoring process includes a quarterly review of
all securities to identify instances where the fair value of a security
compared to its amortized cost is below established thresholds. The process
also includes the monitoring of other impairment indicators such as ratings,
ratings downgrades and payment defaults. The securities identified, in addition
to other securities for which the Company may have a concern, are evaluated for
potential other-than-temporary impairment using all reasonably available
information relevant to the collectability or recovery of the security.
Inherent in the Company's evaluation of other-than-temporary impairment for
these fixed income securities are assumptions and estimates about the financial
condition and future earnings potential of the issue or issuer. Some of the
factors considered in evaluating whether a decline in fair value is other than
temporary are: 1) the financial condition, near-term and long-term prospects of
the issue or issuer, including relevant industry specific market conditions and
trends, geographic location and implications of rating agency actions and
offering prices; 2) the specific reasons that a security is in an unrealized
loss position, including overall market conditions which could affect
liquidity; and 3) the length of time and extent to which the fair value has
been less than amortized cost.
The following table summarizes the gross unrealized losses and fair value of
fixed income securities by the length of time that individual securities have
been in a continuous unrealized loss position.
LESS THAN 12 MONTHS 12 MONTHS OR MORE
--------------------------- -------------------------- TOTAL
NUMBER FAIR UNREALIZED NUMBER FAIR UNREALIZED UNREALIZED
OF ISSUES VALUE LOSSES OF ISSUES VALUE LOSSES LOSSES
($ IN THOUSANDS) --------- ------- ---------- --------- ------ ---------- ----------
DECEMBER 31, 2010
U.S. government and agencies. 1 $ 9,546 $(383) -- $ -- $ -- $ (383)
Corporate.................... 1 4,968 (19) -- -- -- (19)
RMBS......................... 3 385 (3) -- -- -- (3)
CMBS......................... -- -- -- 1 1,916 (87) (87)
-- ------- ----- -- ------ ----- -------
Total..................... 5 $14,899 $(405) 1 $1,916 $ (87) $ (492)
== ======= ===== == ====== ===== =======
DECEMBER 31, 2009
U.S. government and agencies. 2 $41,469 $(283) -- $ -- $ -- $ (283)
Corporate.................... 5 11,269 (71) 1 3,485 (14) (85)
RMBS......................... 1 4,543 (84) -- -- -- (84)
CMBS......................... 2 3,475 (27) 1 1,158 (846) (873)
ABS.......................... 1 8,445 (49) -- -- -- (49)
-- ------- ----- -- ------ ----- -------
Total..................... 11 $69,201 $(514) 2 $4,643 $(860) $(1,374)
== ======= ===== == ====== ===== =======
As of December 31, 2010, all of the unrealized losses are related to fixed
income securities with an unrealized loss position less than 20% of amortized
cost, the degree of which suggests that these securities do not pose a high
risk of being other-than-temporarily impaired. All of the unrealized losses are
related to investment grade fixed income securities. Investment grade is
defined as a security having a rating of Aaa, Aa, A or Baa from Moody's, a
rating of AAA, AA, A or BBB from S&P, Fitch, Dominion or Realpoint, a rating of
aaa, aa, a or bbb from A.M. Best, or a comparable internal rating if an
externally provided rating is not available.
22
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
Unrealized losses on investment grade securities are principally related to
widening credit spreads or rising interest rates since the time of initial
purchase.
As of December 31, 2010, the Company has not made the decision to sell and
it is not more likely than not the Company will be required to sell fixed
income securities with unrealized losses before recovery of the amortized cost
basis.
MUNICIPAL BONDS
The principal geographic distribution of municipal bond issuers represented
in the Company's municipal bond portfolio included 84% and 16% in Washington
and Puerto Rico, respectively, as of December 31, 2010 and 83% and 17% in
Washington and Puerto Rico, respectively, as of December 31, 2009.
CONCENTRATION OF CREDIT RISK
As of December 31, 2010, the Company is not exposed to any credit
concentration risk of a single issuer and its affiliates greater than 10% of
the Company's shareholder's equity.
OTHER INVESTMENT INFORMATION
As of December 31, 2010, fixed income securities and short-term investments
with a carrying value of $10.0 million were on deposit with regulatory
authorities as required by law.
5. FAIR VALUE OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
Fair value is defined as the price that would be received to sell an asset
or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market
participants at the measurement date. The hierarchy for inputs used in
determining fair value maximizes the use of observable inputs and minimizes the
use of unobservable inputs by requiring that observable inputs be used when
available. Assets and liabilities recorded on the Statements of Financial
Position at fair value are categorized in the fair value hierarchy based on the
observability of inputs to the valuation techniques as follows:
LEVEL 1:Assets and liabilities whose values are based on unadjusted quoted
prices for identical assets or liabilities in an active market that the
Company can access.
LEVEL 2:Assets and liabilities whose values are based on the following:
(a)Quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities in active markets;
(b)Quoted prices for identical or similar assets or liabilities in
markets that are not active; or
(c)Valuation models whose inputs are observable, directly or indirectly,
for substantially the full term of the asset or liability.
LEVEL 3:Assets and liabilities whose values are based on prices or valuation
techniques that require inputs that are both unobservable and
significant to the overall fair value measurement. Unobservable inputs
reflect the Company's estimates of the assumptions that market
participants would use in valuing the assets and liabilities.
The availability of observable inputs varies by instrument. In situations
where fair value is based on internally developed pricing models or inputs that
are unobservable in the market, the determination of fair value requires more
judgment. The degree of judgment exercised by the Company in determining fair
value is typically greatest for instruments categorized in Level 3. In many
instances, valuation inputs used to measure fair value fall into
different levels of the fair value hierarchy. The category level in the fair
value hierarchy is determined
23
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
based on the lowest level input that is significant to the fair value
measurement in its entirety. The Company uses prices and inputs that are
current as of the measurement date, including during periods of market
disruption. In periods of market disruption, the ability to observe prices and
inputs may be reduced for many instruments.
The Company has two types of situations where investments are classified as
Level 3 in the fair value hierarchy. The first is where quotes continue to be
received from independent third-party valuation service providers and all
significant inputs are market observable; however, there has been a significant
decrease in the volume and level of activity for the asset when compared to
normal market activity such that the degree of market observability has
declined to a point where categorization as a Level 3 measurement is considered
appropriate. The indicators considered in determining whether a significant
decrease in the volume and level of activity for a specific asset has occurred
include the level of new issuances in the primary market, trading volume in the
secondary market, the level of credit spreads over historical levels,
applicable bid-ask spreads, and price consensus among market participants and
other pricing sources.
The second situation where the Company classifies securities in Level 3 is
where specific inputs significant to the fair value estimation models are not
market observable. This relates to the Company's use of broker quotes.
In determining fair value, the Company principally uses the market approach
which generally utilizes market transaction data for the same or similar
instruments. To a lesser extent, the Company uses the income approach which
involves determining fair values from discounted cash flow methodologies. For
the majority of Level 2 and Level 3 valuations, a combination of the market and
income approaches is used.
SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT VALUATION TECHNIQUES FOR ASSETS AND LIABILITIES MEASURED
AT FAIR VALUE ON A RECURRING BASIS
LEVEL 1 MEASUREMENTS
. FIXED INCOME SECURITIES: Comprise U.S. Treasuries. Valuation is based on
unadjusted quoted prices for identical assets in active markets that the
Company can access.
. SHORT-TERM: Comprise actively traded money market funds that have daily
quoted net asset values for identical assets that the Company can access.
. SEPARATE ACCOUNT ASSETS: Comprise actively traded mutual funds that have
daily quoted net asset values for identical assets that the Company can
access. Net asset values for the actively traded mutual funds in which
the separate account assets are invested are obtained daily from the
fund managers.
LEVEL 2 MEASUREMENTS
. FIXED INCOME SECURITIES:
U.S. GOVERNMENT AND AGENCIES: The primary inputs to the valuation
include quoted prices for identical or similar assets in markets that
are not active, contractual cash flows, benchmark yields and credit
spreads.
MUNICIPAL: The primary inputs to the valuation include quoted prices for
identical or similar assets in markets that are not active, contractual
cash flows, benchmark yields and credit spreads.
CORPORATE, INCLUDING PRIVATELY PLACED: The primary inputs to the
valuation include quoted prices for identical or similar assets in
markets that are not active, contractual cash flows, benchmark yields
and credit spreads. Also included are privately placed securities valued
using a discounted cash flow model that is widely accepted in the
financial services industry and uses market observable inputs and inputs
derived principally from, or corroborated by, observable market data.
The primary inputs to the
24
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
discounted cash flow model include an interest rate yield curve, as well
as published credit spreads for similar assets in markets that are not
active that incorporate the credit quality and industry sector of the
issuer.
FOREIGN GOVERNMENT: The primary inputs to the valuation include quoted
prices for identical or similar assets in markets that are not active,
contractual cash flows, benchmark yields and credit spreads.
RMBS--U.S. GOVERNMENT SPONSORED ENTITIES ("U.S. AGENCY"), PRIME
RESIDENTIAL MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES ("PRIME") AND ALT-A RESIDENTIAL
MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES ("ALT-A"); ABS: The primary inputs to the
valuation include quoted prices for identical or similar assets in
markets that are not active, contractual cash flows, benchmark yields,
prepayment speeds, collateral performance and credit spreads.
CMBS: The primary inputs to the valuation include quoted prices for
identical or similar assets in markets that are not active, contractual
cash flows, benchmark yields, collateral performance and credit spreads.
. SHORT-TERM: The primary inputs to the valuation include quoted prices
for identical or similar assets in markets that are not active,
contractual cash flows, benchmark yields and credit spreads. For certain
short-term investments, amortized cost is used as the best estimate of
fair value.
LEVEL 3 MEASUREMENTS
. FIXED INCOME SECURITIES:
CORPORATE: Valued based on models that are widely accepted in the
financial services industry with certain inputs to the valuation model
that are significant to the valuation, but are not market observable.
RMBS--PRIME AND ALT-A: Valued based on non-binding broker quotes.
CMBS: The primary inputs to the valuation include quoted prices for
identical or similar assets in markets that exhibit less liquidity
relative to those markets supporting Level 2 fair value measurements,
contractual cash flows, benchmark yields, collateral performance and
credit spreads. Due to the reduced availability of actual market prices
or relevant observable inputs as a result of the decrease in liquidity
that has been experienced in the market for these securities, certain
CMBS are categorized as Level 3.
CONTRACTHOLDER FUNDS: Derivatives embedded in certain life and annuity
contracts are valued internally using models widely accepted in the
financial services industry that determine a single best estimate of
fair value for the embedded derivatives within a block of contractholder
liabilities. The models primarily use stochastically determined cash
flows based on the contractual elements of embedded derivatives,
projected option cost and applicable market data, such as interest rate
yield curves and equity index volatility assumptions. These are
categorized as Level 3 as a result of the significance of non-market
observable inputs.
25
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
The following table summarizes the Company's assets and liabilities measured
at fair value on a recurring and non-recurring basis as of December 31, 2010:
QUOTED PRICES SIGNIFICANT
IN ACTIVE OTHER SIGNIFICANT
MARKETS FOR OBSERVABLE UNOBSERVABLE BALANCE AS OF
IDENTICAL ASSETS INPUTS INPUTS DECEMBER 31,
(LEVEL 1) (LEVEL 2) (LEVEL 3) 2010
($ IN THOUSANDS) ---------------- ----------- ------------ -------------
ASSETS:
Fixed income securities:
U.S. government and agencies.............. $ 31,007 $ 42,549 $ -- $ 73,556
Municipal................................. -- 3,176 -- 3,176
Corporate................................. -- 162,735 852 163,587
Foreign government........................ -- 5,090 -- 5,090
RMBS...................................... -- 50,922 6,880 57,802
CMBS...................................... -- 6,947 1,916 8,863
ABS....................................... -- 8,382 -- 8,382
---------- -------- --------- ----------
Total fixed income securities......... 31,007 279,801 9,648 320,456
Short-term investments....................... 11,543 50 -- 11,593
Separate account assets...................... 2,017,185 -- -- 2,017,185
---------- -------- --------- ----------
TOTAL RECURRING BASIS ASSETS.......... 2,059,735 279,851 9,648 2,349,234
---------- -------- --------- ----------
TOTAL ASSETS AT FAIR VALUE................... $2,059,735 $279,851 $ 9,648 $2,349,234
========== ======== ========= ==========
% of total assets at fair value.............. 87.7% 11.9% 0.4% 100.0%
LIABILITIES:
Contractholder funds:
Derivatives embedded in life and annuity
contracts............................... $ -- $ -- $(494,149) $ (494,149)
---------- -------- --------- ----------
TOTAL LIABILITIES AT FAIR VALUE.............. $ -- $ -- $(494,149) $ (494,149)
========== ======== ========= ==========
% of total liabilities at fair value......... -- % -- % 100.0% 100.0%
26
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
The following table summarizes the Company's assets and liabilities measured
at fair value on a recurring and non-recurring basis as of December 31, 2009:
QUOTED PRICES SIGNIFICANT
IN ACTIVE OTHER SIGNIFICANT
MARKETS FOR OBSERVABLE UNOBSERVABLE BALANCE AS OF
IDENTICAL ASSETS INPUTS INPUTS DECEMBER 31,
(LEVEL 1) (LEVEL 2) (LEVEL 3) 2009
($ IN THOUSANDS) ---------------- ----------- ------------ -------------
ASSETS:
Fixed income securities:
U.S. government and agencies.............. $ 29,273 $ 52,278 $ -- $ 81,551
Municipal................................. -- 3,095 -- 3,095
Corporate................................. -- 136,484 1,089 137,573
RMBS...................................... -- 67,975 -- 67,975
CMBS...................................... -- 8,546 1,158 9,704
ABS....................................... -- 8,445 -- 8,445
---------- --------- -------- ----------
Total fixed income securities......... 29,273 276,823 2,247 308,343
Short-term investments....................... 8,507 50 -- 8,557
Separate account assets...................... 2,039,647 -- -- 2,039,647
---------- --------- -------- ----------
TOTAL RECURRING BASIS ASSETS.......... 2,077,427 276,873 2,247 2,356,547
---------- --------- -------- ----------
TOTAL ASSETS AT FAIR VALUE................... $2,077,427 $ 276,873 $ 2,247 $2,356,547
========== ========= ======== ==========
% of total assets at fair value.............. 88.2% 11.7% 0.1% 100.0%
LIABILITIES:
Contractholder funds:
Derivatives embedded in life and annuity
contracts............................... $ -- $(199,765) $(15,526) $ (215,291)
---------- --------- -------- ----------
TOTAL LIABILITIES AT FAIR VALUE.............. $ -- $(199,765) $(15,526) $ (215,291)
========== ========= ======== ==========
% of total liabilities at fair value......... -- % 92.8% 7.2% 100.0%
27
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
The following table presents the rollforward of Level 3 assets and
liabilities held at fair value on a recurring basis during the year ended
December 31, 2010.
TOTAL REALIZED AND UNREALIZED
GAINS (LOSSES) INCLUDED IN:
----------------------------- PURCHASES,
OCI ON SALES,
BALANCE AS OF STATEMENT OF ISSUANCES AND TRANSFERS TRANSFERS BALANCE AS OF
DECEMBER 31, NET FINANCIAL SETTLEMENTS, INTO OUT OF DECEMBER 31,
2009 INCOME/(1)/ POSITION NET LEVEL 3 LEVEL 3 2010
($ IN THOUSANDS) ------------- ---------- ------------ ------------- --------- --------- -------------
ASSETS
Fixed income securities:
Corporate................ $ 1,089 $ (1) $ -- $ 7,740 $ -- $ (7,976) $ 852
RMBS..................... -- (17) 131 9,459 -- (2,693) 6,880
CMBS..................... 1,158 -- 758 -- -- -- 1,916
-------- ------- ---- ------- --------- -------- ---------
TOTAL RECURRING
LEVEL 3 ASSETS......... $ 2,247 $ (18) $889 $17,199 $ -- $(10,669) $ 9,648
======== ======= ==== ======= ========= ======== =========
LIABILITIES
Contractholder funds:
Derivatives embedded in
life and annuity
contracts............... $(15,526) $(4,877) $ -- $ -- $(473,746) $ -- $(494,149)
-------- ------- ---- ------- --------- -------- ---------
TOTAL RECURRING
LEVEL 3 LIABILITIES.... $(15,526) $(4,877) $ -- $ -- $(473,476) $ -- $(494,149)
======== ======= ==== ======= ========= ======== =========
--------
/(1)/The amount above attributable to fixed income securities is reported in
the Statements of Operations and Comprehensive Income as net investment
income. The amount above attributable to derivatives embedded in life and
annuity contracts is reported as a component of contract benefits and is
ceded in accordance with the Company's reinsurance agreements.
Transfers between level categorizations may occur due to changes in the
availability of market observable inputs, which generally are caused by changes
in market conditions such as liquidity, trading volume or bid-ask spreads.
Transfers between level categorizations may also occur due to changes in the
valuation source. For example, in situations where a fair value quote is not
provided by the Company's independent third-party valuation service provider
and as a result the price is stale or has been replaced with a broker quote,
the security is transferred into Level 3. Transfers in and out of level
categorizations are reported as having occurred at the beginning of the quarter
in which the transfer occurred. Therefore, for all transfers into Level 3, all
realized and changes in unrealized gains and losses in the quarter of transfer
are reflected in the Level 3 rollforward table.
There were no transfers between Level 1 and Level 2 during 2010.
Transfers out of Level 3 during 2010, including those related to Corporate
fixed income securities and RMBS, included situations where a broker quote was
used in a prior period and a fair value quote became available from the
Company's independent third-party valuation service provider in the current
period. A quote utilizing the new pricing source was not available as of the
prior period, and any gains or losses related to the change in valuation source
for individual securities were not significant.
Transfers into Level 3 during 2010 also included derivatives embedded in
equity-indexed life and annuity contracts due to refinements in the valuation
modeling resulting in an increase in significance of non-market observable
inputs.
28
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
The following table provides the total gains and (losses) included in net
income during 2010 for Level 3 assets still held as of December 31, 2010.
($ IN THOUSANDS)
ASSETS
Fixed income securities:
Corporate.......................................... $ (2)
RMBS............................................... (11)
CMBS............................................... (1)
-------
TOTAL RECURRING LEVEL 3 ASSETS................. $ (14)
=======
LIABILITIES
Contractholder funds:
Derivatives embedded in life and annuity contracts. $(4,877)
-------
TOTAL RECURRING LEVEL 3 LIABILITIES............ $(4,877)
=======
The amounts in the table above represent losses included in net income
during 2010 for the period of time that the asset was determined to be in Level
3. The amounts attributable to fixed income securities are reported in the
Statements of Operations and Comprehensive Income in net investment income. The
amount attributable to derivatives embedded in life and annuity contracts is
reported as a component of contract benefits and is ceded in accordance with
the Company's reinsurance agreements.
The following table presents the rollforward of Level 3 assets and
liabilities held at fair value on a recurring basis during the year ended
December 31, 2009.
TOTAL GAINS
TOTAL REALIZED AND (LOSSES)
UNREALIZED GAINS INCLUDED IN
(LOSSES) INCLUDED IN: NET INCOME
- ---------------------- PURCHASES, FOR FINANCIAL
OCI ON SALES, NET TRANSFERS INSTRUMENTS
BALANCE AS OF STATEMENT OF ISSUANCES AND IN AND/ BALANCE AS OF STILL HELD AS OF
DECEMBER 31, NET FINANCIAL SETTLEMENTS, OR (OUT) DECEMBER 31, DECEMBER 31,
2008 INCOME/(1)/ POSITION NET OF LEVEL 3 2009 2009/(2)/
($ IN THOUSANDS) ------------- ---------- ------------ ------------- ------------- ------------- ----------------
ASSETS
Fixed income securities:
Corporate................ $ 1,307 $ (2) $ 96 $ (216) $(96) $ 1,089 $ (2)
CMBS..................... -- -- 535 -- 623 1,158 --
ABS...................... 6,002 288 (19) (6,271) -- -- --
-------- ------- ---- ------- ---- -------- -------
TOTAL RECURRING
LEVEL 3 ASSETS......... $ 7,309 $ 286 $612 $(6,487) $527 $ 2,247 $ (2)
======== ======= ==== ======= ==== ======== =======
LIABILITIES
Contractholder funds:
Derivatives embedded in
life and annuity
contracts............... $(36,544) $19,984 $ -- $ 1,034 $ -- $(15,526) $19,984
-------- ------- ---- ------- ---- -------- -------
TOTAL RECURRING
LEVEL 3 LIABILITIES.... $(36,544) $19,984 $ -- $ 1,034 $ -- $(15,526) $19,984
======== ======= ==== ======= ==== ======== =======
--------
/(1)/The amount above attributable to fixed income securities is reported in
the Statements of Operations and Comprehensive Income as follows: $288
thousand in realized capital gains and losses and $(2) thousand in net
investment income. The amount above attributable to derivatives embedded
in life and annuity contracts is reported as a component of contract
benefits and is ceded in accordance with the Company's reinsurance
agreements.
/(2)/The amount above attributable to fixed income securities is reported as a
component of net investment income in the Statements of Operations and
Comprehensive Income. The amount above attributable to derivatives
embedded in life and annuity contracts is reported as a component of
contract benefits and is ceded in accordance with the Company's
reinsurance agreements.
29
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
The following table presents the rollforward of Level 3 assets and
liabilities held at fair value on a recurring basis during the year ended
December 31, 2008.
TOTAL GAINS
TOTAL REALIZED AND (LOSSES)
UNREALIZED GAINS (LOSSES) INCLUDED IN
INCLUDED IN: NET INCOME
------------------------ PURCHASES, FOR FINANCIAL
OCI ON SALES, INSTRUMENTS
BALANCE AS OF STATEMENT OF ISSUANCES AND BALANCE AS OF STILL HELD AS OF
JANUARY 1, NET FINANCIAL SETTLEMENTS, DECEMBER 31, DECEMBER 31,
2008 INCOME/(1)/ POSITION NET 2008 2008/(2)/
($ IN THOUSANDS) ------------- ---------- ------------ ------------- ------------- ----------------
ASSETS
Fixed income securities:
Corporate......................... $ 1,500 $ (1) $ -- $ (192) $ 1,307 $ (2)
ABS............................... 10,484 181 (434) (4,229) 6,002 (1)
------- -------- ----- ------- -------- --------
TOTAL RECURRING LEVEL 3 ASSETS... $11,984 $ 180 $(434) $(4,421) $ 7,309 $ (3)
======= ======== ===== ======= ======== ========
LIABILITIES
Contractholder funds:
Derivatives embedded in life and
annuity contracts................ $ (256) $(36,498) $ -- $ 210 $(36,544) $(36,498)
------- -------- ----- ------- -------- --------
TOTAL RECURRING LEVEL 3
LIABILITIES..................... $ (256) $(36,498) $ -- $ 210 $(36,544) $(36,498)
======= ======== ===== ======= ======== ========
--------
/(1)/The amount above attributable to fixed income securities is reported in
the Statements of Operations and Comprehensive Income as follows: $185
thousand in realized capital gains and losses and $(5) thousand in net
investment income. The amount above attributable to derivatives embedded
in life and annuity contracts is reported as a component of contract
benefits and is ceded in accordance with the Company's reinsurance
agreements.
/(2)/The amount above attributable to fixed income securities is reported as a
component of net investment income in the Statements of Operations and
Comprehensive Income. The amount above attributable to derivatives
embedded in life and annuity contracts is reported as a component of
contract benefits and is ceded in accordance with the Company's
reinsurance agreements.
As of December 31, 2010 and 2009, financial instruments not carried at fair
value included contractholder funds on investment contracts. The carrying value
and fair value of contractholder funds on investment contracts were $12.69
billion and $11.66 billion, respectively, as of December 31, 2010 and were
$13.64 billion and $12.64 billion, respectively, as of December 31, 2009.
The fair value of contractholder funds on investment contracts is based on
the terms of the underlying contracts utilizing prevailing market rates for
similar contracts adjusted for the Company's own credit risk. Deferred
annuities included in contractholder funds are valued using discounted cash
flow models which incorporate market value margins, which are based on the cost
of holding economic capital, and the Company's own credit risk. Immediate
annuities without life contingencies are valued at the present value of future
benefits using market implied interest rates which include the Company's own
credit risk.
6. DERIVATIVE FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
The Company has derivatives embedded in non-derivative host contracts that
are required to be separated from the host contracts and accounted for at fair
value. The Company does not use derivatives for trading purposes. The Company's
embedded derivatives are equity options in life and annuity product contracts,
which provide equity returns to contractholders; and guaranteed minimum
accumulation and withdrawal benefits in variable annuity contracts.
30
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
The following table provides a summary of the volume and fair value
positions of embedded derivative financial instruments as well as their
reporting location in the Statement of Financial Position as of December 31,
2010. None of these derivatives are designated as accounting hedging
instruments.
VOLUME - FAIR
NOTIONAL VALUE, GROSS GROSS
BALANCE SHEET LOCATION AMOUNT NET ASSET LIABILITY
($ IN THOUSANDS) ---------------------- ---------- --------- ----- ---------
Equity index and forward starting options
in life and annuity product contracts... Contractholder funds $4,351,559 $(473,746) $-- $(473,746)
Guaranteed accumulation benefits.......... Contractholder funds 228,195 (18,422) -- (18,422)
Guaranteed withdrawal benefits............ Contractholder funds 32,473 (1,981) -- (1,981)
---------- --------- --- ---------
TOTAL DERIVATIVES......................... $4,612,227 $(494,149) $-- $(494,149)
========== ========= === =========
The following table provides a summary of the volume and fair value
positions of embedded derivative financial instruments as well as their
reporting location in the Statement of Financial Position as of December 31,
2009. None of these derivatives are designated as accounting hedging
instruments.
VOLUME - FAIR
NOTIONAL VALUE, GROSS GROSS
BALANCE SHEET LOCATION AMOUNT NET ASSET LIABILITY
($ IN THOUSANDS) ---------------------- ---------- --------- ----- ---------
Equity index and forward starting options
in life and annuity product contracts... Contractholder funds $4,018,238 $(199,765) $-- $(199,765)
Guaranteed accumulation benefits.......... Contractholder funds 237,005 (13,690) -- (13,690)
Guaranteed withdrawal benefits............ Contractholder funds 37,835 (1,836) -- (1,836)
---------- --------- --- ---------
TOTAL DERIVATIVES......................... $4,293,078 $(215,291) $-- $(215,291)
========== ========= === =========
For the year ended December 31, 2010 gains and losses from valuation and
settlements on embedded derivative financial instruments recorded in interest
credited to contractholder funds and contract benefits were $31.0 million and
$(4.9) million, respectively, which in turn were ceded to ALIC. For the year
ended December 31, 2009 gains and losses from valuation and settlements on
embedded derivative financial instruments recorded in interest credited to
contractholder funds and contract benefits were $(166.3) million and $21.0
million, respectively, which in turn were ceded to ALIC.
OFF-BALANCE-SHEET FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
There were no off-balance-sheet financial instruments as of December 31,
2010 or 2009.
7. RESERVE FOR LIFE-CONTINGENT CONTRACT BENEFITS AND CONTRACTHOLDER FUNDS
As of December 31, the reserve for life-contingent contract benefits
consists of the following:
2010 2009
($ IN THOUSANDS) ---------- ----------
Traditional life insurance..................... $1,363,098 $1,280,461
Immediate fixed annuities...................... 680,467 686,057
Accident and health insurance.................. 961,030 831,211
Other.......................................... 6,722 7,658
---------- ----------
Total reserve for life-contingent contract
benefits.................................. $3,011,317 $2,805,387
========== ==========
31
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
The following table highlights the key assumptions generally used in
calculating the reserve for life-contingent contract benefits:
PRODUCT MORTALITY INTEREST RATE ESTIMATION METHOD
------------------------- ------------------------ ------------------------ ------------------------
Traditional life Actual company Interest rate Net level premium
insurance experience plus loading assumptions range from reserve method using the
4.0% to 8.0% Company's withdrawal
experience rates
Immediate fixed annuities 1983 individual annuity Interest rate Present value of
mortality table with assumptions range from expected future benefits
internal modifications; 1.2% to 8.8% based on historical
1983 individual annuity experience
mortality table; Annuity
2000 mortality table
with internal
modifications
Accident and health Actual company Unearned premium;
insurance experience plus loading additional contract
reserves for mortality
risk
Other:
Variable annuity 100% of Annuity 2000 Interest rate Projected benefit ratio
guaranteed minimum mortality table assumptions range from applied to cumulative
death benefits 4.2% to 5.2% assessments
As of December 31, contractholder funds consist of the following:
2010 2009
($ IN THOUSANDS) ----------- -----------
Interest-sensitive life insurance..... $ 4,314,502 $ 3,844,319
Investment contracts:
Fixed annuities.................... 12,728,648 13,675,700
Other investment contracts......... 203,921 113,008
----------- -----------
Total contractholder funds..... $17,247,071 $17,633,027
=========== ===========
32
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
The following table highlights the key contract provisions relating to
contractholder funds:
PRODUCT INTEREST RATE WITHDRAWAL/SURRENDER CHARGES
------------------------------------- ------------------------------------- ----------------------------------
Interest-sensitive life insurance Interest rates credited range from 0% Either a percentage of account
to 11.5% for equity-indexed life balance or dollar amount
(whose returns are indexed to the S&P grading off generally over 20
500) and 2.7% to 6.0% for all other years
products
Fixed annuities Interest rates credited range from 0% Either a declining or a level
to 8.8% for immediate annuities; 0% percentage charge generally
to 14.0% for equity-indexed annuities over nine years or less.
(whose returns are indexed to the S&P Additionally, approximately
500); and 1.0% to 8.5% for all other 19.0% of fixed annuities are
products subject to market value
adjustment for discretionary
withdrawals.
Other investment contracts:
Guaranteed minimum income, Interest rates used in establishing Withdrawal and surrender
accumulation and withdrawal reserves range from 1.8% to 10.3% charges are based on the terms
benefits on variable annuities and of the related interest-sensitive
secondary guarantees on life insurance or fixed annuity
interest-sensitive life insurance contract.
and fixed annuities
Contractholder funds activity for the years ended December 31 is as follows:
2010 2009
($ IN THOUSANDS) ----------- -----------
Balance, beginning of year........... $17,633,027 $17,787,376
Deposits............................. 1,521,086 1,751,516
Interest credited.................... 743,075 821,046
Benefits............................. (504,789) (523,905)
Surrenders and partial withdrawals... (1,811,355) (1,826,122)
Contract charges..................... (471,729) (417,398)
Net transfers from separate accounts. 18,788 14,400
Other adjustments.................... 118,968 26,114
----------- -----------
Balance, end of year................. $17,247,071 $17,633,027
=========== ===========
33
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
The table below presents information regarding the Company's variable
annuity contracts with guarantees. The Company's variable annuity contracts may
offer more than one type of guarantee in each contract; therefore, the sum of
amounts listed exceeds the total account balances of variable annuity
contracts' separate accounts with guarantees.
DECEMBER 31,
-------------------
2010 2009
($ IN MILLIONS) --------- ---------
IN THE EVENT OF DEATH
Separate account value............................... $ 1,318.1 $ 1,405.4
Net amount at risk/(1)/.............................. $ 126.3 $ 213.1
Average attained age of contractholders.............. 57 years 57 years
AT ANNUITIZATION (INCLUDES INCOME BENEFIT GUARANTEES)
Separate account value............................... $ 252.8 $ 263.7
Net amount at risk/(2)/.............................. $ 40.9 $ 75.9
Weighted average waiting period until annuitization
options available.................................. 3 years 3 years
FOR CUMULATIVE PERIODIC WITHDRAWALS
Separate account value............................... $ 33.1 $ 37.8
Net amount at risk/(3)/.............................. $ 0.3 $ 0.6
ACCUMULATION AT SPECIFIED DATES
Separate account value............................... $ 233.7 $ 236.8
Net amount at risk/(4)/.............................. $ 18.9 $ 26.9
Weighted average waiting period until guarantee
date............................................... 9 years 10 years
--------
/(1)/Defined as the estimated current guaranteed minimum death benefit in
excess of the current account balance as of the balance sheet date.
/(2)/Defined as the estimated present value of the guaranteed minimum annuity
payments in excess of the current account balance.
/(3)/Defined as the estimated current guaranteed minimum withdrawal balance
(initial deposit) in excess of the current account balance as of the
balance sheet date.
/(4)/Defined as the estimated present value of the guaranteed minimum
accumulation balance in excess of the current account balance.
As of December 31, 2010, liabilities for guarantees included reserves for
variable annuity death benefits of $6.7 million, variable annuity income
benefits of $19.8 million, variable annuity accumulation benefits of $18.4
million, variable annuity withdrawal benefits of $2.0 million and
interest-sensitive life and fixed annuity guarantees of $163.7 million. As of
December 31, 2009, liabilities for guarantees included reserves for variable
annuity death benefits of $7.7 million, variable annuity income benefits of
$24.7 million, variable annuity accumulation benefits of $13.7 million,
variable annuity withdrawal benefits of $1.8 million and interest-sensitive
life and fixed annuity guarantees of $72.8 million.
8. REINSURANCE
The Company has reinsurance agreements under which it reinsures all of its
business to ALIC or other non-affiliated reinsurers. Under the agreements,
premiums, contract charges, interest credited to contractholder funds, contract
benefits and substantially all expenses are reinsured. The Company purchases
reinsurance to limit aggregate and single losses on large risks. The Company
cedes a portion of the mortality risk on certain life policies under
coinsurance agreements to a pool of twelve non-affiliated reinsurers.
34
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
As of December 31, 2010, 90.6% of the total reinsurance recoverables were
related to ALIC and 9.4% were related to non-affiliated reinsurers. At both
December 31, 2010 and 2009, 97% of the Company's non-affiliated reinsurance
recoverables are due from companies rated A or better by S&P.
The effects of reinsurance on premiums and contract charges for the years
ended December 31 are as follows:
2010 2009 2008
($ IN THOUSANDS) ---------- ---------- ----------
PREMIUMS AND CONTRACT CHARGES
Direct................................ $1,228,272 $1,194,526 $1,138,747
Assumed............................... 7,465 7,849 8,576
Ceded:
Affiliate.......................... (782,113) (734,369) (691,267)
Non-affiliate...................... (453,624) (468,006) (456,056)
---------- ---------- ----------
Premiums and contract charges, net of
reinsurance......................... $ -- $ -- $ --
========== ========== ==========
The effects of reinsurance on interest credited to contractholder funds,
contract benefits and expenses for the years ended December 31 are as follows:
2010 2009 2008
($ IN THOUSANDS) ----------- ----------- -----------
INTEREST CREDITED TO CONTRACTHOLDER FUNDS,
CONTRACT BENEFITS AND EXPENSES
Direct..................................... $ 2,186,031 $ 2,159,262 $ 2,065,299
Assumed.................................... 8,153 11,101 8,922
Ceded:
Affiliate............................... (1,683,487) (1,621,011) (1,468,505)
Non-affiliate........................... (510,697) (549,352) (605,716)
----------- ----------- -----------
Interest credited to contractholder funds,
contract benefits and expenses, net of
reinsurance.............................. $ -- $ -- $ --
=========== =========== ===========
9. GUARANTEES AND CONTINGENT LIABILITIES
GUARANTEES
In the normal course of business, the Company provides standard
indemnifications to contractual counterparties in connection with numerous
transactions, including acquisitions and divestitures. The types of
indemnifications typically provided include indemnifications for breaches of
representations and warranties, taxes and certain other liabilities, such as
third party lawsuits. The indemnification clauses are often standard
contractual terms and are entered into in the normal course of business based
on an assessment that the risk of loss would be remote. The terms of the
indemnifications vary in duration and nature. In many cases, the maximum
obligation is not explicitly stated and the contingencies triggering the
obligation to indemnify have not occurred and are not expected to occur.
Consequently, the maximum amount of the obligation under such indemnifications
is not determinable. Historically, the Company has not made any material
payments pursuant to these obligations.
The aggregate liability balance related to all guarantees was not material
as of December 31, 2010.
35
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
REGULATION AND COMPLIANCE
The Company is subject to changing social, economic and regulatory
conditions. From time to time, regulatory authorities or legislative bodies
seek to impose additional regulations regarding agent and broker compensation,
regulate the nature of and amount of investments, and otherwise expand overall
regulation of insurance products and the insurance industry. The Company has
established procedures and policies to facilitate compliance with laws and
regulations, to foster prudent business operations, and to support financial
reporting. The Company routinely reviews its practices to validate compliance
with laws and regulations and with internal procedures and policies. As a
result of these reviews, from time to time the Company may decide to modify
some of its procedures and policies. Such modifications, and the reviews that
led to them, may be accompanied by payments being made and costs being
incurred. The ultimate changes and eventual effects of these actions on the
Company's business, if any, are uncertain.
LEGAL AND REGULATORY PROCEEDINGS AND INQUIRIES
BACKGROUND
The Company and certain affiliates are involved in a number of lawsuits,
regulatory inquiries, and other legal proceedings arising out of various
aspects of its business. As background to the "Proceedings" subsection below,
please note the following:
. These matters raise difficult and complicated factual and legal issues
and are subject to many uncertainties and complexities, including the
underlying facts of each matter; novel legal issues; variations between
jurisdictions in which matters are being litigated, heard, or
investigated; differences in applicable laws and judicial
interpretations; the length of time before many of these matters might
be resolved by settlement, through litigation, or otherwise; the fact
that some of the lawsuits are putative class actions in which a class
has not been certified and in which the purported class may not be
clearly defined; the fact that some of the lawsuits involve multi-state
class actions in which the applicable law(s) for the claims at issue is
in dispute and therefore unclear; and the current challenging legal
environment faced by large corporations and insurance companies.
. The outcome of these matters may be affected by decisions, verdicts, and
settlements, and the timing of such decisions, verdicts, and
settlements, in other individual and class action lawsuits that involve
the Company, other insurers, or other entities and by other legal,
governmental, and regulatory actions that involve the Company, other
insurers, or other entities. The outcome may also be affected by future
state or federal legislation, the timing or substance of which cannot be
predicted.
. In the lawsuits, plaintiffs seek a variety of remedies which may include
equitable relief in the form of injunctive and other remedies and
monetary relief in the form of contractual and extra-contractual
damages. In some cases, the monetary damages sought may include punitive
or treble damages. Often specific information about the relief sought,
such as the amount of damages, is not available because plaintiffs have
not requested specific relief in their pleadings. When specific monetary
demands are made, they are often set just below a state court
jurisdictional limit in order to seek the maximum amount available in
state court, regardless of the specifics of the case, while still
avoiding the risk of removal to federal court. In the Company's
experience, monetary demands in pleadings bear little relation to the
ultimate loss, if any, to the Company.
. In connection with regulatory examinations and proceedings, government
authorities may seek various forms of relief, including penalties,
restitution and changes in business practices. The Company may not be
advised of the nature and extent of relief sought until the final stages
of the examination or proceeding.
36
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
. For the reasons specified above, it is not possible to make meaningful
estimates of the amount or range of loss that could result from the
matters described below in the "Proceedings" subsection. The Company
reviews these matters on an ongoing basis and follows appropriate
accounting guidance when making accrual and disclosure decisions. When
assessing reasonably possible and probable outcomes, the Company bases
its decisions on its assessment of the ultimate outcome following all
appeals.
. Due to the complexity and scope of the matters disclosed in the
"Proceedings" subsection below and the many uncertainties that exist,
the ultimate outcome of these matters cannot be reasonably predicted. In
the event of an unfavorable outcome in one or more of these matters, the
ultimate liability may be in excess of amounts currently reserved, if
any, and may be material to the Company's operating results or cash
flows for a particular quarterly or annual period. However, based on
information currently known to it, management believes that the ultimate
outcome of all matters described below, as they are resolved over time,
is not likely to have a material adverse effect on the financial
position of the Company.
PROCEEDINGS
Legal proceedings involving Allstate agencies and AIC may impact the
Company, even when the Company is not directly involved, because the Company
sells its products through a variety of distribution channels including
Allstate agencies. Consequently, information about the more significant of
these proceedings is provided in the following paragraph.
AIC is defending certain matters relating to its agency program
reorganization announced in 1999. These matters are in various stages of
development.
. These matters include a lawsuit filed in 2001 by the U.S. Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission ("EEOC") alleging retaliation under
federal civil rights laws (the "EEOC I" suit) and a class action filed
in 2001 by former employee agents alleging retaliation and age
discrimination under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act ("ADEA"),
breach of contract and ERISA violations (the "Romero I" suit). In 2004,
in the consolidated EEOC I and Romero I litigation, the trial court
issued a memorandum and order that, among other things, certified
classes of agents, including a mandatory class of agents who had signed
a release, for purposes of effecting the court's declaratory judgment
that the release is voidable at the option of the release signer. The
court also ordered that an agent who voids the release must return to
AIC "any and all benefits received by the [agent] in exchange for
signing the release." The court also stated that, "on the undisputed
facts of record, there is no basis for claims of age discrimination."
The EEOC and plaintiffs asked the court to clarify and/or reconsider its
memorandum and order and in January 2007, the judge denied their
request. In June 2007, the court granted AIC's motions for summary
judgment. Following plaintiffs' filing of a notice of appeal, the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit ("Third Circuit") issued an order
in December 2007 stating that the notice of appeal was not taken from a
final order within the meaning of the federal law and thus not
appealable at this time. In March 2008, the Third Circuit decided that
the appeal should not summarily be dismissed and that the question of
whether the matter is appealable at this time will be addressed by the
Third Circuit along with the merits of the appeal. In July 2009, the
Third Circuit vacated the decision which granted AIC's summary judgment
motions, remanded the cases to the trial court for additional discovery,
and directed that the cases be reassigned to another trial court judge.
In January 2010, the cases were assigned to a new judge for further
proceedings in the trial court.
. A putative nationwide class action has also been filed by former
employee agents alleging various violations of ERISA, including a worker
classification issue. These plaintiffs are challenging certain
amendments to the Agents Pension Plan and are seeking to have exclusive
agent independent
37
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
contractors treated as employees for benefit purposes. This matter was
dismissed with prejudice by the trial court, was the subject of further
proceedings on appeal, and was reversed and remanded to the trial court
in 2005. In June 2007, the court granted AIC's motion to dismiss the
case. Following plaintiffs' filing of a notice of appeal, the Third
Circuit issued an order in December 2007 stating that the notice of
appeal was not taken from a final order within the meaning of the
federal law and thus not appealable at this time. In March 2008, the
Third Circuit decided that the appeal should not summarily be dismissed
and that the question of whether the matter is appealable at this time
will be addressed by the Third Circuit along with the merits of the
appeal. In July 2009, the Third Circuit vacated the decision which
granted AIC's motion to dismiss the case, remanded the case to the trial
court for additional discovery, and directed that the case be reassigned
to another trial court judge. In January 2010, the case was assigned to
a new judge for further proceedings in the trial court.
In these agency program reorganization matters, plaintiffs seek compensatory
and punitive damages, and equitable relief. AIC has been vigorously defending
these lawsuits and other matters related to its agency program reorganization.
OTHER MATTERS
Various other legal, governmental, and regulatory actions, including state
market conduct exams, and other governmental and regulatory inquiries are
pending from time to time that involve the Company and specific aspects of its
conduct of business. Like other members of the insurance industry, the Company
is the target of a number of lawsuits and proceedings, some of which involve
claims for substantial or indeterminate amounts. These actions are based on a
variety of issues and target a range of the Company's practices. The outcome of
these disputes is currently unpredictable. However, based on information
currently known to it and the existence of the reinsurance agreements with
ALIC, management believes that the ultimate outcome of all matters described in
this "Other Matters" subsection, in excess of amounts currently reserved, if
any, as they are resolved over time, is not likely to have a material effect on
the operating results, cash flows or financial position of the Company.
10. INCOME TAXES
The Company joins the Corporation and its other domestic subsidiaries (the
"Allstate Group") in the filing of a consolidated federal income tax return and
is party to a federal income tax allocation agreement (the "Allstate Tax
Sharing Agreement"). Under the Allstate Tax Sharing Agreement, the Company pays
to or receives from the Corporation the amount, if any, by which the Allstate
Group's federal income tax liability is affected by virtue of inclusion of the
Company in the consolidated federal income tax return. The Company also has a
supplemental tax sharing agreement with respect to reinsurance ceded to ALIC to
allocate the tax benefits and costs related to such reinsurance. Effectively,
these agreements result in the Company's annual income tax provision being
computed, with adjustments, as if the Company filed a separate return, adjusted
for the reinsurance ceded to ALIC.
The Internal Revenue Service ("IRS") is currently examining the Allstate
Group's 2007 and 2008 federal income tax returns. The IRS has completed its
examination of the Allstate Group's federal income tax returns through 2006 and
the statute of limitations has expired on years prior to 2005. Any adjustments
that may result from IRS examinations of tax returns are not expected to have a
material effect on the results of operations, cash flows or financial position
of the Company.
The Company had no liability for unrecognized tax benefits as of
December 31, 2010 or 2009, and believes it is reasonably possible that the
liability balance will not significantly increase within the next twelve
months. No amounts have been accrued for interest or penalties.
38
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
The components of the deferred income tax assets and liabilities as of
December 31 are as follows:
2010 2009
($ IN THOUSANDS) ------- -------
DEFERRED ASSETS
Tax credit carryforward................... $ 7 $ --
------- -------
Total deferred assets.................. 7 --
------- -------
DEFERRED LIABILITIES
Unrealized net capital gains........... (5,463) (2,995)
Other liabilities...................... (377) (305)
------- -------
Total deferred liabilities......... (5,840) (3,300)
------- -------
Net deferred liabilities........ $(5,833) $(3,300)
======= =======
Although realization is not assured, management believes it is more likely
than not that the deferred tax assets will be realized based on the Company's
assessment that the deductions ultimately recognized for tax purposes will be
fully utilized.
The components of income tax expense for the years ended December 31 are as
follows:
2010 2009 2008
($ IN THOUSANDS) ------ ------ ------
Current..................... $4,386 $4,447 $7,054
Deferred.................... 65 187 (136)
------ ------ ------
Total income tax expense. $4,451 $4,634 $6,918
====== ====== ======
As of December 31, 2010, the Company has tax credit carryforwards of $7
thousand which will be available to offset future tax liabilities. These
carryforwards will expire at the end of 2029 and 2030.
The Company paid income taxes of $4.7 million, $6.8 million and $4.9 million
in 2010, 2009 and 2008, respectively.
A reconciliation of the statutory federal income tax rate to the effective
income tax rate on income from operations for the years ended December 31 is as
follows:
2010 2009 2008
---- ---- ----
Statutory federal income tax rate. 35.0% 35.0% 35.0%
Other............................. (0.1) (0.1) (0.2)
---- ---- ----
Effective income tax rate......... 34.9% 34.9% 34.8%
==== ==== ====
11. STATUTORY FINANCIAL INFORMATION
The Company prepares its statutory-basis financial statements in conformity
with accounting practices prescribed or permitted by the State of Nebraska.
Prescribed statutory accounting practices include a variety of publications of
the National Association of Insurance Commissioners ("NAIC"), as well as state
laws, regulations and general administrative rules. Permitted statutory
accounting practices encompass all accounting practices not so prescribed. The
State of Nebraska requires insurance companies domiciled in its state to
prepare statutory-basis financial statements in conformity with the NAIC
Accounting Practices and Procedures Manual, subject to any deviations
prescribed or permitted by the State of Nebraska Insurance Commissioner.
39
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
Statutory accounting practices differ from GAAP primarily since they require
charging policy acquisition and certain sales inducement costs to expense as
incurred, establishing life insurance reserves based on different actuarial
assumptions, and valuing certain investments and establishing deferred taxes on
a different basis.
Statutory net income for 2010, 2009, and 2008 was $8.7 million, $8.5 million
and $7.8 million, respectively. Statutory capital and surplus was $310.8
million and $306.0 million as of December 31, 2010 and 2009, respectively.
DIVIDENDS
The ability of the Company to pay dividends is dependent on business
conditions, income, cash requirements of the Company and other relevant
factors. The payment of shareholder dividends by the Company without the prior
approval of the state insurance regulator is limited to formula amounts based
on net income and capital and surplus, determined in conformity with statutory
accounting practices, as well as the timing and amount of dividends paid in the
preceding twelve months. The maximum amount of dividends that the Company can
pay during 2011 without prior approval of the Nebraska Department of Insurance
is $31.1 million. The Company did not pay any dividends in 2010.
12. OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
The components of other comprehensive income (loss) on a pre-tax and
after-tax basis for the years ended December 31 are as follows:
2010
--------------------------
PRE-TAX TAX AFTER-TAX
($ IN THOUSANDS) ------- ------- ---------
Unrealized net holding gains arising during the period................. $ 7,746 $(2,711) $ 5,035
Less: reclassification adjustment of realized capital gains and losses. 694 (243) 451
------- ------- -------
Unrealized net capital gains and losses................................ 7,052 (2,468) 4,584
------- ------- -------
Other comprehensive income............................................. $ 7,052 $(2,468) $ 4,584
======= ======= =======
2009
--------------------------
PRE-TAX TAX AFTER-TAX
------- ------- ---------
Unrealized net holding gains arising during the period................. $10,135 $(3,547) $ 6,588
Less: reclassification adjustment of realized capital gains and losses. 1,238 (433) 805
------- ------- -------
Unrealized net capital gains and losses................................ 8,897 (3,114) 5,783
------- ------- -------
Other comprehensive income............................................. $ 8,897 $(3,114) $ 5,783
======= ======= =======
2008
--------------------------
PRE-TAX TAX AFTER-TAX
------- ------- ---------
Unrealized net holding losses arising during the period................ $(3,078) $ 1,077 $(2,001)
Less: reclassification adjustment of realized capital gains and losses. 3,615 (1,265) 2,350
------- ------- -------
Unrealized net capital gains and losses................................ (6,693) 2,342 (4,351)
------- ------- -------
Other comprehensive loss............................................... $(6,693) $ 2,342 $(4,351)
======= ======= =======
40
LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE COMPANY
SCHEDULE I--SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS
OTHER THAN INVESTMENTS IN RELATED PARTIES
DECEMBER 31, 2010
AMOUNT AT
WHICH
SHOWN IN
AMORTIZED FAIR THE BALANCE
COST VALUE SHEET
($ IN THOUSANDS) --------- -------- -----------
TYPE OF INVESTMENT
Fixed maturities:
Bonds:
United States government, government agencies and authorities..... $ 70,426 $ 73,556 $ 73,556
States, municipalities and political subdivisions................. 2,999 3,176 3,176
Foreign governments............................................... 4,998 5,090 5,090
Public utilities.................................................. 14,013 15,063 15,063
All other corporate bonds......................................... 140,248 148,524 148,524
Asset-backed securities............................................... 8,265 8,382 8,382
Residential mortgage-backed securities................................ 55,376 57,802 57,802
Commercial mortgage-backed securities................................. 8,523 8,863 8,863
-------- -------- --------
Total fixed maturities............................................ 304,848 320,456 320,456
Short-term investments................................................... 11,593 11,593 11,593
-------- -------- --------
Total investments................................................. $316,441 $332,049 $332,049
======== ======== ========
41
LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE COMPANY
SCHEDULE IV--REINSURANCE
PERCENTAGE
CEDED TO ASSUMED OF AMOUNT
GROSS OTHER FROM OTHER NET ASSUMED
AMOUNT COMPANIES/(1)/ COMPANIES AMOUNT TO NET
($ IN THOUSANDS) ------------ ------------- ---------- ------ ----------
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2010
Life insurance in force.......... $358,242,997 $364,544,022 $6,301,025 $-- -- %
============ ============ ========== ===
Premiums and contract charges:
Life and annuities............ $ 1,111,971 $ 1,119,436 $ 7,465 $-- -- %
Accident and health insurance. 116,301 116,301 -- -- -- %
------------ ------------ ---------- ---
$ 1,228,272 $ 1,235,737 $ 7,465 $-- -- %
============ ============ ========== ===
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2009
Life insurance in force.......... $349,952,260 $356,581,252 $6,628,992 $-- -- %
============ ============ ========== ===
Premiums and contract charges:
Life and annuities............ $ 1,072,840 $ 1,080,689 $ 7,849 $-- -- %
Accident and health insurance. 121,686 121,686 -- -- -- %
------------ ------------ ---------- ---
$ 1,194,526 $ 1,202,375 $ 7,849 $-- -- %
============ ============ ========== ===
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2008
Life insurance in force.......... $337,177,898 $344,250,029 $7,072,131 $-- -- %
============ ============ ========== ===
Premiums and contract charges:
Life and annuities............ $ 1,017,339 $ 1,025,915 $ 8,576 $-- -- %
Accident and health insurance. 121,408 121,408 -- -- -- %
------------ ------------ ---------- ---
$ 1,138,747 $ 1,147,323 $ 8,576 $-- -- %
============ ============ ========== ===
--------
/(1)/No reinsurance or coinsurance income was netted against premiums ceded in
2010, 2009 and 2008.
42
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
To the Board of Directors and Shareholder of
Lincoln Benefit Life Company
Lincoln, NE
We have audited the accompanying Statements of Financial Position of Lincoln
Benefit Life Company (the "Company"), an affiliate of The Allstate Corporation,
as of December 31, 2010 and 2009, and the related Statements of Operations and
Comprehensive Income, Shareholder's Equity, and Cash Flows for each of the
three years in the period ended December 31, 2010. Our audits also included
Schedule I--Summary of Investments--Other than Investments in Related Parties
and Schedule IV--Reinsurance. These financial statements and financial
statement schedules are the responsibility of the Company's management. Our
responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements and
financial statement schedules based on our audits.
We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we
plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the
financial statements are free of material misstatement. The Company is not
required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of its internal
control over financial reporting. Our audits included consideration of internal
control over financial reporting as a basis for designing audit procedures that
are appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of expressing an
opinion on the effectiveness of the Company's internal control over financial
reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion. An audit also includes
examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in
the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and
significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall
financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a
reasonable basis for our opinion.
In our opinion, such financial statements present fairly, in all material
respects, the financial position of Lincoln Benefit Life Company as of
December 31, 2010 and 2009, and the results of its operations and its cash
flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2010, in
conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States
of America. Also, in our opinion, Schedule I--Summary of Investments--Other
than Investments in Related Parties and Schedule IV--Reinsurance, when
considered in relation to the basic financial statements taken as a whole,
present fairly in all material respects the information set forth therein.
/s/ Deloitte & Touche LLP
Chicago, Illinois
March 11, 2011
43
ITEM 11(F).SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA
LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE COMPANY
5-YEAR SUMMARY OF SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA
2010 2009 2008 2007 2006
($ IN THOUSANDS) ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
OPERATING RESULTS
Net investment income................ $ 12,067 $ 11,783 $ 13,940 $ 14,257 $ 13,948
Realized capital gains and losses.... 694 1,480 5,952 (417) (1,255)
Total revenues....................... 12,761 13,263 19,892 13,840 12,693
Net income........................... 8,310 8,629 12,974 9,005 8,260
FINANCIAL POSITION
Investments.......................... $ 332,049 $ 316,900 $ 310,031 $ 301,201 $ 276,322
Total assets......................... 22,729,575 22,932,908 22,655,371 23,700,007 23,862,919
Reserve for life-contingent contract
benefits and contractholder
funds.............................. 20,258,388 20,438,414 20,368,562 20,169,001 20,322,077
Shareholder's equity................. 325,867 312,973 298,561 289,938 276,626
ITEM 11(H).MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
OVERVIEW
The following discussion highlights significant factors influencing the
financial position and results of operations of Lincoln Benefit Life Company
(referred to in this document as "we", "Lincoln Benefit", "our", "us" or the
"Company"). It should be read in conjunction with the financial statements and
related notes found under Item 11(e) contained herein. We operate as a single
segment entity, based on the manner in which we use financial information to
evaluate business performance and to determine the allocation of resources.
The most important factors we monitor to evaluate the financial condition
and performance of our company include:
. For operations: premiums and contract charges ceded to ALIC, and
invested assets;
. For investments: credit quality/experience, realized capital gains and
losses, investment income, unrealized capital gains and losses,
stability of long-term returns, cash flows and asset duration; and
. For financial condition: financial strength ratings and capital
positions.
APPLICATION OF CRITICAL ACCOUNTING ESTIMATES
The preparation of financial statements in conformity with accounting
principles generally accepted in the United States of America ("GAAP") requires
management to adopt accounting policies and make estimates and assumptions that
affect amounts reported in the financial statements. The most critical
estimates include those used in determining:
. Fair value of financial assets
. Impairment of fixed income securities
In making these determinations, management makes subjective and complex
judgments that frequently require estimates about matters that are inherently
uncertain. Many of these policies, estimates and related judgments are common
in the insurance and financial services industries; others are specific to our
businesses and operations. It is reasonably likely that changes in these
estimates could occur from period to period and result in a material impact on
our financial statements.
44
A brief summary of each of these critical accounting estimates follows. For
a more detailed discussion of the effect of these estimates on our financial
statements, and the judgments and assumptions related to these estimates, see
the referenced sections of this document. For a complete summary of our
significant accounting policies, see Note 2 of the financial statements.
FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL ASSETS Fair value is defined as the price that would
be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly
transaction between market participants at the measurement date. We categorize
our financial assets measured at fair value into a three-level hierarchy based
on the observability of inputs to the valuation techniques as follows:
LEVEL 1:Financial asset values are based on unadjusted quoted prices for
identical assets in an active market that we can access.
LEVEL 2:Financial asset values are based on the following:
(a)Quoted prices for similar assets in active markets;
(b)Quoted prices for identical or similar assets in markets that are not
active; or
(c)Valuation models whose inputs are observable, directly or indirectly,
for substantially the full term of the asset.
LEVEL 3:Financial asset values are based on prices or valuation techniques that
require inputs that are both unobservable and significant to the
overall fair value measurement. Unobservable inputs reflect our
estimates of the assumptions that market participants would use in
valuing the financial assets.
Observable inputs are inputs that reflect the assumptions market
participants would use in valuing financial assets that are developed based on
market data obtained from independent sources. In the absence of sufficient
observable inputs, unobservable inputs reflect our estimates of the assumptions
market participants would use in valuing financial assets and are developed
based on the best information available in the circumstances. The degree of
management judgment involved in determining fair values is inversely related to
the availability of market observable information.
We are responsible for the determination of fair value of financial assets
and the supporting assumptions and methodologies. We gain assurance on the
overall reasonableness and consistent application of valuation input
assumptions, valuation methodologies and compliance with accounting standards
for fair value determination through the execution of various processes and
controls designed to ensure that our financial assets are appropriately valued.
We monitor fair values received from third parties and those derived internally
on an ongoing basis.
We employ independent third-party valuation service providers, broker quotes
and internal pricing methods to determine fair values. We obtain or calculate
only one single quote or price for each financial instrument.
Valuation service providers typically obtain data about market transactions
and other key valuation model inputs from multiple sources and, through the use
of proprietary models, produce valuation information in the form of a single
fair value for individual securities for which a fair value has been requested
under the terms of our agreements. For certain security types, fair values are
derived from the valuation service providers' proprietary valuation models. The
inputs used by the valuation service providers include, but are not limited to,
market prices from recently completed transactions and transactions of
comparable securities, interest rate yield curves, credit spreads, liquidity
spreads, currency rates, and other information, as applicable. Credit and
liquidity spreads are typically implied from completed transactions and
transactions of comparable securities. Valuation service providers also use
proprietary discounted cash flow models that are widely accepted in the
financial services industry and similar to those used by other market
participants to value the same financial instruments. The valuation models take
into account, among other things, market observable information as of the
measurement date, as described above, as well as the specific attributes of the
security being valued including its
45
term, interest rate, credit rating, industry sector, and where applicable,
collateral quality and other issue or issuer specific information. Executing
valuation models effectively requires seasoned professional judgment and
experience. In cases where market transactions or other market observable data
is limited, the extent to which judgment is applied varies inversely with the
availability of market observable information.
For certain of our financial assets measured at fair value, where our
valuation service providers cannot provide fair value determinations, we obtain
a single non-binding price quote from a broker familiar with the security who,
similar to our valuation service providers, may consider transactions or
activity in similar securities among other information. The brokers providing
price quotes are generally from the brokerage divisions of leading financial
institutions with market making, underwriting and distribution expertise
regarding the security subject to valuation.
The fair value of certain financial assets, including privately placed
corporate fixed income securities, for which our valuation service providers or
brokers do not provide fair value determinations, is determined using valuation
methods and models widely accepted in the financial services industry.
Internally developed valuation models, which include inputs that may not be
market observable and as such involve some degree of judgment, are considered
appropriate for each class of security to which they are applied.
Our internal pricing methods are primarily based on models using discounted
cash flow methodologies that develop a single best estimate of fair value. Our
models generally incorporate inputs that we believe are representative of
inputs other market participants would use to determine fair value of the same
instruments, including yield curves, quoted market prices of comparable
securities, published credit spreads, and other applicable market data.
Additional inputs that are used include internally-derived assumptions such as
liquidity premium and credit ratings, as well as instrument-specific
characteristics that include, but are not limited to, coupon rate, expected
cash flows, sector of the issuer, and call provisions. Our internally assigned
credit ratings are developed at a more detailed level than externally published
ratings and allow for a more precise match of these ratings to other market
observable valuation inputs, such as credit and sector spreads, when performing
these valuations. Due to the existence of non-market observable inputs, such as
liquidity premiums, judgment is required in developing these fair values. As a
result, the fair value of these financial assets may differ from the amount
actually received to sell an asset in an orderly transaction between market
participants at the measurement date. Moreover, the use of different valuation
assumptions may have a material effect on the financial assets' fair values.
For the majority of our financial assets measured at fair value, all
significant inputs are based on market observable data and significant
management judgment does not affect the periodic determination of fair value.
The determination of fair value using discounted cash flow models involves
management judgment when significant model inputs are not based on market
observable data. However, where market observable data is available, it takes
precedence, and as a result, no range of reasonably likely inputs exists from
which the basis of a sensitivity analysis could be constructed.
We believe our most significant exposure to changes in fair value is due to
market risk. Our exposure to changes in market conditions is discussed fully in
the Market Risk section of the MD&A.
We employ specific control processes to determine the reasonableness of the
fair values of our financial assets. Our processes are designed to ensure that
the values received or internally estimated are accurately recorded and that
the data inputs and the valuation techniques utilized are appropriate,
consistently applied, and that the assumptions are reasonable and consistent
with the objective of determining fair value. For example, on a continuing
basis, we assess the reasonableness of individual security values received from
valuation service providers and those derived from internal models that exceed
certain thresholds as compared to previous values received from those valuation
service providers or derived from internal models. In addition, we may validate
the reasonableness of fair value by comparing information obtained from our
valuation service providers to other third party valuation sources for selected
securities. We perform ongoing price validation procedures such as
46
back-testing of actual sales, which corroborate the various inputs used in
internal pricing models to market observable data. When fair value
determinations are expected to be more variable, we validate them through
reviews by members of management who have relevant expertise and who are
independent of those charged with executing investment transactions.
We also perform an analysis to determine whether there has been a
significant decrease in the volume and level of activity for the asset when
compared to normal market activity, and if so, whether transactions may not be
orderly. Among the indicators we consider in determining whether a significant
decrease in the volume and level of market activity for a specific asset has
occurred include the level of new issuances in the primary market, trading
volume in the secondary market, level of credit spreads over historical levels,
bid-ask spread, and price consensuses among market participants and sources. If
evidence indicates that prices are based on transactions that are not orderly,
we place little, if any, weight on the transaction price and will estimate fair
value using an internal pricing model. As of December 31, 2010 and 2009, we did
not alter fair values provided by our valuation service providers or brokers or
substitute them with an internal pricing model.
The following table identifies fixed income and short-term investments as of
December 31, 2010 by source of value determination:
FAIR PERCENT
VALUE TO TOTAL
($ IN THOUSANDS) -------- --------
Fair value based on internal sources......... $ 12,444 3.7%
Fair value based on external sources/(1)/.... 319,605 96.3
-------- -----
Total........................................ $332,049 100.0%
======== =====
--------
/(1)/Includes $6.9 million that are valued using broker quotes.
For more detailed information on our accounting policy for the fair value of
financial assets and the financial assets by level in the fair value hierarchy,
see Notes 2 and 5 of the financial statements.
IMPAIRMENT OF FIXED INCOME SECURITIES For fixed income securities classified
as available for sale, the difference between fair value and amortized cost,
net of deferred income taxes, is reported as a component of accumulated other
comprehensive income on the Statements of Financial Position and is not
reflected in the operating results of any period until reclassified to net
income upon the consummation of a transaction with an unrelated third party or
when a write-down is recorded due to an other-than-temporary decline in fair
value. We have a comprehensive portfolio monitoring process to identify and
evaluate each fixed income security whose carrying value may be
other-than-temporarily impaired.
For each fixed income security in an unrealized loss position, we assess
whether management with the appropriate authority has made the decision to sell
or whether it is more likely than not we will be required to sell the security
before recovery of the amortized cost basis for reasons such as liquidity,
contractual or regulatory purposes. If a security meets either of these
criteria, the security's decline in fair value is considered other than
temporary and is recorded in earnings.
If we have not made the decision to sell the fixed income security and it is
not more likely than not we will be required to sell the fixed income security
before recovery of its amortized cost basis, we evaluate whether we expect to
receive cash flows sufficient to recover the entire amortized cost basis of the
security. We use our best estimate of future cash flows expected to be
collected from the fixed income security discounted at the security's original
or current effective rate, as appropriate, to calculate a recovery value and
determine whether a credit loss exists. The determination of cash flow
estimates is inherently subjective and methodologies may vary depending on
facts and circumstances specific to the security. All reasonably available
information relevant to the collectability of the security, including past
events, current conditions, and reasonable and supportable
47
assumptions and forecasts, are considered when developing the estimate of cash
flows expected to be collected. That information generally includes, but is not
limited to, the remaining payment terms of the security, prepayment speeds,
foreign exchange rates, the financial condition and future earnings potential
of the issue or issuer, expected defaults, expected recoveries, the value of
underlying collateral, vintage, geographic concentration, available reserves or
escrows, current subordination levels, third party guarantees and other credit
enhancements. Other information, such as industry analyst reports and
forecasts, sector credit ratings, financial condition of the bond insurer for
insured fixed income securities, and other market data relevant to the
realizability of contractual cash flows, may also be considered. The estimated
fair value of collateral will be used to estimate recovery value if we
determine that the security is dependent on the liquidation of collateral for
ultimate settlement. If the estimated recovery value is less than the amortized
cost of the security, a credit loss exists and an other-than-temporary
impairment for the difference between the estimated recovery value and
amortized cost is recorded in earnings. The portion of the unrealized loss
related to factors other than credit remains classified in accumulated other
comprehensive income. If we determine that the fixed income security does not
have sufficient cash flow or other information to estimate a recovery value for
the security, we may conclude that the entire decline in fair value is deemed
to be credit related and the loss is recorded in earnings.
Once assumptions and estimates are made, any number of changes in facts and
circumstances could cause us to subsequently determine that a fixed income
security is other-than-temporarily impaired, including: 1) general economic
conditions that are worse than previously forecasted or that have a greater
adverse effect on a particular issuer or industry sector than originally
estimated; 2) changes in the facts and circumstances related to a particular
issue or issuer's ability to meet all of its contractual obligations; and 3)
changes in facts and circumstances that result in changes to management's
intent to sell or result in our assessment that it is more likely than not we
will be required to sell before recovery of the amortized cost basis. Changes
in assumptions, facts and circumstances could result in additional charges to
earnings in future periods to the extent that losses are realized. The charge
to earnings, while potentially significant to net income, would not have a
significant effect on shareholder's equity, since our securities are designated
as available for sale and carried at fair value and as a result, any related
unrealized loss, net of deferred income taxes, would already be reflected as a
component of accumulated other comprehensive income in shareholder's equity.
The determination of the amount of other-than-temporary impairment is an
inherently subjective process based on periodic evaluation of the factors
described above. Such evaluations and assessments are revised as conditions
change and new information becomes available. We update our evaluations
regularly and reflect changes in other-than-temporary impairments in results of
operations as such evaluations are revised. The use of different methodologies
and assumptions in the determination of the amount of other-than-temporary
impairments may have a material effect on the amounts presented within the
financial statements.
For additional detail on investment impairments, see Note 4 of the financial
statements.
OPERATIONS
OVERVIEW AND STRATEGY We are a wholly owned subsidiary of Allstate Life
Insurance Company ("ALIC"), which is a wholly owned subsidiary of Allstate
Insurance Company ("AIC"), a wholly owned subsidiary of Allstate Insurance
Holdings, LLC, which is wholly owned by The Allstate Corporation (the
"Corporation"). We provide life insurance, retirement and investment products.
Our products include interest-sensitive, traditional and variable life
insurance and fixed annuities such as deferred and immediate annuities. Our
products are sold through multiple distribution channels including Allstate
exclusive agencies, which include exclusive financial specialists, and
independent agents (including master brokerage agencies).
48
NET INCOME Net income for the years ended December 31 is presented in the
following table:
2010 2009 2008
($ IN THOUSANDS) ------- ------- -------
Net investment income............. $12,067 $11,783 $13,940
Realized capital gains and losses. 694 1,480 5,952
Income tax expense................ (4,451) (4,634) (6,918)
------- ------- -------
Net income........................ $ 8,310 $ 8,629 $12,974
======= ======= =======
We have reinsurance agreements whereby all premiums, contract charges,
interest credited to contractholder funds, contract benefits and substantially
all expenses are ceded to ALIC and other non-affiliated reinsurers, and are
reflected net of such reinsurance in the Statements of Operations and
Comprehensive Income. Our results of operations include net investment income
and realized capital gains and losses recognized in connection with the assets
that are not transferred under the reinsurance agreements.
NET INCOME decreased 3.7% in 2010 compared to 2009 and 33.5% in 2009
compared to 2008. The decrease in 2010 was due to lower net realized capital
gains. The decrease in 2009 was due to lower net realized capital gains and
lower net investment income.
INCOME TAX EXPENSE decreased 3.9% in 2010 compared to 2009 and 33.0% in 2009
compared to 2008. These changes were due to the proportional change in the
income on which the income tax expense was determined.
FINANCIAL POSITION The financial position for the years ended December 31 is
presented in the following table:
2010 2009
($ IN THOUSANDS) ----------- -----------
Fixed income securities/(1)/.................. $ 320,456 $ 308,343
Short-term/(2)/............................... 11,593 8,557
----------- -----------
Total investments.......................... $ 332,049 $ 316,900
=========== ===========
Cash.......................................... $ 3,550 $ 10,063
Reinsurance recoverable from ALIC............. 18,365,058 18,689,074
Reinsurance recoverable from non-affiliates... 1,906,574 1,766,824
Contractholder funds.......................... 17,247,071 17,633,027
Reserve for life-contingent contract benefits. 3,011,317 2,805,387
Separate accounts assets and liabilities...... 2,017,185 2,039,647
--------
/(1)/Fixed income securities are carried at fair value. Amortized cost basis
for these securities was $304.8 million and $299.8 million as of
December 31, 2010 and 2009, respectively.
/(2)/Short-term investments are carried at fair value. Amortized cost basis for
these securities was $11.6 million and $8.6 million as of December 31,
2010 and 2009, respectively.
Total investments increased to $332.0 million as of December 31, 2010 from
$316.9 million as of December 31, 2009 primarily due to purchases of fixed
income securities and increased net unrealized capital gains on fixed income
securities.
49
FIXED INCOME SECURITIES by type are listed in the table below.
PERCENT TO PERCENT TO
FAIR VALUE AS OF TOTAL FAIR VALUE AS OF TOTAL
DECEMBER 31, 2010 INVESTMENTS DECEMBER 31, 2009 INVESTMENTS
($ IN THOUSANDS) ----------------- ----------- ----------------- -----------
U.S. government and agencies........... $ 73,556 22.1% $ 81,551 25.7%
Municipal.............................. 3,176 1.0 3,095 1.0
Corporate.............................. 163,587 49.3 137,573 43.4
Foreign government..................... 5,090 1.5 -- --
Residential mortgage-backed securities
("RMBS")............................. 57,802 17.4 67,975 21.4
Commercial mortgage-backed securities
("CMBS")............................. 8,863 2.7 9,704 3.1
Asset-backed securities ("ABS")........ 8,382 2.5 8,445 2.7
-------- ---- -------- ----
Total fixed income securities.......... $320,456 96.5% $308,343 97.3%
======== ==== ======== ====
As of December 31, 2010, all of the fixed income securities portfolio was
rated investment grade, which is defined as a security having a rating of Aaa,
Aa, A or Baa from Moody's, a rating of AAA, AA, A or BBB from Standard & Poor's
("S&P"), Fitch, Dominion, or Realpoint, a rating of aaa, aa, a, or bbb from
A.M. Best, or a comparable internal rating if an externally provided rating is
not available.
The following table summarizes the fair value and unrealized net capital
gains and losses for fixed income securities by credit rating as of
December 31, 2010.
AAA AA A
-------------------- ------------------ --------------------
FAIR UNREALIZED FAIR UNREALIZED FAIR UNREALIZED
VALUE GAIN/(LOSS) VALUE GAIN/(LOSS) VALUE GAIN/(LOSS)
($ IN THOUSANDS) -------- ----------- ------- ----------- -------- -----------
U.S. government and agencies........... $ 73,556 $3,130 $ -- $ -- $ -- $ --
Municipal
Tax exempt.......................... -- -- 509 9 -- --
Taxable............................. -- -- 2,667 168 -- --
Corporate
Public.............................. 3,094 99 32,761 1,740 102,130 6,641
Privately placed.................... 5,079 79 15,824 639 -- --
Foreign government..................... -- -- 5,090 92 -- --
RMBS
U.S. government sponsored entities
("U.S. Agency")................... 48,133 2,292 -- -- -- --
Prime residential mortgage-backed
securities ("Prime").............. 2,789 5 -- -- 4,180 77
Alt-A residential mortgage-backed...
securities ("Alt-A")................ -- -- -- -- 2,700 52
CMBS................................... 6,947 427 1,916 (87) -- --
ABS.................................... -- -- 8,382 117 -- --
-------- ------ ------- ------ -------- ------
Total fixed income securities.......... $139,598 $6,032 $67,149 $2,678 $109,010 $6,770
======== ====== ======= ====== ======== ======
50
BAA TOTAL
------------------ --------------------
FAIR UNREALIZED FAIR UNREALIZED
VALUE GAIN/(LOSS) VALUE GAIN/(LOSS)
------ ----------- -------- -----------
U.S. government and agencies.. $ -- $ -- $ 73,556 $ 3,130
Municipal
Tax exempt................. -- -- 509 9
Taxable.................... -- -- 2,667 168
Corporate
Public..................... 4,699 128 142,684 8,608
Privately placed........... -- -- 20,903 718
Foreign government............ -- -- 5,090 92
RMBS
U.S. Agency................ -- -- 48,133 2,292
Prime...................... -- -- 6,969 82
Alt-A...................... -- -- 2,700 52
CMBS.......................... -- -- 8,863 340
ABS........................... -- -- 8,382 117
------ ---- -------- -------
Total fixed income securities. $4,699 $128 $320,456 $15,608
====== ==== ======== =======
RMBS, CMBS AND ABS are structured securities that are primarily
collateralized by residential and commercial real estate loans and other
consumer or corporate borrowings. The cash flows from the underlying collateral
paid to the securitization trust are generally applied in a pre-determined
order and are designed so that each security issued by the trust, typically
referred to as a "class", qualifies for a specific original rating. For
example, the "senior" portion or "top" of the capital structure, or rating
class, which would originally qualify for a rating of Aaa typically has
priority in receiving principal repayments on the underlying collateral and
retains this priority until the class is paid in full. In a sequential
structure, underlying collateral principal repayments are directed to the most
senior rated Aaa class in the structure until paid in full, after which
principal repayments are directed to the next most senior Aaa class in the
structure until it is paid in full. Senior Aaa classes generally share any
losses from the underlying collateral on a pro-rata basis after losses are
absorbed by classes with lower original ratings. The payment priority and class
subordination included in these securities serves as credit enhancement for
holders of the senior or top portions of the structures. These securities
continue to retain the payment priority features that existed at the
origination of the securitization trust. Other forms of credit enhancement may
include structural features embedded in the securitization trust, such as
overcollateralization, excess spread and bond insurance. The underlying
collateral can have fixed interest rates, variable interest rates (such as
adjustable rate mortgages ("ARM")) or may contain features of both fixed and
variable rate mortgages.
RMBS, including U.S. Agency, Prime and Alt-A, totaled $57.8 million, with
100% rated investment grade, as of December 31, 2010. The RMBS portfolio is
subject to interest rate risk, but unlike other fixed income securities, is
additionally subject to significant prepayment risk from the underlying
residential mortgage loans. The credit risk associated with our RMBS portfolio
is mitigated due to the fact that 83.3% of the portfolio consists of securities
that were issued by or have underlying collateral guaranteed by U.S. government
agencies.
CMBS totaled $8.9 million, with 100% rated investment grade, as of
December 31, 2010. The CMBS portfolio is subject to credit risk, but unlike
certain other structured securities, is generally not subject to prepayment
risk due to protections within the underlying commercial mortgage loans. All of
the CMBS investments are traditional conduit transactions collateralized by
commercial mortgage loans, broadly diversified across property types and
geographical area.
51
ABS totaled $8.4 million, with 100% rated investment grade, as of
December 31, 2010. Credit risk is managed by monitoring the performance of the
underlying collateral. Many of the securities in the ABS portfolio have credit
enhancement with features such as overcollateralization, subordinated
structures, reserve funds, guarantees and/or insurance.
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS Our short-term investment portfolio was $11.6 million
and $8.6 million as of December 31, 2010 and 2009, respectively.
UNREALIZED NET CAPITAL GAINS totaled $15.6 million as of December 31, 2010
compared to $8.6 million as of December 31, 2009. The improvement since
December 31, 2009 was primarily a result of declining risk-free interest rates
and tightening of credit spreads in certain sectors. The following table
presents unrealized net capital gains and losses, pre-tax and after-tax as of
December 31.
2010 2009
($ IN THOUSANDS) ------- -------
U.S. government and agencies....................... $ 3,130 $ 1,569
Municipal.......................................... 177 96
Corporate.......................................... 9,326 6,107
Foreign government................................. 92 --
RMBS............................................... 2,426 1,649
CMBS............................................... 340 (816)
ABS................................................ 117 (49)
------- -------
Unrealized net capital gains and losses, pre-tax... 15,608 8,556
Deferred income taxes.............................. (5,463) (2,995)
------- -------
Unrealized net capital gains and losses, after-tax. $10,145 $ 5,561
======= =======
The unrealized net capital gain for the fixed income portfolio totaled $15.6
million and comprised $16.1 million of gross unrealized gains and $492 thousand
of gross unrealized losses as of December 31, 2010. This is compared to
unrealized net capital gain for the fixed income portfolio totaling $8.6
million, comprised of $9.93 million of gross unrealized gains and $1.37 million
of gross unrealized losses as of December 31, 2009.
52
Gross unrealized gains and losses as of December 31, 2010 on fixed income
securities by type and sector are provided in the table below.
AMORTIZED
GROSS UNREALIZED COST AS A FAIR VALUE
PAR AMORTIZED --------------- FAIR PERCENT OF AS A PERCENT OF
VALUE COST GAINS LOSSES VALUE PAR VALUE PAR VALUE
($ IN THOUSANDS) -------- --------- ------- ------ -------- ---------- ---------------
Corporate:
Consumer goods (cyclical
and non-cyclical)........ $ 56,050 $ 56,363 $ 3,573 $ (19) $ 59,917 100.6% 106.9%
Financial services......... 19,000 19,000 872 -- 19,872 100.0 104.6
Banking.................... 17,000 16,994 1,103 -- 18,097 100.0 106.5
Energy..................... 16,000 16,098 719 -- 16,817 100.6 105.1
Utilities.................. 14,000 14,013 1,050 -- 15,063 100.1 107.6
Capital goods.............. 11,000 11,110 1,046 -- 12,156 101.0 110.5
Transportation............. 7,350 7,565 374 -- 7,939 102.9 108.0
Basic industry............. 7,000 7,123 372 -- 7,495 101.8 107.1
Technology................. 6,000 5,995 236 -- 6,231 99.9 103.9
-------- -------- ------- ----- --------
Total corporate fixed income
portfolio................... 153,400 154,261 9,345 (19) 163,587 100.6 106.6
-------- -------- ------- ----- --------
U.S. government and
agencies.................... 67,320 70,426 3,513 (383) 73,556 104.6 109.3
Municipal..................... 3,000 2,999 177 -- 3,176 100.0 105.9
Foreign government............ 5,000 4,998 92 -- 5,090 100.0 101.8
RMBS.......................... 55,362 55,376 2,429 (3) 57,802 100.0 104.4
CMBS.......................... 8,500 8,523 427 (87) 8,863 100.3 104.3
ABS........................... 8,070 8,265 117 -- 8,382 102.4 103.9
-------- -------- ------- ----- --------
Total fixed income securities. $300,652 $304,848 $16,100 $(492) $320,456 101.4 106.6
======== ======== ======= ===== ========
The consumer goods sector had the only gross unrealized losses in our
corporate fixed income securities portfolio as of December 31, 2010. In
general, credit spreads remain wider than at initial purchase for most of the
securities with gross unrealized losses.
We have a comprehensive portfolio monitoring process to identify and
evaluate each fixed income security that may be other-than-temporarily
impaired. The process includes a quarterly review of all securities to identify
instances where the fair value of a security compared to its amortized cost is
below established thresholds. The process also includes the monitoring of other
impairment indicators such as ratings, ratings downgrades and payment defaults.
The securities identified, in addition to other securities for which we may
have a concern, are evaluated based on facts and circumstances for inclusion on
our watch-list. All investments in an unrealized loss position as of
December 31, 2010 were included in our portfolio monitoring process for
determining whether declines in value were other than temporary.
The extent and duration of a decline in fair value for fixed income
securities have become less indicative of actual credit deterioration with
respect to an issue or issuer. While we continue to use declines in fair value
and the length of time a security is in an unrealized loss position as
indicators of potential credit deterioration, our determination of whether a
security's decline in fair value is other than temporary has placed greater
emphasis on our analysis of the underlying credit and collateral and related
estimates of future cash flows.
As of December 31, 2010, all of the $492 thousand of unrealized losses are
related to fixed income securities with an unrealized loss position less than
20% of amortized cost, the degree of which suggests that these securities do
not pose a high risk of being other-than-temporarily impaired. As of
December 31, 2010, we
53
do not have the intent to sell and it is not more likely than not we will be
required to sell these securities before the recovery of their amortized cost
basis.
We also monitor the quality of our fixed income portfolio by categorizing
certain investments as "problem," "restructured," or "potential problem."
Problem fixed income securities are in default with respect to principal or
interest and/or are investments issued by companies that have gone into
bankruptcy subsequent to our acquisition. Fixed income securities are
categorized as restructured when the debtor is experiencing financial
difficulty and we grant a concession. Potential problem fixed income securities
are current with respect to contractual principal and/or interest, but because
of other facts and circumstances, we have concerns regarding the borrower's
ability to pay future principal and interest according to the original terms,
which causes us to believe these investments may be classified as problem or
restructured in the future.
As of December 31, 2010 and 2009, we did not have any fixed income
securities categorized as problem, restructured or potential problem.
NET INVESTMENT INCOME The following table presents net investment income for
the years ended December 31.
2010 2009 2008
($ IN THOUSANDS) ------- ------- -------
Fixed income securities........... $12,480 $12,098 $13,302
Short-term and other investments.. 21 107 992
------- ------- -------
Investment income, before expense. 12,501 12,205 14,294
Investment expense................ (434) (422) (354)
------- ------- -------
Net investment income............. $12,067 $11,783 $13,940
======= ======= =======
Net investment income increased 2.4% or $284 thousand in 2010 compared to
2009, after decreasing 15.5% or $2.2 million in 2009 compared to 2008. The 2010
increase was primarily due to higher average investment balances. The 2009
decrease was primarily due to lower yields.
REALIZED CAPITAL GAINS AND LOSSES The following table presents realized
capital gains and losses and the related tax effect for the years ended
December 31.
2010 2009 2008
($ IN THOUSANDS) ----- ------ -------
Realized capital gains and losses, pre-tax... $ 694 $1,480 $ 5,952
Income tax expense........................... (243) (518) (2,083)
----- ------ -------
Realized capital gains and losses, after-tax. $ 451 $ 962 $ 3,869
===== ====== =======
Net realized capital gains in 2010 comprised entirely of gross gains of $694
thousand. Net realized capital gains of $1.5 million in 2009 comprised gross
gains of $1.5 million and gross losses of $8 thousand. The net realized capital
gains in 2010, 2009 and 2008 were related to sales of investments.
CASH As of December 31, 2010, our cash balance was $3.6 million compared to
$10.1 million as of December 31, 2009. Fluctuations in our cash flows generally
result from differences in the timing of reinsurance payments to and from ALIC
and changes in short-term investments.
REINSURANCE RECOVERABLE, CONTRACTHOLDER FUNDS AND RESERVE FOR
LIFE-CONTINGENT CONTRACT BENEFITS Under GAAP, when reinsurance contracts do not
relieve the ceding company of legal liability to contractholders, the ceding
company is required to report reinsurance recoverables arising from these
contracts separately as assets. The liabilities for the contracts are reported
as contractholder funds, reserve for life-contingent contract benefits, or
separate accounts liabilities depending on the characteristics of the
contracts. We reinsure all reserve liabilities
54
with ALIC or other non-affiliated reinsurers. Reinsurance recoverables and the
related reserve for life-contingent contract benefits and contractholder funds
are reported separately in the Statements of Financial Position, while the
assets which support the separate accounts liabilities are reflected as
separate accounts assets.
As of December 31, 2010, contractholder funds decreased to $17.25 billion
from $17.63 billion as of December 31, 2009 as a result of new and additional
deposits on fixed annuities and interest-sensitive life policies and interest
credited to contractholder funds being more than offset by surrenders,
withdrawals, benefit payments and related contract charges. The reserve for
life-contingent contract benefits increased to $3.01 billion as of December 31,
2010 from $2.81 billion as of December 31, 2009 due primarily to the aging of
the in-force block of certain business and sales of traditional life insurance,
partially offset by benefits paid and policy lapses. Reinsurance recoverables
from ALIC decreased by $324.0 million and reinsurance recoverables from
non-affiliates increased $139.8 million.
We purchase reinsurance after evaluating the financial condition of the
reinsurer, as well as the terms and price of coverage. As of December 31, 2010,
97% of reinsurance recoverables due from non-affiliated companies were
reinsured under uncollateralized reinsurance agreements with companies that had
a financial strength rating of A or above, as measured by S&P. In certain
cases, these ratings refer to the financial strength of the affiliated group or
parent company of the reinsurer. We continuously monitor the creditworthiness
of reinsurers in order to determine our risk of recoverability on an individual
and aggregate basis, and a provision for uncollectible reinsurance is recorded
if needed. No amounts have been deemed unrecoverable in the three years ended
December 31, 2010.
MARKET RISK
Market risk is the risk that we will incur losses due to adverse changes in
interest rates and credit spreads. We also have certain exposures to changes in
equity prices in our equity-indexed annuities and separate accounts
liabilities, which are transferred to ALIC in accordance with our reinsurance
agreements.
OVERVIEW In formulating and implementing guidelines for investing funds, we
seek to earn returns that contribute to attractive and stable profits and
long-term capital growth.
We manage our exposure to market risk through the use of asset allocation,
duration, and as appropriate, through the use of stress tests. We have asset
allocation limits that place restrictions on the total funds that may be
invested within an asset class. We have duration limits on our investment
portfolio and, as appropriate, on individual components of the portfolio. These
duration limits place restrictions on the amount of interest rate risk that may
be taken. Comprehensive day-to-day management of market risk within defined
tolerance ranges occurs as portfolio managers buy and sell within their
respective markets based upon the acceptable boundaries established by
investment policies.
INTEREST RATE RISK is the risk that we will incur a loss due to adverse
changes in interest rates relative to the interest rate characteristics of our
interest bearing assets. This risk arises from our investment in
interest-sensitive assets. Interest rate risk includes risks related to changes
in U.S. Treasury yields and other key risk-free reference yields.
One of the measures used to quantify interest rate exposure is duration.
Duration measures the price sensitivity of assets to changes in interest rates.
For example, if interest rates increase 100 basis points, the fair value of an
asset with a duration of 5 is expected to decrease in value by 5%. Our asset
duration was 3.4 and 3.7 as of December 31, 2010 and 2009, respectively.
To calculate duration, we project asset cash flows and calculate their net
present value using a risk-free market interest rate adjusted for credit
quality, sector attributes, liquidity and other specific risks. Duration is
calculated by revaluing these cash flows at alternative interest rates and
determining the percentage change in
55
aggregate fair value. The projections include assumptions (based upon
historical market experience and our experience) that reflect the effect of
changing interest rates on the prepayment, lapse, leverage and/or option
features of instruments, where applicable. The preceding assumptions relate
primarily to mortgage-backed securities, and municipal and corporate
obligations.
Based upon the information and assumptions used in the duration calculation,
and interest rates in effect as of December 31, 2010, we estimate that a 100
basis point immediate, parallel increase in interest rates ("rate shock") would
decrease the net fair value of the assets by $11.3 million, which is the same
amount as December 31, 2009. The selection of a 100 basis point immediate
parallel change in interest rates should not be construed as our prediction of
future market events, but only as an illustration of the potential effect of
such an event.
To the extent that conditions differ from the assumptions we used in these
calculations, duration and rate shock measures could be significantly impacted.
Additionally, our calculations assume that the current relationship between
short-term and long-term interest rates (the term structure of interest rates)
will remain constant over time. As a result, these calculations may not fully
capture the effect of non-parallel changes in the term structure of interest
rates and/or large changes in interest rates.
CREDIT SPREAD RISK is the risk that we will incur a loss due to adverse
changes in credit spreads ("spreads"). This risk arises from many of our
primary activities, as we invest funds in spread-sensitive fixed income assets.
We manage the spread risk in our assets. One of the measures used to
quantify this exposure is spread duration. Spread duration measures the price
sensitivity of the assets to changes in spreads. For example, if spreads
increase 100 basis points, the fair value of an asset exhibiting a spread
duration of 5 is expected to decrease in value by 5%.
Spread duration is calculated similarly to interest rate duration. As of
December 31, 2010, the spread duration of assets was 3.5, compared to 3.6 as of
December 31, 2009. Based upon the information and assumptions we use in this
spread duration calculation, and spreads in effect as of December 31, 2010, we
estimate that a 100 basis point immediate, parallel increase in spreads across
all asset classes, industry sectors and credit ratings ("spread shock") would
decrease the net fair value of the assets by $10.1 million, compared to $8.4
million as of December 31, 2009. The selection of a 100 basis point immediate
parallel change in spreads should not be construed as our prediction of future
market events, but only as an illustration of the potential effect of such an
event.
EQUITY PRICE RISK is the risk that we will incur losses due to adverse
changes in the general levels of the equity markets. As of December 31, 2010
and 2009, we had separate accounts assets related to variable annuity and
variable life contracts with account values totaling $2.02 billion and $2.04
billion, respectively. Equity risk exists for contract charges based on
separate account balances and guarantees for death and/or income benefits
provided by our variable products. All variable life and annuity contract
charges and fees, liabilities and benefits, including guarantees for death
and/or income are ceded to ALIC in accordance with the reinsurance agreements,
thereby limiting our equity risk exposure. In 2006, ALIC disposed of
substantially all of its variable annuity business through reinsurance
agreements with The Prudential Insurance Company of America, a subsidiary of
Prudential Financial Inc. and therefore mitigated this aspect of ALIC's risk.
The Company was not a direct participant of this agreement and its reinsurance
agreements with ALIC remain unchanged.
As of December 31, 2010 and 2009 we had $4.38 billion and $4.16 billion,
respectively, in equity-indexed annuity liabilities that provide customers with
interest crediting rates based on the performance of the S&P 500. All contract
charges and fees, and liabilities and benefits related to equity-indexed
annuity liabilities are ceded to ALIC in accordance with the reinsurance
agreements, thereby limiting our equity risk exposure.
56
CAPITAL RESOURCES AND LIQUIDITY
CAPITAL RESOURCES consist of shareholder's equity. The following table
summarizes our capital resources as of December 31.
2010 2009 2008
($ IN THOUSANDS) -------- -------- --------
Common stock, retained income and additional
capital paid-in............................. $315,722 $307,412 $298,783
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss). 10,145 5,561 (222)
-------- -------- --------
Total shareholder's equity.................... $325,867 $312,973 $298,561
======== ======== ========
SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY increased in 2010 due to net income and increased
unrealized net capital gains. Shareholder's equity increased in 2009, due to
net income and a favorable change in unrealized net capital gains and losses.
FINANCIAL RATINGS AND STRENGTH We share the insurance financial strength
ratings of our parent, ALIC, as our business is reinsured to ALIC. The
following table summarizes ALIC's financial strength ratings as of December 31,
2010.
RATING AGENCY RATING
------------- ----------------
A.M. Best Company, Inc....................... A+ ("Superior")
Standard & Poor's Ratings Services........... A+ ("Strong")
Moody's Investors Service, Inc............... A1 ("Good")
ALIC's ratings are influenced by many factors including operating and
financial performance, asset quality, liquidity, asset/liability management,
overall portfolio mix, financial leverage (i.e., debt), exposure to risks, the
current level of operating leverage and AIC's ratings.
State laws specify regulatory actions if an insurer's risk-based capital
("RBC"), a measure of an insurer's solvency, falls below certain levels. The
NAIC has a standard formula for annually assessing RBC. The formula for
calculating RBC for life insurance companies takes into account factors
relating to insurance, business, asset and interest rate risks. As of
December 31, 2010, our RBC was within the range that we target.
The NAIC has also developed a set of financial relationships or tests known
as the Insurance Regulatory Information System to assist state regulators in
monitoring the financial condition of insurance companies and identifying
companies that require special attention or actions by insurance regulatory
authorities. The NAIC analyzes financial data provided by insurance companies
using prescribed ratios, each with defined "usual ranges". Generally,
regulators will begin to monitor an insurance company if its ratios fall
outside the usual ranges for four or more of the ratios. If an insurance
company has insufficient capital, regulators may act to reduce the amount of
insurance it can issue. Our ratios are within these ranges.
LIQUIDITY SOURCES AND USES Our potential sources of funds principally
include the activities as follows.
. Receipt of insurance premiums
. Contractholder fund deposits
. Reinsurance recoveries
. Receipts of principal and interest on investments
. Sales of investments
. Intercompany loans
57
. Capital contributions from parent
Our potential uses of funds principally include the activities as follows.
. Payment of contract benefits, surrenders and withdrawals
. Reinsurance cessions and payments
. Operating costs and expenses
. Purchase of investments
. Repayment of intercompany loans
. Dividends to parent
. Tax payments/settlements
CASH FLOWS As reflected in our Statements of Cash Flows, net cash provided
by (used in) operating activities was $2.1 million, $4.3 million and $(5.9)
million in 2010, 2009 and 2008, respectively. Fluctuations in net cash provided
by operating activities primarily occur as a result of changes in net
investment income and differences in the timing of reinsurance payments to and
from ALIC.
Under the terms of reinsurance agreements, all premiums and deposits,
excluding variable annuity and life contract deposits allocated to separate
accounts and those reinsured to non-affiliated reinsurers, are transferred to
ALIC, which maintains the investment portfolios supporting our products.
Payments of contractholder claims, benefits, contract surrenders and
withdrawals and certain operating costs (excluding investment-related
expenses), are reimbursed by ALIC, under the terms of the reinsurance
agreements. We continue to have primary liability as a direct insurer for risks
reinsured. Our ability to meet liquidity demands is dependent on ALIC's and
other reinsurers' ability to meet those obligations under the reinsurance
programs.
Our ability to pay dividends is dependent on business conditions, income,
cash requirements and other relevant factors. The payment of shareholder
dividends without the prior approval of the state insurance regulator is
limited by Nebraska law to formula amounts based on net income and capital and
surplus, determined in conformity with statutory accounting practices, as well
as the timing and amount of dividends paid in the preceding twelve months. The
maximum amount of dividends that we can pay during 2011 without prior approval
of the Nebraska Department of Insurance is $31.1 million.
CONTRACTUAL OBLIGATIONS Due to the reinsurance agreements that we have in
place, our contractual obligations are ceded to ALIC and other non-affiliated
reinsurers.
REGULATION AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
We are subject to extensive regulation and we are involved in various legal
and regulatory actions, all of which have an effect on specific aspects of our
business. For a detailed discussion of the legal and regulatory actions in
which we are involved, see Note 9 of the financial statements.
PENDING ACCOUNTING STANDARDS
There are several pending accounting standards that we have not implemented
either because the standard has not been finalized or the implementation date
has not yet occurred. For a discussion of these pending standards, see Note 2
of the financial statements.
The effect of implementing certain accounting standards on our financial
results and financial condition is often based in part on market conditions at
the time of implementation of the standard and other factors we are
58
unable to determine prior to implementation. For this reason, we are sometimes
unable to estimate the effect of certain pending accounting standards until the
relevant authoritative body finalizes these standards or until we implement
them.
ITEM 11(J).QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK
Information required for Item 11(j) is incorporated by reference to the
material under the caption "Market Risk" in Item 11(h) of this report.
ITEM 11(K).DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS, PROMOTERS AND CONTROL PERSONS.
IDENTIFICATION OF DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS:
Directors are elected at each annual meeting of shareholders, for a term of
one year. The biographies of each of the directors below contains information
regarding the person's service as a director, business experience, director
positions held currently or at any time during the last five years, and the
experiences, qualifications, attributes or skills that caused the company
management to determine that a director should serve as such for Lincoln
Benefit. Unless otherwise indicated, each director and executive officer has
served for at least five years in the business position currently or most
recently held.
ROBERT K. BECKER, 55, has been Senior Vice President since March 2010.
Mr. Becker is also the Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer and
Manager of Allstate Financial Services, LLC ("AFS, LLC") and Vice President of
Allstate Life Insurance Company. Mr. Becker is responsible for Allstate's
broker dealer operations as well as recruiting, training and product strategy
for registered representatives of AFS, LLC and third party relationships. At
Allstate since 2000, Mr. Becker has progressed through various roles, including
Regional Financial Services Manager, Regional Distribution Leader and Assistant
Field Vice President. Prior to joining Allstate, Mr. Becker spent over 20 years
with MetLife Insurance Company, where he held various leadership positions.
Mr. Becker's professional designations include LUTCF, CLU, ChFC, CFP, and CLTC.
Currently, Mr. Becker also serves as a director with Allstate Life Insurance
Company, which is affiliated with Lincoln Benefit. Mr. Becker has proven
leadership experience with using excellent customer service to grow business in
a competitive environment.
ANURAG CHANDRA, 33, has been a director and Senior Vice President since
March 2011. Mr. Chandra is also a Senior Vice President of Allstate Life
Insurance Company. Mr. Chandra has broad responsibilities for driving long-term
strategy and for improving the operational base for the Allstate Financial
group of companies. More specifically, Mr. Chandra will have direct
accountability for product development, underwriting, wholesaling and asset
liability management. Prior to joining Allstate in January 2011, Mr. Chandra
was an executive vice president and chief operating officer for HealthMarkets,
Inc. Under his leadership, the company transformed from a niche individual
health insurance manufacturer to one of the largest independent distributors in
the United States. Prior to that role, Mr. Chandra was a principal at Aquiline
Capital Partners, a global private equity firm that took advantage of market
conditions to launch successful new insurance and financial services companies.
Mr. Chandra has also held senior operating and strategic development roles at
Nationwide Financial Services and Conseco/Bankers Life and Casualty. Currently,
Mr. Chandra also serves as a director for Allstate Life Insurance Company,
which is affiliated with Lincoln Benefit. Mr. Chandra has extensive experience
with the day-to-day management of company operations.
LAWRENCE W. DAHL, 51, has been a director since 1999 and President and Chief
Operating Officer since November 2005. In his current role, Mr. Dahl manages
the distribution relationships for Lincoln Benefit. Mr. Dahl began his Allstate
career in 1987 in the Tax Department before becoming the Executive Vice
President of Administration for Lincoln Benefit, where he was responsible for
Marketing, Field Technology, Compliance, Planning and Strategy. Mr. Dahl
progressed through various other leadership positions, including Executive Vice
President of Sales and President of Distribution before becoming the President
and Chief Operating Officer.
59
Mr. Dahl has also earned a juris doctor degree and a Certified Public Account
designation. Over the course of his career with Lincoln Benefit, Mr. Dahl has
gained deep knowledge of the life insurance industry as well as extensive
experience with distribution and sales.
MATTHEW S. EASLEY, 55, has been a director since March 2009 and Senior Vice
President since March 2010. Mr. Easley is also a Vice President for Allstate
Life Insurance Company. Mr. Easley is responsible for Product Management,
Underwriting, and Asset Liability Management within the Allstate Financial
group of companies. Prior to joining Allstate, Mr. Easley spent 23 years at
Nationwide Financial including 11 years as the head of Annuity and Pension
Actuarial, where he started a 401(k) business with a new-to-the-world business
model, created a synthetic asset segmentation method, co-invented a patented
retirement planning software and led a team to create a new strategic plan as
part of the initial public offering of Nationwide Financial Services stock.
Currently, Mr. Easley also serves as a director for Allstate Life Insurance
Company, which is affiliated with Lincoln Benefit. Mr. Easley possesses
extensive insurance business, product and liability management experience.
SUSAN L. LEES, 53, has been director and Senior Vice President, General
Counsel and Secretary since August 2008. Ms. Lees is also Senior Vice
President, General Counsel and Secretary of Allstate Life Insurance Company. At
Allstate for over 20 years, Ms. Lees progressed through various counsel
positions throughout Allstate before become an assistant vice president in
1999. As the leader of the Corporate Law division of Allstate Law and
Regulation, Ms. Lees gained extensive experience working with a number of the
business areas throughout the enterprise, including Allstate Life Insurance
Company. Currently, Ms. Lees serves as a director for Life Insurance Council of
New York. She also serves as a director for Allstate Life Insurance Company,
which is affiliated with Lincoln Benefit. Ms. Lees has a deep understanding of
insurance business generally, as well as applicable laws and regulations,
including corporate and securities laws and corporate governance matters. In
addition, Ms. Lees has extensive knowledge regarding Lincoln Benefit's
business, including its employees, products, agencies and customers.
JOHN C. PINTOZZI, 45, has been director, Senior Vice President and Chief
Financial Officer since March 2005. Mr. Pintozzi also is Senior Vice President
and Chief Financial Officer for Allstate Life Insurance Company. In these
positions, Mr. Pintozzi is responsible for the planning and analysis, capital
allocation, valuation and compliance functions as well as Allstate Federal
Savings Bank. Prior to Allstate, Mr. Pintozzi was an audit partner with
Deloitte & Touche, specializing in the insurance and financial services
industries. He is a Certified Public Accountant and holds memberships with the
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and the Illinois CPA
Society. In addition, Mr. Pintozzi currently serves as a director for Allstate
Life Insurance Company, which is affiliated with Lincoln Benefit. Mr. Pintozzi
has extensive experience in corporate and insurance company finance and
accounting.
MATTHEW E. WINTER, 54, has been a director since December 2009, Chief
Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board since March 2010. Mr. Winter is
also the President and Chief Executive Officer of Allstate Life Insurance
Company and Senior Vice President of Allstate Insurance Company, each a parent
organization of Lincoln Benefit. Prior to Allstate, Mr. Winter was the Vice
Chairman of American International Group, President and Chief Executive Officer
of American General Life Companies, and Executive Vice President for MassMutual
Financial Group. For a brief period in 2009, Mr. Winter served as a director of
EP Global Communications, a magazine publication and distribution company.
Currently, Mr. Winter also serves as a director for Allstate Insurance Company
and Allstate Life Insurance Company, each of which is affiliated with Lincoln
Benefit. Mr. Winter was also a former Chairman of the Houston Food Bank Board
of Directors. Mr. Winter has extensive experience leading major life insurance
and financial services providers, working with financial and estate planning
products and overseeing the operations of insurance companies.
60
INVOLVEMENT IN CERTAIN LEGAL PROCEEDINGS.
No directors or executive officers have been involved in any legal
proceedings that are material to an evaluation of the ability or integrity of
any director or executive officer of Lincoln Benefit.
ITEM 11(L).EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS ("CD&A")
OVERVIEW
Executive officers of Lincoln Benefit also serve as officers of other
subsidiaries of The Allstate Corporation ("Allstate") and receive no
compensation directly from Lincoln Benefit. They are employees of an Allstate
subsidiary. Allocations have been made for each named executive based on the
amount of the named executive's compensation allocated to Lincoln Benefit under
the Amended and Restated Service and Expense Agreement among Allstate Insurance
Company, Allstate and certain affiliates, as amended effective January 1, 2009,
to which Lincoln Benefit is a party (the "Service and Expense Agreement").
Those allocations are reflected in the Summary Compensation Table set forth
below and in this disclosure, except where noted. The named executives may have
received additional compensation for services rendered to other Allstate
subsidiaries, and those amounts are not reported. Lincoln Benefit's directors
receive no compensation for serving as directors in addition to their
compensation as employees of an Allstate affiliate.
Each year the Compensation and Succession Committee (the "Committee") of the
Allstate Board of Directors and members of Allstate management review the
overall design of Allstate's executive compensation program to ensure
compensation is aligned with both annual and long-term performance. At target
levels of performance, annual and long-term incentive awards are designed to
constitute a significant percentage of an executive's total core compensation
and provide a strong link to Allstate's performance. Additionally, the delivery
of the largest portion of incentive compensation through stock options provides
even greater alignment with stockholder interests because the stock price must
appreciate from the date of grant for any value to be delivered to executives.
Allstate has made changes to its executive compensation program for 2011.
Allstate has eliminated any excise tax gross-ups in new change-in-control
agreements. Allstate has also made changes to the annual incentive program for
2011 to continue to better align executive compensation with enterprise
performance. The key program change, which will apply to all bonus eligible
employees across the enterprise, will be to reduce the number of measures and
provide for greater use of enterprise-wide corporate goals. Allstate believes
this action will focus employees on those goals which will more effectively
drive sustainable long-term growth for stockholders.
COMPENSATION PHILOSOPHY
Allstate's compensation philosophy is based on these central beliefs:
. Executive compensation should be aligned with performance and
stockholder value. Accordingly, a significant amount of executive
compensation should be in the form of equity.
. The compensation of our executives should vary both with appreciation in
the price of Allstate stock and with Allstate's performance in achieving
strategic short and long-term business goals designed to drive stock
price appreciation.
. Allstate's compensation program should inspire our executives to strive
for performance that is better than the industry average.
. A greater percentage of compensation should be at risk for executives
who bear higher levels of responsibility for Allstate's performance.
. Allstate should provide competitive levels of compensation for
competitive levels of performance and superior levels of compensation
for superior levels of performance.
61
Allstate's executive compensation program has been designed around these
beliefs and includes programs and practices that ensure alignment between the
interests of its stockholders and executives and delivery of compensation
consistent with the corresponding level of performance. These objectives are
balanced with the goal of attracting, motivating, and retaining highly talented
executives to compete in our complex and highly regulated industry.
Some of Allstate's key practices we believe support this approach include:
. Providing a significant portion of executive pay through stock options,
creating direct alignment with stockholder interests.
. Establishment of stock ownership guidelines for senior executives that
drive further alignment with stockholder interests. Each named executive
officer, except Mr. Dahl, is required to hold four times salary.
. Stock option repricing is not permitted.
. A robust governance process for the design, approval, administration,
and review of our overall compensation program.
. Utilization of annual incentive plan caps to limit maximum award
opportunities and support enterprise risk management strategies.
. Inclusion of a clawback feature in the Annual Executive Incentive Plan
and the 2009 Equity Incentive Plan that provides the ability to recover
compensation from Allstate executive officers in the event of certain
financial restatements.
. Incorporation of discretion in the annual executive incentive plan to
allow for the adjustment of awards to reflect individual performance.
Allstate's philosophy and practices have provided us with the tools to
create an effective executive compensation program as detailed below.
NAMED EXECUTIVES
This CD&A describes the executive compensation program at Allstate and
specifically describes total 2010 compensation for the following named
executives of Lincoln Benefit*:
. Matthew E. Winter--Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer
. John C. Pintozzi--Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
. Lawrence W. Dahl--President and Chief Operating Officer
. Matthew S. Easley--Senior Vice President
. Robert K. Becker--Senior Vice President
* Reflects titles in effect as of December 31, 2010.
COMPENSATION PRACTICES
Allstate reviews the design of its executive compensation program and
executive pay levels on an annual basis and performance and goal attainment
within this design throughout the year. As part of that review, Allstate
considers available data regarding compensation paid to similarly-situated
executives at companies against which it competes for executive talent. With
respect to the compensation program for 2010, the Committee considered
compensation data for the peer companies listed on page 63 for Mr. Winter, as
well as proxy information from select S&P 100 companies with fiscal 2009
revenue of between $15 and $60 billion with which Allstate competes for
executive talent. Towers Watson, an independent compensation consultant,
recommended
62
modifications to the peer insurance companies that Allstate uses in
benchmarking compensation for certain executives for 2010. The Committee
approved removing from the peer insurance companies Cincinnati Financial
Corporation due to its relative size and CNA Financial Corporation because it
is closely held. ACE Ltd, AFLAC Inc., and Manulife Financial Corporation were
added to augment the peer insurance companies with similarly sized insurers.
With respect to the named executives other than Mr. Winter, Allstate
management considered compensation surveys that provided information on
companies of broadly similar size and business mix as Allstate, as well as
companies with a broader market context. The compensation surveys considered
include the Mercer Property & Casualty Insurance Company Survey, the 2009
Towers Perrin Diversified Insurance Survey, and the Towers Perrin Compensation
Data Bank. The Diversified Insurance Survey includes 18 insurance organizations
with assets ranging from $848 million to $108 billion. The Towers Perrin
Compensation Data Bank provides compensation data on 90 of the Fortune 100
companies. The Mercer Property & Casualty Insurance Company Survey includes
compensation data for 27 property and casualty insurance companies with at
least $2 billion in annual premiums. In addition, in its executive pay and
performance discussions, Allstate management considered information regarding
other companies in the financial services industries.
PEER INSURANCE COMPANIES
ACE Ltd.* Manulife Financial Corporation*
AFLAC Inc.* MetLife Inc.
The Chubb Corporation The Progressive Corporation
The Hartford Financial Services Prudential Financial, Inc.
Group, Inc.
Lincoln National Corporation The Travelers Companies, Inc.
--------
* Added in 2010
CORE ELEMENTS OF EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION PROGRAM
Allstate's executive compensation program design balances fixed and variable
compensation elements and provides alignment with both short and long term
business goals through annual and long-term incentives. Allstate's incentives
are designed to balance overall corporate, business unit, and individual
performance with respect to measures Allstate believes correlate to the
creation of stockholder value and align with Allstate's strategic vision and
operating priorities. The following table lists the core elements of Allstate's
executive compensation program.
POTENTIAL FOR
VARIABILITY WITH
CORE ELEMENT PURPOSE PERFORMANCE
------------ -------------------------------------- ----------------
Annual salary Provides a base level of competitive Low
cash compensation for executive talent
Annual cash incentive awards Reward performance on key strategic, High
operational, and financial measures
over the year
Long-term equity incentive awards Align the interests of executives Moderate to High
with long-term shareholder value and
retain executive talent
63
SALARY
Mr. Winter's salary was set by the Allstate Board of Directors based on the
Committee's recommendation. The salaries of the other named executives are set
by Allstate management. In recommending executive base salary levels, Allstate
uses the 50/th/ percentile of its peer insurance companies for Mr. Winter and
the 50/th/ percentile of insurance and general industry data for the other
named executives as a guideline to align with Allstate's pay philosophy for
competitive positioning in the market for executive talent.
. The average enterprise-wide merit and promotional increases are based on
a combination of U.S. general and insurance industry market data and are
set at levels intended to be competitive.
. Annual merit increases for the named executives are based on evaluations
of their performance using the average enterprise-wide merit increase as
a guideline.
. The base salaries for each named executive were reviewed in February
of 2010. Allstate established a new base salary for each named
executive other than Mr. Winter based on individual performance and
in line with the enterprise-wide merit increase.
. Allstate did not adjust the base salary for Mr. Winter, which had
just been established in the last quarter of 2009 when he joined the
corporation.
INCENTIVE COMPENSATION
The Committee approves performance measures and goals for cash incentive
awards during the first quarter of the year. The performance measures and goals
are aligned with Allstate's objectives and tied to its strategic vision and its
operating priorities. They are designed to reward Allstate executives for
actual performance, to reflect objectives that will require significant effort
and skill to achieve, and to drive Allstate stockholder value.
After the end of the year for annual cash incentive awards and after the end
of the three-year cycle for long-term cash incentive awards, the Committee
reviews the extent to which Allstate has achieved the various performance
measures and approves the actual amount of all cash incentive awards for
Allstate executive officers. The Committee may adjust the amount of an annual
cash incentive award but has no authority to increase the amount of an award
payable to Mr. Winter above the described plan limits. Allstate management
approves the actual amount of cash incentive awards to the other named
executives. Allstate pays the cash incentive awards in March, after the end of
the year for the annual cash incentive awards and after the end of the
three-year cycle for the long-term cash incentive awards. Long-term cash
incentives have been discontinued, and the last three year cycle ended in 2010.
Typically the Committee also approves grants of equity awards on an annual
basis during a meeting in the first quarter. By making these awards and
approving performance measures and goals for the annual cash incentive awards
during the first quarter, Allstate is able to balance these elements of core
compensation to align with its business goals.
ANNUAL CASH INCENTIVE AWARDS
In 2010 Allstate executives had the opportunity to earn an annual cash
incentive award based on the achievement of performance measures over a
one-year period. The annual incentive plans are designed to provide all of the
named executives with cash awards based on a combination of corporate and
business unit performance measures for each of Allstate's main business units:
Allstate Protection, Allstate Financial, and Allstate Investments. Lincoln
Benefit is part of Allstate Financial.
The maximum amount of Mr. Winter's award was the lesser of a stockholder
approved maximum under the Annual Executive Incentive Plan of $8.5 million or
25% of the 1.0% of Operating Income pool. Operating Income is defined under the
"Performance Measures" caption on page 85. Although these limits established the
64
maximum annual cash incentive awards that could be paid to Mr. Winter, the
Committee retained complete discretion to pay any lesser amount. Mr. Winter's
actual award was based on the achievement of certain performance measures as
detailed below, including assessments of his individual performance and overall
corporate and Allstate Financial business unit performance. None of the named
executives other than Mr. Winter participate in the Operating Income pool.
For 2010, the Committee adopted corporate and Allstate Financial business
unit level annual performance measures and weighted them as applied to
Mr. Winter in accordance with his responsibility for Allstate's overall
corporate performance and the performance of the Allstate Financial business
unit. Allstate management utilized the same performance measures and weighting
with respect to each of the named executives other than Mr. Winter. Each
measure is assigned a weight expressed as a percentage of the total annual cash
incentive award opportunity, with all weights adding to 100%.
The following table lists the performance measures and related target goals
for 2010 as well as the weighting factors and the actual results applicable to
the named executives. The performance measures were designed to focus executive
attention on key strategic, operational, and financial measures including top
line growth and profitability. For each performance measure, the Committee
approved a threshold, target, and maximum goal. The target goals for the
performance measures were based on evaluations of our historical performance
and plans to drive projected performance. A description of each performance
measure is provided under the "Performance Measures" caption on page 85.
ANNUAL CASH INCENTIVE AWARD PERFORMANCE MEASURES, TARGET, AND WEIGHTING/(1)/
ACHIEVEMENT
RELATIVE TO
THRESHOLD,
PERFORMANCE TARGET,
MEASURE WEIGHTING TARGET ACTUAL/(2)/ MAXIMUM GOALS
----------- --------- ------------- ------------- ---------------
CORPORATE-LEVEL PERFORMANCE MEASURE........... 20%
Adjusted Operating Income Per Diluted $4.30 $3.00 Between
Share.................................... threshold and
target
ALLSTATE FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE MEASURES....... 80%
Adjusted Operating Income.................. $425 million $474 million Exceeded
maximum
Adjusted Operating Return on Equity........ 6.6% 7.7% Exceeded
maximum
Allstate Exclusive Agency Proprietary and $256 million $262 million Between target
AWD Weighted Sales....................... and maximum
Allstate Financial Portfolio Excess Total 55 63 Between target
Return (in basis points)................. and maximum
--------
/(1)/Information regarding Allstate's performance measures is disclosed in the
limited context of its annual cash incentive awards and should not be
understood to be statements of Allstate management's expectations or
estimates of results or other guidance. Allstate specifically cautions
investors not to apply these statements to other contexts.
/(2)/Stated as a percentage of target goals with a range from 0% to 250%, the
actual performance comprises 54% for Adjusted Operating Income Per Diluted
Share performance, and 189% for Allstate Financial performance. The
weighted results stated as a percentage of the target goals for all named
executives was 162%.
65
Target award opportunities approved by Allstate are stated as a percentage
of annual base salary. Annual cash incentive awards are calculated using base
salary, as adjusted by any merit and promotional increases granted during the
year on a prorated basis. In setting target incentive levels for named
executives, Allstate gives the most consideration to market data primarily
focusing on pay levels at peer group companies with which it directly competes
for executive talent and stockholder investment. As a result of leveraging
external market data, Mr. Winter had the highest target award opportunity of
125%, followed by Mr. Pintozzi with a target award opportunity of 60%, followed
by Messrs. Easley and Becker with a target award opportunity of 50%, followed
by Mr. Dahl with a target award opportunity of 35%.
In calculating the annual cash incentive awards, Allstate achievement with
respect to each performance measure is expressed as a percentage of the target
goal, with interpolation applied between the threshold and target goals and
between the target and maximum goals. Unless otherwise adjusted by Allstate,
the amount of each named executive's annual cash incentive award is the sum of
the amounts calculated using the calculation below for all of the performance
measures.
Actual performance interpolated relative to X Weighting X Target award opportunity as a X Salary**
threshold and target on a range of 50% to percentage of salary**
100% and relative to target and maximum
on a range of 100% to 250%*
--------
* Actual performance below threshold results in 0%
** Base salary, as adjusted by any merit and promotional increases granted
during the year on a prorated basis.
Following the end of the performance year, the performance of each named
executive was evaluated. Based on a subjective evaluation of each executive's
contributions and performance individual adjustments were made to the formula
driven annual incentive amounts. The recommendations were considered and
approved by the Committee for Mr. Winter and by Allstate management for the
other named executives.
LONG-TERM INCENTIVE AWARDS--CASH AND EQUITY
As part of total core compensation, Allstate historically has provided three
forms of long-term incentive awards: stock options, restricted stock units, and
long-term cash incentive awards. In 2009, Allstate discontinued future cycles
of the long-term cash incentive plan. The relative mix of various forms of
these awards is driven by Allstate's objectives in providing the specific form
of award, as described below.
LONG-TERM INCENTIVE AWARDS--EQUITY
Allstate grants larger equity awards to executives with the broadest scope
of responsibility, consistent with Allstate's philosophy that a significant
amount of executive compensation should be in the form of equity and that a
greater percentage of compensation should be at risk for executives who bear
higher levels of responsibility for Allstate's performance. However, from time
to time, larger equity awards are granted to attract new executives. Allstate
annually reviews the mix of equity incentives provided to the named executives.
The mix consisted of 65% stock options and 35% restricted stock units for
Mr. Winter. Other employees eligible for equity incentive awards, including the
named executives other than Mr. Winter, had the choice of receiving the value
of their equity incentive awards in the following proportions between stock
options and restricted stock units:
. 25% stock options and 75% restricted stock units;
. 65% stock options and 35% restricted stock units;
. 50% stock options and 50% restricted stock units; or
. 75% stock options and 25% restricted stock units
66
The elections are reflected in the Grants of Plan-Based Awards at Fiscal
Year-End 2010 table. Stock options, which are performance-based, require growth
in the Allstate stock price to deliver any value to an executive. The
restricted stock units provide alignment with Allstate stockholder interests
along with providing an effective retention tool.
STOCK OPTIONS
Stock options represent the opportunity to buy shares of Allstate's stock at
a fixed exercise price at a future date. Allstate uses them to align the
interests of Allstate's executives with long-term stockholder value, as the
stock price must appreciate from the date of grant for any value to be
delivered to executives.
Key elements:
. Under Allstate's stockholder-approved equity incentive plan, the
exercise price cannot be less than the fair market value of a share on
the date of grant.
. Stock option repricing is not permitted. In other words, absent an event
such as a stock split, if the Committee cancels an award and substitutes
a new award, the exercise price of the new award cannot be less than the
exercise price of the cancelled award.
. All stock option awards have been made in the form of nonqualified stock
options.
. The options granted to the named executives in 2010 become exercisable
in three installments, 50% on the second anniversary of the grant date
and 25% on each of the third and fourth anniversary dates, and expire in
ten years, except in certain change-in-control situations or under other
special circumstances approved by the Committee.
RESTRICTED STOCK UNITS
Each restricted stock unit represents Allstate's promise to transfer one
fully vested share of stock in the future if and when the restrictions expire
(when the unit "vests"). Because restricted stock units are based on and
payable in stock, they serve to reinforce the alignment of interests of
Allstate's executives and Allstate's stockholders. In addition, because
restricted stock units have a real, current value that is forfeited, except in
some circumstances, if an executive terminates employment before the restricted
stock units vest, they provide a retention incentive. Under the terms of the
restricted stock unit awards, the executives have only the rights of general
unsecured creditors of Allstate and no rights as stockholders until delivery of
the underlying shares.
Key elements:
. The restricted stock units granted to the named executives in 2010 vest
in three installments, 50% on the second anniversary of the grant date
and 25% on each of the third and fourth anniversary dates, except in
certain change-in-control situations or under other special
circumstances approved by Allstate.
. The restricted stock units granted to the named executives in 2010
include the right to receive previously accrued dividend equivalents
when the underlying restricted stock unit vests.
TIMING OF EQUITY AWARDS AND GRANT PRACTICES
The Committee grants equity incentive awards to current employees on an
annual basis normally during a meeting in the first fiscal quarter, after the
issuance of Allstate's prior fiscal year-end earnings release. Throughout the
year, the Committee grants equity incentive awards in connection with new hires
and promotions and in recognition of achievements. Equity incentive awards to
employees other than Allstate executive officers also may be granted by an
equity award committee which currently consists of Allstate's chief executive
officer. The equity award committee may grant restricted stock units and stock
options in connection with new hires and
67
promotions and in recognition of achievements. The grant date for awards other
than annual awards is fixed as the first business day of a month following the
committee action.
STOCK OWNERSHIP GUIDELINES
Because Allstate believes management's interests must be linked with those
of Allstate's stockholders, Allstate instituted stock ownership guidelines in
1996 that require each of the named executives, other than Mr. Dahl, to own
common stock, including restricted stock units, worth a multiple of base
salary, as of March 1 following the fifth year after assuming a senior
management position. Unexercised stock options do not count towards meeting the
stock ownership guidelines. For the named executives, the goal is four times
salary. Mr. Winter has until March 2015 to meet his goal. Messrs. Easley and
Pintozzi have met their respective goals. Mr. Becker has until March 2014 to
meet his goal. After a named executive meets the guideline for the position, if
the value of his or her shares does not equal the specified multiple of base
salary solely due to the fact that the value of the shares has declined, the
executive is still deemed to be in compliance with the guideline. However, an
executive in that situation may not sell shares acquired upon the exercise of
an option or conversion of an equity award except to satisfy tax withholding
obligations, until the value of his or her shares again equals the specified
multiple of base salary. In accordance with Allstate's policy on insider
trading, all officers, directors, and employees are prohibited from engaging in
transactions with respect to any securities issued by Allstate or any of its
subsidiaries that might be considered speculative or regarded as hedging, such
as selling short or buying or selling options.
LONG-TERM INCENTIVE AWARDS--CASH
There were no pay-outs on any long-term cash incentive awards for the
2008-2010 cycle, the final cycle under the Long-Term Executive Incentive
Compensation Plan. Long-term cash incentive awards were originally designed to
reward executives for collective results attained over a three-year performance
cycle. Only Messrs. Pintozzi and Easley were eligible for these awards. There
were three performance measures for the 2008-2010 cycle: average adjusted
return on equity relative to peers, which was weighted at 50% of the potential
award, Allstate Protection growth in policies in force, and Allstate Financial
return on total capital, both weighted at 25% of the potential award. The
Allstate Protection growth in policies in force measure had target set at 5.0%,
with actual performance of -5.9%. The Allstate Financial return on total
capital measure had target set at 9.5%, with actual performance of -12.6%. The
selection and weighting of these measures was intended to focus executive
attention on the collective achievement of Allstate's long-term financial goals
across its various product lines. A description of each performance measure is
provided under the "Performance Measures" caption on page 85.
The average adjusted return on equity relative to peers measure compared
Allstate's performance to a group of other insurance companies. If the average
adjusted return on equity had exceeded the average risk free rate of return on
three-year Treasury notes over the three-year cycle, plus 200 basis points,
Allstate's ranked position relative to the peer group would have determined the
percentage of the total target award for this performance measure to be paid.
However, the average adjusted return on equity did not exceed the average risk
free rate of return, plus 200 basis points, resulting in no payout.
68
OTHER ELEMENTS OF COMPENSATION
To remain competitive with other employers and to attract, retain, and
motivate highly talented executives and other employees, we provide the
benefits listed in the following table.
OTHER ALL FULL-TIME
OFFICERS AND REGULAR
NAMED AND CERTAIN PART-TIME
BENEFIT OR PERQUISITE EXECUTIVES MANAGERS EMPLOYEES
--------------------- ------------ --------------- -------------
401(k)/(1)/ and defined benefit pension................................ (check mark) (check mark) (check mark)
Supplemental retirement benefit........................................ (check mark) (check mark)
Health and welfare benefits/(2)/....................................... (check mark) (check mark) (check mark)
Supplemental long-term disability and executive physical program....... (check mark) (check mark)/(3)/
Deferred compensation.................................................. (check mark) (check mark)
Tax preparation and financial planning services........................ (check mark) (check mark)/(4)/
Mobile phones, ground transportation and personal use of aircraft/(5)/. (check mark) (check mark)
--------
/(1)/Allstate contributed $.50 for every dollar of basic pre-tax deposits made
in 2010 on the first 3 percent of eligible pay and $.25 for every dollar
of basic pre-tax deposits made in 2010 on the next 2 percent of eligible
pay for eligible participants, including the named executives.
/(2)/Including medical, dental, vision, life, accidental death and
dismemberment, long-term disability, and group legal insurance.
/(3)/An executive physical program is available to all officers.
/(4)/All officers are eligible for tax preparation services. Financial planning
services were provided to Mr. Winter only.
/(5)/Ground transportation is available to Mr. Winter. In limited circumstances
approved by Allstate's CEO, Mr. Winter is permitted to use Allstate's
corporate aircraft for personal purposes. Mr. Winter did not use the
corporate aircraft for personal purposes in 2010. Mobile phones are
available to members of Allstate's senior management team, other officers,
and certain managers, and certain employees depending on their job
responsibilities.
RETIREMENT BENEFITS
Each named executive participates in two different defined benefit pension
plans. The Allstate Retirement Plan (ARP) is a tax qualified defined benefit
pension plan available to all of Allstate's regular full-time and regular
part-time employees who meet certain age and service requirements. The ARP
provides an assured retirement income related to an employee's level of
compensation and length of service at no cost to the employee. As the ARP is a
tax qualified plan, federal tax law places limits on (1) the amount of an
individual's compensation that can be used to calculate plan benefits and
(2) the total amount of benefits payable to a participant under the plan on an
annual basis. These limits may result in a lower benefit under the ARP than
would have been payable if the limits did not exist for certain of our
employees. Therefore, the Allstate Insurance Company Supplemental Retirement
Income Plan (SRIP) was created for the purpose of providing ARP-eligible
employees whose compensation or benefit amount exceeds the federal limits with
an additional defined benefit in an amount equal to what would have been
payable under the ARP if the federal limits described above did not exist.
CHANGE-IN-CONTROL AND POST-TERMINATION BENEFITS
Since a change-in-control or other triggering event may never occur,
Allstate does not view change-in-control benefits or post-termination benefits
as compensation. Consistent with Allstate compensation objectives, Allstate
offers these benefits to attract, motivate, and retain certain highly talented
executives. A change-in-control of Allstate could have a disruptive impact on
both Allstate and its executives. Allstate's change-in-control benefits and
post-termination benefits are designed to mitigate that impact and to maintain
the connection between the interests of Allstate's executives and Allstate
stockholders. Allstate's change-in-control
69
agreements entered into prior to January 1, 2011, provide an excise tax
gross-up to mitigate the possible disparate tax treatment for similarly
situated employees. However, starting in 2011, new change-in-control agreements
will not include an excise tax gross-up provision. Of the named executives,
Messrs. Winter, Pintozzi, and Easley are subject to change-in-control
agreements.
As part of the change-in-control benefits, executives with change-in-control
agreements receive previously deferred compensation and equity awards that
might otherwise be eliminated by new directors elected in connection with a
change-in-control, and also receive certain protections for cash incentive
awards and benefits if an executive's employment is terminated within a
two-year period after a change-in-control. The change-in-control and
post-termination arrangements which are described in the "Potential Payments as
a Result of Termination or Change-in-Control" section are not provided
exclusively to the named executives. A larger group of management employees is
eligible to receive many of the post-termination benefits described in that
section.
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES
SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
The following table sets forth information concerning the compensation of
the named executives for all services rendered to Lincoln Benefit in 2009 and
2010, allocated to Lincoln Benefit in a manner consistent with the allocation
of compensation expenses under the Service and Expense Agreement.
CHANGE IN
PENSION VALUE
AND
NONQUALIFIED
NON-EQUITY DEFERRED
STOCK OPTION INCENTIVE PLAN COMPENSATION ALL OTHER
SALARY BONUS AWARDS AWARDS COMPENSATION EARNINGS COMPENSATION TOTAL
NAME/(1)/ YEAR ($)/(2)/ ($) ($)/(3)/ ($)/(4)/ ($)/(5)/ ($)/(6)/ ($)/(7)/ ($)
-------- ---- ------- ----- ------- ------- -------------- ------------- ------------ ---------
Matthew E. Winter........... 2010 172,200 0 210,943 391,756 347,930 1,100/(8)/ 10,082 1,134,011
(CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD AND
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER) --
John C. Pintozzi............ 2010 130,757 0 94,860 94,859 157,535 8,735/(9)/ 7,528 494,274
(SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT AND
CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER) 2009 120,224 7,436 55,594 106,439 75,456 10,673 9,053 384,875
Lawrence W. Dahl............ 2010 274,586 0 53,428 17,810 137,159 136,233/(10)/ 36,639 655,855
(PRESIDENT--CHIEF OPERATING
OFFICER) 2009 253,299 0 25,195 48,246 113,091 235,494 97,306 772,631
Matthew S. Easley........... 2010 121,588 0 87,172 29,058 94,335 6,276/(11)/ 9,496 347,925
(SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT) 2009 114,709 0 45,652 87,398 72,160 6,064 8,708 334,691
Robert K. Becker............ 2010 89,294 0 18,609 55,811 81,067 35,616/(12)/ 6,763 287,160
(SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT)
--------
/(1)/Messrs. Winter and Becker were not named executives for fiscal year 2009.
/(2)/Reflects amounts for 2009 that were paid in 2009 which, due to the timing
of Allstate's payroll cycle, included amounts earned in 2008.
/(3)/The aggregate grant date fair value of restricted stock unit awards
computed in accordance with Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB")
Accounting Standards Codification Topic 718 ("ASC 718"). The number of
restricted stock units granted in 2010 to each named executive is provided
in the Grants of Plan-Based Awards table on page 73. The fair value of
restricted stock unit awards is based on the final closing price of
Allstate's stock as of the date of grant. The final closing price in part
reflects the payment of future dividends expected.
70
/(4)/The aggregate grant date fair value of option awards computed in
accordance with FASB ASC 718. The fair value of each option award is
estimated on the date of grant using a binomial lattice model. The fair
value of each option award is estimated on the date of grant using the
assumptions as set forth in the following table:
2010 2009
------------- -------------
Weighted average expected term............... 7.8 years 8.1 years
Expected volatility.......................... 23.7 - 52.3% 26.3 - 79.2%
Weighted average volatility.................. 35.1% 38.3%
Expected dividends........................... 2.4 - 2.8% 2.6%
Weighted average expected dividends.......... 2.6% 2.6%
Risk-free rate............................... 0.1 - 3.9% 0.0 - 3.7%
The number of options granted in 2010 to each named executive is provided in
the Grants of Plan-Based Awards table on page 73.
/(5)/Amounts earned under the annual incentive plan are paid in the year
following performance. Amounts earned under the Long-Term Executive
Incentive Compensation Plan are paid in the year following the performance
cycle. The amounts shown in the table above include amounts earned in 2010
and 2009 and payable under these plans in 2011 and 2010, respectively. The
break-down for each component is as follows:
ANNUAL CASH LONG-TERM
INCENTIVE CASH INCENTIVE
NAME YEAR AWARD AMOUNT CYCLE AWARD AMOUNT
---- ---- ------------ --------- --------------
Mr. Winter... 2010 $347,930 2008-2010 $ 0
Mr. Pintozzi. 2010 $157,535 2008-2010 $ 0
2009 $ 54,970 2007-2009 $20,486
Mr. Dahl..... 2010 $137,159 2008-2010 $ 0
2009 $ 50,748* 2007-2009 $ 0
Mr. Easley... 2010 $ 94,335 2008-2010 $ 0
2009 $ 52,444 2007-2009 $19,716
Mr. Becker... 2010 $ 81,067 2008-2010 $ 0
-----
* In 2009, as President and Chief Operating Officer of Lincoln Benefit,
Mr. Dahl participated in a cash-based sales incentive plan (the "Sales
Incentive Plan") based on first year premiums for universal life and term
policies as well as annuity deposits sold by one of Lincoln Benefit's
distribution channels. Payments related to the Sales Incentive Plan totaled
$62,343 for 2009. Mr. Dahl did not participate in the Sales Incentive Plan
in 2010. No other named executives of Lincoln Benefit participated in the
Sales Incentive Plan.
/(6)/Amounts reflect the aggregate increase in actuarial value of the pension
benefits as set forth in the Pension Benefits table, accrued during 2010
and 2009. These are benefits under the Allstate Retirement Plan (ARP) and
the Allstate Insurance Company Supplemental Retirement Income Plan (SRIP).
Non-qualified deferred compensation earnings are not reflected since our
Deferred Compensation Plan does not provide above-market earnings. The
pension plan measurement date is December 31. (See note 16 to Allstate's
audited financial statements for 2010.)
/(7)/The "All Other Compensation for 2010--Supplemental Table" provides details
regarding the amounts for 2010 for this column.
/(8)/Reflects increases in the actuarial value of the benefits provided to
Mr. Winter pursuant to the SRIP of $1,100.
/(9)/Reflects increases in the actuarial value of the benefits provided to
Mr. Pintozzi pursuant to the ARP and SRIP of $4,396 and $4,339,
respectively.
/(10)/Reflects increases in the actuarial value of the benefits provided to
Mr. Dahl pursuant to the ARP and SRIP of $82,402 and $53,831,
respectively.
/(11)/Reflects increases in the actuarial value of the benefits provided to
Mr. Easley pursuant to the ARP and SRIP of $3,098 and $3,178,
respectively.
/(12)/Reflects increases in the actuarial value of the benefits provided to
Mr. Becker pursuant to the ARP and SRIP of $23,305 and $12,311,
respectively.
71
ALL OTHER COMPENSATION FOR 2010--SUPPLEMENTAL TABLE
(In dollars)
The following table describes the incremental cost of other benefits
provided in 2010 that are included in the "All Other Compensation" column.
TOTAL
401(K) PTO ALL OTHER
NAME MATCH/(1)/ PAYOUT OTHER/(2)/ COMPENSATION
---- --------- ------ --------- ------------
Mr. Winter... 2010 1,400 0 8,682 10,082
Mr. Pintozzi. 2010 2,009 0 5,519 7,528
Mr. Dahl..... 2010 4,900 21,539 10,200 36,639
Ms. Easley... 2010 2,009 0 7,487 9,496
Mr. Becker... 2010 1,986 0 4,777 6,763
--------
/(1)/Each of the named executives participated in our 401(k) plan during 2010.
The amount shown is the amount allocated to their accounts as employer
matching contributions. Mr. Winter will not be vested in the employer
matching contribution until he has completed three years of vesting
service.
/(2)/"Other" consists of premiums for group life insurance and personal
benefits and perquisites consisting of cell phones, tax preparation
services, financial planning, executive physicals, ground transportation,
and supplemental long-term disability coverage. There was no incremental
cost for the use of mobile phones. Allstate provides supplemental
long-term disability coverage to regular full-time and regular part-time
employees whose annual earnings exceed the level which produces the
maximum monthly benefit provided by the Group Long Term Disability
Insurance Plan. This coverage is self-insured (funded and paid for by
Allstate when obligations are incurred). No obligations for the named
executives were incurred in 2010 and so no incremental cost is reflected
in the table. None of the personal benefits and perquisites individually
exceeded the greater of $25,000 or 10% of the total amount of these
benefits for the named executives, except for the payment to Mr. Dahl, in
accordance with Nebraska law, of $21,539 for paid time off accrued but not
taken in 2010.
72
GRANTS OF PLAN-BASED AWARDS AT FISCAL YEAR-END 2010/(1)/
The following table provides information about non-equity incentive plan
awards and equity awards granted to our named executives during the fiscal year
2010 to the extent the expense for such awards was allocated to Lincoln Benefit
under the Service and Expense Agreement.
ALL OTHER ALL OTHER
STOCK OPTION
ESTIMATED FUTURE PAYOUTS AWARDS: AWARDS: EXERCISE
UNDER NON-EQUITY INCENTIVE NUMBER OF NUMBER OF OR BASE
PLAN AWARDS/(2)/ SHARES OF SECURITIES PRICE OF
--------------------------- STOCK OR UNDERLYING OPTION
GRANT THRESHOLD TARGET MAXIMUM UNITS OPTIONS AWARDS
NAME DATE PLAN NAME ($) ($) ($) (#) (#) ($/SHR)/(3)/
---- -------------- ----------------------- --------- ------- --------- --------- ---------- -----------
Mr. Winter... -- Annual cash incentive 107,625 215,250 1,104,233
Feb. 22, 2010 Restricted stock units 6,716
Feb. 22, 2010 Stock options 39,571 $31.41
Mr. Pintozzi. -- Annual cash incentive 39,219 78,439 196,097
Feb. 22, 2010 Restricted stock units 3,020
Feb. 22, 2010 Stock options 9,582 $31.41
Mr. Dahl..... -- Annual cash incentive 48,006 96,012 240,029
Feb. 22, 2010 Restricted stock units 1,701
Feb. 22, 2010 Stock options 1,799 $31.41
Mr. Easley... -- Annual cash incentive 36,475 72,949 182,373
Feb. 22, 2010 Restricted stock units 2,775
Feb. 22, 2010 Stock options 2,935 $31.41
Mr. Becker... -- Annual cash incentive 22,307 44,613 111,533
Feb. 22, 2010 Restricted stock units 592
Feb. 22, 2010 Stock options 5,638 $31.41
GRANT DATE
FAIR VALUE ($)/(4)/
-------------------
STOCK OPTION
NAME AWARDS AWARDS
---- -------- --------
Mr. Winter...
$210,943
$391,756
Mr. Pintozzi.
$ 94,860
$ 94,859
Mr. Dahl.....
$ 53,428
$ 17,810
Mr. Easley...
$ 87,172
$ 29,058
Mr. Becker...
$ 18,609
$ 55,811
--------
/(1)/Awards under the annual executive incentive plans and the 2009 Equity
Incentive Plan.
/(2)/The amounts in these columns consist of the threshold, target, and maximum
annual cash incentive awards for the named executives. The threshold
amount for each named executive is fifty percent of target, as the minimum
amount payable if threshold performance is achieved. If threshold is not
achieved the payment to named executives would be zero. The target amount
is based upon achievement of certain performance measures set forth in the
"Annual Cash Incentive Awards" section. The maximum amount payable to
Mr. Winter is the lesser of a stockholder approved maximum under the
Annual Executive Incentive Plan of $8.5 million or 25% of the award pool.
The award pool is equal to 1.0% of Operating Income. None of the other
named executives participate in the operating income pool. A description
of the Operating Income performance measure is provided under the
"Performance Measures" caption on page 85.
/(3)/The exercise price of each option is equal to the fair market value of
Allstate's common stock on the date of grant. Fair market value is equal
to the closing sale price on the date of grant or, if there was no such
sale on the date of grant, then on the last previous day on which there
was a sale.
/(4)/The aggregate grant date fair value of restricted stock units was $31.41
and for stock option awards was $9.90 for 2010, computed in accordance
with FASB ASC 718. The assumptions used in the valuation are discussed in
footnotes 3 and 4 to the Summary Compensation Table on pages 70 and 71.
73
OUTSTANDING EQUITY AWARDS AT FISCAL YEAR-END 2010
OUTSTANDING EQUITY AWARDS AT FISCAL YEAR-END 2010
The following table summarizes the outstanding equity awards of the named
executives as of December 31, 2010, allocated in a manner consistent with the
allocation of compensation expenses to Lincoln Benefit under the Service and
Expense Agreement for 2010. The percentage of each equity award actually
allocated to Lincoln Benefit has varied over the years during which these
awards were granted depending on the extent of services rendered by such
executive to Lincoln Benefit and the arrangements in place at the time of such
equity awards between Lincoln Benefit and the executive's Allstate-affiliated
employer. Because the aggregate amount of such equity awards attributable to
services rendered to Lincoln Benefit by each named executive cannot be
calculated without unreasonable effort, the allocated amount of each equity
award provided for each named executive in the following table is the amount
determined by multiplying each named executive's equity award for services
rendered to Allstate and all of its affiliates by the percentage used for
allocating such named executive's compensation to Lincoln Benefit in 2010 under
the Service and Expense Agreement.
OPTION AWARDS/(1)/ STOCK AWARDS
------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------
NUMBER
OF
SHARES
OR UNITS
NUMBER OF NUMBER OF OF STOCK MARKET VALUE
SECURITIES SECURITIES THAT OF SHARES OR
UNDERLYING UNDERLYING HAVE UNITS OF
OPTION UNEXERCISED UNEXERCISED OPTION OPTION NOT STOCK THAT
GRANT OPTIONS (#) OPTIONS (#) EXERCISE EXPIRATION STOCK AWARD VESTED HAVE NOT
NAME DATE EXERCISABLE/(2)/ UNEXERCISABLE/(3)/ PRICE DATE GRANT DATE (#)/(4)/ VESTED/(5)/
---- -------------- --------------- ----------------- -------- -------------- -------------- -------- ------------
Mr. Winter... Nov. 2, 2009 2,406 7,219 $29.64 Nov. 2, 2019 Nov. 2, 2009 1,694 $ 54,019
Feb. 22, 2010 0 39,571 $31.41 Feb. 22, 2020 Feb. 22, 2010 6,716 $214,100
AGGREGATE
MARKET VALUE
------------
$268,119
Mr. Pintozzi. Sep. 30, 2002 513 0 $35.17 Sep. 30, 2012
Feb. 7, 2003 1,435 0 $31.78 Feb. 7, 2013
Feb. 6, 2004 2,041 0 $45.96 Feb. 6, 2014
Feb. 22, 2005 5,616 0 $52.57 Feb. 22, 2015
Feb. 21, 2006 5,562 0 $53.84 Feb. 21, 2016
Feb. 21, 2006 3,690 0 $53.84 Feb. 21, 2016
Feb. 20, 2007 4,094 1,365 $62.24 Feb. 20, 2017 Feb. 20, 2007 753 $ 23,998
Feb. 26, 2008 4,872 4,872 $48.82 Feb. 26, 2018 Feb. 26, 2008 1,057 $ 33,710
Feb. 27, 2009 2,542 15,312 $16.83 Feb. 27, 2019 Feb. 27, 2009 3,592 $114,526
Feb. 22, 2010 0 9,582 $31.41 Feb. 22, 2020 Feb. 22, 2010 3,020 $ 96,279
AGGREGATE
MARKET VALUE
------------
$268,513
Mr. Dahl..... May 15, 2001 4,224 0 $42.00 May 15, 2011
Feb. 7, 2002 5,868 0 $33.38 Feb. 7, 2012
Feb. 7, 2003 3,200 0 $31.78 Feb. 7, 2013
Feb. 6, 2004 3,333 0 $45.96 Feb. 6, 2014
Feb. 22, 2005 2,492 0 $52.57 Feb. 22, 2015
Feb. 21, 2006 3,418 0 $53.84 Feb. 21, 2016
Feb. 20, 2007 2,154 719 $62.24 Feb. 20, 2017 Feb. 20, 2007 397 $ 12,656
Feb. 26, 2008 2,747 2,747 $48.82 Feb. 26, 2018 Feb. 26, 2008 596 $ 19,001
Feb. 27, 2009 1,127 6,382 $16.83 Feb. 27, 2019 Feb. 27, 2009 1,497 $ 47,724
Feb. 22, 2010 0 1,799 $31.41 Feb. 22, 2020 Feb. 22, 2010 1,701 $ 54,228
AGGREGATE
MARKET VALUE
------------
$133,609
74
OPTION AWARDS/(1)/ STOCK AWARDS
------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------
NUMBER
OF
SHARES
OR UNITS
NUMBER OF NUMBER OF OF STOCK MARKET VALUE
SECURITIES SECURITIES THAT OF SHARES OR
UNDERLYING UNDERLYING HAVE UNITS OF
OPTION UNEXERCISED UNEXERCISED OPTION OPTION NOT STOCK THAT
GRANT OPTIONS (#) OPTIONS (#) EXERCISE EXPIRATION STOCK AWARD VESTED HAVE NOT
NAME DATE EXERCISABLE/(2)/ UNEXERCISABLE/(3)/ PRICE DATE GRANT DATE (#)/(4)/ VESTED/(5)/
---- -------------- --------------- ----------------- -------- -------------- -------------- -------- ------------
Mr. Easley. May 9, 2005 6,150 0 $57.04 May 9, 2015
Feb. 21, 2006 5,274 0 $53.84 Feb. 21, 2016
Feb. 21, 2006 3,690 0 $53.84 Feb. 21, 2016
Feb. 20, 2007 3,940 1,314 $62.24 Feb. 20, 2017 Feb. 20, 2007 724 $ 23,096
Feb. 26, 2008 4,712 4,712 $48.82 Feb. 26, 2018 Feb. 26, 2008 1,023 $ 32,599
Feb. 27, 2009 4,191 12,573 $16.83 Feb. 27, 2019 Feb. 27, 2009 2,950 $ 94,044
Feb. 22, 2010 0 2,935 $31.41 Feb. 22, 2020 Feb. 22, 2010 2,775 $ 88,476
AGGREGATE
MARKET VALUE
------------
$238,215
Mr. Becker. Feb. 6, 2004 595 0 $45.96 Feb. 6, 2014
Feb. 22, 2005 465 0 $52.57 Feb. 22, 2015
Feb. 21, 2006 561 0 $53.84 Feb. 21, 2016
Feb. 20, 2007 410 137 $62.24 Feb. 20, 2017 Feb. 20, 2007 76 $ 2,418
Feb. 26, 2008 501 501 $48.82 Feb. 26, 2018 Feb. 26, 2008 109 $ 3,464
Feb. 27, 2009 1,190 3,569 $16.83 Feb. 27, 2019 Feb. 27, 2009 838 $ 26,704
Feb. 22, 2010 0 5,638 $31.41 Feb. 22, 2020 Feb. 22, 2010 592 $ 18,887
AGGREGATE
MARKET VALUE
------------
$ 51,473
--------
/(1)/The options granted in 2010 vest in three installments of 50% on the
second anniversary date and 25% on each of the third and fourth
anniversaries dates. The other options vest in four installments on the
first four anniversaries of the grant date. The exercise price of each
option is equal to the fair market value of Allstate's common stock on the
date of grant. For options granted prior to 2007, fair market value is
equal to the average of high and low sale prices on the date of grant, and
for options granted in 2007 and thereafter, fair market value is equal to
the closing sale price on the date of grant or in each case, if there was
no sale on the date of grant, then on the last previous day on which there
was a sale.
/(2)/The aggregate value and aggregate number of exercisable in-the-money
options as of December 31, 2010, for each of the named executives is as
follows: Mr. Winter $5,391 (2,406 aggregate number exercisable),
Mr. Pintozzi $38,401 (3,977 aggregate number exercisable), Mr. Dahl
$17,281 (4,327 aggregate number exercisable), Mr. Easley $63,069 (4,191
aggregate number exercisable), and Mr. Becker $17,907 (1,190 aggregate
number exercisable)
/(3)/The aggregate value and aggregate number of unexercisable in-the-money
options as of December 31, 2010, for each of the named executives is as
follows: Mr. Winter $34,770 (46,791 aggregate number exercisable),
Mr. Pintozzi $234,947 (24,894 aggregate number unexercisable), Mr. Dahl
$96,895 (8,181 aggregate number unexercisable), Mr. Easley $190,598
(15,508 aggregate number unexercisable), and Mr. Becker $56,370 (9,207
aggregate number unexercisable).
/(4)/The restricted stock unit awards granted in 2010 vest in three
installments of 50% on the second anniversary of the grant date and 25% on
each of the third and fourth anniversary dates. The other restricted stock
unit awards vest in one installment on the fourth anniversary of the grant
date, unless otherwise noted.
/(5)/Amount is based on the closing price of Allstate common stock of $31.88 on
December 31, 2010.
OPTION EXERCISES AND STOCK VESTED AT FISCAL YEAR-END 2010
The following table summarizes the options exercised by the named executives
during 2010 and the restricted stock and restricted stock unit awards that
vested during 2010, allocated in a manner consistent with the allocation of
compensation expenses to Lincoln Benefit under the Service and Expense
Agreement for 2010.
75
OPTION EXERCISES AND STOCK VESTED AT FISCAL YEAR-END 2010
OPTION AWARDS
(AS OF 12/31/10) STOCK AWARDS
-------------------------------- -------------------------------
NUMBER OF SHARES NUMBER OF SHARES
ACQUIRED ON VALUE REALIZED ACQUIRED ON VALUE REALIZED
NAME EXERCISE (#) ON EXERCISE ($) VESTING (#) ON VESTING ($)
---- ---------------- --------------- ---------------- --------------
Mr. Winter... 0 $ 0 $ 0 $ 0
Mr. Pintozzi. 2,562 $36,015 1,087 $33,921
Mr. Dahl..... 4,851 $33,820 516 $16,110
Mr. Easley... 0 $ 0 1,043 $32,551
Mr. Becker... 0 $ 0 84 $ 2,637
RETIREMENT BENEFITS
Each named executive participates in two different defined benefit pension
plans. Pension expense for each named executive under these plans has been
accrued annually over the course of the executive's career with Allstate. The
aggregate amount of the annual accrual specifically allocated to Lincoln
Benefit over that period of time has varied depending on the extent of services
rendered by such executive to Lincoln Benefit and the arrangements in place at
the time of accrual between Lincoln Benefit and the executive's
Allstate-affiliated employer. Because the aggregate amount of such annual
accruals earned prior to 2010 attributable to services rendered to Lincoln
Benefit by each named executive cannot be calculated without unreasonable
effort, the present value of accumulated benefit provided for each named
executive in the following table is the amount determined by multiplying the
present value of such named executive's accumulated pension benefit for
services rendered to Allstate and all of its affiliates over the course of such
named executive's career with Allstate by the percentage used for allocating
such named executive's compensation to Lincoln Benefit under the Service and
Expense Agreement in 2010.
PENSION BENEFITS
NUMBER OF PRESENT
YEARS VALUE OF PAYMENTS
CREDITED ACCUMULATED DURING LAST
NAME PLAN NAME SERVICE (#) BENEFIT/(1)(2)/ ($) FISCAL YEAR ($)
---- ------------------------------------ ----------- ----------------- ---------------
Mr. Winter/(3)/. Allstate Retirement Plan 1.2 0 0
Supplemental Retirement Income Plan 1.2 1,100 0
Mr. Pintozzi.... Allstate Retirement Plan 8.3 19,939 0
Supplemental Retirement Income Plan 8.3 20,553 0
Mr. Dahl........ Allstate Retirement Plan 23.9 522,155 0
Supplemental Retirement Income Plan 23.9 437,358 0
Mr. Easley...... Allstate Retirement Plan 5.7 10,343 0
Supplemental Retirement Income Plan 5.7 15,229 0
Mr. Becker...... Allstate Retirement Plan 10.0 116,258 0
Supplemental Retirement Income Plan 10.0 90,137 0
--------
/(1)/These amounts are estimates and do not necessarily reflect the actual
amounts that will be paid to the named executives, which will only be known
at the time they become eligible for payment. Accrued benefits were
calculated as of December 31, 2010, and used to calculate the Present Value
of Accumulated Benefits at December 31, 2010. December 31 is our pension
plan measurement date used for financial statement reporting purposes.
The amounts listed in this column are based on the following assumptions:
. Discount rate of 6%, payment form assuming 80% paid as a lump sum and
20% paid as an annuity, lump-sum/annuity conversion segmented interest
rates of 5.0% for the first five years, 6.5% for the
76
next 15 years, and 7% for all years after 20 and the 2011 combined static
Pension Protection Act funding mortality table with a blend of 50% males
and 50% females (as required under the Internal Revenue Code), and
post-retirement mortality for annuitants using the 2011 Internal Revenue
Service mandated annuitant table; these are the same as those used for
financial reporting year-end disclosure as described in the notes to
Allstate's consolidated financial statements. (See note 16 to Allstate's
audited financial statements for 2010.)
. Based on guidance provided by the Securities and Exchange Commission, we
have assumed normal retirement age which is age 65 under both the ARP
and SRIP, regardless of any announced or anticipated retirements.
. No assumption for early termination, disability, or pre-retirement
mortality.
/(2)/The figures shown in the table above reflect the present value of the
current accrued pension benefits calculated using the assumptions described
in the preceding footnote. If the named executives' employment terminated
on December 31, 2010, the present value of the non-qualified pension
benefits for each named executive earned through December 31, 2010, is
shown in the following table:
LUMP SUM
NAME PLAN NAME AMOUNT ($)
---- ------------------------------------ ----------
Mr. Winter... Supplemental Retirement Income Plan 1,159
Mr. Pintozzi. Supplemental Retirement Income Plan 22,528
Mr. Dahl..... Supplemental Retirement Income Plan 660,832
Mr. Easley... Supplemental Retirement Income Plan 15,895
Mr. Becker... Supplemental Retirement Income Plan 118,725
The amount shown is based on the lump sum methodology (i.e., interest rate
and mortality table) used by the Allstate pension plans in 2011, as required
under the Pension Protection Act. Specifically, the interest rate for 2011
is based on 20% of the average August 30-year Treasury Bond rate from the
prior year and 80% of the average corporate bond segmented yield curve from
August of the prior year. The mortality table for 2011 is the 2011 combined
static Pension Protection Act funding mortality table with a blend of 50%
males and 50% females, as required under the Internal Revenue Code.
/(3)/Mr. Winter is not currently vested in the Allstate Retirement Plan or the
Supplemental Retirement Income Plan.
The benefits and value of benefits shown in the Pension Benefits table are
based on the following material factors:
ALLSTATE RETIREMENT PLAN ("ARP")
The ARP has two different types of benefit formulas (final average pay and
cash balance) which apply to participants based on their date of hire or
individual choice made prior to the January 1, 2003 introduction of a cash
balance design. Of the named executives, Messrs. Winter, Pintozzi, and Easley
are eligible to earn cash balance benefits. Benefits under the final average
pay formula are earned and stated in the form of a straight life annuity
payable at the normal retirement date (age 65). Participants who earn final
average pay benefits may do so under one or more benefit formulas based on when
they become members of the ARP and their years of service.
Mr. Dahl and Mr. Becker earn ARP benefits under the post-1988 final average
pay formula which is the sum of the Base Benefit and the Additional Benefit, as
defined as follows:
. Base Benefit =1.55% of the participant's average annual compensation,
multiplied by credited service after 1988 (limited to 28 years of
credited service)
77
. Additional Benefit =0.65% of the amount, if any, of the participant's
average annual compensation that exceeds the participant's covered
compensation (the average of the maximum annual salary taxable for
Social Security over the 35-year period ending the year the participant
would reach Social Security retirement age) multiplied by credited
service after 1988 (limited to 28 years of credited service)
Since Mr. Dahl earned benefits between January 1, 1978, and December 31,
1988, one component of his ARP benefit will be based on the following benefit
formula:
1. Multiply years of credited service from 1978 through 1988 by 2 1/8%.
2. Then, multiply the percentage from step (1) by
a. Average annual compensation (five-year average) at December 31, 1988,
and by
b. Estimated Social Security at December 31, 1988.
3. Then, subtract 2(b) from 2(a). The result is the normal retirement allowance
for service from January 1, 1978, through December 31, 1988.
4. The normal retirement allowance is indexed for final average pay. In
addition, there is an adjustment of 18% of the normal retirement allowance
as of December 31, 1988, to reflect a conversion to a single life annuity.
For participants eligible to earn cash balance benefits, pay credits are
added to the cash balance account on a quarterly basis as a percent of
compensation and based on the participant's years of vesting service as follows:
CASH BALANCE PLAN PAY CREDITS
PAY CREDIT
VESTING SERVICE %
--------------- ----------
Less than 1 year................. 0%
1 year, but less than 5 years.... 2.5%
5 years, but less than 10 years.. 3%
10 years, but less than 15 years. 4%
15 years, but less than 20 years. 5%
20 years, but less than 25 years. 6%
25 years or more................. 7%
SUPPLEMENTAL RETIREMENT INCOME PLAN ("SRIP")
SRIP benefits are generally determined using a two-step process:
(1) determine the amount that would be payable under the ARP formula specified
above if the federal limits described above did not apply, then (2) reduce the
amount described in (1) by the amount actually payable under the ARP formula.
The normal retirement date under the SRIP is age 65. If eligible for early
retirement under the ARP, an eligible employee is also eligible for early
retirement under the SRIP.
OTHER ASPECTS OF THE PENSION PLANS
For the ARP and SRIP, eligible compensation consists of salary, annual cash
incentive awards, pre-tax employee deposits made to Allstate's 401(k) plan and
Allstate's cafeteria plan, holiday pay, and vacation pay. Eligible compensation
also includes overtime pay, payment for temporary military service, and
payments for short term disability, but does not include long-term cash
incentive awards or income related to the exercise of stock options and the
vesting of restricted stock and restricted stock units. Compensation used to
determine benefits under the ARP is limited in accordance with the Internal
Revenue Code. For final average pay benefits, average annual compensation is
the average compensation of the five highest consecutive calendar years within
the last ten consecutive calendar years preceding the actual retirement or
termination date.
78
Payment options under the ARP include a lump sum, straight life annuity, and
various survivor annuity options. The lump sum under the final average pay
benefit is calculated in accordance with the applicable interest rate and
mortality as required under the Internal Revenue Code. The lump sum payment
under the cash balance benefit is generally equal to a participant's cash
balance account balance. Payments from the SRIP are paid in the form of a lump
sum using the same interest rate and mortality assumptions used under the ARP.
TIMING OF PAYMENTS
The earliest retirement age that a named executive may retire with unreduced
retirement benefits under the ARP and SRIP is age 65. However, a participant
earning final average pay benefits is entitled to an early retirement benefit
on or after age 55 if he or she terminates employment after the completion of
20 or more years of service. A participant earning cash balance benefits who
terminates employment with at least three years of vesting service is entitled
to a lump sum benefit equal to his or her cash balance account balance.
Currently, none of the named executives are eligible for an early retirement
benefit.
SRIP benefits earned through December 31, 2004 (Pre 409A SRIP Benefits) are
generally payable at age 65, the normal retirement date under the ARP. Pre 409A
SRIP Benefits may be payable earlier upon reaching age 50 if disabled,
following early retirement at age 55 or older with 20 years of service, or
following death in accordance with the terms of the SRIP. SRIP benefits earned
after December 31, 2004 (Post 409A SRIP Benefits) are paid on the January 1
following termination of employment after reaching age 55 (a minimum six month
deferral period applies), or following death in accordance with the terms of
the SRIP.
Eligible employees are vested in the normal retirement benefit under the ARP
and the SRIP on the earlier of the completion of five years of service or upon
reaching age 65 for participants with final average pay benefits or the
completion of three years of service or upon reaching age 65 for participants
whose benefits are calculated under the cash balance formula.
. Mr. Winter's SRIP benefit is not currently vested but would become
payable following death. Mr. Winter will turn 65 on January 22, 2022.
. Mr. Pintozzi's Pre 409A SRIP benefit would become payable as early as
January 1, 2011, but is immediately payable upon death. Mr. Pintozzi's
Post 409A Benefit would be paid on January 1, 2021, or immediately upon
death. Mr. Pintozzi will turn 65 on May 18, 2030.
. Mr. Dahl's Pre 409A SRIP Benefit would become payable as early as
January 1, 2015, but is immediately payable upon death or disability.
Mr. Dahl's Post 409A Benefit would be paid on January 1, 2015, or
immediately upon death. Mr. Dahl will turn 65 on August 2, 2024.
. Mr. Easley's Post 409A Benefit would become payable as early as
January 1, 2011, but is immediately payable upon death. Mr. Easley's
Post 409A Benefit would be paid on January 1, 2012, or immediately upon
death. Mr. Easley will turn 65 on March 28, 2021.
. Mr. Becker's Pre 409A SRIP Benefit would become payable as early as
January 1, 2021, but is immediately payable upon death or disability.
Mr. Becker's Post 409A Benefit would be paid on January 1, 2011, or
immediately upon death. Mr. Becker will turn 65 on July 9, 2020.
EXTRA SERVICE AND PENSION BENEFIT ENHANCEMENT
No additional service is granted under the ARP or the SRIP. Generally,
Allstate has not granted additional service credit outside of the actual
service used to calculate ARP and SRIP benefits.
NON-QUALIFIED DEFERRED COMPENSATION
The aggregate amount of the annual accrual specifically allocated to Lincoln
Benefit over each named executive's career with Allstate has varied depending
on the extent of services rendered by such executive to
79
Lincoln Benefit and the arrangements in place at the time of accrual between
Lincoln Benefit and the executive's Allstate-affiliated employer. Because the
aggregate earnings and balance attributable to services rendered to Lincoln
Benefit by each named executive cannot be calculated without unreasonable
effort, the aggregate earnings and aggregate balance provided for each named
executive in the following table is the amount determined by multiplying the
value of such named executive's non-qualified deferred compensation benefit for
services rendered to Allstate and all of its affiliates over the course of such
named executive's career with Allstate by the percentage used for allocating
such named executive's compensation to Lincoln Benefit under the Service and
Expense Agreement in 2010.
NON-QUALIFIED DEFERRED COMPENSATION AT FISCAL YEAR-END 2010
EXECUTIVE REGISTRANT AGGREGATE AGGREGATE AGGREGATE
CONTRIBUTIONS CONTRIBUTIONS EARNINGS WITHDRAWALS/ BALANCE
IN LAST FY IN LAST FY IN LAST FY DISTRIBUTIONS AT LAST FYE
NAME ($) ($) ($)/(1)/ ($) ($)/(2)/
---- ------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- -----------
Mr. Winter... 0 0 0 0 0
Mr. Pintozzi. 0 0 0 0 0
Mr. Dahl..... 0 0 0 0 0
Ms. Easley... 0 0 0 0 0
Mr. Becker... 0 0 0 0 0
--------
/(1)/Aggregate earnings were not included in the named executive's prior year
compensation.
/(2)/There are no amounts reported in the Aggregate Balance at Last FYE column
that were reported in the 2010 or 2009 Summary Compensation Tables.
In order to remain competitive with other employers, Allstate allows
employees, including the named executives, whose annual compensation exceeds
the amount specified in the Internal Revenue Code (e.g., $245,000 in 2010), to
defer up to 80% of their salary and/or up to 100% of their annual cash
incentive award that exceeds that amount under the Deferred Compensation Plan.
Allstate does not match participant deferrals and does not guarantee a stated
rate of return.
Deferrals under the Deferred Compensation Plan are credited with earnings,
or are subject to losses, based on the results of the investment option or
options selected by the participants. The investment options available in 2010
under the Deferred Compensation Plan are Stable Value, S&P 500, International
Equity, Russell 2000, and Bond Funds--options available in 2010 under our
401(k) plan. Under the Deferred Compensation Plan, deferrals are not actually
invested in these funds, but instead are credited with earnings or losses based
on the funds' investment experience, which are net of administration and
investment expenses. Because the rate of return is based on actual investment
measures in our 401(k) plan, no above-market earnings are paid. Similar to
participants in our 401(k) plan, participants can change their investment
elections daily. Investment changes are effective the next business day. The
Deferred Compensation Plan is unfunded; participants have only the rights of
general unsecured creditors.
Deferrals under the Deferred Compensation Plan are segregated into Pre 409A
balances and Post 409A balances. A named executive may elect to begin receiving
a distribution of a Pre 409A balance upon separation from service or in one of
the first through fifth years after separation from service. In either event,
the named executive may elect to receive payment of a Pre 409A balance in a
lump sum or in annual cash installment payments over a period of two to ten
years. An irrevocable distribution election is required before making any Post
409A deferrals into the plan. The distribution options available to the Post
409A balances are similar to those available to the Pre 409A balances, except
the earliest distribution date is six months following separation from service.
Upon a showing of unforeseeable emergency, a plan participant may be allowed to
access certain funds in a deferred compensation account earlier than the dates
specified above.
80
POTENTIAL PAYMENTS AS A RESULT OF TERMINATION OR CHANGE-IN-CONTROL
The following table lists the compensation and benefits that Allstate would
pay or provide to the named executives in various scenarios involving a
termination of employment, other than compensation and benefits generally
available to all salaried employees.
COMPENSATION ELEMENTS
NON-
QUALIFIED
BASE SEVERANCE ANNUAL RESTRICTED PENSION
TERMINATION SCENARIOS SALARY PAY INCENTIVE STOCK OPTIONS STOCK UNITS BENEFITS/(1)/
--------------------- ------------ ----------------- -------------- ---------------- ------------- --------------
VOLUNTARY TERMINATION... Ceases None Forfeited Unvested are Forfeited Distributions
immediately unless forfeited, commence
terminated vested expire per plan
on last day at the earlier
of fiscal of three
year months or
normal
expiration
INVOLUNTARY Ceases None Forfeited Unvested are Forfeited Distributions
TERMINATION/(3)/....... immediately unless forfeited, commence
terminated vested expire per plan
on last day at the earlier
of fiscal of three
year months or
normal
expiration
RETIREMENT/(4)/......... Ceases None Pro rated for Continue to RSUs Distributions
Immediately the year vest upon continue to commence
based on normal or vest upon per plan
actual health normal
performance retirement; retirement.
for the year unvested Forfeited in
forfeited upon early
early retirement.
retirement. All
expire at
earlier of five
years or
normal
expiration
TERMINATION DUE TO Ceases Lump sum Pro rated at Vest Vest Immediately
CHANGE IN CONTROL/(5)/. Immediately equal to a target immediately immediately payable
multiple of (reduced by upon a change upon a upon a
salary, a any actually in control change in change in
multiple of paid) control control
annual
incentive at
target and
pension
enhancement/(6)/
DEATH................... One month None Pro rated for Vest Vest Distributions
salary paid year based immediately immediately commence
upon death on actual and expire at per plan
performance earlier of two
for the year years or
normal
expiration
HEALTH,
WELFARE AND
DEFERRED OTHER
TERMINATION SCENARIOS COMPENSATION/(2)/ BENEFITS
--------------------- ------------------ ----------------
VOLUNTARY TERMINATION... Distributions None
commence per
participant
election
INVOLUNTARY Distributions None
TERMINATION/(3)/....... commence per
participant
election
RETIREMENT/(4)/......... Distributions None
commence per
participant
election
TERMINATION DUE TO Immediately Outplacement
CHANGE IN CONTROL/(5)/. payable upon a services
change in control provided;
continuation
coverage
subsidized/(7)/
DEATH................... Payable within None
90 days
81
NON-
QUALIFIED
BASE SEVERANCE ANNUAL RESTRICTED PENSION DEFERRED
TERMINATION SCENARIOS SALARY PAY INCENTIVE STOCK OPTIONS STOCK UNITS BENEFITS/(1)/ COMPENSATION/(2)/
--------------------- ------------ --------- -------------- --------------- ----------- ------------ ----------------
DISABILITY....... Ceases None Pro rated for Vest Forfeited Participant Distributions
Immediately year based immediately may commence per
on actual and expire at request participant
performance earlier of two payment if election
for the year years or age 50 or
normal older
expiration
HEALTH,
WELFARE AND
OTHER
TERMINATION SCENARIOS BENEFITS
--------------------- -------------
DISABILITY....... Supplemental
Long Term
Disability
benefits
--------
/(1)/See the section titled Pension Benefits for further detail on
non-qualified pension benefits and timing of payments.
/(2)/See the Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation section for additional
information on the Deferred Compensation Plan and distribution options
available.
/(3)/Examples of "Involuntary Termination" independent of a change-in-control
include performance-related terminations; terminations for employee
dishonesty and violation of Allstate rules, regulations, or policies; and
terminations resulting from lack of work, rearrangement of work, and
reduction in force.
/(4)/Retirement for purposes of the annual cash incentive plans is defined as
voluntary termination on or after the date the named executive attains age
55 with at least 20 years of service. The "normal retirement date" under
the equity awards is the date on or after the date the named executive
attains age 60 with at least one year of service. The "health retirement
date" is the date on which the named executive terminates for health
reasons after attaining age 50, but before attaining age 60, with at least
ten years of continuous service. The "early retirement date" is the date
the named executive attains age 55 with 20 years of service.
/(5)/Of the named executives, only Messrs. Winter, Pintozzi, and Easley are
subject to change-in-control agreements. In general, a change-in-control
is one or more of the following events: (1) any person acquires 30% or
more of the combined voting power of Allstate common stock within a
12-month period; (2) any person acquires more than 50% of the combined
voting power of Allstate common stock; (3) certain changes are made to the
composition of the Board; or (4) the consummation of a merger,
reorganization, or similar transaction. These triggers were selected
because, in a widely held company the size of Allstate, they could each
result in a substantial change in management. Effective upon a
change-in-control, the named executives become subject to covenants
prohibiting competition and solicitation of employees, customers, and
suppliers at any time until one year after termination of employment.
During the two-year period following a change-in-control, the
change-in-control agreements provide for a minimum salary, annual cash
incentive awards, and other benefits. In addition, they provide that the
named executives' positions, authority, duties, and responsibilities will
be at least commensurate in all material respects with those held prior to
the change-in-control. If a named executive incurs legal fees or other
expenses in an effort to enforce the change-in-control agreement, Allstate
will reimburse the named executive for these expenses unless it is
established by a court that the named executive had no reasonable basis
for the claim or acted in bad faith.
/(6)/For those named executives subject to change-in-control agreements,
severance benefits would be payable if the named executive's employment is
terminated either by Allstate without "cause" or by the executive for
"good reason" as defined in the agreements during the two-year period
following the change-in-control. Cause means the named executive has been
convicted of a felony or other crime involving fraud or dishonesty, has
willfully or intentionally breached the change-in-control agreement, has
habitually neglected his or her duties, or has engaged in willful or
reckless material misconduct in the performance of his or her duties. Good
reason includes a material diminution in a named executive's base
compensation, authority, duties, or responsibilities, a material change in
the geographic location where the named executive performs services, or a
material breach of the change-in-control agreement by Allstate. Mr.
Winter's cash severance payment would be three times salary and three
times annual incentive at target. Messrs. Pintozzi's and Easley's cash
severance payments would be two times their respective salary and two
times their respective annual incentive at target.
For the named executives subject to change-in-control agreements, the
pension enhancement is a lump sum payment equal to the positive difference,
if any, between: (a) the sum of the lump-sum values of each maximum annuity
that would be payable to the named executive under any defined benefit plan
(whether or not qualified under Section 401(a) of the Internal Revenue Code)
if the named executive had: (i) become fully vested in all such benefits,
(ii) attained as of the named executive's termination date an age that is
two years (three years for Mr. Winter) greater than the named executive's
actual age, (iii) accrued a number of years of service that is two years
(three years for Mr. Winter) greater than the number of years of service
actually accrued by the named executive as of the named executive's
termination date, and (iv) received a lump-sum severance benefit consisting
of two times base salary (three for Mr. Winter), two (three for Mr. Winter)
times annual incentive cash compensation calculated at target, plus the 2010
annual incentive cash award as covered compensation in equal monthly
installments during the two-year period following the named executive's
termination date (a three-year period applies to Mr. Winter); and (b) the
lump-sum values of the maximum annuity benefits vested and payable to named
executive under each defined benefit plan that is qualified under
Section 401(a) of the Internal Revenue Code plus the aggregate amounts
simultaneously or previously paid to the named executive under the defined
benefit plans (whether or not qualified under Section 401(a)). The
calculation of the lump sum amounts payable under this formula does not
impact the benefits payable under the ARP or the SRIP.
/(7)/For the named executives subject to change-in-control agreements, if the
named executive's employment is terminated by reason of death during the
two-year period commencing on the date of a change-in-control, the named
executive's estate or beneficiary will be entitled to survivor and other
benefits, including retiree medical coverage, if eligible, that are not
less favorable than the most favorable benefits available to the estates
or surviving families of peer executives at Allstate. In the event of
termination by reason of disability, Allstate will pay disability and
other benefits, including supplemental long-term disability benefits and
retiree medical coverage, if eligible, that are not less favorable than
the most favorable benefits available to disabled peer executives. In
addition, such survivor or disability benefits shall not be materially
less favorable, in the aggregate, than the most favorable benefits in
effect during the 90-day period preceding the change-in-control.
82
ESTIMATE OF POTENTIAL PAYMENTS UPON TERMINATION/(1)/
The table below describes the amount of compensation payable to each named
executive or the value of benefits provided to the named executives, calculated
in a manner consistent with the allocation of compensation expenses to Lincoln
Benefit under the Service and Expense Agreement for 2010, that exceed the
compensation or benefits generally available to all salaried employees in each
termination scenario. The "Total" column in the following table does not
reflect compensation or benefits previously accrued or earned by the named
executives such as deferred compensation and non-qualified pension benefits.
The payment of the 2010 annual cash incentive award and any 2010 salary earned
but not paid in 2010 due to Allstate's payroll cycle are not included in these
tables because these amounts are payable to the named executives regardless of
termination, death, or disability. Benefits and payments are calculated
assuming a December 31, 2010, employment termination date.
RESTRICTED
STOCK STOCK
OPTIONS-- UNITS-- WELFARE EXCISE TAX
UNVESTED UNVESTED BENEFITS AND REIMBURSEMENT
AND AND OUTPLACEMENT AND TAX
SEVERANCE ACCELERATED ACCELERATED SERVICES GROSS-UP/(2)/ TOTAL
NAME ($) ($) ($) ($) ($) ($)
---- --------- ----------- ----------- ------------ ------------- ---------
MR. WINTER
Voluntary Termination/Retirement/(3)/..... 0 0 0 0 0 0
Involuntary Termination................... 0 0 0 0 0
Termination due to Change-in-Control/(4)/. 1,202,254 34,770 268,119 10,263/(5)/ 448,200 1,963,606
Death..................................... 34,770 268,119 0 0 302,889
Disability................................ 34,770 0 637,274/(6)/ 0 672,044
MR. PINTOZZI
Voluntary Termination/Retirement/(3)/..... 0 0 0 0 0 0
Involuntary Termination................... 0 0 0 0 0
Termination due to Change-in-Control/(4)/. 442,285 234,947 268,513 13,593/(5)/ 0 959,338
Death..................................... 0 234,947 268,513 0 0 503,460
Disability................................ 0 234,947 0 707,459/(6)/ 0 942,406
MR. DAHL
Voluntary Termination/Retirement/(3)/..... 0 0 0 0 0 0
Involuntary Termination................... 0 0 0 0 0
Termination due to Change-in-Control/(4)/. 0 96,895/(7)/ 133,609/(7)/ 0 0 230,504
Death..................................... 96,895 133,609 0 0 230,504
Disability................................ 96,895 0 703,387/(6)/ 0 800,282
MR. EASLEY
Voluntary Termination/Retirement/(3)/..... 0 0 0 0 0 0
Involuntary Termination................... 0 0 0 0 0
Termination due to Change-in-Control/(4)/. 381,650 190,598 238,215 12,614/(5)/ 0 823,077
Death..................................... 190,598 238,215 0 0 428,813
Disability................................ 190,598 0 397,373/(6)/ 0 587,971
MR. BECKER
Voluntary Termination/Retirement/(3)/..... 0 0 0 0 0 0
Involuntary Termination................... 0 0 0 0 0
Termination due to Change-in-Control/(4)/. 0 56,370/(7)/ 51,473/(7)/ 0 0 107,843
Death..................................... 0 56,370 51,473 0 0 107,843
Disability................................ 0 56,370 0 186,591/(6)/ 0 242,961
--------
/(1)/A "0" indicates that either there is no amount payable to the named
executive or no amount payable to the named executive that is not also
made available to all salaried employees.
/(2)/Certain payments made as a result of a change in control are subject to a
20% excise tax imposed on the named executive by Section 4999 of the Code.
The Excise Tax Reimbursement and Tax Gross-up is the amount Allstate would
pay to the named executive as reimbursement for the 20% excise tax plus a
tax gross-up for any taxes incurred by the named executive resulting from
the reimbursement of such excise tax. The estimated amounts of
reimbursement of any resulting excise taxes were determined without regard
to the effect that restrictive covenants and any other facts and
circumstances may have on the amount of excise taxes, if any, that
ultimately might be payable in the event these payments were made to a
named executive which is not subject to reliable advance prediction or a
reasonable estimate. Allstate believes providing an excise tax gross-up
mitigates the possible disparate tax treatment for similarly situated
employees and is appropriate in this limited circumstance to prevent the
intended value of a benefit from being significantly and arbitrarily
reduced. However, starting in 2011, new change-in-control agreements will
not include an excise tax gross-up provision.
83
/(3)/As of December 31, 2010 none of the named executives was eligible to
retire in accordance with Allstate's policy or the terms of any of the
Allstate compensation and benefit plans including the equity incentive
plans.
/(4)/The values in this change-in-control row represent amounts paid if both
the change-in-control and termination occur on December 31, 2010. If there
was a change-in-control that did not result in a termination, the amounts
payable to each named executive would be as follows:
STOCK OPTIONS-- TOTAL--
UNVESTED AND RESTRICTED STOCK UNITS-- UNVESTED AND
ACCELERATED UNVESTED AND ACCELERATED ACCELERATED
NAME ($) ($) ($)
---- --------------- ------------------------ ------------
Mr. Winter... 34,770 268,119 302,889
Mr. Pintozzi. 234,947 268,513 503,460
Mr. Dahl..... 96,895 133,609 230,504
Mr. Easley... 190,598 238,215 428,813
Mr. Becker... 56,370 51,473 107,843
A change-in-control also would accelerate the distribution of non-qualified
deferred compensation and SRIP benefits for Messrs. Winter, Pintozzi, and
Easley. Within five business days after the effective date of a
change-in-control, each named executive subject to a change-in-control
agreement would receive any deferred compensation account balances and a
lump sum payment equal to the present value of the named executive's SRIP
benefit. Please see the Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation at Fiscal Year
End 2010 table and footnote 2 to the Pension Benefits table in the
Retirement Benefits section for details regarding the applicable amounts for
each named executive.
/(5)/The Welfare Benefits and Outplacement Services amount includes the cost to
provide certain welfare benefits to the named executive and family during
the period which the named executive is eligible for continuation coverage
under applicable law. The amount shown reflects Allstate's costs for these
benefits or programs assuming an 18-month continuation period. The value
of outplacement services for Mr. Winter is $20,000 and $15,000 for Messrs.
Pintozzi and Easley.
/(6)/The named executives are eligible to participate in Allstate's
supplemental long-term disability plan for employees whose annual earnings
exceed the level which produces the maximum monthly benefit provided by
the Allstate Long Term Disability Plan (Basic Plan). The benefit is equal
to 50% of the named executive's qualified annual earnings divided by
twelve and rounded to the nearest one hundred dollars, reduced by $7,500,
which is the maximum monthly benefit payment that can be received under
the Basic Plan. The amount reflected assumes the named executive remains
totally disabled until age 65 and represents the full present value of the
monthly benefit payable until age 65.
/(7)/Messrs. Dahl and Becker did not have change-in control agreements in
place. However, pursuant to the terms of their equity awards unvested
stock options and restricted stock units would have become immediately
payable upon a change-in control.
RISK MANAGEMENT AND COMPENSATION
Allstate management has reviewed its compensation policies and practices and
believes that they are appropriately structured, that they are consistent with
its key operating priority of keeping Allstate financially strong, and that
they avoid providing incentives for employees to engage in unnecessary and
excessive risk taking. Allstate believes that executive compensation has to be
examined in the larger context of an effective risk management framework and
strong internal controls. The Allstate Board and its Audit Committee both play
an important role in risk management oversight, including reviewing how
management measures, evaluates, and manages the corporation's exposure to risks
posed by a wide variety of events and conditions. In addition, the Compensation
and Succession Committee of Allstate employs an independent executive
compensation consultant each year to assess Allstate's executive pay levels,
practices, and overall program design.
A review and assessment of potential compensation-related risks was
conducted by Allstate management and reviewed by the Chief Risk Officer.
Performance related incentive plans were analyzed using a process developed in
conjunction with our independent executive compensation consultant.
The 2010 risk assessment specifically noted that our compensation programs:
. provide a balanced mix of cash and equity through annual and long-term
incentives to align with short-term and long-term business goals.
. utilize a full range of performance measures that Allstate believes
correlate to long-term Allstate shareholder value creation.
84
. incorporate strong governance practices, including paying cash incentive
awards only after a review of executive and corporate performance.
. enable the use of negative discretion to adjust annual incentive
compensation payments when formulaic payouts are not warranted due to
other circumstances.
Furthermore, to ensure Allstate's compensation programs do not motivate
imprudent risk taking, awards to Allstate executive officers, including
Mr. Winter, made after May 19, 2009, under the 2009 Equity Incentive Plan and
awards made under the Annual Executive Incentive Plan are subject to clawback
in the event of certain financial restatements.
PERFORMANCE MEASURES
Information regarding our performance measures is disclosed in the limited
context of Allstate's annual and long-term cash incentive awards and should not
be understood to be statements of management's expectations or estimates of
results or other guidance. We specifically caution investors not to apply these
statements to other contexts.
The following are descriptions of the performance measures used for
Allstate's annual cash incentive awards for 2010 and its long-term cash
incentive awards for the 2008-2010 cycle which may be applied to compensation
of Lincoln Benefit's named executives. These measures are not GAAP measures.
They were developed uniquely for incentive compensation purposes and are not
reported items in our financial statements. Some of these measures use non-GAAP
measures and operating measures. The Committee has approved the use of non-GAAP
and operating measures when appropriate to drive executive focus on particular
strategic, operational, or financial factors or to exclude factors over which
our executives have little influence or control, such as capital market
conditions.
ANNUAL CASH INCENTIVE AWARDS FOR 2010
OPERATING INCOME: This measure is used to assess financial performance. This
measure is equal to net income adjusted to exclude the after tax effects of the
items listed below:
. Realized capital gains and losses (which includes the related effect on
the amortization of deferred acquisition and deferred sales inducement
costs) except for periodic settlements and accruals on certain non-hedge
derivative instruments.
. Gains and losses on disposed operations.
. Adjustments for other significant non-recurring, infrequent, or unusual
items, when (a) the nature of the charge or gain is such that it is
reasonably unlikely to recur within two years or (b) there has been no
similar charge or gain within the prior two years.
CORPORATE MEASURE
ADJUSTED OPERATING INCOME PER DILUTED SHARE: This measure is used to assess
financial performance. The measure is equal to net income adjusted to exclude
the after-tax effects of the items listed below, divided by the weighted
average shares outstanding on a diluted basis:
. Realized capital gains and losses (which includes the related effect on
the amortization of deferred acquisition and deferred sales inducement
costs) except for periodic settlements and accruals on certain non-hedge
derivative instruments.
. Gains and losses on disposed operations.
. Adjustments for other significant non-recurring, infrequent, or unusual
items, when (a) the nature of the charge or gain is such that it is
reasonably unlikely to recur within two years or (b) there has been no
similar charge or gain within the prior two years.
85
. Restructuring and related charges.
. Effects of acquiring businesses.
. Negative operating results of sold businesses.
. Underwriting results of the Discontinued Lines and Coverages segment.
. Any settlement, awards, or claims paid as a result of lawsuits and other
proceedings brought against Allstate subsidiaries regarding the scope
and nature of coverage provided under insurance policies issued by such
companies.
ALLSTATE FINANCIAL MEASURES
ADJUSTED OPERATING INCOME: This is a measure Allstate management uses to
assess the profitability of the business. The Allstate Financial segment
measure, operating income, is adjusted to exclude the after tax effects of
restructuring and related charges and the potential amount by which 2010
guaranty fund assessments related to insured solvencies exceed $6 million. For
disclosure of the Allstate Financial segment measure see footnote 18 to
Allstate's audited financial statements.
ADJUSTED OPERATING RETURN ON EQUITY: This is a measure Allstate management
uses to assess profitability and capital efficiency. This measure is calculated
using adjusted operating income, as defined above, as the numerator, and
Allstate Financial's adjusted average subsidiary shareholder's equity as the
denominator. Adjusted subsidiary shareholder's equity is the sum of
subsidiaries' shareholder's equity for Allstate Life Insurance Company,
Allstate Bank, a proportionate share of American Heritage Life Investment
Corporation and certain other minor entities and excludes the effect of
unrealized net capital gains and losses, net of tax and deferred acquisition
costs. The average adjusted shareholder's equity is calculated by dividing the
sum of Allstate Financial's adjusted shareholder's equity at year-end 2009 and
at the end of each quarter of 2010 by five.
ALLSTATE EXCLUSIVE AGENCY PROPRIETARY AND AWD WEIGHTED SALES: This operating
measure is used to quantify the current year sales of financial products
through Allstate's Exclusive Agency proprietary distribution channel, including
agencies and direct, and the Allstate Workplace Division. The measure is
calculated by applying a percentage or factor against the premium or deposits
of life insurance, annuities and Allstate Workplace Division products that vary
based on the relative expected profitability of the specific product. For
non-Allstate Workplace Division proprietary products sold through Allstate
Financial Services channel, the percentage or factors are consistent with those
used for production credits by Allstate Protection.
ALLSTATE FINANCIAL PORTFOLIO RELATIVE TOTAL RETURN:
PORTFOLIO RELATIVE TOTAL RETURN: Management uses the three following
measures to assess the value of active portfolio management relative to the
total return of a market based benchmark. The measure is calculated as the
difference, in basis points, of the specific portfolio total return over a
designated benchmark. Total return is principally determined using industry
standards and the same sources used in preparing the financial statements to
determine fair value. (See footnotes to our audited financial statements for
our methodologies for estimating the fair value of our investments.) In
general, total return represents the annualized increase or decrease, expressed
as a percentage, in the value of the portfolio. Time weighted returns are
utilized. The designated benchmark is a composite of pre-determined, customized
indices which reflect the investment risk parameters established in investment
policies by the boards of the relevant subsidiaries, weighted in proportion to
our investment plan, in accordance with our investment policy. The specific
measures and investments included are listed below:
. PROPERTY LIABILITY PORTFOLIO RELATIVE TOTAL RETURN: Total return for
Property-liability investments and Kennett investments.
. ALLSTATE FINANCIAL PORTFOLIO RELATIVE TOTAL RETURN: Total return for
Allstate Financial investments.
86
. ALLSTATE PENSION PLANS PORTFOLIO RELATIVE TOTAL RETURN: Total return for
the Allstate Retirement Plan and Agents Pension Plan investments.
LONG-TERM CASH INCENTIVE AWARDS
AVERAGE ADJUSTED RETURN ON EQUITY RELATIVE TO PEERS: This measure is used to
assess Allstate's financial performance against its peers. It is calculated as
Allstate's ranked position relative to the insurance company peer group based
upon three-year average adjusted return on equity, calculated on the same basis
for Allstate and each of the peer insurance companies. Three-year average
adjusted return on equity is the sum of the annual adjusted return on equity
for each of the three years in the cycle divided by three. The annual adjusted
return on equity is calculated as the ratio of net income divided by the
average of shareholders' equity at the beginning and at the end of the year
after excluding the component of accumulated other comprehensive income for
unrealized net capital gains and losses.
ALLSTATE FINANCIAL RETURN ON TOTAL CAPITAL: This is a measure management
uses to measure the efficiency of capital utilized in the business. Three-year
Allstate Financial return on total capital is the sum of the annual adjusted
return on subsidiaries' shareholder's equity for each of the three years
divided by three. The annual adjusted return on subsidiaries' shareholder's
equity is the Allstate Financial measure, net income, divided by the average
subsidiaries' shareholder's equity at the beginning and at the end of the year.
The subsidiaries' shareholder's equity is the sum of the subsidiaries'
shareholder's equity for Allstate Life Insurance Company, Allstate Bank,
American Heritage Life Investment Corporation, and certain other minor
entities, adjusted to exclude the loan protection business and excluding the
component of accumulated other comprehensive income for unrealized net capital
gains. (See note 18 to Allstate's audited financial statements for Allstate
Financial net income.)
ALLSTATE PROTECTION GROWTH IN POLICIES IN FORCE OVER THREE-YEAR CYCLE: This
is a measure used by management to assess growth in the number of policies in
force, which is a driver of premiums written. The measure is calculated as the
sum of the percent increase in each of the three years in the total number of
policies in force at the end of the year over the beginning of the year. The
measure excludes property insurance, Allstate Motor Club, and the loan
protection business and includes Allstate Canada.
ITEM 11(M).SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT.
SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS.
The following table shows the number of Lincoln Benefit shares owned by any
beneficial owner who owns more than five percent of any class of Lincoln
Benefit's voting securities.
NAME AND ADDRESS OF AMOUNT AND NATURE OF PERCENT OF
TITLE OF CLASS BENEFICIAL OWNER BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP CLASS
(A) (B) (C) (D)
-------------- -------------------------------- ------------------------------- ----------
Capital Stock Allstate Life Insurance Company 100,000 100%
3100 Sanders Road,
Northbrook, IL 60062
N/A Allstate Insurance Company Indirect voting and investment N/A
2775 Sanders Road, power of shares owned by
Northbrook, IL 60062 Allstate Life Insurance
Company
N/A The Allstate Corporation Indirect voting and investment N/A
2775 Sanders Road, power of shares owned by
Northbrook, IL 60062 Allstate Life Insurance
Company
87
SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
The following table shows the number of shares of Allstate common stock
beneficially owned by each director and named executive officer of Lincoln
Benefit individually, and by all executive officers and directors of Lincoln
Benefit as a group. Shares reported as beneficially owned include shares held
indirectly through the Allstate 401(k) Savings Plan and other shares held
indirectly, as well as shares subject to stock options exercisable on or prior
to May 9, 2011 and restricted stock units for which restrictions expire on or
prior to May 9, 2011. The percentage of Allstate shares of common stock
beneficially owned by any Lincoln Benefit director, named executive officer or
by all directors and executive officers of Lincoln Benefit as a group does not
exceed 1%. The following share amounts are as of March 10, 2011. As of
March 10, 2010, none of these shares were pledged as security.
COMMON STOCK SUBJECT TO
OPTIONS EXERCISABLE AND
RESTRICTED STOCK UNITS
FOR WHICH RESTRICTIONS
EXPIRE ON OR PRIOR
AMOUNT AND NATURE OF TO MAY 9, 2011 -
BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP OF INCLUDED IN
ALLSTATE COMMON STOCK COLUMN (A)
NAME OF BENEFICIAL OWNER (A) (B)
------------------------ ------------------------ ------------------------
Anurag Chandra........... 0 0
Robert K. Becker......... 17,535 12,162
Lawrence W. Dahl......... 34,755 33,178
Matthew S. Easley........ 95,825 89,126
Susan L. Lees............ 39,344 27,732
John C. Pintozzi......... 102,679 97,514
Matthew E. Winter........ 8539 8385
ALL DIRECTORS AND
EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AS
A GROUP................ 281,142 255,935
88
ITEM 11(N)TRANSACTIONS WITH RELATED PERSONS, PROMOTERS AND CERTAIN CONTROL
PERSONS.
TRANSACTIONS WITH RELATED PERSONS.
This table describes certain intercompany agreements involving Lincoln
Benefit and the following companies:
. Allstate Life Insurance Company ("ALIC"), the direct parent of Lincoln
Benefit;
. Allstate Insurance Company ("AIC"), an indirect parent of Lincoln
Benefit; and
. The Allstate Corporation ("AllCorp"), the ultimate indirect parent of
Lincoln Benefit.
APPROXIMATE DOLLAR VALUE
OF THE AMOUNT INVOLVED IN RELATED PERSON(S) INVOLVED IN THE TRANSACTION/1/ AND
THE TRANSACTION, PER FISCAL THE APPROXIMATE DOLLAR VALUE OF THE AMOUNT OF THE
TRANSACTION DESCRIPTION YEAR RELATED PERSON'S INTEREST IN THE TRANSACTION ($)
----------------------- ----------------------- ---------------------------------------------------
($) ALIC AIC ALLCORP
Investment Management Agreement 2008 131,668,584 68,941,225/2/ 51,404,171 677,981
among Allstate Investments, LLC,
Allstate Insurance Company, The 2009 142,073,012 76,392,634/2/ 54,248,353 1,151,990
Allstate Corporation and certain
affiliates effective January 1, 2007. 2010 130,793,008 73,282,918/2/ 47,445,127 687,957
Tax Sharing Agreement among The 2008 465,439,826/3/ (109,322,083) 633,316,282 (121,960,368)
Allstate Corporation and certain
affiliates dated as of November 12, 2009 (1,173,212,154)/3/ (534,572,879) (467,570,173) (121,813,486)
1996, as supplemented by Supplemental
Intercompany Tax Sharing Agreement 2010 (113,770,599)/3/ (621,234,096) 647,559,256 (146,676,325)
between Allstate Life Insurance
Company and Lincoln Benefit Life
Company effective December 21, 2000.
Cash Management Services Master 2008 1,338,376/4/ 198,098/5/ 816,143/5/ N/A
Agreement between Allstate Insurance
Company, Allstate Bank (aka Allstate 2009 1,527,072/4/ 158,312/5/ 1,052,781/5/
Federal Savings Bank), and certain
affiliates dated March 16, 1999, as 2010 967,620/4/ 76,166/5/ 694,117/5/
amended by Amendment No.1 effective
January 5, 2001, and Amendment No. 2
entered into November 8, 2002, between
Allstate Insurance Company, Allstate
Bank and Allstate Motor Club, Inc., and
as supplemented by the Premium
Depository Service Supplement dated as
of September 30, 2005, the Variable
Annuity Service Supplement dated
November 10, 2005, and the Sweep
Agreement Service Supplement dated as
of October 11, 2006.
--------
/1/ Each identified Related Person is a Party to the transaction.
/2/ Gross amount of expense received under the transaction.
/3/ Total amounts paid to Internal Revenue Service.
/4/ Each identified Related Person is a Party to the transaction.
/5/ Total fees collected for all bank accounts covered under the transaction.
89
APPROXIMATE DOLLAR VALUE
OF THE AMOUNT INVOLVED IN RELATED PERSON(S) INVOLVED IN THE TRANSACTION/1/ AND
THE TRANSACTION, PER FISCAL THE APPROXIMATE DOLLAR VALUE OF THE AMOUNT OF THE
TRANSACTION DESCRIPTION YEAR RELATED PERSON'S INTEREST IN THE TRANSACTION ($)
----------------------- ------------------------ -------------------------------------------------
($) ALIC AIC ALLCORP
Amended and Restated Service and 2008 3,295,180,640 215,640,945/2/ 2,186,281,461/2/ 5,351,262/2/
Expense Agreement between Allstate
Insurance Company, The Allstate 2009 3,451,765,246 180,154,068/2/ 1,937,571,496/2/ 2,510,800/2/
Corporation and certain affiliates effective
January 1, 2004, as amended by 2010 3,619,106,706 175,950,701/2/ 1,823,391,816/2/ 4,191,150/2/
Amendment No. 1 effective January 1,
2009, and as supplemented by New York
Insurer Supplement to Amended and
Restated Service and Expense Agreement
between Allstate Insurance Company, The
Allstate Corporation, Allstate Life
Insurance Company of New York and
Intramerica Life Insurance Company,
effective March 5, 2005.
Reinsurance Agreements between Lincoln 2008 766,582,944/6/ 766,582,944/6/ N/A N/A
Benefit Life Company and Allstate Life
Insurance Company: Coinsurance 2009 873,759,209/6/ 873,759,209/6/
Agreement effective December 31, 2001;
Modified Coinsurance Agreement 2010 888,764,276/6/ 888,764,276/6/
effective December 31, 2001; Modified
Coinsurance Agreement effective
December 31, 2001.
Intercompany Loan Agreement among 2008 400,040,660 50,014,792/7/ 1,732,736 400,040,660
The Allstate Corporation, Allstate Life
Insurance Company, Lincoln Benefit Life 2009 86,111,674 0/8/ 86,111,674 86,111,674
Company and other certain subsidiaries of
The Allstate Corporation dated 2010 149,971,764 149,971,764 149,971,764 149,971,764
February 1, 1996.
Agreement for the Settlement of State and 2008 2,089,067 356,331/9/ 1,732,736 N/A
Local Tax Credits among Allstate
Insurance Company and certain affiliates 2009 941,379 193,504/9/ 441,024
effective January 1, 2007.
2010 835,435 236,540/9/ 474,132
--------
/1/ Each identified Related Person is a Party to the transaction.
/2/ Gross amount of expense received under the transaction.
/6/ Net reinsurance income.
/7/ Amounts loaned and repaid.
/8/ No loans outstanding at year end.
/9/ Value of transfer transactions.
90
REVIEW AND APPROVAL OF INTERCOMPANY AGREEMENTS
All intercompany agreements to which Lincoln Benefit is a party are approved
by Lincoln Benefit's Board of Directors as well as by the board of any other
affiliate of The Allstate Corporation which is a party to the agreement.
Intercompany agreements are also submitted for approval to the Nebraska
Department of Insurance, Lincoln Benefit's domestic regulator, and any
additional states in which Lincoln Benefit might be commercially domiciled
pursuant to the applicable state's insurance holding company systems act. This
process is documented in an internal procedure that captures the review and
approval process of all intercompany agreements. All approvals are maintained
in Lincoln Benefit's corporate records.
While there is no formal process for the review and approval of related
person transactions between unaffiliated entities specific to Lincoln Benefit,
all directors and executive officers of Lincoln Benefit are subject to the
Allstate Code of Ethics ("Code"). The Code includes a written conflict of
interest policy that was adopted by the Board of Directors of the Allstate
Corporation, the ultimate parent company of Lincoln Benefit. Any potential
relationship or activity that could impair independent thinking and judgment,
including holding a financial interest in a business venture that is similar to
Allstate, or in a business that has a relationship with Allstate, must be
disclosed to Human Resources. Human Resources will work with representatives
from the Law Department, including Enterprise Business Conduct, to determine
whether an actual conflict of interest exists. Each director and executive
officer must sign a Code of Ethics certification annually.
INDEPENDENCE STANDARDS FOR DIRECTORS
Although not subject to the independence standards of the New York Stock
Exchange, for purposes of this S-1 registration statement, Lincoln Benefit has
applied the independence standards required for listed companies of the New
York Stock Exchange to the Board of Directors. Applying these standards,
Lincoln Benefit has been determined that none of the directors are considered
to be independent.
COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION
The Board of Directors of Lincoln Benefit does not have a compensation
committee. All compensation decisions are made by The Allstate Corporation, as
the ultimate parent company of Lincoln Benefit. No executive officer of Lincoln
Benefit served as a member of the compensation committee of another entity for
which any executive officer served as a director for Lincoln Benefit.
OTHER INFORMATION
A section entitled "Experts" is added to your prospectus as follows:
EXPERTS
The financial statements and the related financial statement schedules
included herein have been audited by Deloitte & Touche LLP, an independent
registered public accounting firm, as stated in their report appearing herein.
Such financial statements and financial statement schedules are included in
reliance upon the report of such firm given upon their authority as experts in
accounting and auditing.
PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITER
Contingent on regulatory approval, ALFS, Inc ("ALFS") is expected to merge
into Allstate Distributors, LLC ("ADLLC"), effective April 29, 2011. At that
time, ALFS will assign its rights and delegate its duties as principal
underwriter to ADLLC. This change will have no effect on Lincoln Benefit's
obligations to you under your Contract. The section of your prospectus
concerning the principal underwriter is amended accordingly.
Contingent on regulatory approval, ADLLC serves as distributor of the
securities registered herein. The securities offered herein are sold on a
continuous basis, and there is no specific end date for the offering.
91
ADLLC, an affiliate of Lincoln Benefit, is a wholly owned subsidiary of
Allstate Life Insurance Company. ADLLC is a registered broker dealer under the
Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and is a member of the
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. ADLLC is not required to sell any
specific number or dollar amount of securities, but will use its best efforts
to sell the securities offered.
ADMINISTRATION
We have primary responsibility for all administration of the Contracts and
the Variable Account. We entered into an administrative services agreement with
The Prudential Insurance Company of America ("PICA") whereby, PICA or an
affiliate provides administrative services to the Variable Account and the
Contracts on our behalf. In addition, PICA entered into a master services
agreement with se/2/, inc., of 5801 SW 6th Avenue, Topeka, Kansas 66636,
whereby se/2/, inc. provides certain business process outsourcing services with
respect to the Contracts. se/2/, inc. may engage other service providers to
provide certain administrative functions. These service providers may change
over time, and as of December 31, 2010, consisted of the following: Keane BPO,
LLC (administrative services) located at 625 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 1100,
Chicago, IL 60611; RR Donnelly Global Investment Markets (compliance printing
and mailing) located at 111 South Wacker Drive, Chicago, IL 60606; Jayhawk File
Express, LLC (file storage and document destruction) located at 601 E. 5th
Street, Topeka, KS 66601-2596; Co-Sentry.net, LLC (back-up printing and
disaster recovery) located at 9394 West Dodge Rd, Suite 100, Omaha, NE 68114;
Convey Compliance Systems, Inc. (withholding calculations and tax statement
mailing) located at 3650 Annapolis Lane, Suite 190, Plymouth, MN 55447;
Spangler Graphics, LLC (compliance mailings) located at 29305 44th Street,
Kansas City, KS 66106; Veritas Document Solutions, LLC (compliance mailings)
located at 913 Commerce Ct, Buffalo Grove, IL 60089; Records Center of Topeka,
a division of Underground Vaults & Storage, Inc. (back-up tapes storage)
located at 1540 NW Gage Blvd. #6, Topeka, KS 66618; EquiSearch Services, Inc.
(lost shareholder search) located at 11 Martime Avenue, Suite 665, White
Plains, NY 10606; ZixCorp Systems, Inc. (email encryption) located at 2711 N.
Haskell Ave., Suite 2300, Dallas, TX 75204; DST Systems, Inc. (FAN mail,
positions, prices) located at 333 West 11 Street, 5th Floor, Kansas City, MO
64105.
In administering the Contracts, the following services are provided, among
others:
. maintenance of Contract Owner records;
. Contract Owner services;
. calculation of unit values;
. maintenance of the Variable Account; and
. preparation of Contract Owner reports.
92
CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY PROSPECTUS
FLEXIBLE PREMIUM
INDIVIDUAL DEFERRED VARIABLE ANNUITY CONTRACTS
ISSUED BY
LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE COMPANY
IN CONNECTION WITH
LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE VARIABLE ANNUITY ACCOUNT
STREET ADDRESS: 5801 SW 6TH AVE., TOPEKA, KS 66606-0001
MAILING ADDRESS: P.O. BOX 758561, TOPEKA, KS 66675-8566
TELEPHONE NUMBER: 1-800-457-7617
FAX NUMBER: 1-785-228-4584
The Contract is a deferred annuity contract designed to aid you in long-term
financial planning. You may purchase it on either a tax qualified or non-tax
qualified basis. LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE NO LONGER OFFERS THIS CONTRACT. IF YOU
HAVE ALREADY PURCHASED THE CONTRACT YOU MAY CONTINUE TO MAKE PURCHASE PAYMENTS
ACCORDING TO THE CONTRACT.
Because this is a flexible premium annuity contract, you may pay multiple
premiums. We allocate your premium to the investment options under the Contract
and our Fixed Account in the proportions that you choose. The Contract
currently offers 49 investment options, each of which is a Sub-Account of the
Lincoln Benefit Life Variable Annuity Account ("Separate Account"). Each
Sub-Account invests exclusively in shares of Portfolios in one of the following
underlying Funds:
AIM VARIABLE INSURANCE FUNDS (INVESCO MFS(R) VARIABLE INSURANCE TRUST/(SM)
VARIABLE INSURANCE FUNDS) (SERIES I) /(INITIAL CLASS)
THE ALGER PORTFOLIOS (CLASS O) OPPENHEIMER VARIABLE ACCOUNT FUNDS
(SERVICE SHARES)
DWS VARIABLE SERIES I (CLASS A)
PIMCO VARIABLE INSURANCE TRUST
DWS VARIABLE SERIES II (CLASS A) (ADMINISTRATIVE SHARES)
FEDERATED INSURANCE SERIES PUTNAM VARIABLE TRUST (CLASS IB)
FIDELITY(R) VARIABLE INSURANCE T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY SERIES, INC. (I)
PRODUCTS (INITIAL CLASS)
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL SERIES,
JANUS ASPEN SERIES (INSTITUTIONAL INC. (I)
SHARES AND SERVICE SHARES)
WELLS FARGO VARIABLE TRUST FUNDS
LEGG MASON PARTNERS VARIABLE EQUITY
TRUST (CLASS I)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION HAS NOT APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED THESE
SECURITIES NOR HAS IT PASSED ON THE ACCURACY OR THE ADEQUACY OF THIS
PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
THE DATE OF THIS PROSPECTUS IS MAY 1, 2011.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some of the portfolios described in this prospectus may not be available in
your Contract. We may make available other investment options in the future.
You may not purchase a Contract if either you or the Annuitant are older than
90 years before we receive your application.
Your Contract Value will vary daily as a function of the investment performance
of the Sub-Accounts to which you have allocated Purchase Payments and any
interest credited to the Fixed Account. We do not guarantee any minimum
Contract Value for amounts allocated to the Sub-Accounts. Benefits provided by
this Contract, when based on the Fixed Account, are subject to a Market Value
Adjustment, which may result in an upwards or downwards adjustment in
withdrawal benefits, death benefits, settlement values, transfers to the
Sub-Accounts.
In certain states the Contract may be offered as a group contract with
individual ownership represented by Certificates. The discussion of Contracts
in this prospectus applies equally to Certificates under group contracts,
unless the content specifies otherwise.
This prospectus sets forth the information you ought to know about the
Contract. You should read it before investing and keep it for future reference.
1 PROSPECTUS
We have filed a Statement of Additional Information with the Securities and
Exchange Commission ("SEC"). The current Statement of Additional Information is
dated May 1, 2011. The information in the Statement of Additional Information
is incorporated by reference in this prospectus. You can obtain a free copy by
writing us or calling us at the telephone number given above. The Table of
Contents of the Statement of Additional Information appears on page 46 of this
prospectus.
At least once each year we will send you an annual statement. The annual
statement details values and specific information for your Contract. It does
not contain our financial statements. Our financial statements are set forth in
the Statement of Additional Information. Lincoln Benefit will file annual and
quarterly reports and other information with the SEC. You may read and copy any
reports, statements or other information we file at the SEC's public reference
room in Washington, D.C. You can obtain copies of these documents by writing to
the SEC and paying a duplicating fee. Please call the SEC at 1-202-551-8090 for
further information as to the operation of the public reference room. Our SEC
filings are also available to the public on the SEC Internet site
(http://www.sec.gov).
PLEASE READ THIS PROSPECTUS CAREFULLY AND RETAIN IT FOR YOUR FUTURE REFERENCE.
2 PROSPECTUS
TABLE OF CONTENTS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DEFINITIONS 4
--------------------------------------------------------------------
FEE TABLES 5
--------------------------------------------------------------------
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ABOUT YOUR CONTRACT 7
--------------------------------------------------------------------
CONDENSED FINANCIAL INFORMATION 11
--------------------------------------------------------------------
DESCRIPTION OF THE CONTRACTS 11
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Summary 11
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Contract Owner 11
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Annuitant 11
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Modification of the Contract 11
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Assignment 11
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Free Look Period 11
--------------------------------------------------------------------
PURCHASES AND CONTRACT VALUE 12
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Minimum Purchase Payment 12
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Automatic Payment Plan 12
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Allocation of Purchase Payments 12
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Contract Value 12
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Separate Account Accumulation Unit Value 13
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Transfer During Accumulation Period 13
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Market Timing & Excessive Trading 13
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Trading Limitations 14
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Short Term Trading Fees 14
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Automatic Dollar Cost Averaging Program 15
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Portfolio Rebalancing 15
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THE INVESTMENT AND FIXED ACCOUNT OPTIONS 16
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Separate Account Investments 16
--------------------------------------------------------------------
The Portfolios 16
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Voting Rights 18
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Additions, Deletions, and Substitutions of Securities 19
--------------------------------------------------------------------
The Fixed Account 19
--------------------------------------------------------------------
General 19
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account Option 19
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Market Value Adjustment 21
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Dollar Cost Averaging Fixed Account Option 21
--------------------------------------------------------------------
ANNUITY BENEFITS 21
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Annuity Date 21
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Annuity Options 22
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Other Options 22
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Annuity Payments: General 22
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Variable Annuity Payments 23
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Fixed Annuity Payments 23
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Transfers During the Annuity Period 23
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Death Benefit During Annuity Period 23
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Certain Employee Benefit Plans 24
-------------------------------------------------------------
OTHER CONTRACT BENEFITS 24
-------------------------------------------------------------
Death Benefit: General 24
-------------------------------------------------------------
Due Proof of Death 24
-------------------------------------------------------------
Death Benefit Payments 24
-------------------------------------------------------------
Beneficiary 28
-------------------------------------------------------------
Contract Loans for 403(b) Contracts 28
-------------------------------------------------------------
Withdrawals (Redemptions) 29
-------------------------------------------------------------
Written Request and Forms in Good Order 30
-------------------------------------------------------------
Systematic Withdrawal Program 30
-------------------------------------------------------------
ERISA Plans 31
-------------------------------------------------------------
Minimum Contract Value 31
-------------------------------------------------------------
CONTRACT CHARGES 31
-------------------------------------------------------------
Mortality and Expense Risk Charge 31
-------------------------------------------------------------
Administrative Charges 31
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Contract Maintenance Charge 31
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Administrative Expense Charge 32
-------------------------------------------------------------
Transfer Fee 32
-------------------------------------------------------------
Sales Charges 32
-------------------------------------------------------------
Premium Taxes 34
-------------------------------------------------------------
Deduction for Separate Account Income Taxes 34
-------------------------------------------------------------
Other Expenses 34
-------------------------------------------------------------
TAXES 35
-------------------------------------------------------------
Taxation of Lincoln Benefit Life Company 35
-------------------------------------------------------------
Taxation of Variable Annuities in General 35
-------------------------------------------------------------
Income Tax Withholding 38
-------------------------------------------------------------
Tax Qualified Contracts 38
-------------------------------------------------------------
DESCRIPTION OF LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE COMPANY AND THE
SEPARATE ACCOUNT 43
-------------------------------------------------------------
Lincoln Benefit Life Company 43
-------------------------------------------------------------
Separate Account 43
-------------------------------------------------------------
State Regulation of Lincoln Benefit 43
-------------------------------------------------------------
Financial Statements 44
-------------------------------------------------------------
ADMINISTRATION 44
-------------------------------------------------------------
DISTRIBUTION OF CONTRACTS 44
-------------------------------------------------------------
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS 45
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LEGAL MATTERS 45
-------------------------------------------------------------
ABOUT LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE COMPANY 45
-------------------------------------------------------------
REGISTRATION STATEMENT 45
-------------------------------------------------------------
TABLE OF CONTENTS OF STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION 46
-------------------------------------------------------------
APPENDIX A ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUES 47
-------------------------------------------------------------
APPENDIX B ILLUSTRATION OF A MARKET VALUE ADJUSTMENT 73
-------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THIS PROSPECTUS DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFERING IN ANY JURISDICTION IN WHICH
SUCH OFFERING MAY NOT LAWFULLY BE MADE. WE DO NOT AUTHORIZE ANYONE TO PROVIDE
ANY INFORMATION OR REPRESENTATIONS REGARDING THE OFFERING DESCRIBED IN THIS
PROSPECTUS OTHER THAN AS CONTAINED IN THIS PROSPECTUS.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3 PROSPECTUS
DEFINITIONS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Please refer to this list for the meaning of the following terms:
ACCUMULATION PERIOD - The period, beginning on the Issue Date, during which
Contract Value builds up under Your Contract.
ACCUMULATION UNIT - A unit of measurement which we use to calculate Contract
Value.
ANNUITANT - The living person on whose life the annuity benefits under a
Contract are based.
ANNUITIZATION - The process to begin annuity payments under the Contract.
ANNUITIZED VALUE - The Contract Value adjusted by any applicable Market Value
Adjustment and less any applicable taxes.
ANNUITY DATE - The date on which annuity payments are scheduled to begin.
ANNUITY PERIOD - The period during which annuity payments are paid. The Annuity
Period begins on the Annuity Date.
ANNUITY UNIT - A unit of measurement which we use to calculate the amount of
Variable Annuity payments.
BENEFICIARY(IES) - The person(s) designated to receive any death benefits under
the Contract.
COMPANY ("WE," "US," "OUR," "LINCOLN BENEFIT") - Lincoln Benefit Life Company.
CONTRACT ANNIVERSARY - Each anniversary of the Issue Date.
CONTRACT OWNER ("YOU," "YOUR") - The person(s) having the privileges of
ownership defined in the Contract. If Your Contract is issued as part of a
retirement plan, Your ownership privileges may be modified by the plan.
CONTRACT VALUE - The sum of the values of Your investment in the Sub-Accounts
of the Separate Account and the Fixed Account.
CONTRACT YEAR - Each twelve-month period beginning on the Issue Date and each
Contract Anniversary.
CONTRIBUTION YEAR - Each twelve-month period beginning on the date a Purchase
Payment is allocated to a Sub-Account, or each anniversary of that date.
FIXED ACCOUNT - The portion of the Contract Value allocated to Our general
account.
FIXED ANNUITY - A series of annuity payments that are fixed in amount.
GUARANTEE PERIODS - A period of years for which we have guaranteed a specific
effective annual interest rate on an amount allocated to the Fixed Account.
ISSUE DATE - The date when the Contract becomes effective.
LATEST ANNUITY DATE - The latest date by which you must begin annuity payments
under the Contract.
LOAN ACCOUNT - An account established for amounts transferred from the
Sub-Accounts or the Fixed Account as security for outstanding Contract loans.
MARKET VALUE ADJUSTMENT - An amount added to or subtracted from certain
transactions involving Your interest in the Fixed Account, to reflect the
impact of changing interest rates.
NET INVESTMENT FACTOR - The factor used to determine the value of an
Accumulation Unit and Annuity Unit in any Valuation Period. We determine the
Net Investment Factor separately for each Sub-Account.
NON-QUALIFIED PLAN - A retirement plan which does not receive special tax
treatment under Sections 401, 403(b), 408, 408A or 457 of the Tax Code.
PORTFOLIO(S) - The underlying funds in which the Sub- Accounts invest. Each
Portfolio is an investment company registered with the SEC or a separate
investment series of a registered investment company.
PURCHASE PAYMENTS - Amounts paid to Us as premium for the Contract by you or on
Your behalf.
QUALIFIED PLAN - A retirement plan which receives special tax treatment under
Sections 401, 403(b), 408 or 408A of the Tax Code or a deferred compensation
plan for a state and local government or another tax exempt organization under
Section 457 of the Tax Code.
SEPARATE ACCOUNT - The Lincoln Benefit Life Variable Annuity Account, which is
a segregated investment account of the Company.
SUB-ACCOUNT - A subdivision of the Separate Account, which invests wholly in
shares of one of the Portfolios.
SURRENDER VALUE - The amount paid upon complete surrender of the Contract,
equal to the Contract Value, less any applicable premium taxes, Withdrawal
Charge, and the contract maintenance charge and increased or decreased by any
Market Value Adjustment.
TAX CODE - The Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.
TREASURY RATE - The U.S. Treasury Note Constant Maturity Yield for the
preceding week as reported in Federal Reserve Bulletin Release H.15.
VALUATION DATE - Each day the New York Stock Exchange is open for business.
VALUATION PERIOD - The period of time over which we determine the change in the
value of the Sub-Accounts in order to price Accumulation Units and Annuity
Units. Each Valuation Period begins at the close of normal trading on the New
York Stock Exchange ("NYSE") currently 4:00 p.m. Eastern time on each Valuation
Date and ends at the close of the NYSE on the next Valuation Date.
VARIABLE ANNUITY - A series of annuity payments that vary in amount based on
changes in the value of the Sub- Accounts to which Your Contract Value has been
allocated.
WITHDRAWAL CHARGE - The contingent deferred sales charge that may be required
upon some withdrawals.
4 PROSPECTUS
FEE TABLES
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THE FOLLOWING TABLES DESCRIBE THE FEES AND EXPENSES THAT YOU WILL PAY WHEN
BUYING, OWNING, AND SURRENDERING THE CONTRACT. THE FIRST TABLE DESCRIBES THE
FEES AND EXPENSES THAT YOU WILL PAY AT THE TIME THAT YOU BUY THE CONTRACT,
SURRENDER THE CONTRACT, OR TRANSFER CASH VALUE BETWEEN INVESTMENT OPTIONS.
STATE PREMIUM TAXES MAY ALSO BE DEDUCTED.
Maximum Contingent Deferred Sales Charge - Withdrawal Charge (as a percentage
of Purchase Payments) - 7%
CONTRIBUTION YEAR APPLICABLE CHARGE
1-2 7%
3-4 6%
5 5%
6 4%
7 3%
8 + 0%
TRANSFER FEE (Applies solely to the second and subsequent transfers
within a calendar month. We are currently waiving the transfer fee) $ 10.00
THE NEXT TABLE DESCRIBES THE FEES AND EXPENSES THAT YOU WILL PAY PERIODICALLY
DURING THE TIME THAT YOU OWN THE CONTRACT, NOT INCLUDING PORTFOLIO FEES AND
EXPENSES.
Annual Contract Maintenance Charge $35.00
Separate Account Annual Expenses (as a percentage of daily net asset
value deducted from each of the Sub-Accounts of the Separate Account)
Base Contract (without optional riders)
Mortality and Expense Risk Charge 1.15%
Administrative Expense Charge 0.10%
------
Total Separate Account Annual Expenses 1.25%
Base Contract (with Enhanced Death Benefit Rider)
Mortality and Expense Risk Charge 1.35%
Administrative Expense Charge 0.10%
------
Total Separate Account Annual Expenses 1.45%
Base Contract (with Enhanced Income Benefit Rider)
Mortality and Expense Risk Charge 1.50%
Administrative Expense Charge 0.10%
------
Total Separate Account Annual Expenses 1.60%
Base Contract (with Enhanced Death and Income Benefit Riders)
Mortality and Expense Risk Charge 1.55%
Administrative Expense Charge 0.10%
------
Total Separate Account Annual Expenses 1.65%
Base Contract (with Enhanced Death and Income Benefit Riders II)
Mortality and Expense Risk Charge 1.70%
Administrative Expense Charge 0.10%
------
Total Separate Account Annual Expenses 1.80%
THE NEXT TABLE SHOWS THE MINIMUM AND MAXIMUM TOTAL ANNUAL OPERATING EXPENSES
CHARGED BY THE PORTFOLIOS THAT YOU MAY PAY PERIODICALLY DURING THE TIME THAT
YOU OWN THE CONTRACT. ADVISERS AND/OR OTHER SERVICE PROVIDERS OF CERTAIN
PORTFOLIOS MAY HAVE AGREED TO WAIVE THEIR FEES AND/OR REIMBURSE PORTFOLIO
EXPENSES IN ORDER TO KEEP THE PORTFOLIOS' EXPENSES BELOW SPECIFIED LIMITS. THE
RANGE OF EXPENSES SHOWN IN THIS TABLE DOES NOT SHOW THE EFFECT OF ANY SUCH FEE
WAIVER OR EXPENSE REIMBURSEMENT. MORE DETAIL CONCERNING EACH PORTFOLIO'S FEES
AND EXPENSES IS CONTAINED IN THE PROSPECTUS FOR EACH PORTFOLIO.
Minimum Maximum
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Annual Portfolio Operating Expenses(1) (expenses that
are deducted from Portfolio assets, which may include
management fees, distribution and/or service (12b-1) fees,
and other expenses) (without waivers or reimbursements) 0.56% 1.46%
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)Expenses are shown as a percentage of Portfolio average daily net assets
before any waiver or reimbursement as of December 31, 2010.
5 PROSPECTUS
EXAMPLE 1
This Example is intended to help you compare the cost of investing in the
Contracts with the cost of investing in other variable annuity contracts. These
costs include Contract owner transaction expenses, Contract fees, Separate
Account annual expenses, and Portfolio fees and expenses and assumes no
transfers or exchanges were made. The Example shows the dollar amount of
expenses that you would bear directly or indirectly if you:
.. Invested $10,000 in the Contract for the time periods indicated,
.. earned a 5% annual return on your investment,
.. surrendered your Contract, or you began receiving income payments for a
specified period of less than 120 months, at the end of each time period,
and,
.. elected the Enhanced Death and Income Benefit Riders II (with total
Separate Account expenses of 1.80%).
The first line of the example assumes that the maximum fees and expenses of any
of the Portfolios are charged. The second line of the example assumes that the
minimum fees and expenses of any of the Portfolios are charged. Your actual
expenses may be higher or lower than those shown below.
THE EXAMPLE DOES NOT INCLUDE ANY TAXES OR TAX PENALTIES YOU MAY BE REQUIRED TO
PAY IF YOU SURRENDER YOUR CONTRACT.
1 Year 3 Years 5 Years 10 Years
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Costs Based on Maximum Annual Portfolio Expenses $927 $1,523 $2,142 $3,585
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Costs Based on Minimum Annual Portfolio Expenses $839 $1,262 $1,711 $2,747
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
EXAMPLE 2
This Example uses the same assumptions as Example 1 above, except that it
assumes you decided not to surrender your Contract, or you began receiving
income payments for a specified period of at least 120 months, at the end of
each time period.
1 Year 3 Years 5 Years 10 Years
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Costs Based on Maximum Annual Portfolio Expenses $332 $1,013 $1,717 $3,585
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Costs Based on Minimum Annual Portfolio Expenses $244 $ 752 $1,286 $2,747
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
EXPLANATION OF EXPENSE EXAMPLES
PLEASE REMEMBER THAT YOU ARE LOOKING AT EXAMPLES AND NOT A REPRESENTATION OF
PAST OR FUTURE EXPENSES. YOUR RATE OF RETURN MAY BE HIGHER OR LOWER THAN 5%,
WHICH IS NOT GUARANTEED. THE EXAMPLES DO NOT ASSUME THAT ANY PORTFOLIO EXPENSE
WAIVERS OR REIMBURSEMENT ARRANGEMENTS ARE IN EFFECT FOR THE PERIODS PRESENTED.
EXAMPLES 1 AND 2 ASSUME THE ELECTION OF THE ENHANCED DEATH AND INCOME BENEFIT
RIDERS II (TOTAL SEPARATE ACCOUNT EXPENSES OF 1.80%). IF THESE RIDERS WERE NOT
ELECTED, THE EXPENSE FIGURES SHOWN WOULD BE SLIGHTLY LOWER. THE EXAMPLES
REFLECT THE FREE WITHDRAWAL AMOUNTS, IF ANY, AND AN ANNUAL CONTRACT MAINTENANCE
CHARGE OF $35.
6 PROSPECTUS
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ABOUT YOUR CONTRACT
The following are answers to some of the questions you may have about some of
the more important features of the Contract. The Contract is more fully
described in the rest of the prospectus. Please read the prospectus carefully.
1. WHAT IS THE CONTRACT?
The Contract is a flexible premium deferred variable annuity contract. It is
designed for tax-deferred retirement investing. The Contract is available for
non- qualified or qualified retirement plans. The Contract, like all deferred
annuity contracts, has two phases: the Accumulation Period and the Annuity
Period. During the Accumulation Period, earnings accumulate on a tax- deferred
basis and are taxed as income when you make a withdrawal. The Annuity Period
begins when you begin receiving payments under one of the annuity payment
options described in the answer to Question 2. The amount of money accumulated
under your Contract during the Accumulation Period will be used to determine
the amount of your annuity payments during the Annuity Period.
Your premiums are invested in one or more of the Sub- Accounts of the Separate
Account or allocated to the Fixed Account, as you instruct us. You may allocate
your Contract Value to up to twenty-one options under the Contract, counting
each Sub-Account and the Fixed Account as one option. We will treat all of your
Contract Value allocated to the Fixed Account as one option for purposes of
this limit, even if you have chosen more than one Guarantee Period. The value
of your Contract will depend on the investment performance of the Sub- Accounts
and the amount of interest we credit to the Fixed Account.
Each Sub-Account will invest in a single investment portfolio (a "Portfolio")
of an underlying fund. The Portfolios offer a range of investment objectives,
from conservative to aggressive. You bear the entire investment risk on amounts
allocated to the Sub-Accounts. The investment policies and risks of each
Portfolio are described in the accompanying prospectuses for the Portfolios.
In some states, you may also allocate all or part of your Contract Value to the
"Fixed Account", as described in the answer to Question 5.
2. WHAT ANNUITY OPTIONS DOES THE CONTRACT OFFER?
You may receive annuity payments on a fixed or a variable basis or a
combination of the two. We offer a variety of annuity options including:
.. a life annuity with payments guaranteed for zero to thirty years;
.. a joint and full survivorship annuity, with payments guaranteed for zero to
thirty years; and
.. fixed payments for a specified period of five to thirty years.
Call us to inquire about other options.
You may change your annuity option at any time before annuitization. You may
select the date to annuitize the Contract. The date you select, however, may be
no later than the later of the tenth Contract Anniversary or the youngest
Annuitant's 90th birthday. If your Contract was issued in connection with a
qualified plan, different deadlines may apply.
If you select annuity payments on a variable basis, the amount of our payments
to you will be affected by the investment performance of the Sub-Accounts you
have selected. The fixed portion of your annuity payments, on the other hand,
generally will be equal in amount to the initial payment we determine. As
explained in more detail below, however, during the Annuity Period you will
have a limited ability to change the relative weighting of the Sub-Accounts on
which your variable annuity payments are based or to increase the portion of
your annuity payments consisting of Fixed Annuity payments.
3. HOW DO I BUY A CONTRACT?
You can obtain a Contract application from your Lincoln Benefit agent. You must
pay at least $1,200 in Purchase Payments during the first Contract Year.
Purchase Payments must be at least $100, unless you enroll in an automatic
payment plan. Your periodic payments in an automatic payment plan must be at
least $25 per month. We may lower these minimums at our sole discretion. The
maximum age of the oldest Contract Owner and Annuitant cannot exceed age 90 as
of the date we receive the completed application.
4. WHAT ARE MY INVESTMENT CHOICES UNDER THE CONTRACT?
You can allocate and reallocate your investment among the Sub-Accounts, each of
which in turn invests in a single Portfolio. Under the Contract, the Separate
Account currently invests in the Portfolios described in "The Investment and
Fixed Account Options: Separate Account Investments."
Some of the Portfolios described in this prospectus may not be available in
your Contract.
Each Portfolio holds its assets separately from the assets of the other
Portfolios. Each Portfolio has distinct investment objectives and policies
which are described in the prospectuses for the Portfolios.
5. WHAT IS THE FIXED ACCOUNT OPTION?
We offer two Fixed Account interest crediting options: the Guaranteed Maturity
Fixed Account Option and the Dollar Cost Averaging Fixed Account Option.
You may allocate Purchase Payments to the Sub- Account(s) and the Fixed
Account(s). Loan payments may not be allocated to the Fixed Account(s). You may
7 PROSPECTUS
not transfer amounts into the DCA Fixed Account. The minimum amount that may be
transferred into any one of the Guarantee Maturity Fixed Account Options is
$500.
We will credit interest to amounts allocated to the Guaranteed Maturity Fixed
Account Option at a specified rate for a specified Guarantee Period. You select
the Guarantee Period for each amount that you allocate to the Guaranteed
Maturity Fixed Account Option. We will tell you what interest rates and
Guarantee Periods we are offering at a particular time. At the end of each
Guarantee Period, you may select a new Guarantee Period from among the choices
we are then making available or transfer or withdraw the relevant amount from
the Fixed Account without any Market Value Adjustment.
We may offer Guarantee Periods ranging from one to ten years in length. We are
currently offering Guarantee Periods of one, three, five, seven, and ten years
in length. In the future we may offer Guarantee Periods of different lengths or
stop offering some Guarantee Periods.
We will not change the interest rate credited to a particular allocation until
the end of the relevant Guarantee Period. From time to time, however, we may
change the interest rate that we offer to credit to new allocations to the
Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account Option and to amounts rolled over in the
Fixed Account for new Guarantee Periods.
In addition, if you participate in our dollar cost averaging program, you may
designate amounts to be held in the Dollar Cost Averaging Fixed Account Option
until they are transferred monthly to the Sub-Accounts or Guarantee Periods of
your choosing. When you make an allocation to the Fixed Account for this
purpose, we will set an interest rate applicable to that amount. We will then
credit interest at that rate to that amount until it has been entirely
transferred to your chosen Sub-Accounts or Guarantee Periods. We will complete
the transfers within one year of the allocation. In our discretion we may
change the rate that we set for new allocations to the Fixed Account for the
dollar cost averaging program. We will never, however, set a rate less than an
effective annual rate of 3%.
A Market Value Adjustment may increase or decrease the amount of certain
transactions involving the Fixed Account, to reflect changes in interest rates.
As a general rule, we will apply a Market Value Adjustment to the following
transactions:
1) when you withdraw funds from the Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account Option in
an amount greater than the Free Withdrawal Amount (which is described in the
answer to Question 6);
2) when you transfer funds from the Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account Option to
the Sub-Accounts;
3) when you allocate part of your balance in the Guaranteed Maturity Fixed
Account Option to a new Guarantee Period before the end of the existing
Guarantee Period;
4) when you annuitize your Contract; and
5) when we pay a death benefit.
We will not apply a Market Value Adjustment to a transaction to the extent that:
1) it occurs within 30 days after the end of a Guarantee Period applicable to
the funds involved in the transaction;
2) it is necessary to meet IRS minimum withdrawal requirements; or
3) it is a transfer that is part of a Dollar Cost Averaging program.
We determine the amount of a Market Value Adjustment using a formula that takes
into consideration:
1) whether current interest rates differ from interest rates at the beginning
of the applicable Guarantee Period; and
2) how many years are left until the end of the Guarantee Period.
As a general rule, if interest rates have dropped, the Market Value Adjustment
will be an addition; if interest rates have risen, the Market Value Adjustment
will be a deduction. It is therefore possible that if you withdraw an amount
from the Fixed Account during a Guarantee Period, a Market Value Adjustment may
cause you to receive less than you initially allocated to the Fixed Account.
6. WHAT ARE MY EXPENSES UNDER THE CONTRACT?
CONTRACT MAINTENANCE CHARGE. During the Accumulation Period, each year we
subtract an annual contract maintenance charge of $35 from your Contract Value
allocated to the Sub-Accounts. We will waive this charge if you pay $50,000 or
more in Purchase Payments or if you allocate all of your Contract Value to the
Fixed Account.
During the Annuity Period, we will subtract the annual contract maintenance
charge in equal parts from your annuity payments. We waive this charge if on
the Annuity Date your Contract Value is $50,000 or more or if all payments are
Fixed Annuity payments.
ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSE CHARGE AND MORTALITY AND EXPENSE RISK CHARGE. We impose
a mortality and expense risk charge at an annual rate of 1.15% of average daily
net assets and an administrative expense charge at an annual rate of .10% of
average daily net assets. If you select one of our optional enhanced benefit
riders, however, we may charge you a higher mortality and expense risk charge.
These charges are assessed each day during the Accumulation Period and the
Annuity Period. We guarantee that we will not raise these charges.
8 PROSPECTUS
TRANSFER FEE. Although we currently are not charging a transfer fee, the
Contract permits us to charge you up to $10 per transfer for each transfer
after the first transfer in each month.
WITHDRAWAL CHARGE (CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGE). During the Accumulation
Period, you may withdraw all or part of the value of your Contract before your
death or, if the Contract is owned by a company or other legal entity, before
the Annuitant's death. Certain withdrawals may be made without payment of any
Withdrawal Charge, which is a contingent deferred sales charge. Other
withdrawals are subject to the Withdrawal Charge.
The Withdrawal Charge will vary depending on how many complete years have
passed since you paid the Purchase Payment being withdrawn. The Withdrawal
Charge applies to each Purchase Payment for seven complete years from the date
of the Payment (each a "Contribution Year") as follows:
CONTRIBUTION YEAR APPLICABLE CHARGE
----------------- -----------------
1-2 7%
3-4 6%
5 5%
6 4%
7 3%
8+ 0%
In determining Withdrawal Charges, we will deem your Purchase Payments to be
withdrawn on a first-in, first- out basis.
Each year, free of Withdrawal Charges or any otherwise applicable Market Value
Adjustment, you may withdraw the Free Withdrawal Amount, which equals:
(a) the greater of:
earnings not previously withdrawn; or
15% of your total Purchase Payments made in the most recent seven years; plus
(b) an amount equal to your total Purchase Payments made more than seven
years ago, to the extent not previously withdrawn.
In most states, we also may waive the Withdrawal Charge if you:
1) require long-term medical or custodial care outside the home;
2) become unemployed; or
3) are diagnosed with a terminal illness.
These provisions will apply to the Annuitant, if the Contract is owned by a
company or other legal entity. Additional restrictions and costs may apply to
Contracts issued in connection with qualified plans. Withdrawals of earnings
are taxed as ordinary income and, if taken prior to age 59 1/2, may be subject
to an additional 10% federal tax penalty. You should consult with your tax
counselor to determine what effect a withdrawal might have on your tax
liability. As described in the answer to Question 5, we may increase or
decrease certain withdrawals by a Market Value Adjustment.
PREMIUM TAXES. Certain states impose a premium tax on annuity purchase payments
received by insurance companies. Any premium taxes relating to the Contract may
be deducted from Purchase Payments or the Contract Value when the tax is
incurred or at a later time. State premium taxes generally range from 0% to
3.5%.
OTHER EXPENSES. In addition to our charges under the Contract, each Portfolio
deducts amounts from its assets to pay its investment advisory fees and other
expenses.
7. HOW WILL MY INVESTMENT IN THE CONTRACT BE TAXED?
You should consult a qualified tax adviser for personalized answers. Generally,
earnings under variable annuities are not taxed until amounts are withdrawn or
distributions are made. This deferral of taxes is designed to encourage
long-term personal savings and supplemental retirement plans. Withdrawals of
earnings are taxed as ordinary income and, if taken prior to age 59 1/2, may
be subject to an additional 10% federal tax penalty.
Special rules apply if the Contract is owned by a company or other legal
entity. Generally, such an owner must include in income any increase in the
excess of the Contract Value over the "investment in the contract" during the
taxable year.
8. DO I HAVE ACCESS TO MY MONEY?
At any time during the Accumulation Period, we will pay you all or part of the
value of your Contract, minus any applicable charge, if you surrender your
Contract or request a partial withdrawal. Under some qualified plans, you may
also take a loan against the value of your Contract. Generally, a partial
withdrawal must equal at least $50, and after the withdrawal your remaining
Contract Value must at least equal $500.
Although you have access to your money during the Accumulation Period, certain
charges, such as the contract maintenance charge, the Withdrawal Charge, and
premium tax charges, may be deducted on a surrender or withdrawal. You may also
incur federal income tax liability or tax penalties. In addition, if you have
allocated some of the value of your Contract to the Fixed Account, the amount
of your surrender proceeds or withdrawal may be increased or decreased by a
Market Value Adjustment.
After annuitization, under certain settlement options you may be entitled to
withdraw the commuted value of the remaining payments.
9. WHAT IS THE DEATH BENEFIT?
We will pay a death benefit while the Contract is in force and before the
Annuity Date, if the Contract Owner dies, or if the Annuitant dies and the
Contract Owner is not a living person. To obtain payment of the Death Benefit,
9 PROSPECTUS
the Beneficiary must submit to us a complete request for payment of the death
benefit, which includes due proof of death as specified in the Contract.
The standard death benefit is the greatest of the following:
1) your total Purchase Payments reduced by a withdrawal adjustment;
2) your Contract Value;
3) the amount you would have received by surrendering your Contract; or
4) your Contract Value on each Contract Anniversary evenly divisible by seven
increased by the total Purchase Payments since that anniversary and reduced
by a withdrawal adjustment.
We also offer an optional enhanced death benefit rider, which is described
later in this prospectus.
We will determine the value of the death benefit on the day that we receive all
of the information that we need to process the claim.
10. WHAT ELSE SHOULD I KNOW?
ALLOCATION OF PURCHASE PAYMENTS. You allocate your initial Purchase Payment
among the Sub-Accounts and the Fixed Account in your Contract application. You
may make your allocations in specific dollar amounts or percentages, which must
be whole numbers that add up to 100%. When you make subsequent Purchase
Payments, you may again specify how you want your payments allocated. If you do
not, we will automatically allocate the payment based on your most recent
instructions. You may not allocate Purchase Payments to the Fixed Account if it
is not available in your state.
TRANSFERS. During the Accumulation Period, you may transfer Contract Value
among the Sub-Accounts and from the Sub-Accounts to the Fixed Account. You may
not make a transfer, however, that would result in your allocating your
Contract Value to more than twenty-one options under the Contract. While you
may also transfer amounts from the Fixed Account, a Market Value Adjustment may
apply. You may instruct us to transfer Contract Value by writing or calling us.
You may also use our Automatic Dollar Cost Averaging or Portfolio Rebalancing
programs. You may not use both programs at the same time.
Under the Dollar Cost Averaging program, amounts are automatically transferred
at regular intervals from the Fixed Account or a Sub-Account of your choosing,
including other Sub-Accounts or the Fixed Account. Transfers from the Dollar
Cost Averaging Fixed Account may be made monthly only. Transfers from
Sub-Accounts may be made monthly, quarterly, or annually.
Under the Portfolio Rebalancing Program, you can maintain the percentage of
your Contract Value allocated to each Sub-Account at a pre-set level.
Investment results will shift the balance of your Contract Value allocations.
If you elect rebalancing, we will automatically transfer your Contract Value
back to the specified percentages at the frequency (monthly, quarterly,
semiannually, annually) that you specify. We will automatically terminate this
program if you request a transfer outside of the program. You may not include
the Fixed Account in a Portfolio Rebalancing Program. You also may not elect
rebalancing after annuitization.
During the Annuity Period, you may not make any transfers for the first six
months after the Annuity Date. Thereafter, you may make transfers among the
Sub- Accounts or from the Sub-Accounts to increase your Fixed Annuity payments.
Your transfers, however, must be at least six months apart. You may not,
however, convert any portion of your right to receive Fixed Annuity payments
into Variable Annuity payments.
FREE LOOK PERIOD. You may cancel the Contract by returning it to us within 10
days after you receive it, or after whatever longer period may be permitted by
state law. You may return it by delivering it or mailing it to us. If you
return the Contract, the Contract terminates and, in most states, we will pay
you an amount equal to the Contract Value on the date we receive the Contract
from you. The Contract Value may be more or less than your Purchase Payments.
In some states, we are required to send you the amount of your Purchase
Payments. Since state laws differ as to the consequences of returning a
Contract, you should refer to your Contract for specific information about your
circumstances. If your Contract is qualified under Section 408 of the Internal
Revenue Code, we will refund the greater of any purchase payments or the
Contract Value.
11. WHO CAN I CONTACT FOR MORE INFORMATION?
You can write to us at Lincoln Benefit Life Company, P.O. Box 758565, Topeka,
KS 66675-8565, or call us at (800) 457-7617.
10 PROSPECTUS
CONDENSED FINANCIAL INFORMATION
Attached as Appendix A is a table showing selected information concerning
Accumulation Unit Values for each Sub-Account for 2001 through 2010.
Accumulation Unit Value is the unit of measure that we use to calculate the
value of your interest in a Sub-Account. Accumulation Unit Value does not
reflect the deduction of certain charges that are subtracted from your Contract
Value, such as the Contract Administration Charge. The Separate Account's
financial statements, which are comprised of the financial statements of the
underlying sub-accounts, as of December 31, 2010, are included in the Statement
of Additional Information. Lincoln Benefit's financial statements as of
December 31, 2010, are included in the Statement of Additional Information.
DESCRIPTION OF THE CONTRACTS
SUMMARY. The Contract is a deferred annuity contract designed to aid you in
long-term financial planning. You may add to the Contract Value by making
additional Purchase Payments. In addition, the Contract Value will change to
reflect the performance of the Sub-Accounts to which you allocate your Purchase
Payments and your Contract Value, as well as to reflect interest credited to
amounts allocated to the Fixed Account. You may withdraw your Contract Value by
making a partial withdrawal or by surrendering your Contract. Upon
Annuitization, we will pay you benefits under the Contract in the form of an
annuity, either for the life of the Annuitant or for a fixed number of years.
All of these features are described in more detail below.
CONTRACT OWNER. As the Contract Owner, you are the person usually entitled to
exercise all rights of ownership under the Contract. You usually are also the
person entitled to receive benefits under the Contract or to choose someone
else to receive benefits. The Contract can also be purchased as an IRA or TSA
(also known as a 403(b)). The endorsements required to qualify these annuities
under the Code may limit or modify your rights and privileges under the
Contract. The maximum age of the oldest Contract Owner and Annuitant cannot
exceed age 90 as of the date we receive the completed application. The Contract
cannot be jointly owned by both a non-living person and a living person.
Changing ownership of this contract may cause adverse tax consequences and may
not be allowed under qualified plans. Please consult with a competent tax
advisor prior to making a request for a change of Contract Owner. If the
Contract Owner is a grantor trust, the Contract Owner will be considered a
non-living person for purposes of this section and the Death Benefit section.
ANNUITANT. The Annuitant is the living person whose life span is used to
determine annuity payments. You initially designate an Annuitant in your
application. You may change the Annuitant at any time before annuity payments
begin. If a non-Qualified contract is held by a non-living person, any change
in the Annuitant will be treated as the death of the Annuitant and will
activate the distribution requirements outlined in the Death Benefit section.
If your Contract was issued under a plan qualified under Section 403(b), 408 or
408A of the Tax Code, you must be the Annuitant. If the Contract is a
non-qualified Contract, you may also designate a Joint Annuitant, who is a
second person on whose life annuity payments depend. Additional restrictions
may apply in the case of Qualified Plans. If you are not the Annuitant and the
Annuitant dies before annuity payments begin, then either you become the new
Annuitant or you must name another person as the new Annuitant. You must attest
that the Annuitant is alive in order to annuitize your Contract.
MODIFICATION OF THE CONTRACT. Only a Lincoln Benefit officer may approve a
change in or waive any provision of the Contract. Any change or waiver must be
in writing. None of our agents has the authority to change or waive the
provisions of the Contract.
We are permitted to change the terms of the Contract if it is necessary to
comply with changes in the law. If a provision of the Contract is inconsistent
with state law, we will follow state law.
ASSIGNMENT. Before the Annuity Date, if the Annuitant is still alive, you may
assign an interest in the Contract if it is a non-qualified Contract. If a
Contract is issued pursuant to a Qualified Plan, the law prohibits some types
of assignments, pledges and transfers and imposes special conditions on others.
An assignment may also result in taxes or tax penalties.
We will not be bound by any assignment until we receive written notice of it.
Accordingly, until we receive written notice of an assignment, we will continue
to act as though the assignment had not occurred. We are not responsible for
the validity of any assignment.
BECAUSE OF THE POTENTIAL TAX CONSEQUENCES AND ERISA ISSUES ARISING FROM AN
ASSIGNMENT, YOU SHOULD CONSULT WITH AN ATTORNEY BEFORE TRYING TO ASSIGN YOUR
CONTRACT.
FREE LOOK PERIOD. You may cancel the Contract by returning it to us within 10
days after you receive it, or within whatever longer period may be permitted by
state law. You may return it by delivering it to your agent or mailing it to
us. If you return the Contract, the Contract terminates and, in most states, we
will pay you an amount equal to the Contract Value on the date we receive the
Contract from you. The Contract Value at that time may be more or less than
your Purchase Payments.
In some states, if you exercise your "free look" rights, we are required to
return the amount of your Purchase Payments. Currently, if you live in one of
those states, on the Issue Date we will allocate your Purchase Payment to the
Sub-Accounts and the Fixed Account Options as you specified in your
application. However, we reserve the right in the future to delay allocating
your Purchase
11 PROSPECTUS
Payments to the Sub-Accounts you have selected or to the Fixed Account until 20
days after the Issue Date or, if your state's free look period is longer than
ten days, for ten days plus the period required by state law. During that time,
we will allocate your Purchase Payment to the Fidelity Money Market
Sub-Account. Your Contract will contain specific information about your
free-look rights in your state.
PURCHASES AND CONTRACT VALUE
MINIMUM PURCHASE PAYMENT. The minimum initial Purchase Payment for a Contract
is $1,200. You may pay it in a lump sum or in installments of your choice over
the first Contract Year. You may not pay more than $1 million in Purchase
Payments without our prior approval. As a general rule, subsequent Purchase
Payments may be made in amounts of $100 or more. Subsequent Purchase Payments
made as part of an Automatic Payment Plan, however, may be as small as $25 per
month. However, each purchase payment made to the Dollar Cost Averaging Fixed
Account must be at least $1,200. If we receive purchase payments designated for
the Dollar Cost Averaging Fixed Account that are lower than the required
minimum of $1,200, or purchase payments designated for the Guaranteed Maturity
Fixed Account Option that are lower than $500, such amounts will be allocated
to the Fidelity Money Market Portfolio. We may lower these minimums if we
choose. We may refuse any Purchase Payment at any time. We may apply certain
limitations, restrictions, and/or underwriting standards as a condition of
acceptance of purchase payments.
AUTOMATIC PAYMENT PLAN. You may make scheduled Purchase Payments of $25 or
more per month by automatic payment through your bank account. Call or write us
for an enrollment form.
ALLOCATION OF PURCHASE PAYMENTS. Your Purchase Payments are allocated to the
Sub-Account(s) and the Fixed Account in the proportions that you have selected.
You must specify your allocation in your Contract application, either as
percentages or specific dollar amounts. If you make your allocation in
percentages, the total must equal 100%. We will allocate your subsequent
Purchase Payments in those percentages, until you give us new allocation
instructions. You may not allocate Purchase Payments to the Fixed Account if it
is not available in your state.
You initially may allocate your Purchase Payments to up to twenty-one options,
counting each Sub-Account and the Fixed Account as one option. For this
purpose, we will treat all of your allocations to the Fixed Account as one
option, even if you choose more than one Guarantee Period. You may add or
delete Sub-Accounts and/or the Fixed Account from your allocation instructions,
but we will not execute instructions that would cause you to have Contract
Value in more than twenty-one options. In the future, we may waive this limit.
If your application is complete, we will issue your Contract within two
business days of its receipt at our P.O. Box shown on the first page of this
prospectus. If your application for a Contract is incomplete, we will notify
you and seek to complete the application within five business days. For
example, if you do not fill in allocation percentages, we will contact you to
obtain the missing percentages. If we cannot complete your application within
five business days after we receive it, we will return your application and
your Purchase Payment, unless you expressly permit us to take a longer time.
Usually, we will allocate your initial Purchase Payment to the Sub-Accounts and
the Fixed Account, as you have instructed us, on the Issue Date. We will
allocate your subsequent Purchase Payments on the date that we receive them at
the next computed Accumulation Unit Value.
There may be circumstances where the New York Stock Exchange is open, however,
due to inclement weather, natural disaster or other circumstances beyond our
control, our offices may be closed or our business processing capabilities may
be restricted. Under those circumstances, your Contract Value may fluctuate
based on changes in the Accumulation Unit Values, but you may not be able to
transfer Contract Value, or make a purchase or redemption request.
With respect to any purchase payment that is pending investment in our Variable
Account, we may hold the amount temporarily in a suspense account and may earn
interest on amounts held in that suspense account. You will not be credited
with any interest on amounts held in that suspense account.
In some states, however, we are required to return at least your Purchase
Payment if you cancel your Contract during the "free-look" period. In those
states, we currently will allocate your Purchase Payments on the Issue Date as
you have instructed us, as described above. In the future, however, we reserve
the right, if you live in one of those states, to allocate all Purchase
Payments received during the "free-look period" to the Fidelity Money Market
Sub-Account. If we exercise that right and your state's free look period is ten
days, we will transfer your Purchase Payments to your specified Sub-Accounts or
the Fixed Account 20 days after the Issue Date; if your state's free look
period is longer, we will transfer your Purchase Payment after ten days plus
the period required by state law have passed.
We determine the number of Accumulation Units in each Sub-Account to allocate
to your Contract by dividing that portion of your Purchase Payment allocated to
a Sub-Account by that Sub-Account's Accumulation Unit Value on the Valuation
Date when the allocation occurs.
CONTRACT VALUE. We will establish an account for you and will maintain your
account during the Accumulation Period. The total value of your Contract at any
time is equal to the sum of the value of your Accumulation Units
12 PROSPECTUS
in the Sub-Accounts you have selected, plus the value of your investment in the
Fixed Account.
SEPARATE ACCOUNT ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE. As a general matter, the
Accumulation Unit Value for each Sub-Account will rise or fall to reflect
changes in the share price of the Portfolio in which the Sub-Account invests.
In addition, we subtract from Accumulation Unit Value amounts reflecting the
mortality and expense risk charge, administrative expense charge, and any
provision for taxes that have accrued since we last calculated the Accumulation
Unit Value. We determine Withdrawal Charges, transfer fees and contract
maintenance charges separately for each Contract. They do not affect
Accumulation Unit Value. Instead, we obtain payment of those charges and fees
by redeeming Accumulation Units.
We determine a separate Accumulation Unit Value for each Sub-Account. We also
determine a separate set of Accumulation Unit Values reflecting the cost of the
enhanced benefit riders described beginning on page 26. If we elect or are
required to assess a charge for taxes, we may calculate a separate Accumulation
Unit Value for Contracts issued in connection with Non-Qualified and Qualified
Plans, respectively, within each Sub-Account. We determine the Accumulation
Unit Value for each Sub-Account Monday through Friday on each day that the New
York Stock Exchange is open for business.
You should refer to the prospectuses for the Portfolios for a description of
how the assets of each Portfolio are valued, since that determination has a
direct bearing on the Accumulation Unit Value of the corresponding Sub- Account
and, therefore, your Contract Value.
TRANSFER DURING ACCUMULATION PERIOD. During the Accumulation Period, you may
transfer Contract Value among the Fixed Account and the Sub-Accounts in writing
or by telephone. Currently, there is no minimum transfer amount. The Contract
permits us to set a minimum transfer amount in the future. You may not make a
transfer that would result in your allocating your Contract Value to more than
twenty-one options under the Contract at one time.
As a general rule, we only make transfers on days when the NYSE is open for
business. If we receive your request on one of those days, we will make the
transfer that day. Requests received before 4:00 p.m. will be effected on that
day at that day's price. Requests received after 4:00 p.m. will be effected on
the next day on which the NYSE is open for business, at that day's price. If
you transfer an amount from the Fixed Account to a Sub-Account before the end
of the applicable Guarantee Period or you allocate an amount in the Fixed
Account to a new Guarantee Period before the end of the existing Guarantee
Period, we usually will increase or decrease the amount by a Market Value
Adjustment. The calculation of the Market Value Adjustment is described in
"Market Value Adjustment" on page 21.
Transfers within 30 days after the end of the applicable Guarantee Period are
not subject to a Market Value Adjustment.
The Contract permits us to defer transfers from the Fixed Account for up to six
months from the date you ask us.
You may not transfer Contract Value into the Dollar Cost Averaging Fixed
Account Option. You may not transfer Contract Value out of the Dollar Cost
Averaging Fixed Account Option except as part of a Dollar Cost Averaging
program.
We may charge you the transfer fee described on page 5, although we currently
are waiving it. At any time, without notice, we may suspend, modify or
terminate your privilege to make transfers via the phone, or via other
electronic or automated means previously approved by the Company, including,
but not limited to, automated telephone services, facsimile machine, e-mail and
electronic services via online access. Among other things, we reserve the right
to limit the number of such transfers among the Variable Sub-Accounts in any
Contract year, or to refuse any Variable Sub-Account transfer request. We also
reserve the right to restrict such transfers in any manner reasonably designed
to prevent transfers that we consider disadvantageous to the Contract Owners.
We use procedures that we believe provide reasonable assurance that telephone
authorized transfers are genuine. For example, we tape telephone conversations
with persons purporting to authorize transfers and request identifying
information. Accordingly, we disclaim any liability for losses resulting from
allegedly unauthorized telephone transfers. However, if we do not take
reasonable steps to help ensure that a telephone authorization is valid, we may
be liable for such losses.
MARKET TIMING & EXCESSIVE TRADING
The Contracts/Policies are intended for long-term investment. Market timing and
excessive trading can potentially dilute the value of Variable Sub-Accounts and
can disrupt management of a Portfolio and raise its expenses, which can impair
Portfolio performance and adversely affect your Contract/Policy Value. Our
policy is not to accept knowingly any money intended for the purpose of market
timing or excessive trading. Accordingly, you should not invest in the
Contract/Policy if your purpose is to engage in market timing or excessive
trading, and you should refrain from such practices if you currently own a
Contract/Policy.
We seek to detect market timing or excessive trading activity by reviewing
trading activities. Portfolios also may report suspected market-timing or
excessive trading activity to us. If, in our judgment, we determine that the
transfers are part of a market timing strategy or are otherwise harmful to the
underlying Portfolio, we will impose the trading limitations as described below
under "Trading Limitations." Because there is no universally accepted
definition of what constitutes market timing or
13 PROSPECTUS
excessive trading, we will use our reasonable judgment based on all of the
circumstances.
While we seek to deter market timing and excessive trading in Variable
Sub-Accounts, because our procedures involve the exercise of reasonable
judgment, we may not identify or prevent some market timing or excessive
trading. Moreover, imposition of trading limitations is triggered by the
detection of market timing or excessive trading activity, and the trading
limitations are not applied prior to detection of such trading activity.
Therefore, our policies and procedures do not prevent such trading activity
before it is detected. As a result, some investors may be able to engage in
market timing and excessive trading, while others are prohibited, and the
Portfolio may experience the adverse effects of market timing and excessive
trading described above.
TRADING LIMITATIONS
We reserve the right to limit transfers among the investment alternatives in
any Contract/Policy year, require that all future transfer requests be
submitted through U.S. Postal Service First Class Mail thereby refusing to
accept transfer requests via telephone, facsimile, Internet, or overnight
delivery, or to refuse any transfer request, if:
.. we believe, in our sole discretion, that certain trading practices, such as
excessive trading, by, or on behalf of, one or more Contract/Policy Owners,
or a specific transfer request or group of transfer requests, may have a
detrimental effect on the Accumulation Unit Values of any Variable
Sub-Account or on the share prices of the corresponding Portfolio or
otherwise would be to the disadvantage of other Contract/Policy Owners; or
.. we are informed by one or more of the Portfolios that they intend to
restrict the purchase, exchange, or redemption of Portfolio shares because
of excessive trading or because they believe that a specific transfer or
group of transfers would have a detrimental effect on the prices of
Portfolio shares.
In making the determination that trading activity constitutes market timing or
excessive trading, we will consider, among other things:
.. the total dollar amount being transferred, both in the aggregate and in the
transfer request;
.. the number of transfers you make over a period of time and/or the period of
time between transfers (note: one set of transfers to and from a Variable
Sub-Account in a short period of time can constitute market timing);
.. whether your transfers follow a pattern that appears designed to take
advantage of short term market fluctuations, particularly within certain
Variable Sub-Account underlying Portfolios that we have identified as being
susceptible to market timing activities (e.g., International, High Yield,
and Small Cap Variable Sub-Accounts);
.. whether the manager of the underlying Portfolio has indicated that the
transfers interfere with Portfolio management or otherwise adversely impact
the Portfolio; and
.. the investment objectives and/or size of the Variable Sub-Account
underlying Portfolio.
We seek to apply these trading limitations uniformly. However, because these
determinations involve the exercise of discretion, it is possible that we may
not detect some market timing or excessive trading activity. As a result, it is
possible that some investors may be able to engage in market timing or
excessive trading activity, while others are prohibited, and the Portfolio may
experience the adverse effects of market timing and excessive trading described
above.
If we determine that a Contract/Policy Owner has engaged in market timing or
excessive trading activity, we will require that all future transfer requests
be submitted through U.S. Postal Service First Class Mail thereby refusing to
accept transfer requests via telephone, facsimile, Internet, or overnight
delivery. If we determine that a Contract/Policy Owner continues to engage in a
pattern of market timing or excessive trading activity we will restrict that
Contract/Policy Owner from making future additions or transfers into the
impacted Variable Sub-Account(s) or will restrict that Contract/Policy Owner
from making future additions or transfers into the class of Variable
Sub-Account(s) if the Variable Sub-Accounts(s) involved are vulnerable to
arbitrage market timing trading activity (e.g., International, High Yield, and
Small Cap Variable Sub-Accounts).
In our sole discretion, we may revise our Trading Limitations at any time as
necessary to better deter or minimize market timing and excessive trading or to
comply with regulatory requirements.
SHORT TERM TRADING FEES
The underlying Portfolios are authorized by SEC regulation to adopt and impose
redemption fees if a Portfolio's Board of Directors determines that such fees
are necessary to minimize or eliminate short-term transfer activity that can
reduce or dilute the value of outstanding shares issued by the Portfolio. The
Portfolio will set the parameters relating to the redemption fee and such
parameters may vary by Portfolio. If a Portfolio elects to adopt and charge
redemption fees, these fees will be passed on to the Contract/Policy Owner(s)
responsible for the short-term transfer activity generating the fee.
We will administer and collect redemption fees in connection with transfers
between the Variable Sub- Accounts and forward these fees to the Portfolio.
Please consult the Portfolio's prospectus for more complete information
regarding the fees and charges associated with each Portfolio.
14 PROSPECTUS
AUTOMATIC DOLLAR COST AVERAGING PROGRAM. Under our Automatic Dollar Cost
Averaging program, you may authorize us to transfer a fixed dollar amount at
fixed intervals from the Dollar Cost Averaging Fixed Account Option or a
Sub-Account of your choosing. The interval between transfers from the Dollar
Cost Averaging Fixed Account may be monthly only. The interval between
transfers from Sub-Accounts may be monthly, quarterly, or annually, at your
option. The transfers will be made at the Accumulation Unit Value on the date
of the transfer. The transfers will continue until you instruct us otherwise,
or until your chosen source of transfer payments is exhausted. Currently, the
minimum transfer amount is $100 per transfer. However, if you wish to Dollar
Cost Average to a Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account Option, the minimum amount
that must be transferred into any one Option is $500. We may change this
minimum or grant exceptions. For each purchase payment allocated to this
Option, your first monthly transfer will occur 25 days after such purchase
payment. If we do not receive an allocation from you within 25 days of the
purchase payment, we will transfer the payment plus associated interest to the
Fidelity Money Market Variable Sub-Account in equal monthly payments. You may
not use the Dollar Cost Averaging program to transfer amounts from the
Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account Option.
Your request to participate in this program will be effective when we receive
your completed application at the P.O. Box given on the first page of this
prospectus. Call or write us for a copy of the application. You may elect to
increase, decrease or change the frequency or amount of transfers under a
Dollar Cost Averaging program. We will not charge a transfer fee for Dollar
Cost Averaging.
The theory of Dollar Cost Averaging is that by spreading your investment over
time, you may be able to reduce the effect of transitory market conditions on
your investment. In addition, because a given dollar amount purchases more
units when the unit prices are relatively low rather than when the prices are
higher, in a fluctuating market, the average cost per unit may be less than the
average of the unit prices on the purchase dates. However, participation in
this program does not assure you of a greater profit from your purchases under
the program, nor will it prevent or necessarily reduce losses in a declining
market. Moreover, while we refer to this program of periodic transfers
generally as dollar cost averaging, periodic transfers from a Sub-Account with
more volatile performance experience is unlikely to produce the desired effects
of dollar cost averaging as would transfers from a less volatile Sub-Account.
You may not use Dollar Cost Averaging and Portfolio Rebalancing at the same
time.
PORTFOLIO REBALANCING. Portfolio Rebalancing allows you to maintain the
percentage of your Contract Value allocated to each Sub-Account at a pre-set
level. Over time, the variations in each Sub-Account's investment results will
shift the balance of your Contract Value allocations. Under the Portfolio
Rebalancing feature, each period, if the allocations change from your desired
percentages, we will automatically transfer your Contract Value, including new
Purchase Payments (unless you specify otherwise), back to the percentages you
specify. Portfolio Rebalancing is consistent with maintaining your allocation
of investments among market segments, although it is accomplished by reducing
your Contract Value allocated to the better performing segments.
You may choose to have rebalances made monthly, quarterly, semi-annually, or
annually. We will not charge a transfer fee for Portfolio Rebalancing. A
one-time request to rebalance the amounts allocated to the Sub- Accounts is not
part of a Portfolio Rebalancing program and is subject to all of the
requirements that are applicable to transfers. We will automatically terminate
this program if you request any transfers outside the Portfolio Rebalancing
program. If you wish to resume Portfolio Rebalancing after it has been
canceled, then you must complete a new Portfolio Rebalancing form and send it
to our home office. You may not include the Fixed Account in a Portfolio
Rebalancing program.
You may request Portfolio Rebalancing at any time by submitting a completed
written request to us at the P.O. Box given on the first page of this
prospectus. Please call or write us for a copy of the request form. If you stop
Portfolio Rebalancing, you must wait 30 days to begin again. In your request,
you may specify a date for your first rebalancing. If you specify a date fewer
than 30 days after your Issue Date, your first rebalance will be delayed one
month. If you request Portfolio Rebalancing in your Contract application and do
not specify a date for your first rebalancing, your first rebalance will occur
one period after the Issue Date. For example, if you specify quarterly
rebalancing, your first rebalance will occur three months after your Issue
Date. Otherwise, your first rebalancing will occur twenty-five days after we
receive your completed request form. All subsequent rebalancing will occur at
the intervals you have specified on the day of the month that coincides with
the same day of the month as your Contract Anniversary Date.
Generally, you may change the allocation percentages, frequency, or choice of
Sub-Accounts at any time. If your total Contract Value subject to rebalancing
falls below any minimum value that we may establish, we may prohibit or limit
your use of Portfolio Rebalancing. You may not use Dollar Cost Averaging and
Portfolio Rebalancing at the same time. We may change, terminate, limit, or
suspend Portfolio Rebalancing at any time.
15 PROSPECTUS
THE INVESTMENT AND FIXED ACCOUNT OPTIONS: SEPARATE ACCOUNT INVESTMENTS
THE PORTFOLIOS. Each of the Sub-Accounts of the Separate Account invests in
the shares of one of the Portfolios. Each Portfolio is either an open-end
management investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of
1940 or a separate investment series of an open-end management investment
company. We have briefly described the Portfolios below. You should consult the
current prospectuses for the Portfolios for more detailed and
complete information concerning the Portfolios. If you do not have a prospectus
for a Portfolio, contact us and we will send you a copy.
We do not promise that the Portfolios will meet their investment objectives.
Amounts you have allocated to Sub-Accounts may grow in value, decline in value,
or grow less than you expect, depending on the investment performance of the
Portfolios in which those Sub- Accounts invest. You bear the investment risk
that those Portfolios possibly will not meet their investment objectives. You
should carefully review their prospectuses before allocating amounts to the
Sub-Accounts of the Separate Account.
PORTFOLIO EACH PORTFOLIO SEEKS INVESTMENT ADVISER
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AIM VARIABLE INSURANCE FUNDS (INVESCO VARIABLE INSURANCE FUNDS)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Invesco Van Kampen V.I. Mid Cap Value, Above-average total return over a market cycle of
Series I three to five years by investing in common stocks MORGAN STANLEY INVESTMENT
and other equity securities. MANAGEMENT, INC./(2)/
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Invesco Van Kampen V.I. Mid Cap Growth, Capital growth
Series II
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------VAN KAMPEN ASSET
Invesco Van Kampen V.I. Growth and Long-term growth of capital and income. MANAGEMENT
Income, Series II
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Invesco V.I. Basic Value Fund - Series I Long-term growth of capital INVESCO ADVISERS, INC.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THE ALGER PORTFOLIOS
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alger LargeCap Growth Portfolio - Class Long-term capital appreciation
I-2
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alger Income & Growth Portfolio - To provide a high level of dividend income. Its
Class I-2 secondary goal is to provide capital appreciation. FRED ALGER MANAGEMENT, INC.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alger Capital Appreciation Portfolio - Long-term capital appreciation
Class I-2
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alger MidCap Growth Portfolio - Long-term capital appreciation
Class I-2
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alger SmallCap Growth Portfolio - Long-term capital appreciation
Class I-2
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DWS VARIABLE SERIES I
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DWS Bond VIP - Class A To maximize total return consistent with preservation
of capital and prudent investment management, by
investing for both current income and capital
appreciation DEUTSCHE INVESTMENT
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------MANAGEMENT AMERICAS INC.
DWS VSI Global Small Cap Growth - Class Above-average capital appreciation over the long
A (formerly, DWS VSI Global term
Opportunities - Class A)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DWS Growth & Income VIP - Class A Long-term growth of capital, current income and
growth of income
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DWS International VIP - Class A Long-term growth of capital
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DWS VARIABLE SERIES II
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DWS Balanced VIP - Class A High total return, a combination of income and DEUTSCHE INVESTMENT
capital appreciation MANAGEMENT AMERICAS INC.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERATED INSURANCE SERIES
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Federated Capital Income Fund II High current income and moderate capital FEDERATED EQUITY
appreciation MANAGEMENT COMPANY OF
PENNSYLVANIA
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Federated Fund for U.S. Government Current income
Securities II FEDERATED INVESTMENT
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------MANAGEMENT COMPANY
Federated High Income Bond Fund II High current income
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
16 PROSPECTUS
PORTFOLIO EACH PORTFOLIO SEEKS INVESTMENT ADVISER
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIDELITY(R) VARIABLE INSURANCE PRODUCTS
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fidelity VIP Asset Manager(SM) High total return with reduced risk over the long
Portfolio - Initial Class term by allocating its assets among stocks, bonds,
and short-term instruments.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fidelity VIP Contrafund(R) Portfolio - Long-term capital appreciation.
Initial Class
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------FIDELITY MANAGEMENT &
Fidelity VIP Equity-Income Portfolio - Reasonable Income. The fund will also consider the RESEARCH COMPANY
Initial Class potential for capital appreciation. The fund's goal
is to achieve a yield which exceeds the composite
yield on the securities comprising the Standard &
Poor's 500(SM) Index (S&P 500(R) ).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fidelity VIP Growth Portfolio - Initial To achieve capital appreciation.
Class
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fidelity VIP Index 500 Portfolio - Investment results that correspond to the total return
Initial Class of common stocks publicly traded in the United
States, as represented by the Standard & Poor's
500(SM) Index (S&P 500(R) ).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fidelity VIP Money Market Portfolio - As high a level of current income as is consistent with
Initial Class preservation of capital and liquidity.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fidelity VIP Overseas Portfolio - Long-term growth of capital.
Initial Class
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JANUS ASPEN SERIES
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Janus Aspen Series Balanced Portfolio Long-term capital growth, consistent with
- Institutional Shares preservation of capital and balanced by current
income.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Janus Aspen Series Flexible Bond To obtain maximum total return, consistent with
Portfolio - Institutional Shares preservation of capital. JANUS CAPITAL MANAGEMENT
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------LLC
Janus Aspen Series Overseas Portfolio Long-term growth of capital.
- Service Shares
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Janus Aspen Series Janus Portfolio Long-term growth of capital
- Institutional Shares
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Janus Aspen Series Enterprise Portfolio Long-term growth of capital
- Institutional Shares
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Janus Aspen Series Worldwide Portfolio Long-term growth of capital (prior to May 16, 2011,
- Institutional Shares the Portfolio sought long-term growth of capital in a
manner consistent with the preservation of capital)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LEGG MASON PARTNERS VARIABLE EQUITY
TRUST
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Legg Mason ClearBridge Variable Large Long-term growth of capital with current income as a LEGG MASON PARTNERS FUND
Cap Value Portfolio - Class I secondary objective ADVISOR, LLC
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MFS(R) VARIABLE INSURANCE TRUST/(SM)/
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MFS Growth Series - Initial Class Capital appreciation
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MFS Investors Trust Series - Initial Capital appreciation
Class
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------MFS(TM) INVESTMENT
MFS New Discovery Series - Initial Class Capital appreciation MANAGEMENT
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MFS Research Series - Initial Class Capital appreciation
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MFS Total Return Series - Initial Class Total return
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPPENHEIMER VARIABLE ACCOUNT FUNDS
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Oppenheimer Main Street Small- & Capital appreciation. OPPENHEIMERFUNDS, INC.
Mid-Cap Fund(R) /VA - Service
Shares/(3)/
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PIMCO VARIABLE INSURANCE TRUST
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PIMCO VIT Foreign Bond Portfolio (U.S. Maximum total return, consistent with preservation
Dollar- Hedged) - Administrative Shares of capital and prudent investment management. PACIFIC INVESTMENT
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------MANAGEMENT COMPANY LLC
PIMCO VIT Total Return Portfolio Maximum total return, consistent with preservation
- Administrative Shares of capital and prudent investment management.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PUTNAM VARIABLE TRUST
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Putnam VT International Value Fund - Capital growth. Current income is a secondary PUTNAM INVESTMENT
Class IB objective. MANAGEMENT, LLC
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
17 PROSPECTUS
PORTFOLIO EACH PORTFOLIO SEEKS INVESTMENT ADVISER
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY SERIES, INC.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T. Rowe Price Equity Income Portfolio - Substantial dividend income as well as long-term
I growth of capital through investments in the
common stocks of established companies.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------T. ROWE PRICE ASSOCIATES,
T. Rowe Price Mid-Cap Growth Portfolio Long-term capital appreciation by investing in INC.
- I/(1)/ mid-cap stocks with potential for above-average
earnings growth.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T. Rowe Price New America Growth Long-term growth of capital by investing primarily in
Portfolio - I the common stocks of growth companies.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL SERIES, INC.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T. Rowe Price International Stock Long-term growth of capital through investments
Portfolio - I primarily in the common stocks of established T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL,
non-U.S. companies. INC.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
WELLS FARGO VARIABLE TRUST FUNDS
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wells Fargo Advantage VT Discovery Fund Long-term capital appreciation.
WELLS FARGO FUNDS
MANAGEMENT, LLC
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wells Fargo Advantage VT Opportunity Long-term capital appreciation. SUB-ADVISOR: WELLS CAPITAL
Fund(SM) MANAGEMENT INCORPORATED
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Effective May 1, 2004, the T. Rowe Price Mid-Cap Growth Portfolio - I is no
longer available for new investments. If you are currently invested in the
Variable Sub-account that invests in this Portfolio you may continue your
investment. If, prior to May 1, 2004, you enrolled in one of our automatic
transaction programs, such as automatic additions, portfolio rebalancing, or
dollar cost averaging, we will continue to effect automatic transactions into
the Variable Sub-Account in accordance with that program. Outside of these
automatic transaction programs, additional allocations will not be allowed.
(2) Morgan Stanley Investment Management Inc., the adviser to the UIF
Portfolios, does business in certain instances using the name Van Kampen.
(3) Effective May 1, 2011, the following Portfolio changed its name:
PREVIOUS NAME NEW NAME
-----------------------------------------------------------
Oppenheimer Main Street Small Oppenheimer Main Street
Cap Fund(R)/VA-Service Shares Small- & Mid-Cap Fund(R)/VA-
Service Shares
-----------------------------------------------------------
Each Portfolio is subject to certain investment restrictions and policies which
may not be changed without the approval of a majority of the shareholders of
the Portfolio. See the accompanying Prospectuses of the Portfolios for further
information.
We automatically reinvest all dividends and capital gains distributions from
the Portfolios in shares of the distributing Portfolio at their net asset
value. The income and realized and unrealized gains or losses on the assets of
each Sub-Account are separate and are credited to or charged against the
particular Sub-Account without regard to income, gains or losses from any other
Sub-Account or from any other part of our business. We will use the net
Purchase Payments you allocate to a Sub-Account to purchase shares in the
corresponding Portfolio and will redeem shares in the Portfolios to meet
Contract obligations or make adjustments in reserves. The Portfolios are
required to redeem their shares at net asset value and to make payment within
seven days.
Some of the Portfolios have been established by investment advisers which
manage publicly traded mutual funds having similar names and investment
objectives. While some of the Portfolios may be similar to, and may in fact be
modeled after publicly traded mutual funds, you should understand that the
Portfolios are not otherwise directly related to any publicly traded mutual
fund. Consequently, the investment performance of publicly traded mutual funds
and any similarly named Portfolio may differ substantially.
Certain of the Portfolios sell their shares to separate accounts underlying
both variable life insurance and variable annuity contracts. It is conceivable
that in the future it may be unfavorable for variable life insurance separate
accounts and variable annuity separate accounts to invest in the same
Portfolio. Although neither we nor any of the Portfolios currently foresees any
such disadvantages either to variable life insurance or variable annuity
contract owners, each Portfolio's Board of Directors intends to monitor events
in order to identify any material conflicts between variable life and variable
annuity contract owners and to determine what action, if any, should be taken
in response thereto. If a Board of Directors were to conclude that separate
investment funds should be established for variable life and variable annuity
separate accounts, Lincoln Benefit will bear the attendant expenses.
VOTING RIGHTS. As a general matter, you do not have a direct right to vote the
shares of the Portfolios held by the Sub-Accounts to which you have allocated
your Contract Value. Under current law, however, you are entitled to give us
instructions on how to vote those shares on certain matters. We will notify you
when your instructions are needed. We will also provide proxy materials or
other information to assist you in understanding the matter at issue. We will
determine the number of shares for which you may give voting
instructions as of the record date set by the relevant Portfolio for the
shareholder meeting at which the vote will occur.
As a general rule, before the Annuity Date, you are the person entitled to give
voting instructions. After the Annuity Date, the payee is that person.
Retirement plans, however, may have different rules for voting by plan
participants.
18 PROSPECTUS
If you send us written voting instructions, we will follow your instructions in
voting the Portfolio shares attributable to your Contract. If you do not send
us written instructions, we will vote the shares attributable to your Contract
in the same proportions as we vote the shares for which we have received
instructions from other Contract Owners. We will vote shares that we hold in
the same proportions as we vote the shares for which we have received
instructions from other Contract Owners.
We may, when required by state insurance regulatory authorities, disregard
Contract Owner voting instructions if the instructions require that the shares
be voted so as to cause a change in the sub-classification or investment
objective of one or more of the Portfolios or to approve or disapprove an
investment advisory contract for one or more of the Portfolios.
In addition, we may disregard voting instructions in favor of changes initiated
by Contract Owners in the investment objectives or the investment adviser of
the Portfolios if we reasonably disapprove of the proposed change. We would
disapprove a proposed change only if the proposed change is contrary to state
law or prohibited by state regulatory authorities or we reasonably conclude
that the proposed change would not be consistent with the investment objectives
of the Portfolio or would result in the purchase of securities for the
Portfolio which vary from the general quality and nature of investments and
investment techniques utilized by the Portfolio. If we disregard voting
instructions, we will include a summary of that action and our reasons for that
action in the next semi-annual financial report to you.
This description reflects our view of currently applicable law. If the law
changes or our interpretation of the law changes, we may decide that we are
permitted to vote the Portfolio shares without obtaining instructions from our
Contract Owners, and we may choose to do so.
ADDITIONS, DELETIONS, AND SUBSTITUTIONS OF SECURITIES. If the shares of any of
the Portfolios are no longer available for investment by the Separate Account
or if, in the judgment of our Board of Directors, further investment in the
shares of a Portfolio is no longer appropriate in view of the purposes of the
Contract, we may add or substitute shares of another Portfolio or underlying
fund for Portfolio shares already purchased or to be purchased in the future by
Purchase Payments under the Contract. Any substitution of securities will
comply with the requirements of the 1940 Act.
We also reserve the right to make the following changes in the operation of the
Separate Account and the Sub-Accounts:
(a) to operate the Separate Account in any form permitted by law;
(b) to take any action necessary to comply with applicable law or obtain and
continue any exemption from applicable laws;
(c) to transfer assets from one Sub-Account to another, or from any
Sub-Account to our general account;
(d) to add, combine, or remove Sub-Accounts in the Separate Account; and
(e) to change the way in which we assess charges, as long as the total
charges do not exceed the maximum amount that may be charged the Separate
Account and the Portfolios in connection with the Contracts.
If we take any of these actions, we will comply with the then applicable legal
requirements.
THE FIXED ACCOUNT
GENERAL. You may allocate part or all of your Purchase Payments to the Fixed
Account in states where it is available. Amounts allocated to the Fixed Account
become part of the general assets of Lincoln Benefit. Loan payments may not be
allocated to the Fixed Account(s). Allstate Life invests the assets of the
general account in accordance with applicable laws governing the investments of
insurance company general accounts. The Fixed Account may not be available in
all states. Please contact us at 1-800-457-7617 for current information.
GUARANTEED MATURITY FIXED ACCOUNT OPTION. We will credit interest to each
amount allocated to the Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account Option at a specified
rate for a specified Guarantee Period. You select the Guarantee Period for each
amount that you allocate to this option. We will declare the interest rate that
we will guarantee to credit to that amount for that Guarantee Period. Each
amount allocated to a Guarantee Period under this option must be at least $500.
We reserve the right to limit the number of additional Purchase Payments that
may be allocated to this option.
We will tell you what interest rates and Guarantee Periods we are offering at a
particular time. We may offer Guarantee Periods ranging from one to ten years
in length. We will decide in our discretion which Guarantee Periods to offer.
Currently, we offer Guarantee Periods of one, three, five, seven and ten years.
In the future we may offer Guarantee Periods of different lengths or stop
offering some Guarantee Periods.
We will credit interest daily to each amount allocated to a Guarantee Period
under this option at a rate which compounds to the effective annual interest
rate that we declared at the beginning of the applicable Guarantee Period. We
will not change the interest rate credited to a particular allocation until the
end of the relevant Guarantee Period. We may declare different interest rates
for Guarantee Periods of the same length that begin at different times.
19 PROSPECTUS
The following example illustrates how a Purchase Payment allocated to this
option would grow, given an assumed Guarantee Period and effective annual
interest rate:
EXAMPLE
Purchase Payment $ 10,000
Guarantee Period 5 years
Effective Annual Rate 4.50%
End of Contract Year
------------------------------------------------------
Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beginning Contract Value $10,000.00
X (1 + Effective Annual Rate) X 1.045
----------
$10,450.00
Contract Value at end of Contract Year $10,450.00
X (1 + Effective Annual Rate) X 1.045
----------
$10,920.25
Contract Value at end of Contract Year $10,920.25
X (1 + Effective Annual Rate) X 1.045
----------
$11,411.66
Contract Value at end of Contract Year $11,411.66
X (1 + Effective Annual Rate) X 1.045
----------
$11,925.19
Contract Value at end of Contract Year $11,925.19
X (1 + Effective Annual Rate) X 1.045
----------
$12,461.82
Total Interest Credited During Guarantee Period = $2,461.82 ($12,461.82 -
$10,000)
NOTE:This example assumes no withdrawals during the entire five-year Guarantee
Period. If you were to make a partial withdrawal, you might be required to
pay a Withdrawal Charge and the amount withdrawn might be increased or
decreased by a Market Value Adjustment. The hypothetical interest rate is
for illustrative purposes only and is not intended to predict future
interest rates to be declared under the Contract.
We have no specific formula for determining the rate of interest that we will
declare initially or in the future. We will set those interest rates based on
relevant factors such as then current interest rates, regulatory and tax
requirements, our sales commission and administrative expenses, general
economic trends, and competitive factors. For current interest rate
information, please contact us at 1-800-457-7617.
WE WILL DETERMINE THE INTEREST RATES TO BE DECLARED IN OUR SOLE DISCRETION. WE
CAN NEITHER PREDICT NOR GUARANTEE WHAT THOSE RATES WILL BE IN THE FUTURE.
At the end of each Guarantee Period, we will mail you a notice asking you what
to do with the relevant amount, including the accrued interest. During the
30-day period after the end of the Guarantee Period, you may:
1) take no action. If so, we will automatically keep the relevant amount in the
Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account Option. The new Guarantee Period will be
the same length as the expiring Guarantee Period and will begin on the day
the previous Guarantee Period ends. The new interest rate will be our then
current declared rate for Guarantee Periods of that length; or
2) allocate the relevant Contract Value to one or more new Guarantee Periods of
your choice in the Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account Option. The new
Guarantee Period(s) will begin on the day the previous Guarantee Period
ends. The new interest rate will be our then current declared rate for those
Guarantee Periods; or
3) instruct us to transfer all or a portion of the relevant amount to one or
more Sub-Accounts. We will effect the transfer on the day we receive your
instructions. We will not adjust the amount transferred to include a Market
Value Adjustment; or
4) withdraw all or a portion of the relevant amount through a partial
withdrawal. You may be required to pay a Withdrawal Charge, but we will not
adjust the amount withdrawn to include a Market Value Adjustment. The amount
withdrawn will be deemed to have been withdrawn on the day the Guarantee
Period ends.
Under our Automatic Laddering Program, you may choose, in advance, to use
Guarantee Periods of the same length for all renewals in the Guaranteed
Maturity Fixed Account Option. You can select this program at any time during
the Accumulation Period, including on the Issue Date. We will apply renewals to
Guarantee Periods of the selected length until you direct us in writing to
stop. We may stop offering this program at any time.
20 PROSPECTUS
MARKET VALUE ADJUSTMENT. We may increase or decrease the amount of some
transactions involving your investment in the Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account
Option to include a Market Value Adjustment. The formula for determining Market
Value Adjustments reflects changes in interest rates since the beginning of the
relevant Guarantee Period. As a result, you will bear some of the investment
risk on amounts allocated to the Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account Option.
As a general rule, we will apply a Market Value Adjustment to the following
transactions involving your Fixed Account balance:
1) when you withdraw funds from the Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account Option in
an amount greater than the Free Withdrawal Amount, as described on page 33;
2) when you transfer funds from the Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account Option to
the Sub-Accounts;
3) when you allocate part of your balance in the Guaranteed Maturity Fixed
Account Option to a new Guarantee Period before the end of the existing
Guarantee Period;
4) when you annuitize your Contract; and
5) when we pay a death benefit.
We will not apply a Market Value Adjustment to a transaction, to the extent
that:
1) it occurs within 30 days after the end of a Guarantee Period applicable to
the funds involved in the transaction;
2) you make a withdrawal to satisfy the IRS' required minimum distribution
rules for this Contract; or
3) it is a transfer that is part of a Dollar Cost Averaging program.
The formula for calculating Market Value Adjustments is set forth in Appendix B
to this prospectus, which also contains additional examples of the application
of the Market Value Adjustment. This formula primarily compares:
1) the Treasury Rate at the time of the relevant transaction for a maturity
equal in length to the relevant Guarantee Period; and
2) the Treasury Rate at the beginning of the Guarantee Period for a maturity
equal in length to the Guarantee Period.
Generally, if the Treasury Rate at the beginning of the Guarantee Period is
higher than the corresponding current Treasury Rate, then the Market Value
Adjustment will increase the amount payable to you or transferred. Similarly,
if the Treasury Rate at the beginning of the Guarantee Period is lower than the
corresponding current Treasury Rate, then the Market Value Adjustment will
reduce the amount payable to you or transferred.
For example, assume that you purchased a Contract and selected an initial
Guarantee Period of five years and the five-year Treasury Rate for that
duration is 4.50%. Assume that at the end of three years, you make a partial
withdrawal. If, at that later time, the current five-year Treasury Rate is
4.20%, then the Market Value Adjustment will be positive, which will result in
an increase in the amount payable to you. Similarly, if the current five-year
Treasury Rate is 4.80%, then the Market Value Adjustment will be negative,
which will result in a decrease in the amount payable to you.
DOLLAR COST AVERAGING FIXED ACCOUNT OPTION. You may also allocate Purchase
Payments to the Dollar Cost Averaging Fixed Account Option. We will credit
interest to Purchase Payments allocated to this option for up to one year at
the current rate that we declare when you make the allocation. The effective
annual rate will never be less than 3%. You may not transfer funds to this
option from the Sub-Accounts or the Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account Option.
We will follow your instructions in transferring amounts from this option to
the Sub-Accounts or the Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account Option on a monthly
basis only, as described in "Automatic Dollar Cost Averaging Program" on page
15 of this prospectus.
ANNUITY BENEFITS
ANNUITY DATE. You may select the Annuity Date, which is the date on which
annuity payments are to begin, in your application. The Annuity Date must
always be the business day on or immediately following the tenth day of a
calendar month.
The Annuity Date may be no later than the Latest Annuity Date. As a general
rule, the Latest Annuity Date is on or immediately following the later of the
10th Contract Anniversary or the youngest Annuitant's 90th birthday. If your
Contract was issued pursuant to a Qualified Plan, however, the Tax Code
generally requires you to begin to take at least a minimum distribution by the
later of:
.. the year of your separation from service; or
.. April 1 of the calendar year following the calendar year in which you
attain age 70 1/2.
If your Contract is issued pursuant to Section 408 of the Tax Code (traditional
IRAs), you must begin taking minimum distributions by April 1 of the calendar
year following the calendar year in which you reach age 70 1/2. No minimum
distributions are required by the Tax Code for Contracts issued pursuant to
Section 408A (Roth IRAs).
If your Contract was purchased by a Qualified Plan, we may require you to
annuitize by the date required by the Tax Code.
21 PROSPECTUS
If you do not select an Annuity Date, the Latest Annuity Date will
automatically become the Annuity Date. You may change the Annuity Date by
writing to us at the address given on the first page of the prospectus.
ANNUITY OPTIONS. You may elect an Annuity Option at any time before the
Annuity Date. As part of your election, you may choose the length of the
applicable guaranteed payment period within the limits available for your
chosen Option. If you do not select an Annuity Option, we will pay monthly
annuity payments in accordance with the applicable default Option. The default
Options are:
.. Option A with 10 years (120 months) guaranteed, if you have designated only
one Annuitant; and
.. Option B with 10 years (120 months) guaranteed, if you have designated
joint Annuitants.
You may freely change your choice of Annuity Option, as long as you request the
change at least thirty days before the Annuity Date.
Three Annuity Options are generally available under the Contract. Each is
available in the form of:
.. a Fixed Annuity;
.. a Variable Annuity; or
.. a combination of both Fixed and Variable Annuity.
The three Annuity Options are:
OPTION A: LIFE INCOME WITH GUARANTEED PAYMENTS. Under this plan, we make
periodic income payments for at least as long as the Annuitant lives. If the
Annuitant dies before we have made all of the guaranteed income payments, we
will continue to pay income payments to the Beneficiary until the guaranteed
number of payments has been paid. The number of months guaranteed may be 0
months, or range from 60 to 360 months.
OPTION B: JOINT AND SURVIVOR LIFE INCOME WITH GUARANTEED PAYMENTS. Under this
plan, we make periodic income payments for at least as long as either the
Annuitant or the joint Annuitant is alive. If both the Annuitant and the joint
Annuitant die before we have made all of the guaranteed income payments, we
will continue to pay income payments to the Beneficiary until the guaranteed
number of payments has been paid. The number of months guaranteed may be 0
months, or range from 60 to 360 months.
OPTION C: PAYMENTS FOR A SPECIFIED PERIOD CERTAIN OF 5 YEARS TO 30 YEARS. We
make periodic payments for the period you have chosen. If the Annuitant dies
before all of the guaranteed payments have been made, we will pay the remaining
guaranteed payments to the Beneficiary. If you elect this option, and request
Variable Annuity payments, you may at any time before the period expires
request a lump sum payment. If you elected Variable Annuity payments, the lump
sum payment will depend on:
.. the investment results of the Sub-Accounts you have selected,
.. the Contract Value at the time you elected annuitization, and
.. the length of the remaining period for which the payee would be entitled to
payments.
No lump sum payment is available if you request Fixed Annuity payments. If you
purchased your Contract under a retirement plan, you may have a more limited
selection of Annuity Options to choose from. You should consult your Plan
documents to see what is available.
If you choose Income Plan A or B, or, if available, another Income Plan with
payments that continue for the life of the Annuitant or joint Annuitant, we may
require proof of age and sex of the Annuitant or joint Annuitant before
starting income payments, and proof that the Annuitant or joint Annuitant are
alive before we make each payment. Please note that under such Income Plans, if
you elect to take no minimum guaranteed payments, it is possible that the payee
could receive only 1 income payment if the Annuitant and any joint Annuitant
both die before the second income payment, or only 2 income payments if they
die before the third income payment, and so on.
You may not "annuitize" your Contract for a lump sum payment. Instead, before
the Annuity Date you may surrender your Contract for a lump sum. As described
on page 30 below, however, we will subtract any applicable Withdrawal Charge
and increase or decrease your surrender proceeds by any applicable Market Value
Adjustment.
OTHER OPTIONS. We may have other Annuity Options available. You may obtain
information about them by writing or calling us.
If your Contract is issued under Sections 401, 403(b), 408 or 408A of the Tax
Code, we will only make payments to you and/or your spouse.
ANNUITY PAYMENTS: GENERAL. On the Annuity Date, we will apply the Annuitized
Value of your Contract to the Annuity Option you have chosen. Your annuity
payments may consist of Variable Annuity payments or Fixed Annuity payments or
a combination of the two. We will determine the amount of your annuity payments
as described in "Variable Annuity Payments" and "Fixed Annuity Payments"
beginning on page 23.
You must notify us in writing at least 30 days before the Annuity Date how you
wish to allocate your Annuitized Value between Variable Annuity and Fixed
Annuity payments. You must apply at least the Contract Value in the Fixed
Account on the Annuity Date to Fixed Annuity payments. If you wish to apply any
portion of your Fixed
22 PROSPECTUS
Account balance to your Variable Annuity payments, you should plan ahead and
transfer that amount to the Sub-Accounts prior to the Annuity Date. If you do
not tell us how to allocate your Contract Value among Fixed and Variable
Annuity payments, we will apply your Contract Value in the Separate Account to
Variable Annuity payments and your Contract Value in the Fixed Account to Fixed
Annuity payments.
Annuity payments begin on the Annuity Date. We make subsequent annuity payments
on the tenth of the month or, if the NYSE is closed on that day, the next day
on which the NYSE is open for business.
Annuity payments will be made in monthly, quarterly, semi-annual or annual
installments as you select. If the amount available to apply under an Annuity
Option is less than $5,000, however, and state law permits, we may pay you a
lump sum instead of the periodic payments you have chosen. In addition, if the
first annuity payment would be less than $50, and state law permits us, we may
reduce the frequency of payments so that the initial payment will be at least
$50.
We may defer for up to 15 days the payment of any amount attributable to a
Purchase Payment made by check to allow the check reasonable time to clear.
YOU MAY NOT WITHDRAW CONTRACT VALUE DURING THE ANNUITY PERIOD, IF WE ARE MAKING
PAYMENTS TO YOU UNDER ANY ANNUITY OPTION, SUCH AS OPTION A OR B ABOVE,
INVOLVING PAYMENT TO THE PAYEE FOR LIFE OR ANY COMBINATION OF PAYMENTS FOR LIFE
AND MINIMUM GUARANTEE PERIOD FOR A PREDETERMINED NUMBER OF YEARS.
VARIABLE ANNUITY PAYMENTS. One basic objective of the Contract is to provide
Variable Annuity Payments which will to some degree respond to changes in the
economic environment. The amount of your Variable Annuity Payments will depend
upon the investment results of the Sub-Accounts you have selected, any premium
taxes, the age and sex of the Annuitant, and the Annuity Option chosen. We
guarantee that the Payments will not be affected by (1) actual mortality
experience and (2) the amount of our administration expenses.
We cannot predict the total amount of your Variable Annuity payments. The
Variable Annuity payments may be more or less than your total Purchase Payments
because (a) Variable Annuity payments vary with the investment results of the
underlying Portfolios; and (b) Annuitants may die before their actuarial life
expectancy is achieved.
The length of any guaranteed payment period under your selected Annuity Option
will affect the dollar amounts of each Variable Annuity payment. As a general
rule, longer guarantee periods result in lower periodic payments, all other
things being equal. For example, if a life Annuity Option with no minimum
guaranteed payment period is chosen, the Variable Annuity payments will be
greater than Variable Annuity payments under an Annuity Option for a minimum
specified period and guaranteed thereafter for life.
The investment results of the Sub-Accounts to which you have allocated your
Contract Value will also affect the amount of your periodic payment. In
calculating the amount of the periodic payments in the annuity tables in the
Contract, we assumed an annual investment rate of 3 1/2%. If the actual net
investment return is less than the assumed investment rate, then the dollar
amount of the Variable Annuity payments will decrease. The dollar amount of the
Variable Annuity payments will stay level if the net investment return equals
the assumed investment rate and the dollar amount of the Variable Annuity
payments will increase if the net investment return exceeds the assumed
investment rate. You should consult the Statement of Additional Information for
more detailed information as to how we determine Variable Annuity Payments.
FIXED ANNUITY PAYMENTS. You may choose to apply a portion of your Annuitized
Value to provide Fixed Annuity payments. We determine the Fixed Annuity payment
amount by applying the applicable Annuitized Value to the Annuity Option you
have selected.
As a general rule, subsequent Fixed Annuity payments will be equal in amount to
the initial payment. However, as described in "Transfers During the Annuity
Period" below, after the Annuity Date, you will have a limited ability to
increase the amount of your Fixed Annuity payments by making transfers from the
Sub-Accounts.
We may defer making Fixed Annuity payments for a period of up to six months or
whatever shorter time state law may require. During the deferral period, we
credit any applicable interest at a rate at least as high as state law requires.
TRANSFERS DURING THE ANNUITY PERIOD. During the Annuity Period, you will have
a limited ability to make transfers among the Sub-Accounts so as to change the
relative weighting of the Sub-Accounts on which your Variable Annuity payments
will be based. In addition, you will have a limited ability to make transfers
from the Sub-Accounts to increase the proportion of your annuity payments
consisting of Fixed Annuity payments. You may not, however, convert any portion
of your right to receive Fixed Annuity payments into Variable Annuity payments.
You may not make any transfers for the first six months after the Annuity Date.
Thereafter, you may make transfers among the Sub-Accounts or make transfers
from the Sub-Accounts to increase your Fixed Annuity payments. Your transfers
must be at least six months apart.
DEATH BENEFIT DURING ANNUITY PERIOD. If any Contract Owner dies after the
Annuity Date, the
23 PROSPECTUS
successor Contract Owner will receive any guaranteed annuity payments scheduled
to continue. If the successor Owner dies before all of the guaranteed payments
have been made, we will continue the guaranteed payments to the
Beneficiary(ies). After annuity payments begin, upon
the death of the Annuitant and any Joint Annuitant, we will make any remaining
guaranteed payments to the Beneficiary. The amount and number of these
guaranteed payments will depend on the Annuity Option in effect at the time of
the Annuitant's death. After the Annuitant's death, any remaining guaranteed
payments will be distributed at least as rapidly as under the method of
distribution in effect at the Annuitant's death.
CERTAIN EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS. The Contracts offered by this prospectus
contain income payment tables that provide for different payments to men and
women of the same age, except in states that require unisex tables. We reserve
the right to use income payment tables that do not distinguish on the basis of
sex to the extent permitted by applicable law. In certain employment related
situations, employers are required by law to use the same income payment tables
for men and women. Accordingly, if the Contract is to be used in connection
with an employment-related retirement or benefit plan and we do not offer
unisex annuity tables in your state, you should consult with legal counsel as
to whether the purchase of a Contract is appropriate.
OTHER CONTRACT BENEFITS
DEATH BENEFIT: GENERAL. We will pay a distribution on death, if:
1) the Contract is in force;
2) annuity payments have not begun; and
3) either:
(a) any Owner dies; or
(b) any Annuitant dies and the Owner is a non-living person.
DUE PROOF OF DEATH. A complete request for settlement of the Death Proceeds
must be submitted before the Annuity Date. Where there are multiple
Beneficiaries, we will value the Death Benefit at the time the first
Beneficiary submits a complete request for settlement of the Death Proceeds. A
complete request must include "Due Proof of Death". We will accept the
following documentation as Due Proof of Death:
.. a certified original copy of the Death Certificate;
.. a certified copy of a court decree as to the finding of death; or
.. a written statement of a medical doctor who attended the deceased at the
time of death.
In addition, in our discretion we may accept other types of proof.
DEATH PROCEEDS. If we receive a complete request for settlement of the Death
Proceeds within 180 days of the date of your death, the Death Proceeds are
equal to the Death Benefit described below. Otherwise, the Death Proceeds are
equal to the greater of the Contract Value or the Surrender Value. We reserve
the right to waive or extend, on a nondiscriminatory basis, the 180-day period
in which the Death Proceeds will equal the Death Benefit as described below.
This right applies only to the amount payable as Death Proceeds and in no way
restricts when the claim may be filed.
DEATH BENEFIT AMOUNT. The standard Death Benefit under the Contract is the
greatest of the following:
1) the total Purchase Payments, less a withdrawal adjustment for any prior
partial withdrawals;
2) the Contract Value on the date as of which we calculate the Death Benefit.
3) the Surrender Value;
4) the Contract Value on the seventh Contract Anniversary and each subsequent
Contract Anniversary evenly divisible by seven, increased by the total
Purchase Payments since that anniversary and reduced by a withdrawal
adjustment for any partial withdrawals since that anniversary.
The withdrawal adjustment for the Death Benefit will equal (a) divided by (b),
with the result multiplied by (c), where:
(a) = the withdrawal amount;
(b) = the Contract Value immediately before the withdrawal; and
(c) = the value of the applicable Death Benefit immediately before the
withdrawal.
As described on page 26, you may add optional riders that in some circumstances
may increase the Death Benefit under your contract.
DEATH BENEFIT PAYMENTS
1. If your spouse is the sole beneficiary:
(a) Your spouse may elect to receive the Death Proceeds in a lump sum; or
(b) Your spouse may elect to receive the Death Proceeds paid out under one
of the annuity options, subject to the following conditions:
The Annuity Date must be within one year of your date of death. Annuity
payments must be payable:
(i) over the life of your spouse; or
(ii) for a guaranteed number of payments from 5 to 30 years but not to
exceed the life expectancy of your spouse; or
(iii) over the life of your spouse with a guaranteed number of payments from
5 to 30 years but not to exceed the life expectancy of your spouse.
24 PROSPECTUS
(b) If your spouse chooses to continue the Contract, or does not elect one
of these options, then the Contract will continue in the Accumulation Period as
if the death had not occurred. If the Contract is continued in the Accumulation
Period, the following conditions apply.
Unless otherwise instructed by the continuing spouse, the excess, if any, of
the Death Proceeds over the Contract Value will be allocated to the
Sub-Accounts. This excess will be allocated in proportion to your Contract
Value in those Sub-Accounts as of the end of the Valuation Period during which
we receive the
complete request for settlement of the Death Proceeds, except that any portion
of this excess attributable to the fixed account options will be allocated to
the Money Market Sub-Account. Within 30 days of the date the Contract is
continued, your surviving spouse may choose one of the following transfer
alternatives without incurring a transfer fee:
(i) transfer all or a portion of the excess among the Sub-Accounts;
(ii) transfer all or a portion of the excess into the Guaranteed Maturity
Fixed Account and begin a new Guarantee Period; or
(iii) transfer all or a portion of the excess into a combination of
Sub-Accounts and the Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account.
Any such transfer does not count as the free transfer allowed each calendar
month and is subject to any minimum allocation amount specified in your
Contract.
The surviving spouse may make a single withdrawal of any amount within one year
of the date of your death without incurring a Withdrawal Charge or Market Value
Adjustment.
Prior to the Annuity Date, the death benefit of the continued Contract will be
as defined in the Death Benefit provision.
Only one spousal continuation is allowed under this Contract.
If there is no Annuitant at that time, the new Annuitant will be the surviving
spouse.
2. If the Beneficiary is not your spouse but is a living person:
(a) The Beneficiary may elect to receive the Death Proceeds in a lump sum; or
(b) The Beneficiary may elect to receive the Death Proceeds paid out under
one of the annuity options, subject to the following conditions:
The Annuity Date must be within one year of your date of death. Annuity
payments must be payable:
(i) over the life of the Beneficiary; or
(ii) for a guaranteed number of payments from 5 to 30 years but not to
exceed the life expectancy of the Beneficiary; or
(iii) over the life of the Beneficiary with a guaranteed number of payments
from 5 to 30 years but not to exceed the life expectancy of the Beneficiary.
(c) If the Beneficiary does not elect one of the options above, then the
Beneficiary must receive the Contract Value payable within 5 years of your date
of death. We will determine the Death Proceeds as of the date we receive the
complete request for settlement of the Death Proceeds. Unless otherwise
instructed by the Beneficiary, the excess, if any, of the Death Proceeds over
the Contract Value will be allocated to the Money Market Sub-Account and the
Contract Value will be adjusted accordingly. The Beneficiary may exercise all
rights as set forth in Transfer During the Accumulation Period on page 13 and
Transfer Fees on page 32 during this 5-year period.
The Beneficiary may not pay additional purchase payments into the Contract
under this election. Withdrawal Charges will be waived for any withdrawals made
during this 5-year period.
We reserve the right to offer additional options upon the death of the Contract
Owner.
If the Beneficiary dies before the complete liquidation of the Contract Value,
then the Beneficiary's named Beneficiary(ies) will receive the greater of the
Surrender Value or the remaining Contract Value. This amount must be liquidated
as a lump sum within 5 years of the date of the original Contract Owner's death.
3. If the Beneficiary is a corporation or other type of non-living person:
(a) The Beneficiary may elect to receive the Death Proceeds in a lump sum; or
(b) If the Beneficiary does not elect to receive the option above, then the
Beneficiary must receive the Contract Value payable within 5 years of your date
of death. We will determine the Death Proceeds as of the date we receive the
complete request for settlement of the Death Proceeds. Unless otherwise
instructed by the Beneficiary, the excess, if any, of the Death Proceeds over
the Contract Value will be allocated to the Money Market Sub-Account. The
Beneficiary may exercise all rights as set forth in Transfer During the
Accumulation Period on page 13 and Transfer Fees on page 32 during this 5-year
period.
The Beneficiary may not pay additional purchase payments into the contract
under this election. Withdrawal charges will be waived during this 5 year
period.
We reserve the right to offer additional options upon Death of Owner.
25 PROSPECTUS
If any Beneficiary is a non-living person, all Beneficiaries will be considered
to be non-living persons for the above purposes.
Under any of these options, all contract rights, subject to any restrictions
previously placed upon the Beneficiary, are available to the Beneficiary from
the date of your death to the date on which the Death Proceeds are paid.
Different rules may apply to Contracts issued in connection with Qualified
Plans.
We offer different optional riders under this Contract. If you elect an
optional rider, we will charge you a higher mortality and expense charge. We
may discontinue offering one or more Riders at any time. The benefits under the
Riders are described below. The benefits in the riders discussed below may not
be available in all states. For example, the Enhanced Death Benefit, Enhanced
Income Benefit and all versions of the Enhanced Death and Income Benefit riders
issued in Washington state do not contain the Enhanced Death Benefit B or
Enhanced Income Benefit B provisions that are described below. Further they may
be offered in certain states as a benefit of the base contract rather than as a
separate rider. In those states, the expense charge will remain the same for
the benefit.
ENHANCED DEATH BENEFIT RIDER: When you purchase your Contract, you may select
the Enhanced Death Benefit Rider. This Rider is available if the oldest Owner
or Annuitant is age 80 or less at issue. If you are not an individual, the
Enhanced Death Benefit applies only to the Annuitant's death. As described
below, we will charge a higher mortality and expense risk charge if you select
this Rider. If you select this Rider, the Death Benefit will be the greater of
the value provided in your Contract or the Enhanced Death Benefit. The Enhanced
Death Benefit will be the greater of the Enhanced Death Benefit A or Enhanced
Death Benefit B, defined below.
ENHANCED INCOME BENEFIT RIDER: When you purchase your Contract you may select
the Enhanced Income Benefit Rider if available in your state. Lincoln Benefit
Life no longer offers this Rider in most states. This Rider is available if the
oldest Owner or Annuitant is age 75 or less at issue. If you select this Rider,
you may be able to receive higher annuity payments in certain circumstances. As
described below, we will charge a higher mortality and expense risk charge if
you select this Rider.
The Enhanced Income Benefit under this Rider is equal to the greater of
Enhanced Income Benefit A or Enhanced Income Benefit B, defined below, on the
Annuity Date. We will not increase or decrease the Enhanced Income Benefit
amount by any Market Value Adjustment. To be eligible for the Enhanced Income
Benefit, you must select an Annuity Date that is:
(a) on or after the tenth Contract Anniversary;
(b) before the Annuitant's age 90; and
(c) within a 30-day period on or following a Contract Anniversary.
On the Annuity Date, you may apply the Enhanced Income Benefit to an Annuity
Option that provides for fixed payments on the basis guaranteed in the Contract
for either a single life with a period certain, or joint lives with a period
certain of at least:
(a) 10 years, if the youngest Annuitant's age is 80 or less on the Annuity
Date; or
(b) 5 years, if the youngest Annuitant's age is greater than 80 on the
Annuity Date.
If you wish to select a different Annuity Option, you must apply the Annuitized
Value and not the Enhanced Income Benefit.
The Enhanced Income Benefit under this Rider only applies to the determination
of income payments under the income options described above. It is not a
guarantee of Contract Value or performance. The benefit does not enhance the
amounts paid in partial withdrawals, surrenders or death benefits. In addition,
under some circumstances, you will receive higher initial income payments by
applying your Contract Annuitized Value to one of the standard Annuity Options
instead of utilizing this optional benefit. If you surrender your Contract, you
will not receive any benefit under this Rider.
ENHANCED INCOME BENEFIT A. At issue, the Enhanced Income Benefit A is equal to
the initial purchase payment. After issue, Enhanced Income Benefit A is
recalculated as follows:
.. When you make a Purchase Payment, we will increase the Enhanced Income
Benefit A by the amount of your Purchase Payment;
.. When you make a withdrawal, we will decrease Enhanced Income Benefit A by a
withdrawal adjustment as defined below;
.. On each Contract Anniversary, the Enhanced Income Benefit A is equal to the
greater of the Contract Value or the most recently calculated Enhanced
Income Benefit A.
If you do not make any additional Purchase Payments or withdrawals, the
Enhanced Income Benefit A will be the greatest of all Contract Anniversary
Contract Values prior to the date we calculate the Enhanced Income Benefit.
We will continuously adjust Enhanced Income Benefit A; as described above,
until the oldest Contract Owner's 85th birthday, or if the Contract Owner is
not a living individual, the oldest Annuitant's 85th birthday. Thereafter, we
will adjust Enhanced Income Benefit A only for Purchase Payments and
withdrawals.
ENHANCED INCOME BENEFIT B. Enhanced Income Benefit B is equal to your total
Purchase Payments
26 PROSPECTUS
reduced by any withdrawal adjustments, accumulated daily at an effective annual
interest rate of 5% per year, until the earlier of:
(a) the date we determine the income benefit;
(b) the first day of the month following the oldest Contract Owner's 85th
birthday, or the first day of the month following the oldest Annuitant's 85th
birthday, if the Contract Owner is not a living individual.
The withdrawal adjustment is equal to (a) divided by (b), with the result
multiplied by (c) where,
(a) is the withdrawal amount;
(b) is the Contract Value immediately prior to the withdrawal;
(c) is the most recently calculated Enhanced Income Benefit A or B, as
applicable.
ENHANCED DEATH AND INCOME BENEFIT RIDER II: When you purchase your Contract
and if available in your state, you may select the Enhanced Death and Income
Benefit Rider II. Lincoln Benefit Life no longer offers this Rider in most
states. This Rider is available if the oldest Owner or Annuitant is age 75 or
less at issue. This Rider provides the same Enhanced Death Benefit as the
Enhanced Death Benefit Rider. In addition, this Rider may enable you to receive
higher annuity payments in certain circumstances. As described below, we will
charge a higher mortality and expense risk charge if you select this Rider.
The Enhanced Income Benefit under this Rider is equal to the greater of
Enhanced Death Benefit A or Enhanced Death Benefit B, defined below, on the
Annuity Date. We will not increase or decrease the Enhanced Income Benefit
amount by any Market Value Adjustment. To be eligible for the Enhanced Income
Benefit, you must select an Annuity Date that is:
(a) on or after the tenth Contract Anniversary;
(b) before the Annuitant's age 90; and
(c) within a 30-day period on or following a Contract Anniversary.
On the Annuity Date, you may apply the Enhanced Income Benefit to an Annuity
Option that provides for fixed payments on the basis guaranteed in the contract
for either a single life with a period certain, or joint lives with a period
certain of at least:
(a) 10 years, if the youngest Annuitant's age is 80 or less on the Annuity
Date; or
(b) 5 years, if the youngest Annuitant's age is greater than 80 on the
Annuity Date.
If you wish to select a different Annuity Option, you must apply the Annuitized
Value and not the Enhanced Income Benefit.
ENHANCED DEATH AND INCOME BENEFIT RIDER. This Rider was previously available
if the oldest Owner or Annuitant is age 75 or less at issue. This rider is no
longer available. This Rider provides the same Enhanced Death Benefit as the
Enhanced Death Benefit Rider. In addition, this Rider may enable you to receive
higher annuity payments in certain circumstances. As described below, we will
charge a higher mortality and expense risk charge if you select this Rider.
The Enhanced Income Benefit under this Rider is equal to the value of the
Enhanced Death Benefit on the Annuity Date. We will not increase or decrease
the Enhanced Income Benefit amount by any Market Value Adjustment. To be
eligible for the Enhanced Income Benefit, you must select an Annuity Date that
is on or after the tenth Contract Anniversary, but before the Annuitant's age
90. On the Annuity Date, you may apply the Enhanced Income Benefit to an
Annuity Option that provides for payments guaranteed for either a single life
with a period certain or joint lives with a period certain of at least:
(a) 10 years, if the youngest Annuitant's age is 80 or less on the Annuity
Date; or
(b) at least 5 years, if the youngest Annuitant's age is greater than 80 on
the Annuity Date.
If you wish to select a different Annuity Option, you must apply the Annuitized
Value and not the Enhanced Income Benefit.
ENHANCED DEATH BENEFIT A. At issue, Enhanced Death Benefit A is equal to the
initial Purchase Payment. After issue, Enhanced Death Benefit A is adjusted
whenever you pay a Purchase Payment or make a withdrawal and on each Contract
Anniversary as follows:
.. When you pay a Purchase Payment, we will increase Enhanced Death Benefit A
by the amount of the Purchase Payment;
.. When you make a withdrawal, we will decrease Enhanced Death Benefit A by a
withdrawal adjustment, as described below; and
.. On each Contract Anniversary, we will set Enhanced Death Benefit A equal to
the greater of the Contract Value on that Contract Anniversary or the most
recently calculated Enhanced Death Benefit A.
If you do not pay any additional purchase payments or make any withdrawals,
Enhanced Death Benefit A will equal the greatest of the Contract Value on the
Issue Date and all Contract Anniversaries prior to the date we calculate any
death benefit.
We will continuously adjust Enhanced Death Benefit A as described above until
the oldest Contract Owner's 85th birthday or, if the Contract Owner is not a
living individual, the Annuitant's 85th birthday. Thereafter, we will adjust
Enhanced Death Benefit A only for Purchase Payments and withdrawals.
27 PROSPECTUS
ENHANCED DEATH BENEFIT B. Enhanced Death Benefit B is equal to your total
Purchase Payments, reduced by any withdrawal adjustments, accumulated daily at
an effective annual rate of 5% per year, until the earlier of:
(a) the date we determine the death benefit,
(b) the first day of the month following the oldest Contract Owner's 85th
birthday; or
(c) the first day of the month following the oldest Annuitant's 85th
birthday, if the Contract Owner is not a living individual.
Thereafter, we will only adjust Enhanced Death Benefit B to reflect additional
Purchase Payments and withdrawals. Enhanced Death Benefit B will never be
greater than the maximum death benefit allowed by any nonforfeiture laws that
govern the Contract.
The withdrawal adjustment for both Enhanced Death Benefit A and Enhanced Death
Benefit B will equal (a) divided by (b), with the result multiplied by (c),
where:
(a) = the withdrawal amount;
(b) = the Contract Value immediately before the withdrawal; and
(c) = the most recently calculated Enhanced Benefit A or B, as appropriate.
BENEFICIARY. You name the Beneficiary. You may name a Beneficiary in the
application. You may also name one or more contingent Beneficiaries who are
entitled to receive benefits under the contract if all primary Beneficiaries
are deceased at the time a Contract Owner, or Annuitant if the Contract Owner
is not a living person, dies. You may change the Beneficiary or add additional
Beneficiaries at any time before the Annuity Date. We will provide a form to be
signed and filed with us.
Your changes in Beneficiary take effect when we accept them, effective as of
the date you signed the form. Until we accept your change instructions, we are
entitled to rely on your most recent instructions in our files. We are not
liable for making a payment to a Beneficiary shown in our files or treating
that person in any other respect as the Beneficiary prior to accepting a
change. Accordingly, if you wish to change your beneficiary, you should deliver
your instructions to us promptly.
If you did not name a Beneficiary or if the named Beneficiary is no longer
living, the Beneficiary will be:
.. your spouse if he or she is still alive; or, if he or she is no longer
alive,
.. your surviving children equally; or if you have no surviving children,
.. your estate.
Unless you have provided directions to the contrary, the Beneficiaries will
take equal shares. If there is more than one Beneficiary in a class and one of
the Beneficiaries predeceases the Contract Owner or Annuitant, the remaining
Beneficiaries in that class will divide the deceased Beneficiary's share in
proportion to the original shares of the remaining beneficiaries.
If more than one Beneficiary shares in the Death Proceeds, each Beneficiary
will be treated as a separate and independent owner of his or her respective
share. Each Beneficiary will exercise all rights related to his or her share,
including the sole right to select a payout option, subject to any restrictions
previously placed upon the Beneficiary. Each Beneficiary may designate a
Beneficiary(ies) for his or her respective share, but that designated
Beneficiary(ies) will be restricted to the payout option chosen by the original
Beneficiary.
If there is more than one Beneficiary and one of the Beneficiaries is a
corporation or other type of non-living person, all beneficiaries will be
considered to be non-living persons.
You may specify that the Death Benefit be paid under a specific income Plan by
submitting a written request to our Service Center. If you so request, your
Beneficiary may not change to a different Income Plan or lump sum. Once we
accept the written request, the change or restriction will take effect as of
the date you signed the request. Any change is subject to any payment we make
or other action we take before we accept the changes.
Different rules may apply to Contracts issued in connection with Qualified
Plans.
CONTRACT LOANS FOR 403(B) CONTRACTS. Subject to the restrictions described
below, we will make loans to the Owner of a Contract used in connection with a
Tax Sheltered Annuity Plan ("TSA Plan") under Section 403(b) of the Tax Code.
Loans are not available under Non-Qualified Contracts. We will only make loans
after the free look period and before annuitization. All loans are subject to
the terms of the Contract, the relevant Plan, and the Tax Code, which impose
restrictions on loans.
We will not make a loan to you if the total of the requested loan and your
unpaid outstanding loans will be greater than the Surrender Value of your
Contract on the date of the loan. In addition, we will not make a loan to you
if the total of the requested loan and all of the plan participant's Contract
loans under TSA plans is more than the lesser of (a) or (b) where:
(a) equals $50,000 minus the excess of the highest outstanding loan balance
during the prior 12 months over the current outstanding loan balance; and
(b) equals the greater of $10,000 or half of the Surrender Value.
The minimum loan amount is $1,000.
To request a Contract loan, write to us at the address given on the first page
of the prospectus. You alone are responsible for ensuring that your loan and
repayments
28 PROSPECTUS
comply with tax requirements. Some of these requirements are stated in
Section 72 of the Tax Code. Please seek advice from your plan administrator or
tax advisor.
When we make a loan, we will transfer an amount equal to the loan amount from
the Separate Account and/or the Fixed Account to the Loan Account as collateral
for the loan. We will transfer to the Loan Account amounts from the Separate
Account in proportion to the assets in each Sub-Account. If your loan amount is
greater than your Contract Value in the Sub-Accounts, we will transfer the
remaining required collateral from the Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account
Options. If your loan amount is greater than your contract value in the
Sub-Accounts and the Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account Options, we will
transfer the remaining required collateral from the Dollar Cost Averaging Fixed
Account Option.
We will not charge a Withdrawal Charge on the loan or on the transfer from the
Sub-Accounts or the Fixed Account. We may, however, apply a Market Value
Adjustment to a transfer from the Fixed Account to the Loan Account. If we do,
we will increase or decrease the amount remaining in the Fixed Account by the
amount of the Market Value Adjustment, so that the net amount transferred to
the Loan Account will equal the desired loan amount. We will charge a
Withdrawal Charge and apply a Market Value Adjustment, if applicable, on a
distribution to repay the loan in full, in the event of loan default.
We will credit interest to the amounts in the Loan Account. The annual interest
rate credited to the Loan Account will be the greater of: (a) 3%; or (b) the
loan interest rate minus 2.25%. The value of the amounts in the Loan Account
are not affected by the changes in the value of the Sub-Accounts.
When you take out a loan, we will set the loan interest rate. That rate will
apply to your loan until it is repaid. From time to time, we may change the
loan interest rate applicable to new loans. We also reserve the right to change
the terms of new loans.
We will subtract the outstanding Contract loan balance, including accrued but
unpaid interest, from:
1) the Death Proceeds;
2) surrender proceeds;
3) the amount available for partial withdrawal;
4) the amount applied on the Annuity Date to provide annuity payments; and
5) the amount applied on the Annuity Date to provide annuity payments under the
Enhanced Income Benefit Rider, Enhanced Death and Income Benefit Rider, or
the Enhanced Death and Income Benefit Rider II.
Usually you must repay a Contract loan within five years of the date the loan
is made. Scheduled payments must be level, amortized over the repayment period,
and made at least quarterly. We may permit a repayment period of 15 or 30 years
if the loan proceeds are used to acquire your principal residence. We may also
permit other repayment periods.
You must mark your loan repayments as such. We will assume that any payment
received from you is a Purchase Payment, unless you tell us otherwise.
Generally, loan payments are allocated to the Sub-Account(s) in the proportion
that you have selected for Purchase Payments. Allocations of loan payments are
not permitted to the Fixed Accounts (Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account and
Dollar Cost Averaging Fixed Account Option). If your Purchase Payment
allocation includes any of the Fixed Accounts, the percentages allocated to the
Fixed Accounts will be allocated instead to the Fidelity Money Market
Sub-Account.
If you do not make a loan payment when due, we will continue to charge interest
on your loan. We also will declare the entire loan in default. We will subtract
the defaulted loan balance plus accrued interest from any future distribution
under the Contract and keep it in payment of your loan. Any defaulted amount
plus interest will be treated as a distribution for tax purposes (as permitted
by law). As a result, you may be required to pay taxes on the defaulted amount
and incur the early withdrawal tax penalty. We will capitalize interest on a
loan in default.
If the total loan balance exceeds the Surrender Value, we will mail written
notice to your last known address. The notice will state the amount needed to
maintain the Contract in force. If we do not receive payment of this amount
within 31 days after we mail this notice, we will terminate your Contract.
We may defer making any loan for 6 months after you ask us for a loan, unless
the loan is to pay a premium to us.
WITHDRAWALS (REDEMPTIONS). Except as explained below, you may redeem a
Contract for all or a portion of its Contract Value before the Annuity Date. We
may impose a Withdrawal Charge, which would reduce the amount paid to you upon
redemption. The Withdrawal Charges are described on page 32. Withdrawals from
the Fixed Account may be increased or decreased by a Market Value Adjustment,
as described in "Market Value Adjustment" on page 21.
In general, you must withdraw at least $50 at a time. You may also withdraw a
lesser amount if you are withdrawing your entire interest in a Sub-Account. If
your request for a partial withdrawal would reduce the Contract Value to less
than $500, we may treat it as a request for a withdrawal of your entire
Contract Value, as described in "Minimum Contract Value" on page 31. Your
Contract will terminate if you withdraw all of your Contract Value.
29 PROSPECTUS
Withdrawals taken prior to annuitization are generally considered to come from
the earnings in the Contract first. If the Contract is tax-qualified, generally
all withdrawals are treated as distribution of earnings. Withdrawals of
earnings are taxed as ordinary income and, if taken prior to age 59 1/2, may be
subject to an additional 10% federal tax penalty.
We may be required to withhold 20% of withdrawals and distributions from
Contracts issued in connection with certain Qualified Plans, as described on
page 39.
To make a withdrawal, you must send us a written withdrawal request or
systematic withdrawal program enrollment form. You may obtain the required
forms from us at the address and phone number given on the first page of this
prospectus.
WRITTEN REQUESTS AND FORMS IN GOOD ORDER.
Written requests must include sufficient information and/or documentation, and
be sufficiently clear, to enable us to complete your request without the need
to exercise discretion on our part to carry it out. You may contact our
Customer Service Center to learn what information we require for your
particular request to be in "good order." Additionally, we may require that you
submit your request on our form. We reserve the right to determine whether any
particular request is in good order, and to change or waive any good order
requirements at any time.
For partial withdrawals, you may allocate the amount among the Sub-Accounts and
the Fixed Accounts. If we do not receive allocation instructions from you, we
usually will allocate the partial withdrawal proportionately among the
Sub-Accounts and the Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account Options based upon the
balance of the Sub-Accounts and the Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account Options,
with any remainder being distributed from the Dollar Cost Averaging Fixed
Account Option. You may not make a partial withdrawal from the Fixed Account in
an amount greater than the total amount of the partial withdrawal multiplied by
the ratio of the value of the Fixed Account to the Contract Value immediately
before the partial withdrawal.
If you request a total withdrawal, you must send us your Contract. The
Surrender Value will equal the Contract Value minus any applicable Withdrawal
Charge and adjusted by any applicable Market Value Adjustment. We also will
deduct a contract maintenance charge of $35, unless we have waived the contract
maintenance charge on your Contract as described on page 31. We determine the
Surrender Value based on the Contract Value next computed after we receive a
properly completed surrender request. We will usually pay the Surrender Value
within seven days after the day we receive a completed request form. However,
we may suspend the right of withdrawal from the Separate Account or delay
payment for withdrawals for more than seven days in the following circumstances:
1) whenever the New York Stock Exchange ("NYSE") is closed (other than
customary weekend and holiday closings);
2) when trading on the NYSE is restricted or an emergency exists, as determined
by the SEC, so that disposal of the Separate Account's investments or
determination of Accumulation Unit Values is not reasonably practicable; or
3) at any other time permitted by the SEC for your protection.
In addition, we may delay payment of the Surrender Value in the Fixed Account
for up to 6 months or a shorter period if required by law. If we delay payment
from the Fixed Account for more than 30 days, we will pay interest as required
by applicable law.
You may withdraw amounts attributable to contributions made pursuant to a
salary reduction agreement (in accordance with Section 403(b)(11) of the Tax
Code) only in the following circumstances:
1) when you attain age 59 1/2;
2) when you terminate your employment with the plan sponsor;
3) upon your death;
4) upon your disability as defined in Section 72(m)(7) of the Tax Code;
5) or in the case of hardship.
If you seek a hardship withdrawal, you may only withdraw amounts attributable
to your Purchase Payments; you may not withdraw any earnings. These limitations
on withdrawals apply to:
1) salary reduction contributions made after December 31, 1988;
2) income attributable to such contributions; and
3) income attributable to amounts held as of December 31, 1988.
The limitations on withdrawals do not affect transfers between certain
Qualified Plans. Additional restrictions and limitations may apply to
distributions from any Qualified Plan. Tax penalties may also apply. You should
seek tax advice regarding any withdrawals or distributions from Qualified Plans.
SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PROGRAM. If your Contract is a non-Qualified Contract or
IRA, you may participate in our Systematic Withdrawal Program. You must
complete an enrollment form and send it to us. You must complete the
withholding election section of the enrollment form before the systematic
withdrawals will begin. You may choose withdrawal payments of a flat dollar
amount, earnings, or a percentage of Purchase
30 PROSPECTUS
Payments. You may choose to receive systematic withdrawal payments on a
monthly, quarterly, semi-annual, or annual basis. Systematic withdrawals will
be deducted from your Sub-Account and Fixed Account balances, excluding the
Dollar Cost Averaging Fixed Account, on a pro rata basis.
Depending on fluctuations in the net asset value of the Sub-Accounts and the
value of the Fixed Account, systematic withdrawals may reduce or even exhaust
the Contract Value. The minimum amount of each systematic withdrawal is $50.
We will make systematic withdrawal payments to you or your designated payee. We
may modify or suspend the Systematic Withdrawal Program and charge a processing
fee for the service. If we modify or suspend the Systematic Withdrawal Program,
existing systematic withdrawal payments will not be affected.
ERISA PLANS. A married participant may need spousal consent to receive a
distribution from a Contract issued in connection with a Qualified Plan or a
Non-Qualified Plan covered by to Title 1 of ERISA. You should consult an
adviser.
MINIMUM CONTRACT VALUE. If as a result of withdrawals your Contract Value
would be less than $500 and you have not made any Purchase Payments during the
previous three full calendar years, we may terminate your Contract and
distribute its Surrender Value to you. Before we do this, we will give you 60
days notice. We will not terminate your Contract on this ground if the Contract
Value has fallen below $500 due to either a decline in Accumulation Unit Value
or the imposition of fees and charges. In addition, in some states we are not
permitted to terminate Contracts on this ground. Different rules may apply to
Contracts issued in connection with Qualified Plans.
CONTRACT CHARGES
We assess charges under the Contract in three ways:
1) as deductions from Contract Value for contract maintenance charges and, if
applicable, for premium taxes;
2) as charges against the assets of the Separate Account for administrative
expenses and for the assumption of mortality and expense risks; and
3) as Withdrawal Charges (contingent deferred sales charges) subtracted from
withdrawal and surrender payments.
In addition, certain deductions are made from the assets of the Portfolios for
investment management fees and expenses. Those fees and expenses are summarized
in the Fee Tables on page 5, and described more fully in the Prospectuses and
Statements of Additional Information for the Portfolios.
MORTALITY AND EXPENSE RISK CHARGE. We deduct a mortality and expense risk
charge from each Sub-Account during each Valuation Period. The mortality and
expense risk charge is equal, on an annual basis, to 1.15% of the average net
asset value of each Sub-Account. The mortality risks arise from our contractual
obligations:
1) to make annuity payments after the Annuity Date for the life of the
Annuitant(s);
2) to waive the Withdrawal Charge upon your death; and
3) to provide the Death Benefit prior to the Annuity Date. A detailed
explanation of the Death Benefit may be found beginning on page 24.
The expense risk is that it may cost us more to administer the Contracts and
the Separate Account than we receive from the contract maintenance charge and
the administrative expense charge. We guarantee the mortality and expense risk
charge and we cannot increase it. We assess the mortality and expense risk
charge during both the Accumulation Period and the Annuity Period.
If you select the Enhanced Death Benefit Rider, your mortality and expense risk
charge will be 1.35% of average net asset value of each Sub-Account. If you
select the Enhanced Income Rider, your mortality and expense risk charge will
be 1.50% of average daily net asset value of each Sub-Account. If you select
the Enhanced Death and Income Benefit Rider, your mortality and expense risk
charge will be 1.55% of average daily net asset value of each Sub-Account. If
you select the Enhanced Death and Income Benefit Rider II, your mortality and
expense risk charge will be 1.70% of average daily net asset value of each
Sub-Account. We charge a higher mortality and expense risk charge for the
Riders to compensate us for the additional risk that we accept by providing the
Riders. We will calculate a separate Accumulation Unit Value for the base
Contract, and for Contracts with each type of Rider, in order to reflect the
difference in the mortality and expense risk charges.
ADMINISTRATIVE CHARGES.
CONTRACT MAINTENANCE CHARGE. We charge an annual contract maintenance charge
of $35 on your Contract. The amount of this charge is guaranteed not to
increase. This charge reimburses us for our expenses incurred in maintaining
your Contract.
Before the Annuity Date, we assess the contract maintenance charge on each
Contract Anniversary. To obtain payment of this charge, on a pro rata basis we
will allocate this charge among the Sub-Accounts to which you have allocated
your Contract Value, and redeem Accumulation Units accordingly. We will waive
this charge if you pay more than $50,000 in Purchase Payments or if you
allocate all of your Contract Value to
31 PROSPECTUS
the Fixed Account. If you surrender your Contract, we will deduct the full $35
charge as of the date of surrender, unless your Contract qualifies for a waiver.
After the Annuity Date and if allowed in your state, we will subtract this
charge in equal parts from each of your annuity payments. We will waive this
charge if on the Annuity Date your Contract Value is $50,000 or more or if all
of your annuity payments are Fixed Annuity payments.
ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSE CHARGE. We deduct an administrative expense charge from
each Sub-Account during each Valuation Period. This charge is equal, on an
annual basis, to 0.10% of the average net asset value of the Sub-Accounts. This
charge is designed to compensate us for the cost of administering the Contracts
and the Separate Account. The administrative expense charge is assessed during
both the Accumulation Period and the Annuity Period.
TRANSFER FEE. We currently are waiving the transfer fee. The Contract,
however, permits us to charge a transfer fee of $10 on the second and each
subsequent transaction in each calendar month in which transfer(s) are effected
between Subaccount(s) and/or the Fixed Account. We will notify you if we begin
to charge this fee. We will not charge a transfer fee on transfers that are
part of a Dollar Cost Averaging or Portfolio Rebalancing program.
The transfer fee will be deducted from Contract Value that remains in the
Subaccount(s) or Fixed Account from which the transfer was made. If that amount
is insufficient to pay the transfer fee, we will deduct the fee from the
transferred amount.
SALES CHARGES.
WITHDRAWAL CHARGE. We may charge a Withdrawal Charge, which is a contingent
deferred sales charge, upon certain withdrawals.
As a general rule, the Withdrawal Charge equals a percentage of Purchase
Payments withdrawn that are: (a) less than seven years old; and (b) not
eligible for a free withdrawal. The applicable percentage depends on how many
years ago you made the Purchase Payment being withdrawn, as shown in this chart:
WITHDRAWAL CHARGE
CONTRIBUTION YEAR PERCENTAGE
First and Second 7%
Third and Fourth 6%
Fifth 5%
Sixth 4%
Seventh 3%
Eighth and later 0%
When we calculate the Withdrawal Charge, we do not take any applicable Market
Value Adjustment into consideration. Beginning on January 1, 2004, if you make
a withdrawal before the Annuity Date, we will apply the withdrawal charge
percentage in effect on the date of the withdrawal, or the withdrawal charge
percentage in effect on the following day, whichever is lower.
We subtract the Withdrawal Charge from the Contract Value remaining after your
withdrawal. As a result, the decrease in your Contract Value will be greater
than the withdrawal amount requested and paid.
For purposes of determining the Withdrawal Charge, the Contract Value is deemed
to be withdrawn in the following order:
FIRST. Earnings - the current Contract Value minus all Purchase Payments that
have not previously been withdrawn;
SECOND. "Old Purchase Payments" - Purchase Payments received by us more than
seven years before the date of withdrawal that have not been previously
withdrawn;
THIRD. Any additional amounts available as a "Free Withdrawal," as described
on page 33;
FOURTH. "New Purchase Payments" - Purchase Payments received by us less than
seven years before the date of withdrawal. These Payments are deemed to be
withdrawn on a first-in, first-out basis.
No Withdrawal Charge is applied in the following situations:
.. on annuitization;
.. the payment of a Death Benefit;
.. a free withdrawal amount, as described on page 33;
.. certain withdrawals for Contracts issued under 403(b) plans or 401 plan
under our prototype as described on page 42;
.. withdrawals taken to satisfy IRS minimum distribution rules;
.. withdrawals that qualify for one of the waiver benefits described on pages
33-34; and
.. withdrawal under Contracts issued to employees of Lincoln Benefit Life
Company or its affiliates, Surety Life Insurance Company and Allstate
Financial Services, L.L.C., or to their spouses or minor children if those
individuals reside in the State of Nebraska.
We will never waive or eliminate a Withdrawal Charge where such waiver or
elimination would be unfairly discriminatory to any person or where it is
prohibited by state law.
We may waive withdrawal charges if this Contract is surrendered, and the entire
proceeds of the surrender are directly used to purchase a new Contract also
issued by us or any affiliated company. Such waivers will be granted on a
non-discriminatory basis.
32 PROSPECTUS
We use the amounts obtained from the Withdrawal Charge to pay sales commissions
and other promotional or distribution expenses associated with marketing the
Contracts. To the extent that the Withdrawal Charge does not cover all sales
commissions and other promotional or distribution expenses, we may use any of
our corporate assets, including potential profit which may arise from the
mortality and expense risk charge or any other charges or fee described above,
to make up any difference.
Withdrawals of earnings are taxed as ordinary income and, if taken prior to age
59 1/2, may be subject to an additional 10% federal tax penalty. The amount of
your withdrawal may be affected by a Market Value Adjustment. Additional
restrictions may apply to Contracts held in Qualified Plans. We outline the tax
requirements applicable to withdrawals on page 36. You should consult your own
tax counsel or other tax advisers regarding any withdrawals.
FREE WITHDRAWAL. Withdrawals of the following amounts are never subject to the
Withdrawal Charge:
.. In any Contract Year, the greater of: (a) earnings that have not previously
been withdrawn; or (b) 15 percent of New Purchase Payments; and
.. Any Old Purchase Payments that have not been previously withdrawn.
However, even if you do not owe a Withdrawal Charge on a particular withdrawal,
you may still owe taxes or penalty taxes, or be subject to a market Value
Adjustment. The tax treatment of withdrawals is summarized on page 36.
WAIVER BENEFITS
GENERAL. If approved in your state, we will offer the three waiver benefits
described below. In general, if you qualify for one of these benefits, we will
permit you to make one or more partial or full withdrawals without paying any
otherwise applicable Withdrawal Charge or Market Value Adjustment. While we
have summarized those benefits here, you should consult your Contract for the
precise terms of the waiver benefits.
Some Qualified Plans may not permit you to utilize these benefits. Also, even
if you do not need to pay our Withdrawal Charge because of these benefits, you
still may be required to pay taxes or tax penalties on the amount withdrawn.
You should consult your tax adviser to determine the effect of a withdrawal on
your taxes.
CONFINEMENT WAIVER BENEFIT. Under this benefit, we will waive the Withdrawal
Charge and Market Value Adjustment on all withdrawals under your Contract if
the following conditions are satisfied:
1) Any Contract Owner or the Annuitant, if the Contract is owned by a company
or other legal entity, is confined to a long term care facility or a
hospital for at least 90 consecutive days. The Owner or Annuitant must enter
the long term care facility or hospital at least 30 days after the Issue
Date;
2) You request the withdrawal no later than 90 days following the end of the
Owner or Annuitant's stay at the long term care facility or hospital. You
must provide written proof of the stay with your withdrawal request; and
3) A physician must have prescribed the stay and the stay must be medically
necessary.
You may not claim this benefit if the physician prescribing the Owner or
Annuitant's stay in a long term care facility is the Owner or Annuitant or a
member of the Owner or Annuitant's immediate family.
TERMINAL ILLNESS WAIVER BENEFIT. Under this benefit, we will waive any
Withdrawal Charge and Market Value Adjustment on all withdrawals under your
Contract if, at least 30 days after the Issue Date, you, or the Annuitant if
the Owner is not a living person, are diagnosed with a terminal illness. We may
require confirmation of the diagnosis as provided in the Contract.
UNEMPLOYMENT WAIVER BENEFIT. Under this benefit, we will waive any Withdrawal
Charge and Market Value Adjustment on one partial or full withdrawal from your
Contract, if you meet the following requirements:
1) you become unemployed at least 1 year after the Issue Date;
2) you receive unemployment compensation for at least 30 consecutive days as a
result of that unemployment; and
3) you claim this benefit within 180 days of your initial receipt of
unemployment compensation.
You may exercise this benefit once before the Annuity Date.
WAIVER OF WITHDRAWAL CHARGE FOR CERTAIN QUALIFIED PLAN WITHDRAWALS. For
Contracts issued under a Section 403(b) plan or a Section 401 plan under our
prototype, we will waive the Withdrawal Charge when:
1) the Annuitant becomes disabled (as defined in Section 72(m)(7)) of the Tax
Code;
2) the Annuitant reaches age 59 1/2 and at least 5 Contract Years have passed
since the Contract was issued;
3) at least 15 Contract Years have passed since the Contract was issued.
Our prototype is a Section 401 Defined Contribution Qualified Retirement plan.
This plan may be established as a Money Purchase plan, a Profit Sharing plan,
or a paired plan (Money Purchase and Profit Sharing). For more information
about our prototype plan, call us at 1-800-457-7617.
33 PROSPECTUS
PREMIUM TAXES. We will charge premium taxes or other state or local taxes
against the Contract Value, including Contract Value that results from amounts
transferred from existing policies (Section 1035 exchange) issued by us or
other insurance companies. Some states assess premium taxes when Purchase
Payments are made; others assess premium taxes when annuity payments begin. We
will deduct any applicable premium taxes upon full surrender, death, or
annuitization. Premium taxes generally range from 0% to 3.5%.
DEDUCTION FOR SEPARATE ACCOUNT INCOME TAXES. We are not currently maintaining
a provision for taxes. In the future, however, we may establish a provision for
taxes if we determine, in our sole discretion, that we will incur a tax as a
result of the operation of the Separate Account. We will deduct for any taxes
we incur as a result of the operation of the Separate Account, whether or not
we previously made a provision for taxes and whether or not it was sufficient.
Our status under the Tax Code is briefly described in the Statement of
Additional Information.
OTHER EXPENSES. You indirectly bear the charges and expenses of the Portfolios
whose shares are held by the Sub-Accounts to which you allocate your Contract
value. For a summary of current estimates of those charges and expenses, see
page 5. For more detailed information about those charges and expenses, please
refer to the prospectuses for the appropriate Portfolios. We receive
compensation from the investment advisers or administrators or the Portfolios
in connection with administrative service and cost savings experienced by the
investment advisers or administrators. We collect this compensation under
agreements between us and the Portfolio's investment adviser, administrators or
distributors, and is calculated based on a percentage of the average assets
allocated to the Portfolio.
34 PROSPECTUS
TAXES
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THE FOLLOWING DISCUSSION IS GENERAL AND IS NOT INTENDED AS TAX ADVICE. LINCOLN
BENEFIT MAKES NO GUARANTEE REGARDING THE TAX TREATMENT OF ANY CONTRACT OR
TRANSACTION INVOLVING A CONTRACT.
Federal, state, local and other tax consequences of ownership or receipt of
distributions under an annuity contract depend on your individual
circumstances. If you are concerned about any tax consequences with regard to
your individual circumstances, you should consult a competent tax adviser.
TAXATION OF LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE COMPANY
Lincoln Benefit is taxed as a life insurance company under Part I of Subchapter
L of the Code. Since the Separate Account is not an entity separate from
Lincoln Benefit, and its operations form a part of Lincoln Benefit, it will not
be taxed separately. Investment income and realized capital gains of the
Separate Account are automatically applied to increase reserves under the
Contract. Under existing federal income tax law, Lincoln Benefit believes that
the Separate Account investment income and capital gains will not be taxed to
the extent that such income and gains are applied to increase the reserves
under the Contract. Accordingly, Lincoln Benefit does not anticipate that it
will incur any federal income tax liability attributable to the Separate
Account, and therefore Lincoln Benefit does not intend to make provisions for
any such taxes. If Lincoln Benefit is taxed on investment income or capital
gains of the Separate Account, then Lincoln Benefit may impose a charge against
the Separate Account in order to make provision for such taxes.
TAXATION OF VARIABLE ANNUITIES IN GENERAL
TAX DEFERRAL. Generally, you are not taxed on increases in the Contract Value
until a distribution occurs. This rule applies only where:
.. the Contract Owner is a natural person,
.. the investments of the Separate Account are "adequately diversified"
according to Treasury Department regulations, and
.. Lincoln Benefit is considered the owner of the Separate Account assets for
federal income tax purposes.
NON-NATURAL OWNERS. Non-natural owners are also referred to as Non Living
Owners in this prospectus. As a general rule, annuity contracts owned by
non-natural persons such as corporations, trusts, or other entities are not
treated as annuity contracts for federal income tax purposes. The income on
such contracts does not enjoy tax deferral and is taxed as ordinary income
received or accrued by the non-natural owner during the taxable year.
EXCEPTIONS TO THE NON-NATURAL OWNER RULE. There are several exceptions to the
general rule that annuity contracts held by a non-natural owner are not treated
as annuity contracts for federal income tax purposes. Contracts will generally
be treated as held by a natural person if the nominal owner is a trust or other
entity which holds the contract as agent for a natural person. However, this
special exception will not apply in the case of an employer who is the nominal
owner of an annuity contract under a non-Qualified deferred compensation
arrangement for its employees. Other exceptions to the non-natural owner rule
are: (1) contracts acquired by an estate of a decedent by reason of the death
of the decedent; (2) certain qualified contracts; (3) contracts purchased by
employers upon the termination of certain Qualified Plans; (4) certain
contracts used in connection with structured settlement agreements; and
(5) immediate annuity contracts, purchased with a single premium, when the
annuity starting date is no later than a year from purchase of the annuity and
substantially equal periodic payments are made, not less frequently than
annually, during the annuity period.
GRANTOR TRUST OWNED ANNUITY. Contracts owned by a grantor trust are considered
owned by a non-natural owner. Grantor trust owned contracts receive tax
deferral as described in the Exceptions to the Non-Natural Owner Rule section.
In accordance with the Code, upon the death of the annuitant, the death benefit
must be paid. According to your Contract, the Death Benefit is paid to the
beneficiary. A trust named beneficiary, including a grantor trust, has two
options for receiving any death benefits: 1) a lump sum payment, or 2) payment
deferred up to five years from date of death.
DIVERSIFICATION REQUIREMENTS. For a Contract to be treated as an annuity for
federal income tax purposes, the investments in the Separate Account must be
"adequately diversified" consistent with standards under Treasury Department
regulations. If the investments in the Separate Account are not adequately
diversified, the Contract will not be treated as an annuity contract for
federal income tax purposes. As a result, the income on the Contract will be
taxed as ordinary income received or accrued by the Contract owner during the
taxable year. Although Lincoln Benefit does not have control over the
Portfolios or their investments, we expect the Portfolios to meet the
diversification requirements.
OWNERSHIP TREATMENT. The IRS has stated that a contract owner will be
considered the owner of separate account assets if he possesses incidents of
ownership in those assets, such as the ability to exercise investment control
over the assets. At the time the diversification regulations were issued, the
Treasury Department announced that the regulations do not provide guidance
concerning circumstances in which investor control of
35 PROSPECTUS
the separate account investments may cause a Contract owner to be treated as
the owner of the separate account. The Treasury Department also stated that
future guidance would be issued regarding the extent that owners could direct
sub-account investments without being treated as owners of the underlying
assets of the separate account.
Your rights under the Contract are different than those described by the IRS in
private and published rulings in which it found that Contract owners were not
owners of separate account assets. For example, if your contract offers more
than twenty (20) investment alternatives you have the choice to allocate
premiums and contract values among a broader selection of investment
alternatives than described in such rulings. You may be able to transfer among
investment alternatives more frequently than in such rulings. These differences
could result in you being treated as the owner of the Separate Account. If this
occurs, income and gain from the Separate Account assets would be includible in
your gross income. Lincoln Benefit does not know what standards will be set
forth in any regulations or rulings which the Treasury Department may issue. It
is possible that future standards announced by the Treasury Department could
adversely affect the tax treatment of your Contract. We reserve the right to
modify the Contract as necessary to attempt to prevent you from being
considered the federal tax owner of the assets of the Separate Account.
However, we make no guarantee that such modification to the Contract will be
successful.
TAXATION OF PARTIAL AND FULL WITHDRAWALS. If you make a partial withdrawal
under a Non-Qualified Contract, amounts received are taxable to the extent the
Contract Value, without regard to surrender charges, exceeds the investment in
the Contract. The investment in the Contract is the gross premium paid for the
contract minus any amounts previously received from the Contract if such
amounts were properly excluded from your gross income. If you make a full
withdrawal under a Non-Qualified Contract, the amount received will be taxable
only to the extent it exceeds the investment in the Contract.
TAXATION OF ANNUITY PAYMENTS. Generally, the rule for income taxation of
annuity payments received from a Non-Qualified Contract provides for the return
of your investment in the Contract in equal tax-free amounts over the payment
period. The balance of each payment received is taxable. For fixed annuity
payments, the amount excluded from income is determined by multiplying the
payment by the ratio of the investment in the Contract (adjusted for any refund
feature or period certain) to the total expected value of annuity payments for
the term of the Contract. If you elect variable annuity payments, the amount
excluded from taxable income is determined by dividing the investment in the
Contract by the total number of expected payments. The annuity payments will be
fully taxable after the total amount of the investment in the Contract is
excluded using these ratios. If any variable payment is less than the
excludable amount you should contact a competent tax advisor to determine how
to report any unrecovered investment. The federal tax treatment of annuity
payments is unclear in some respects. As a result, if the IRS should provide
further guidance, it is possible that the amount we calculate and report to the
IRS as taxable could be different. If you die, and annuity payments cease
before the total amount of the investment in the Contract is recovered, the
unrecovered amount will be allowed as a deduction for your last taxable year.
PARTIAL ANNUITIZATION
Effective January 1, 2011, an individual may partially annuitize their
non-qualified annuity if the contract so permits. The Small Business Jobs Act
of 2010 included a provision which allows for a portion of a non-qualified
annuity, endowment or life insurance contract to be annuitized while the
balance is not annuitized. The annuitized portion must be paid out over 10 or
more years or over the lives of one or more individuals. The annuitized portion
of the contract is treated as a separate contract for purposes of determining
taxability of the payments under IRC section 72. We do not currently permit
partial annuitization.
TAXATION OF LEVEL MONTHLY VARIABLE ANNUITY PAYMENTS. You may have an option to
elect a variable income payment stream consisting of level monthly payments
that are recalculated annually. Although we will report your levelized payments
to the IRS in the year distributed, it is possible the IRS could determine that
receipt of the first monthly payout of each annual amount is constructive
receipt of the entire annual amount. If the IRS were to take this position, the
taxable amount of your levelized payments would be accelerated to the time of
the first monthly payout and reported in the tax year in which the first
monthly payout is received.
WITHDRAWALS AFTER THE PAYOUT START DATE. Federal tax law is unclear regarding
the taxation of any additional withdrawal received after the Payout Start Date.
It is possible that a greater or lesser portion of such a payment could be
taxable than the amount we determine.
DISTRIBUTION AT DEATH RULES. In order to be considered an annuity contract for
federal income tax purposes, the Contract must provide:
.. if any Contract Owner dies on or after the Payout Start Date but before the
entire interest in the Contract has been distributed, the remaining portion
of such interest must be distributed at least as rapidly as under the
method of distribution being used as of the date of the Contract Owner's
death;
.. if any Contract Owner dies prior to the Payout Start Date, the entire
interest in the Contract will be distributed within 5 years after the date
of the Contract Owner's death. These requirements are satisfied if any
portion of the Contract Owner's interest that is payable to (or for the
benefit of) a designated Beneficiary is distributed over the life of
36 PROSPECTUS
such Beneficiary (or over a period not extending beyond the life expectancy
of the Beneficiary) and the distributions begin within 1 year of the
Contract Owner's death. If the Contract Owner's designated Beneficiary is
the surviving spouse of the Contract Owner, the Contract may be continued
with the surviving spouse as the new Contract Owner;
.. if the Contract Owner is a non-natural person, then the Annuitant will be
treated as the Contract Owner for purposes of applying the distribution at
death rules. In addition, a change in the Annuitant on a Contract owned by
a non-natural person will be treated as the death of the Contract Owner.
We administer certain spousal rights under the Contract and related tax
reporting in accordance with our understanding of the Defense of Marriage Act
(which defines a "marriage" as a legal union between a man and a woman and a
"spouse" as a person of the opposite sex). Depending on the state in which your
Contract is issued, we may offer certain spousal benefits to civil union
couples or same-sex marriage spouses. You should be aware, however, that
federal tax law does not recognize civil unions or same-sex marriages.
Therefore, we cannot permit a civil union partner or same-sex spouse to
continue the Contract within the meaning of the tax law upon the death of the
first partner under the Contract's "spousal continuance" provision. Please note
there may be federal tax consequences at the death of the first civil union or
same-sex marriage partner. Civil union couples and same-sex marriage spouses
should consider that limitation before selecting a spousal benefit under the
Contract.
TAXATION OF ANNUITY DEATH BENEFITS. Death Benefit amounts are included in
income as follows:
.. if distributed in a lump sum, the amounts are taxed in the same manner as a
total withdrawal, or
.. if distributed under an Income Plan, the amounts are taxed in the same
manner as annuity payments.
PENALTY TAX ON PREMATURE DISTRIBUTIONS. A 10% penalty tax applies to the
taxable amount of any premature distribution from a non-Qualified Contract. The
penalty tax generally applies to any distribution made prior to the date you
attain age 59 1/2. However, no penalty tax is incurred on distributions:
.. made on or after the date the Contract Owner attains age 59 1/2,
.. made as a result of the Contract Owner's death or becoming totally disabled,
.. made in substantially equal periodic payments (as defined by the Code) over
the Contract Owner's life or life expectancy, or over the joint lives or
joint life expectancies of the Contract Owner and the Beneficiary,
.. made under an immediate annuity, or
.. attributable to investment in the Contract before August 14, 1982.
You should consult a competent tax advisor to determine how these exceptions
may apply to your situation.
SUBSTANTIALLY EQUAL PERIODIC PAYMENTS. With respect to non-Qualified Contracts
using substantially equal periodic payments or immediate annuity payments as an
exception to the penalty tax on premature distributions, any additional
withdrawal or other material modification of the payment stream would violate
the requirement that payments must be substantially equal. Failure to meet this
requirement would mean that the income portion of each payment received prior
to the later of 5 years or the Contract Owner's attaining age 59 1/2 would be
subject to a 10% penalty tax unless another exception to the penalty tax
applied. The tax for the year of the modification is increased by the penalty
tax that would have been imposed without the exception, plus interest for the
years in which the exception was used. A material modification does not include
permitted changes described in published IRS rulings. You should consult a
competent tax advisor prior to creating or modifying a substantially equal
periodic payment stream.
TAX FREE EXCHANGES UNDER INTERNAL REVENUE CODE SECTION 1035. A 1035 exchange
is a tax-free exchange of a non-Qualified life insurance contract, endowment
contract or annuity contract into a non-Qualified annuity contract. The
contract owner(s) must be the same on the old and new contract. Basis from the
old contract carries over to the new contract so long as we receive that
information from the relinquishing company. If basis information is never
received, we will assume that all exchanged funds represent earnings and will
allocate no cost basis to them.
PARTIAL EXCHANGES. The IRS has issued rulings that permit partial exchanges of
annuity contracts. Effective June 30, 2008, a partial exchange, of a deferred
annuity contract for another deferred annuity contract, will qualify for
tax-deferral only if no amount is withdrawn or surrendered from either contract
for a period of 12 months. The 12 month period begins on the date when exchange
proceeds are treated as premiums paid for the recipient contract. Withdrawals
from, annuitizations, taxable Owner or Annuitant changes, or surrenders of
either contract within the 12 month period will retroactively negate the
partial exchange, unless one of the following applies:
.. the contract owner is at least 591/2 or dies; or becomes totally disabled
or obtains a divorce or suffers a loss of employment after the partial
exchange was completed and prior to the withdrawal, annuitization, Owner or
Annuitant change, or surrender;
.. if the annuity is owned by an entity, the annuitant dies after the partial
exchange was completed and prior to the withdrawal, annuitization, Owner or
Annuitant change or surrender;
37 PROSPECTUS
.. the withdrawal is allocable to investment in the Contract before August 14,
1982; or,
.. the annuity is a qualified funding asset within the meaning of Code section
130(d).
If a partial exchange is retroactively negated, the amount originally
transferred to the recipient contract is treated as a withdrawal from the
source contract, taxable to the extent of any gain in that contract on the date
of the exchange. An additional 10% tax penalty may also apply if the Contract
Owner is under age 59 1/2. Your Contract may not permit partial exchanges.
TAXATION OF OWNERSHIP CHANGES. If you transfer a non-Qualified Contract
without full and adequate consideration to a person other than your spouse (or
to a former spouse incident to a divorce), you will be taxed on the difference
between the Contract Value and the investment in the Contract at the time of
transfer. Any assignment or pledge (or agreement to assign or pledge) of the
Contract Value is taxed as a withdrawal of such amount or portion and may also
incur the 10% penalty tax.
AGGREGATION OF ANNUITY CONTRACTS. The Code requires that all non-Qualified
deferred annuity contracts issued by Lincoln Benefit (or its affiliates) to the
same Contract Owner during any calendar year be aggregated and treated as one
annuity contract for purposes of determining the taxable amount of a
distribution.
INCOME TAX WITHHOLDING
Generally, Lincoln Benefit is required to withhold federal income tax at a rate
of 10% from all non-annuitized distributions. The customer may elect out of
withholding by completing and signing a withholding election form. If no
election is made or no U.S. taxpayer identification number is provided we will
automatically withhold the required 10% of the taxable amount. In certain
states, if there is federal withholding, then state withholding is also
mandatory.
Lincoln Benefit is required to withhold federal income tax using the wage
withholding rates for all annuitized distributions. The customer may elect out
of withholding by completing and signing a withholding election form. If no
election is made, we will automatically withhold using married with three
exemptions as the default. If no U.S. taxpayer identification number is
provided, we will automatically withhold using single with zero exemptions as
the default. In certain states, if there is federal withholding, then state
withholding is also mandatory.
Election out of withholding is valid only if the customer provides a U.S.
residence address and taxpayer identification number.
Generally, Code Section 1441 provides that Lincoln Benefit as a withholding
agent must withhold 30% of the taxable amounts paid to a non-resident alien. A
non-resident alien is someone other than a U.S. citizen or resident alien. We
require an original IRS Form W-8BEN at issue to certify the owners' foreign
status. Withholding may be reduced or eliminated if covered by an income tax
treaty between the U.S. and the non-resident alien's country of residence if
the payee provides a U.S. taxpayer identification number on a fully completed
Form W-8BEN. A U.S. taxpayer identification number is a social security number
or an individual taxpayer identification number ("ITIN"). ITINs are issued by
the IRS to non-resident alien individuals who are not eligible to obtain a
social security number. The U.S. does not have a tax treaty with all countries
nor do all tax treaties provide an exclusion or lower withholding rate for
annuities.
TAX QUALIFIED CONTRACTS
The income on tax sheltered annuity (TSA) and IRA investments is tax deferred,
and the income from annuities held by such plans does not receive any
additional tax deferral. You should review the annuity features, including all
benefits and expenses, prior to purchasing an annuity as a TSA or IRA. Tax
Qualified Contracts are contracts purchased as or in connection with:
.. Individual Retirement Annuities (IRAs) under Code Section 408(b);
.. Roth IRAs under Code Section 408A;
.. Simplified Employee Pension (SEP IRA) under Code Section 408(k);
.. Savings Incentive Match Plans for Employees (SIMPLE IRA) under Code
Section 408(p);
.. Tax Sheltered Annuities under Code Section 403(b);
.. Corporate and Self Employed Pension and Profit Sharing Plans under Code
Section 401; and
.. State and Local Government and Tax-Exempt Organization Deferred
Compensation Plans under Code Section 457.
Lincoln Benefit reserves the right to limit the availability of the Contract
for use with any of the retirement plans listed above or to modify the Contract
to conform with tax requirements. If you use the Contract within an employer
sponsored qualified retirement plan, the plan may impose different or
additional conditions or limitations on withdrawals, waiver of charges, death
benefits, Payout Start Dates, income payments, and other Contract features. In
addition, adverse tax consequences may result if Qualified Plan limits on
distributions and other conditions are not met. Please consult your Qualified
Plan administrator for more information. Lincoln Benefit no longer issues
deferred annuities to employer sponsored qualified retirement plans.
The tax rules applicable to participants with tax qualified annuities vary
according to the type of contract and the terms and conditions of the
endorsement. Adverse tax consequences may result from certain transactions such
as excess contributions, premature distributions, and, distributions that do
not conform to specified
38 PROSPECTUS
commencement and minimum distribution rules. Lincoln Benefit can issue an
individual retirement annuity on a rollover or transfer of proceeds from a
decedent's IRA, TSA, or employer sponsored retirement plan under which the
decedent's surviving spouse is the beneficiary. Lincoln Benefit does not offer
an individual retirement annuity that can accept a transfer of funds for any
other, non-spousal, beneficiary of a decedent's IRA, TSA, or employer sponsored
qualified retirement plan.
Please refer to your Endorsement for IRAs or 403(b) plans, if applicable, for
additional information on your death settlement options. In the case of certain
Qualified Plans, the terms of the Qualified Plan Endorsement and the plans may
govern the right to benefits, regardless of the terms of the Contract.
TAXATION OF WITHDRAWALS FROM AN INDIVIDUALLY OWNED TAX QUALIFIED CONTRACT. If
you make a partial withdrawal under a Tax Qualified Contract other than a Roth
IRA, the portion of the payment that bears the same ratio to the total payment
that the investment in the Contract (i.e., nondeductible IRA contributions)
bears to the Contract Value, is excluded from your income. We do not keep track
of nondeductible contributions, and generally all tax reporting of
distributions from Tax Qualified Contracts other than Roth IRAs will indicate
that the distribution is fully taxable.
"Qualified distributions" from Roth IRAs are not included in gross income.
"Qualified distributions" are any distributions made more than five taxable
years after the taxable year of the first contribution to any Roth IRA and
which are:
.. made on or after the date the Contract Owner attains age 59 1/2,
.. made to a beneficiary after the Contract Owner's death,
.. attributable to the Contract Owner being disabled, or
.. made for a first time home purchase (first time home purchases are subject
to a lifetime limit of $10,000).
"Nonqualified distributions" from Roth IRAs are treated as made from
contributions first and are included in gross income only to the extent that
distributions exceed contributions.
REQUIRED MINIMUM DISTRIBUTIONS. Generally, Tax Qualified Contracts (excluding
Roth IRAs) require minimum distributions upon reaching age 70 1/2. Failure to
withdraw the required minimum distribution will result in a 50% tax penalty on
the shortfall not withdrawn from the Contract. Effective December 31, 2005, the
IRS requires annuity contracts to include the actuarial present value of other
benefits for purposes of calculating the required minimum distribution amount.
These other benefits may include accumulation, income, or death benefits. Not
all income plans offered under the Contract satisfy the requirements for
minimum distributions. Because these distributions are required under the Code
and the method of calculation is complex, please see a competent tax advisor.
THE DEATH BENEFIT AND TAX QUALIFIED CONTRACTS. Pursuant to the Code and IRS
regulations, an IRA (e.g., traditional IRA, Roth IRA, SEP IRA and SIMPLE IRA)
may not invest in life insurance contracts. However, an IRA may provide a death
benefit that equals the greater of the purchase payments or the Contract Value.
The Contract offers a death benefit that in certain circumstances may exceed
the greater of the purchase payments or the Contract Value. We believe that the
Death Benefits offered by your Contract do not constitute life insurance under
these regulations.
It is also possible that certain death benefits that offer enhanced earnings
could be characterized as an incidental death benefit. If the death benefit
were so characterized, this could result in current taxable income to a
Contract Owner. In addition, there are limitations on the amount of incidental
death benefits that may be provided under Qualified Plans, such as in
connection with a TSA or employer sponsored qualified retirement plan.
Lincoln Benefit reserves the right to limit the availability of the Contract
for use with any of the Qualified Plans listed above.
PENALTY TAX ON PREMATURE DISTRIBUTIONS FROM TAX QUALIFIED CONTRACTS. A 10%
penalty tax applies to the taxable amount of any premature distribution from a
Tax Qualified Contract. The penalty tax generally applies to any distribution
made prior to the date you attain age 59 1/2. However, no penalty tax is
incurred on distributions:
.. made on or after the date the Contract Owner attains age 59 1/2,
.. made as a result of the Contract Owner's death or total disability,
.. made in substantially equal periodic payments (as defined by the Code) over
the Contract Owner's life or life expectancy, or over the joint lives or
joint life expectancies of the Contract Owner and the Beneficiary,
.. made after separation from service after age 55 (does not apply to IRAs),
.. made pursuant to an IRS levy,
.. made for certain medical expenses,
.. made to pay for health insurance premiums while unemployed (applies only
for IRAs),
.. made for qualified higher education expenses (applies only for IRAs),
.. made for a first time home purchase (up to a $10,000 lifetime limit and
applies only for IRAs), and
39 PROSPECTUS
.. from an IRA or attributable to elective deferrals under a 401(k) plan,
403(b) annuity, or certain similar arrangements made to individuals who
(because of their being members of a reserve component) are ordered or
called to active duty after Sept. 11, 2001, for a period of more than 179
days or for an indefinite period; and made during the period beginning on
the date of the order or call to duty and ending at the close of the active
duty period.
During the first 2 years of the individual's participation in a SIMPLE IRA,
distributions that are otherwise subject to the premature distribution penalty,
will be subject to a 25% penalty tax.
You should consult a competent tax advisor to determine how these exceptions
may apply to your situation.
SUBSTANTIALLY EQUAL PERIODIC PAYMENTS ON TAX QUALIFIED CONTRACTS. With respect
to Tax Qualified Contracts using substantially equal periodic payments as an
exception to the penalty tax on premature distributions, any additional
withdrawal or other material modification of the payment stream would violate
the requirement that payments must be substantially equal. Failure to meet this
requirement would mean that the income portion of each payment received prior
to the later of 5 years or the taxpayer's attaining age 59 1/2 would be subject
to a 10% penalty tax unless another exception to the penalty tax applied. The
tax for the year of the modification is increased by the penalty tax that would
have been imposed without the exception, plus interest for the years in which
the exception was used. A material modification does not include permitted
changes described in published IRS rulings. You should consult a competent tax
advisor prior to creating or modifying a substantially equal periodic payment
stream.
INCOME TAX WITHHOLDING ON TAX QUALIFIED CONTRACTS. Generally, Lincoln Benefit
is required to withhold federal income tax at a rate of 10% from all
non-annuitized distributions that are not considered "eligible rollover
distributions." The customer may elect out of withholding by completing and
signing a withholding election form. If no election is made, or if no U.S.
taxpayer identification number is provided, we will automatically withhold the
required 10% from the taxable amount. In certain states, if there is federal
withholding, then state withholding is also mandatory. Lincoln Benefit is
required to withhold federal income tax at a rate of 20% on all "eligible
rollover distributions" unless you elect to make a "direct rollover" of such
amounts to an IRA or eligible retirement plan. Eligible rollover distributions
generally include all distributions from Tax Qualified Contracts, including
TSAs but excluding IRAs, with the exception of:
.. required minimum distributions, or,
.. a series of substantially equal periodic payments made over a period of at
least 10 years, or,
.. a series of substantially equal periodic payments made over the life (joint
lives) of the participant (and beneficiary), or,
.. hardship distributions.
With respect to any Contract held under a Section 457 plan or by the trustee of
a Section 401 Pension or Profit Sharing Plan, we will not issue payments
directly to a plan participant or beneficiary. Consequently, the obligation to
comply with the withholding requirements described above will be the
responsibility of the plan.
For all annuitized distributions that are not subject to the 20% withholding
requirement, Lincoln Benefit is required to withhold federal income tax using
the wage withholding rates. The customer may elect out of withholding by
completing and signing a withholding election form. If no election is made, we
will automatically withhold using married with three exemptions as the default.
If no U.S. taxpayer identification number is provided, we will automatically
withhold using single with zero exemptions as the default. In certain states,
if there is federal withholding, then state withholding is also mandatory.
Election out of withholding is valid only if the customer provides a U.S.
residence address and taxpayer identification number.
Generally, Code Section 1441 provides that Lincoln Benefit as a withholding
agent must withhold 30% of the taxable amounts paid to a non-resident alien. A
non-resident alien is someone other than a U.S. citizen or resident alien. We
require an original IRS Form W-8BEN at issue to certify the owners' foreign
status. Withholding may be reduced or eliminated if covered by an income tax
treaty between the U.S. and the non-resident alien's country of residence if
the payee provides a U.S. taxpayer identification number on a fully completed
Form W-8BEN. A U.S. taxpayer identification number is a social security number
or an individual taxpayer identification number ("ITIN"). ITINs are issued by
the IRS to non-resident alien individuals who are not eligible to obtain a
social security number. The U.S. does not have a tax treaty with all countries
nor do all tax treaties provide an exclusion or lower withholding rate for
annuities.
CHARITABLE IRA DISTRIBUTIONS. The Pension Protection Act of 2006 included a
charitable giving incentive permitting tax-free IRA distributions for
charitable purposes. The Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization,
and Job Creation Act of 2010 extended this provision until the end of 2011.
For distributions in tax years beginning after 2005 and before 2012, the Act
provides an exclusion from gross income, up to $100,000, for otherwise taxable
IRA distributions from a traditional or Roth IRA that are qualified charitable
distributions. To constitute a qualified charitable distribution, the
distribution must be
40 PROSPECTUS
made (1) directly by the IRA trustee to certain qualified charitable
organizations and (2) on or after the date the IRA owner attains age 70 1/2.
Distributions that are excluded from income under this provision are not taken
into account in determining the individual's deduction, if any, for charitable
contributions.
The IRS has indicated that an IRA trustee is not responsible for determining
whether a distribution to a charity is one that satisfies the requirements for
the new income tax exclusion added by the Pension Protection Act. As a result
the general rules for reporting IRA distributions apply.
INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ANNUITIES. Code Section 408(b) permits eligible
individuals to contribute to an individual retirement program known as an
Individual Retirement Annuity (IRA). Individual Retirement Annuities are
subject to limitations on the amount that can be contributed and on the time
when distributions may commence. Certain distributions from other types of
qualified retirement plans may be "rolled over" on a tax-deferred basis into an
Individual Retirement Annuity.
ROTH INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ANNUITIES. Code Section 408A permits eligible
individuals to make nondeductible contributions to an individual retirement
program known as a Roth Individual Retirement Annuity. Roth Individual
Retirement Annuities are subject to limitations on the amount that can be
contributed and on the time when distributions may commence.
A traditional Individual Retirement Account or Annuity may be converted or
"rolled over" to a Roth Individual Retirement Annuity. For distributions after
2007, the Pension Protection Act of 2006 allows distributions from qualified
retirement plans including tax sheltered annuities and governmental Section 457
plans to be rolled over directly into a Roth IRA, subject to the usual rules
that apply to conversions from a traditional IRA into a Roth IRA. The income
portion of a conversion or rollover distribution is taxable currently, but is
exempted from the 10% penalty tax on premature distributions. Prior to January
1, 2010, income and filing status limitations applied to rollovers from
non-Roth accounts to a Roth IRA. Effective January 1, 2005, the IRS requires
conversions of annuity contracts to include the actuarial present value of
other benefits for purposes of valuing the taxable amount of the conversion.
ANNUITIES HELD BY INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS (COMMONLY KNOWN AS CUSTODIAL
IRAS). Code Section 408 permits a custodian or trustee of an Individual
Retirement Account to purchase an annuity as an investment of the Individual
Retirement Account. If an annuity is purchased inside of an Individual
Retirement Account, then the Annuitant must be the same person as the
beneficial owner of the Individual Retirement Account.
If you have a contract issued as an IRA under Code Section 408(b) and request
to change the ownership to an IRA custodian permitted under Section 408, we
will treat a request to change ownership from an individual to a custodian as
an indirect rollover. We will send a Form 1099R to report the distribution and
the custodian should issue a Form 5498 for the contract value contribution.
Generally, the death benefit of an annuity held in an Individual Retirement
Account must be paid upon the death of the Annuitant. However, in most states,
the Contract permits the custodian or trustee of the Individual Retirement
Account to continue the Contract in the accumulation phase, with the
Annuitant's surviving spouse as the new Annuitant, if the following conditions
are met:
1) The custodian or trustee of the Individual Retirement Account is the owner
of the annuity and has the right to the death proceeds otherwise payable
under the Contract;
2) The deceased Annuitant was the beneficial owner of the Individual Retirement
Account;
3) We receive a complete request for settlement for the death of the Annuitant;
and
4) The custodian or trustee of the Individual Retirement Account provides us
with a signed certification of the following:
(a) The Annuitant's surviving spouse is the sole beneficiary of the
Individual Retirement Account;
(b) The Annuitant's surviving spouse has elected to continue the Individual
Retirement Account as his or her own Individual Retirement Account; and
(c) The custodian or trustee of the Individual Retirement Account has
continued the Individual Retirement Account pursuant to the surviving
spouse's election.
SIMPLIFIED EMPLOYEE PENSION IRA. (SEP IRA) Code Section 408(k) allows eligible
employers to establish simplified employee pension plans for their employees
using individual retirement annuities. These employers may, within specified
limits, make deductible contributions on behalf of the employees to the
individual retirement annuities. Employers intending to use the Contract in
connection with such plans should seek competent tax advice.
SAVINGS INCENTIVE MATCH PLANS FOR EMPLOYEES (SIMPLE IRA). Code Section 408(p)
allows eligible employers with 100 or fewer employees to establish SIMPLE
retirement plans for their employees using individual retirement annuities. In
general, a SIMPLE IRA consists of a salary deferral program for eligible
employees and matching or nonelective contributions made by employers.
Employers intending to purchase the Contract
41 PROSPECTUS
as a SIMPLE IRA should seek competent tax and legal advice. SIMPLE IRA plans
must include the provisions of the Economic Growth and Tax Relief
Reconciliation Act of 2007 (EGTRRA) to avoid adverse tax consequences. If your
current SIMPLE IRA plan uses IRS Model Form 5304-SIMPLE with a revision date of
March 2002 or later, then your plan is up to date. If your plan has a revision
date prior to March 2002, please consult with your tax or legal advisor to
determine the action you need to take in order to comply with this requirement.
TO DETERMINE IF YOU ARE ELIGIBLE TO CONTRIBUTE TO ANY OF THE ABOVE LISTED IRAS
(TRADITIONAL, ROTH, SEP, OR SIMPLE), PLEASE REFER TO IRS PUBLICATION 590 AND
YOUR COMPETENT TAX ADVISOR.
TAX SHELTERED ANNUITIES. Code Section 403(b) provides tax-deferred retirement
savings plans for employees of certain non-profit and educational
organizations. Under Section 403(b), any contract used for a 403(b) plan must
provide that distributions attributable to salary reduction contributions made
after 12/31/88, and all earnings on salary reduction contributions, may be made
only on or after the date the employee:
.. attains age 59 1/2,
.. severs employment,
.. dies,
.. becomes disabled, or
.. incurs a hardship (earnings on salary reduction contributions may not be
distributed on account of hardship).
These limitations do not apply to withdrawals where Lincoln Benefit is directed
to transfer some or all of the Contract Value to another 403(b) plan.
Generally, we do not accept funds in 403(b) contracts that are subject to the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).
CAUTION: Under IRS regulations we can accept contributions, transfers and
rollovers only if we have entered into an information-sharing agreement, or its
functional equivalent, with the applicable employer or its plan administrator.
Unless your contract is grandfathered from certain provisions in these
regulations, we will only process certain transactions (e.g, transfers,
withdrawals, hardship distributions and, if applicable, loans) with employer
approval. This means that if you request one of these transactions we will not
consider your request to be in good order, and will not therefore process the
transaction, until we receive the employer's approval in written or electronic
form.
CORPORATE AND SELF-EMPLOYED PENSION AND PROFIT SHARING PLANS.
Section 401(a) of the Code permits corporate employers to establish various
types of tax favored retirement plans for employees. Self-employed individuals
may establish tax favored retirement plans for themselves and their employees
(commonly referred to as "H.R.10" or "Keogh"). Such retirement plans may permit
the purchase of annuity contracts. Lincoln Benefit no longer issues annuity
contracts to employer sponsored qualified retirement plans.
There are two owner types for contracts intended to qualify under
Section 401(a): a qualified plan fiduciary or an annuitant owner.
.. A qualified plan fiduciary exists when a qualified plan trust that is
intended to qualify under Section 401(a) of the Code is the owner. The
qualified plan trust must have its own tax identification number and a
named trustee acting as a fiduciary on behalf of the plan. The annuitant
should be the person for whose benefit the contract was purchased.
.. An annuitant owner exists when the tax identification number of the owner
and annuitant are the same, or the annuity contract is not owned by a
qualified plan trust. The annuitant should be the person for whose benefit
the contract was purchased.
If a qualified plan fiduciary is the owner of the contract, the qualified plan
must be the beneficiary so that death benefits from the annuity are distributed
in accordance with the terms of the qualified plan. Annuitant owned contracts
require that the beneficiary be the annuitant's spouse (if applicable), which
is consistent with the required IRS language for qualified plans under
Section 401(a). A completed Annuitant Owned Qualified Plan Designation of
Beneficiary form is required in order to change the beneficiary of an annuitant
owned Qualified Plan contract.
STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT AND TAX-EXEMPT ORGANIZATION DEFERRED COMPENSATION
PLANS. Section 457 of the Code permits employees of state and local governments
and tax-exempt organizations to defer a portion of their compensation without
paying current taxes. The employees must be participants in an eligible
deferred compensation plan. In eligible governmental plans, all assets and
income must be held in a trust/custodial account/annuity contract for the
exclusive benefit of the participants and their beneficiaries. To the extent
the Contracts are used in connection with a non-governmental eligible plan,
employees are considered general creditors of the employer and the employer as
owner of the Contract has the sole right to the proceeds of the Contract. Under
eligible 457 plans, contributions made for the benefit of the employees will
not be includible in the employees' gross income until distributed from the
plan. Lincoln Benefit no longer issues annuity contracts to 457 plans.
42 PROSPECTUS
DESCRIPTION OF LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE COMPANY AND THE SEPARATE ACCOUNT
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE COMPANY
Lincoln Benefit is a stock life insurance company organized under the laws of
the state of Nebraska in 1938. Our legal domicile and principal business
address is 2940 S. 84th Street , Lincoln, NE 68506-4142. Lincoln Benefit is a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Allstate Life Insurance Company ("Allstate Life"), a
stock life insurance company incorporated under the laws of the State of
Illinois. Allstate Life is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Allstate Insurance
Company ("Allstate"), a stock property-liability insurance company incorporated
under the laws of the State of Illinois. All of the capital stock issued and
outstanding of Allstate Insurance Company is owned by Allstate Insurance
Holdings, LLC, which is wholly owned by The Allstate Corporation.
We are authorized to conduct life insurance and annuity business in the
District of Columbia, Guam, U.S. Virgin Islands and all states except New York.
We will market the Contract everywhere we conduct variable annuity business.
The Contracts offered by this prospectus are issued by us and will be funded in
the Separate Account and/or the Fixed Account.
Under our reinsurance agreement with Allstate Life, substantially all contract
related transactions are transferred to Allstate Life, and substantially all of
the assets backing our reinsured liabilities are owned by Allstate Life.
Accordingly, the results of operations with respect to applications received
and contracts issued by Lincoln Benefit are not reflected in our financial
statements. The amounts reflected in our financial statements relate only to
the investment of those assets of Lincoln Benefit that are not transferred to
Allstate Life under the reinsurance agreement. These assets represent our
general account and are invested and managed by Allstate Life. While the
reinsurance agreement provides us with financial backing from Allstate Life, it
does not create a direct contractual relationship between Allstate Life and you.
Under the Company's reinsurance agreements with Allstate Life, the Company
reinsures all reserve liabilities with Allstate Life except for variable
contracts. The Company's variable Contract assets and liabilities are held in
legally-segregated, unitized Separate Accounts and are retained by the Company.
However, Lincoln Benefit's economic risks and returns related to such variable
contracts are transferred to Allstate Life.
Effective June 1, 2006, Allstate Life entered into an agreement ("the
Agreement") with Prudential Financial, Inc. and its subsidiary, The Prudential
Insurance Company of America ("PICA") pursuant to which Allstate Life sold,
through a combination of coinsurance and modified coinsurance reinsurance,
substantially all of its variable annuity business, including that of its
subsidiary Lincoln Benefit. Pursuant to the Agreement Allstate Life and PICA
also entered into an administrative services agreement which provides that PICA
or an affiliate administer the Variable Account and the Contracts. The benefits
and provisions of the Contracts have not been changed by these transactions and
agreements. None of the transactions or agreements have changed the fact that
we are primarily liable to you under your Contract.
SEPARATE ACCOUNT. Lincoln Benefit Life Variable Annuity Account was originally
established in 1992, as a segregated asset account of Lincoln Benefit. The
Separate Account meets the definition of a "separate account" under the federal
securities laws and is registered with the SEC as a unit investment trust under
the Investment Company Act of 1940. The SEC does not supervise the management
of the Separate Account or Lincoln Benefit.
We own the assets of the Separate Account, but we hold them separate from our
other assets. To the extent that these assets are attributable to the Contract
Value of the Contracts offered by this prospectus, these assets are not
chargeable with liabilities arising out of any other business we may conduct.
Income, gains, and losses, whether or not realized, from assets allocated to
the Separate Account are credited to or charged against the Separate Account
without regard to our other income, gains, or losses. Our obligations arising
under the Contracts are general corporate obligations of Lincoln Benefit.
The Separate Account is divided into Sub-Accounts. The assets of each
Sub-Account are invested in the shares of one of the Portfolios. We do not
guarantee the investment performance of the Separate Account, its Sub-Accounts
or the Portfolios. Values allocated to the Separate Account and the amount of
Variable Annuity payments will rise and fall with the values of shares of the
Portfolios and are also reduced by Contract charges. We may also use the
Separate Account to fund our other annuity contracts. We will account
separately for each type of annuity contract funded by the Separate Account.
We have included additional information about the Separate Account in the
Statement of Additional Information. You may obtain a copy of the Statement of
Additional Information by writing to us or calling us at 1-800-457-7617. We
have reproduced the Table of Contents of the Statement of Additional
Information on page 46.
STATE REGULATION OF LINCOLN BENEFIT. We are subject to the laws of Nebraska
and regulated by the Nebraska Department of Insurance. Every year we file an
annual
43 PROSPECTUS
statement with the Department of Insurance covering our operations for the
previous year and our financial condition as of the end of the year. We are
inspected periodically by the Department of Insurance to verify our contract
liabilities and reserves. Our books and records are subject to review by the
Department of Insurance at all times. We are also subject to regulation under
the insurance laws of every jurisdiction in which we operate.
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. The financial statements of Lincoln Benefit and the
financial statements of the Separate Account, which are comprised of the
financial statements of the underlying Sub-Accounts, are set forth in the
Statement of Additional Information.
ADMINISTRATION
We have primary responsibility for all administration of the Contracts and the
Variable Account. We entered into an administrative services agreement with The
Prudential Insurance Company of America ("PICA") whereby, PICA or an affiliate
provides administrative services to the Variable Account and the Contracts on
our behalf. In addition, PICA entered into a master services agreement with
se/2/, inc., of 5801 SW 6th Avenue, Topeka, Kansas 66636, whereby se/2/, inc.
provides certain business process outsourcing services with respect to the
Contracts. se/2/, inc. may engage other service providers to provide certain
administrative functions. These service providers may change over time, and as
of December 31, 2010, consisted of the following: Keane BPO, LLC
(administrative services) located at 625 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 1100,
Chicago, IL 60611; RR Donnelly Global Investment Markets (compliance printing
and mailing) located at 111 South Wacker Drive, Chicago, IL 60606; Jayhawk File
Express, LLC (file storage and document destruction) located at 601 E. 5th
Street, Topeka, KS 66601-2596; Co-Sentry.net, LLC (back-up printing and
disaster recovery) located at 9394 West Dodge Rd, Suite 100, Omaha, NE 68114;
Convey Compliance Systems, Inc. (withholding calculations and tax statement
mailing) located at 3650 Annapolis Lane, Suite 190, Plymouth, MN 55447;
Spangler Graphics, LLC (compliance mailings) located at 29305 44th Street,
Kansas City, KS 66106; Veritas Document Solutions, LLC (compliance mailings)
located at 913 Commerce Ct, Buffalo Grove, IL 60089; Records Center of Topeka,
a division of Underground Vaults & Storage, Inc. (back-up tapes storage)
located at 1540 NW Gage Blvd. #6, Topeka, KS 66618; EquiSearch Services, Inc.
(lost shareholder search) located at 11 Martime Avenue, Suite 665, White
Plains, NY 10606; ZixCorp Systems, Inc. (email encryption) located at 2711 N.
Haskell Ave., Suite 2300, Dallas, TX 75204; DST Systems, Inc. (FAN mail,
positions, prices) located at 333 West 11 Street, 5th Floor, Kansas City, MO
64105.
In administering the Contracts, the following services are provided, among
others:
.. maintenance of Contract Owner records;
.. Contract Owner services;
.. calculation of unit values;
.. maintenance of the Variable Account; and
.. preparation of Contract Owner reports.
We will send you Contract statements at least annually. We will also send you
transaction confirmations. You should notify us promptly in writing of any
address change. You should read your statements and confirmations carefully and
verify their accuracy. You should contact us promptly if you have a question
about a periodic statement or a confirmation. We will investigate all
complaints and make any necessary adjustments retroactively, but you must
notify us of a potential error within a reasonable time after the date of the
questioned statement. If you wait too long, we will make the adjustment as of
the date that we receive notice of the potential error.
We will also provide you with additional periodic and other reports,
information and prospectuses as may be required by federal securities laws.
DISTRIBUTION OF CONTRACTS
The Contracts described in this prospectus are sold by registered
representatives of broker-dealers who are our licensed insurance agents, either
individually or through an incorporated insurance agency. Commissions paid to
broker-dealers may vary, but we estimate that the total commissions paid on all
Contract sales will not exceed 6% of all Purchase Payments (on a present value
basis). From time to time, we may offer additional sales incentives of up to 1%
of Purchase Payments to broker-dealers who maintain certain sales volume levels.
Contingent on regulatory approval, ALFS, Inc ("ALFS") is expected to merge into
Allstate Distributors, LLC ("ADLLC"), effective April 29, 2011. At that time,
ALFS will assign its rights and delegate its duties as principal underwriter to
ADLLC. This change will have no effect on Lincoln Benefit's obligations to you
under your Contract.
ADLLC, located at 3100 Sanders Road, Northbrook, IL 60062-7154 serves as
distributor of the Contracts. ADLLC, an affiliate of Lincoln Benefit, is a
wholly owned subsidiary of Allstate Life Insurance Company. ADLLC is a
registered broker dealer under the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended, and is a member of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.
Lincoln Benefit does not pay ADLLC a commission for distribution of the
Contracts. The underwriting agreement with ADLLC provides that we will
reimburse ADLLC for expenses incurred in distributing the Contracts, including
liability arising out of services we provide on the Contracts.
Lincoln Benefit and ADLLC have also entered into wholesaling agreements with
certain independent contractors and their broker-dealers. Under these
44 PROSPECTUS
agreements, compensation based on a percentage of premium payments and/or
Contract values is paid to the wholesaling broker-dealer for the wholesaling
activities of their registered representative.
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
There are no pending legal proceedings affecting the Separate Account. Lincoln
Benefit is engaged in routine lawsuits which, in our management's judgment, are
not of material importance to their respective total assets or material with
respect to the Separate Account.
LEGAL MATTERS
All matters of Nebraska law pertaining to the Contract, including the validity
of the Contract and our right to issue the Contract under Nebraska law, have
been passed upon by Susan L. Lees, General Counsel of Lincoln Benefit.
REGISTRATION STATEMENT
We have filed a registration statement with the SEC, under the Securities Act
of 1933 as amended, with respect to the Contracts offered by this prospectus.
This prospectus does not contain all the information set forth in the
registration statement and the exhibits filed as part of the registration
statement. You should refer to the registration statement and the exhibits for
further information concerning the Separate Account, Lincoln Benefit, and the
Contracts. The descriptions in this prospectus of the Contracts and other legal
instruments are summaries. You should refer to those instruments as filed for
the precise terms of those instruments. You may inspect and obtain copies of
the registration statement as described on the cover page of this prospectus.
ABOUT LINCOLN BENEFIT LIFE COMPANY
Rule 12h-7 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "Exchange
Act") exempts an insurance company from filing reports under the Exchange Act
when the insurance company issues certain types of insurance products that are
registered under the Securities Act of 1933 and such products are regulated
under state law. The variable annuities described in this prospectus fall
within the exemption provided under rule 12h-7. We rely on the exemption
provided under rule 12h-7 and do not file reports under the Exchange Act.
45 PROSPECTUS
TABLE OF CONTENTS OF STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
---------------------------------------------------------
THE CONTRACT
---------------------------------------------------------
Annuity Payments
---------------------------------------------------------
Initial Monthly Annuity Payment
---------------------------------------------------------
Subsequent Monthly Payments
---------------------------------------------------------
Transfers After Annuity Date
---------------------------------------------------------
Annuity Unit Value
---------------------------------------------------------
Illustrative Example of Annuity Unit Value Calculation
---------------------------------------------------------
Illustrative Example of Variable Annuity Payments
---------------------------------------------------------
EXPERTS
---------------------------------------------------------
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
---------------------------------------------------------
46 PROSPECTUS
APPENDIX A
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUES
Appendix A presents the Accumulation Unit Values and number of Accumulation
Units outstanding for each Sub-Account since the Sub-Accounts were first
offered under the Contracts. This Appendix includes Accumulation Unit Values
representing the highest and lowest available combinations of Contract charges
that affect Accumulation Unit Values for each Contract. The Statement of
Additional Information, which is available upon request without charge,
contains the Accumulation Unit Values for all other available combinations of
Contract charges that affect Accumulation Unit Values for each Contract. Please
contact us at 1-800-457-7617 to obtain a copy of the Statement of Additional
Information.
The LBL Consultant Variable Annuity I Contracts and all of the Variable
Sub-Accounts shown below were first offered under the Contracts on September 9,
1998, except for the Janus Aspen Series Foreign Stock - Service Shares
Sub-Account, LSA Balanced, Oppenheimer Main Street Small Cap/VA - Service
Shares Sub-Account, PIMCO VIT Foreign Bond (U.S. Dollar-Hedged) -
Administrative Shares Sub-Account, PIMCO VIT Total Return - Administrative
Shares Sub-Account, Premier VIT OpCap Balanced Sub-Account, Premier VIT NACM
Small Cap Portfolio Class 1 Sub-Account, Putnam VT International Value Fund -
Class IB Sub-Account, Invesco Van Kampen V.I. Growth and Income Fund - Series
II Sub-Account which were first offered under the Contracts on May 1, 2002; the
Invesco V.I. Basic Value Fund - Series I Sub-Account, Legg Mason ClearBridge
Variable Large Cap Value Portfolio - Class I Sub-Account, Invesco Van Kampen
V.I. Mid Cap Value Fund - Series I Sub-Account which were first offered under
the Contracts on April 30, 2004; the Wells Fargo Advantage VT Discovery
Sub-Account, Wells Fargo Advantage VT Opportunity Sub-Account which were first
offered under the Contracts on April 8, 2005; and the DWS Balanced - Class A
Sub-Account which was first offered under the Contracts on April 29, 2005 and
Janus Aspen Overseas Portfolio - Service Share Sub-Account which was first
offered under the Contracts on April 30, 2008. Accumulation unit value: unit of
measure used to calculate the value or a Contract Owner's interest in a
Sub-Account for any Valuation Period. An Accumulation Unit Value does not
reflect deduction of certain charges under the Contract that are deducted from
your Contract Value, such as the Contract Maintenance Charge.
The name of the following Sub-Accounts changed since December 31, 2010. The
name shown in the tables of Accumulation Units correspond to the name of the
Sub-Accounts as of December 31, 2010:
SUB-ACCOUNT NAME AS OF
DECEMBER 31, 2010 (AS
APPEARS IN THE FOLLOWING
TABLES OF ACCUMULATION SUB-ACCOUNT NAME AS OF
UNIT VALUES) MAY 1, 2011
---------------------------------------------------
DWS Global Opportunities DWS VSI Global Small Cap
VIP - Class A Growth - Class A
Oppenheimer Main Street Oppenheimer Main Street
Small Cap Small- & Mid-Cap
Fund(R)/VA-Service Shares Fund(R)/VA-Service Shares
---------------------------------------------------
47 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.15
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ALGER CAPITAL APPRECIATION PORTFOLIO--CLASS I-2
2001 $16.720 $13.880 560,418
2002 $13.880 $9.061 474,441
2003 $9.061 $12.055 518,914
2004 $12.055 $12.881 454,884
2005 $12.881 $14.559 380,525
2006 $14.559 $17.148 318,953
2007 $17.148 $22.613 307,354
2008 $22.613 $12.252 182,353
2009 $12.252 $18.283 147,379
2010 $18.283 $20.589 125,277
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ALGER INCOME & GROWTH PORTFOLIO--CLASS I-2
2001 $15.770 $13.340 888,850
2002 $13.340 $9.078 781,602
2003 $9.078 $11.641 775,012
2004 $11.641 $12.398 686,795
2005 $12.398 $12.665 553,769
2006 $12.665 $13.673 412,877
2007 $13.673 $14.870 289,123
2008 $14.870 $8.889 189,627
2009 $8.889 $11.603 144,735
2010 $11.603 $12.865 102,497
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ALGER LARGE CAP GROWTH PORTFOLIO--CLASS I-2
2001 $13.260 $11.540 996,256
2002 $11.540 $7.640 734,340
2003 $7.640 $10.198 807,544
2004 $10.198 $10.625 719,914
2005 $10.625 $11.756 607,853
2006 $11.756 $12.208 452,187
2007 $12.208 $14.460 340,976
2008 $14.460 $7.689 252,531
2009 $7.689 $11.206 202,899
2010 $11.206 $12.549 159,401
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ALGER MID CAP GROWTH PORTFOLIO--CLASS I-2
2001 $16.280 $15.030 515,103
2002 $15.030 $10.457 410,450
2003 $10.457 $15.264 559,837
2004 $15.264 $17.040 571,188
2005 $17.040 $18.482 583,687
2006 $18.482 $20.104 495,198
2007 $20.104 $26.119 395,122
2008 $26.119 $10.741 307,529
2009 $10.741 $16.093 251,589
2010 $16.093 $18.974 201,160
48 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.15
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ALGER SMALLCAP GROWTH PORTFOLIO--CLASS I-2
2001 $11.520 $8.020 328,999
2002 $8.020 $5.842 283,731
2003 $5.842 $8.212 468,871
2004 $8.212 $9.454 355,278
2005 $9.454 $10.913 404,918
2006 $10.913 $12.935 399,147
2007 $12.935 $14.976 268,659
2008 $14.976 $7.898 187,715
2009 $7.898 $11.349 171,410
2010 $11.349 $14.043 140,374
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DWS BALANCED VIP--CLASS A
2005 $10.000 $10.602 449,167
2006 $10.602 $11.543 346,262
2007 $11.543 $11.950 249,164
2008 $11.950 $8.576 165,654
2009 $8.576 $10.454 114,278
2010 $10.454 $11.483 87,837
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DWS BOND VIP--CLASS A
2001 $10.880 $11.360 507,663
2002 $11.360 $12.081 558,679
2003 $12.081 $12.535 493,622
2004 $12.535 $13.046 507,579
2005 $13.046 $13.219 458,975
2006 $13.219 $13.671 362,090
2007 $13.671 $14.064 339,879
2008 $14.064 $11.560 255,646
2009 $11.560 $12.566 186,602
2010 $12.566 $13.253 155,647
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DWS GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES VIP--CLASS A
2001 $16.510 $12.290 103,294
2002 $12.290 $9.724 130,916
2003 $9.724 $14.317 193,561
2004 $14.317 $17.440 176,147
2005 $17.440 $20.357 193,166
2006 $20.357 $24.544 166,415
2007 $24.544 $26.499 131,794
2008 $26.499 $13.094 97,138
2009 $13.094 $19.164 83,558
2010 $19.164 $23.968 72,183
49 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.15
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DWS GROWTH & INCOME VIP--CLASS A
2001 $10.660 $9.340 218,214
2002 $9.340 $7.087 201,541
2003 $7.087 $8.871 178,003
2004 $8.871 $9.651 150,151
2005 $9.651 $10.109 139,183
2006 $10.109 $11.345 102,347
2007 $11.345 $11.355 73,259
2008 $11.355 $6.918 49,772
2009 $6.918 $9.164 38,191
2010 $9.164 $10.354 21,260
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DWS INTERNATIONAL VIP--CLASS A
2001 $12.250 $8.360 100,581
2002 $8.360 $6.743 105,081
2003 $6.743 $8.507 114,835
2004 $8.507 $9.790 121,969
2005 $9.790 $11.232 127,476
2006 $11.232 $13.967 127,598
2007 $13.967 $15.805 113,896
2008 $15.805 $8.083 101,279
2009 $8.083 $10.658 69,353
2010 $10.658 $10.697 54,718
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERATED CAPITAL INCOME FUND II
2001 $10.060 $8.570 420,723
2002 $8.570 $8.959 460,608
2003 $8.959 $7.668 309,555
2004 $7.668 $8.325 297,389
2005 $8.325 $8.738 271,194
2006 $8.738 $9.980 220,546
2007 $9.980 $10.253 154,739
2008 $10.253 $8.062 102,548
2009 $8.062 $10.213 101,513
2010 $10.213 $11.305 68,578
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERATED FUND FOR U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES II
2001 $11.050 $11.670 1,994,814
2002 $11.670 $12.572 2,695,911
2003 $12.572 $12.710 1,589,894
2004 $12.710 $13.005 1,136,236
2005 $13.005 $13.104 879,855
2006 $13.104 $13.478 722,780
2007 $13.478 $14.146 603,659
2008 $14.146 $14.568 494,396
2009 $14.568 $15.136 374,113
2010 $15.136 $15.721 305,850
50 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.15
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERATED HIGH INCOME BOND FUND II
2001 $8.940 $8.950 785,823
2002 $8.950 $6.435 296,496
2003 $6.435 $10.814 707,583
2004 $10.814 $11.797 729,703
2005 $11.797 $11.960 606,875
2006 $11.960 $13.088 539,007
2007 $13.088 $13.368 432,506
2008 $13.368 $9.770 344,383
2009 $9.770 $14.748 260,044
2010 $14.748 $16.710 201,597
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIDELITY VIP ASSET MANAGER PORTFOLIO--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $11.250 $10.650 334,328
2002 $10.650 $9.601 371,447
2003 $9.601 $11.186 420,226
2004 $11.186 $11.652 437,716
2005 $11.652 $11.973 433,897
2006 $11.973 $12.690 338,607
2007 $12.690 $14.474 252,896
2008 $14.474 $10.189 202,629
2009 $10.189 $12.992 144,646
2010 $12.992 $14.661 116,581
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIDELITY VIP CONTRAFUND PORTFOLIO--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $12.970 $11.240 1,006,844
2002 $11.240 $10.060 1,084,534
2003 $10.060 $12.763 1,311,861
2004 $12.763 $14.555 1,438,118
2005 $14.555 $16.809 1,469,954
2006 $16.809 $18.546 1,308,454
2007 $18.546 $21.536 1,005,803
2008 $21.536 $12.226 742,971
2009 $12.226 $16.386 631,023
2010 $16.386 $18.969 511,344
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIDELITY VIP EQUITY-INCOME PORTFOLIO--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $12.180 $11.430 1,289,762
2002 $11.430 $9.375 1,218,166
2003 $9.375 $12.067 1,403,132
2004 $12.067 $13.291 1,384,897
2005 $13.291 $13.896 1,176,532
2006 $13.896 $16.496 941,565
2007 $16.496 $16.539 684,837
2008 $16.539 $9.366 412,487
2009 $9.366 $12.044 308,304
2010 $12.044 $13.697 252,183
51 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.15
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIDELITY VIP GROWTH PORTFOLIO--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $13.870 $11.280 1,366,004
2002 $11.280 $7.786 1,121,334
2003 $7.786 $10.215 1,141,572
2004 $10.215 $10.429 1,091,575
2005 $10.429 $10.897 953,608
2006 $10.897 $11.500 769,995
2007 $11.500 $14.418 618,823
2008 $14.418 $7.523 492,708
2009 $7.523 $9.531 405,357
2010 $9.531 $11.688 320,051
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIDELITY VIP INDEX 500 PORTFOLIO--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $12.110 $10.510 2,032,615
2002 $10.510 $8.073 1,782,207
2003 $8.073 $10.237 1,907,842
2004 $10.237 $11.183 1,817,054
2005 $11.183 $11.578 1,583,665
2006 $11.578 $13.233 1,319,112
2007 $13.233 $13.778 1,041,479
2008 $13.778 $8.572 756,199
2009 $8.572 $10.718 592,792
2010 $10.718 $12.176 493,294
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIDELITY VIP MONEY MARKET PORTFOLIO--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $11.070 $11.390 2,969,960
2002 $11.390 $11.436 3,542,199
2003 $11.436 $11.406 2,015,425
2004 $11.406 $11.401 1,544,840
2005 $11.401 $11.601 1,335,848
2006 $11.601 $12.017 1,166,577
2007 $12.017 $12.487 1,221,039
2008 $12.487 $12.705 1,305,720
2009 $12.705 $12.637 985,343
2010 $12.637 $12.511 775,634
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIDELITY VIP OVERSEAS PORTFOLIO--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $11.810 $9.200 137,725
2002 $9.200 $7.240 200,173
2003 $7.240 $10.251 294,264
2004 $10.251 $11.504 402,967
2005 $11.504 $13.526 394,476
2006 $13.526 $15.773 366,639
2007 $15.773 $18.273 327,028
2008 $18.273 $10.141 276,821
2009 $10.141 $12.672 211,336
2010 $12.672 $14.155 161,268
52 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.15
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INVESCO V.I. BASIC VALUE FUND--SERIES I FORMERLY, AIM V.I. BASIC VALUE
FUND--SERIES I
2004 $10.000 $10.821 269,780
2005 $10.821 $11.301 253,928
2006 $11.301 $12.634 235,944
2007 $12.634 $12.669 199,610
2008 $12.669 $6.034 176,998
2009 $6.034 $8.820 148,589
2010 $8.820 $9.351 119,425
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INVESCO VAN KAMPEN V.I. GROWTH AND INCOME FUND--SERIES II FORMERLY,
VAN KAMPEN LIT GROWTH AND INCOME PORTFOLIO, CLASS II
2002 $10.000 $8.163 36,430
2003 $8.163 $10.293 152,145
2004 $10.293 $11.600 354,336
2005 $11.600 $12.570 434,444
2006 $12.570 $14.397 396,566
2007 $14.397 $14.576 306,627
2008 $14.576 $9.758 199,062
2009 $9.758 $11.960 183,308
2010 $11.960 $13.252 150,424
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INVESCO VAN KAMPEN V.I. MID CAP GROWTH FUND--SERIES II FORMERLY,
VAN KAMPEN LIT MID CAP GROWTH PORTFOLIO, CLASS II
2004 $10.000 $11.156 44,940
2005 $11.156 $12.242 49,948
2006 $12.242 $12.686 45,228
2007 $12.686 $14.732 39,490
2008 $14.732 $7.735 29,220
2009 $7.735 $11.945 38,907
2010 $11.945 $15.014 25,399
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INVESCO VAN KAMPEN V.I. MID CAP VALUE FUND--SERIES I FORMERLY, UIF
U.S. MID CAP VALUE PORTFOLIO, CLASS I
2004 $10.000 $11.333 309,322
2005 $11.333 $12.570 353,741
2006 $12.570 $14.984 276,970
2007 $14.984 $15.958 210,481
2008 $15.958 $9.252 158,166
2009 $9.252 $12.720 131,570
2010 $12.720 $15.356 113,395
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JANUS ASPEN ENTERPRISE PORTFOLIO--INSTITUTIONAL SHARES
2001 $18.390 $11.000 926,849
2002 $11.000 $7.827 694,192
2003 $7.827 $10.443 656,913
2004 $10.443 $12.453 642,333
2005 $12.453 $13.812 539,509
2006 $13.812 $15.497 434,028
2007 $15.497 $18.677 344,083
2008 $18.677 $10.380 288,564
2009 $10.380 $14.846 221,943
2010 $14.846 $18.452 186,653
53 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.15
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JANUS ASPEN JANUS PORTFOLIO--INTERNATIONAL SHARES
2001 $14.230 $10.570 1,856,493
2002 $10.570 $12.531 623,206
2003 $12.531 $9.984 1,211,583
2004 $9.984 $10.306 1,041,507
2005 $10.306 $10.614 860,239
2006 $10.614 $11.676 645,480
2007 $11.676 $13.270 469,901
2008 $13.270 $7.900 371,128
2009 $7.900 $10.637 290,538
2010 $10.637 $12.031 230,669
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JANUS ASPEN OVERSEAS PORTFOLIO--SERVICE SHARES
2008 $10.000 $7.495 62,852
2009 $7.495 $13.254 86,323
2010 $13.254 $16.365 71,833
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JANUS ASPEN SERIES BALANCED PORTFOLIO--INSTITUTIONAL SHARES
2001 $14.120 $13.290 1,044,409
2002 $13.290 $7.762 94,361
2003 $7.762 $13.832 1,496,830
2004 $13.832 $14.825 1,365,759
2005 $14.825 $15.805 1,195,782
2006 $15.805 $17.282 970,410
2007 $17.282 $18.865 747,492
2008 $18.865 $15.679 535,796
2009 $15.679 $19.493 427,444
2010 $19.493 $20.865 348,978
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JANUS ASPEN SERIES FLEXIBLE BOND PORTFOLIO--INSTITUTIONAL SHARES
2001 $10.800 $11.490 418,584
2002 $11.490 $12.280 1,721,351
2003 $12.280 $13.166 584,216
2004 $13.166 $13.519 527,949
2005 $13.519 $13.619 492,874
2006 $13.619 $14.017 393,774
2007 $14.017 $14.816 327,277
2008 $14.816 $15.514 272,856
2009 $15.514 $17.346 231,270
2010 $17.346 $18.496 202,832
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JANUS ASPEN SERIES FOREIGN STOCK PORTFOLIO--SERVICE SHARES
2002 $10.000 $7.675 1,378,111
2003 $7.675 $10.226 58,782
2004 $10.226 $11.939 152,105
2005 $11.939 $12.526 114,760
2006 $12.526 $14.605 84,464
2007 $14.605 $17.055 73,894
2008 $17.055 $16.058 0
54 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.15
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JANUS ASPEN WORLDWIDE PORTFOLIO--INSTITUTIONAL SHARES
2001 $14.450 $11.070 2,316,369
2002 $11.070 $8.143 1,719,720
2003 $8.143 $9.971 1,479,355
2004 $9.971 $10.318 1,193,225
2005 $10.318 $10.788 997,853
2006 $10.788 $12.594 775,658
2007 $12.594 $13.634 562,020
2008 $13.634 $7.451 410,898
2009 $7.451 $10.132 336,082
2010 $10.132 $11.591 263,086
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LEGG MASON CLEARBRIDGE VARIABLE LARGE CAP VALUE PORTFOLIO--CLASS I
SHARES FORMERLY, LEGG MASON CLEARBRIDGE VARIABLE INVESTORS
PORTFOLIO--CLASS I
2004 $10.000 $10.954 60,840
2005 $10.954 $11.525 49,518
2006 $11.525 $13.461 49,417
2007 $13.461 $13.811 35,322
2008 $13.811 $8.781 26,875
2009 $8.781 $10.796 20,239
2010 $10.796 $11.671 17,945
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LSA BALANCED
2002 $10.000 $8.678 2,230
2003 $8.678 $11.074 83,852
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MFS GROWTH--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $16.280 $10.690 331,023
2002 $10.690 $6.994 247,624
2003 $6.994 $8.995 248,807
2004 $8.995 $10.035 231,814
2005 $10.035 $10.821 202,017
2006 $10.821 $11.531 165,550
2007 $11.531 $13.798 126,996
2008 $13.798 $8.528 102,015
2009 $8.528 $11.594 78,308
2010 $11.594 $13.207 66,211
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MFS INVESTORS TRUST SERIES--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $11.630 $9.660 295,343
2002 $9.660 $7.536 269,101
2003 $7.536 $9.091 270,484
2004 $9.091 $9.998 244,156
2005 $9.998 $10.596 207,370
2006 $10.596 $11.824 171,767
2007 $11.824 $12.880 126,138
2008 $12.880 $8.512 100,457
2009 $8.512 $10.668 84,052
2010 $10.668 $11.704 56,558
55 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.15
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MFS NEW DISCOVERY SERIES--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $18.820 $17.650 188,675
2002 $17.650 $11.918 183,131
2003 $11.918 $15.738 224,760
2004 $15.738 $16.556 232,616
2005 $16.556 $17.209 188,078
2006 $17.209 $19.241 161,666
2007 $19.241 $19.479 139,957
2008 $19.479 $11.671 119,273
2009 $11.671 $18.809 94,439
2010 $18.809 $25.325 80,183
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MFS RESEARCH SERIES--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $12.750 $9.920 207,793
2002 $9.920 $7.389 186,178
2003 $7.389 $9.100 190,978
2004 $9.100 $10.412 189,969
2005 $10.412 $11.085 142,585
2006 $11.085 $12.095 119,287
2007 $12.095 $13.521 86,910
2008 $13.521 $8.534 55,904
2009 $8.534 $11.002 49,781
2010 $11.002 $12.593 38,970
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MFS TOTAL RETURN SERIES--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $12.380 $12.250 436,363
2002 $12.250 $11.473 642,776
2003 $11.473 $13.180 943,486
2004 $13.180 $14.490 1,033,566
2005 $14.490 $14.714 970,559
2006 $14.714 $16.260 802,883
2007 $16.260 $16.734 661,560
2008 $16.734 $12.868 464,793
2009 $12.868 $15.000 347,219
2010 $15.000 $16.285 279,717
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPPENHEIMER MAIN STREET SMALL CAP FUND/VA--SERVICE SHARES
2002 $10.000 $7.847 97,205
2003 $7.847 $11.178 214,471
2004 $11.178 $13.157 347,171
2005 $13.157 $14.256 305,883
2006 $14.256 $16.144 279,529
2007 $16.144 $15.720 219,803
2008 $15.720 $9.625 151,992
2009 $9.625 $13.011 120,823
2010 $13.011 $15.812 98,906
56 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.15
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PIMCO VIT FOREIGN BOND PORTFOLIO (U.S. DOLLAR-HEDGED)--
ADMINISTRATIVE SHARES
2002 $10.000 $10.565 75,670
2003 $10.565 $10.669 337,271
2004 $10.669 $11.122 347,113
2005 $11.122 $11.550 338,440
2006 $11.550 $11.657 247,334
2007 $11.657 $11.929 175,543
2008 $11.929 $11.501 185,837
2009 $11.501 $13.133 139,898
2010 $13.133 $14.072 137,307
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PIMCO VIT TOTAL RETURN PORTFOLIO--ADMINISTRATIVE SHARES
2002 $10.000 $10.557 539,429
2003 $10.557 $10.951 1,001,817
2004 $10.951 $11.343 1,060,049
2005 $11.343 $11.476 1,156,641
2006 $11.476 $11.771 944,261
2007 $11.771 $12.643 737,286
2008 $12.643 $13.088 699,373
2009 $13.088 $14.744 709,743
2010 $14.744 $15.743 639,674
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PREMIER VIT NACM SMALL CAP PORTFOLIO CLASS 1
2002 $10.000 $7.200 88,999
2003 $7.200 $10.143 236,796
2004 $10.143 $11.809 274,798
2005 $11.809 $11.669 207,018
2006 $11.669 $14.300 198,198
2007 $14.300 $14.203 142,608
2008 $14.203 $8.186 108,005
2009 $8.186 $9.344 85,491
2010 $9.344 $10.843 0
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PREMIER VIT OPCAP BALANCED PORTFOLIO
2004 $10.000 $10.812 129,223
2005 $10.812 $10.971 113,375
2006 $10.971 $12.005 99,054
2007 $12.005 $11.330 58,167
2008 $11.330 $7.700 43,630
2009 $7.700 $7.432 0
57 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.15
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PUTNAM VT INTERNATIONAL VALUE FUND--CLASS IB FORMERLY, PUTNAM VT
INTERNATIONAL GROWTH AND INCOME FUND--CLASS IB
2002 $10.000 $8.198 38,105
2003 $8.198 $11.161 43,231
2004 $11.161 $13.335 89,040
2005 $13.335 $15.027 123,886
2006 $15.027 $18.881 158,576
2007 $18.881 $19.952 125,260
2008 $19.952 $10.636 74,027
2009 $10.636 $13.254 56,664
2010 $13.254 $14.022 39,029
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RIDGEWORTH LARGE CAP GROWTH STOCK FUND
2001 $10.260 $9.590 42,077
2002 $9.590 $7.397 56,403
2003 $7.397 $8.653 63,977
2004 $8.653 $9.123 60,421
2005 $9.123 $8.929 57,402
2006 $8.929 $9.773 67,263
2007 $9.773 $11.125 88,003
2008 $11.125 $6.517 81,011
2009 $6.517 $6.634 0
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RIDGEWORTH LARGE CAP VALUE EQUITY FUND
2001 $9.420 $9.200 196,823
2002 $9.200 $7.540 104,266
2003 $7.540 $9.168 53,974
2004 $9.168 $10.439 192,125
2005 $10.439 $10.696 91,183
2006 $10.696 $12.937 142,829
2007 $12.937 $13.229 83,673
2008 $13.229 $8.781 59,269
2009 $8.781 $8.309 0
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME PORTFOLIO--I
2001 $12.330 $12.360 581,145
2002 $12.360 $10.602 608,043
2003 $10.602 $13.140 744,659
2004 $13.140 $14.913 895,153
2005 $14.913 $15.306 874,317
2006 $15.306 $17.984 762,467
2007 $17.984 $18.339 575,733
2008 $18.339 $11.571 402,473
2009 $11.571 $14.353 288,947
2010 $14.353 $16.304 227,597
58 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.15
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL STOCK PORTFOLIO--I
2001 $11.520 $8.850 92,572
2002 $8.850 $7.137 99,915
2003 $7.137 $9.201 173,635
2004 $9.201 $10.338 264,060
2005 $10.338 $11.847 255,863
2006 $11.847 $13.934 244,192
2007 $13.934 $15.553 191,891
2008 $15.553 $7.879 149,103
2009 $7.879 $11.858 116,835
2010 $11.858 $13.403 95,977
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T. ROWE PRICE MID-CAP GROWTH PORTFOLIO--I
2001 $14.910 $14.590 368,137
2002 $14.590 $11.345 436,260
2003 $11.345 $15.505 619,155
2004 $15.505 $18.121 586,887
2005 $18.121 $20.534 504,417
2006 $20.534 $21.626 404,390
2007 $21.626 $25.097 295,779
2008 $25.097 $14.931 222,831
2009 $14.931 $21.476 160,985
2010 $21.476 $27.173 125,304
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH PORTFOLIO--I
2001 $11.050 $9.620 108,815
2002 $9.620 $6.813 165,424
2003 $6.813 $9.090 155,957
2004 $9.090 $9.995 173,326
2005 $9.955 $10.271 157,832
2006 $10.271 $10.888 129,696
2007 $10.888 $12.233 117,852
2008 $12.233 $7.461 92,406
2009 $7.461 $11.035 64,870
2010 $11.035 $13.040 49,935
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
WELLS FARGO ADVANTAGE VT DISCOVERY FUND
2005 $10.000 $11.481 293,780
2006 $11.481 $12.999 225,795
2007 $12.999 $15.702 161,353
2008 $15.702 $8.628 115,632
2009 $8.628 $11.956 82,156
2010 $11.956 $16.004 68,993
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
WELLS FARGO ADVANTAGE VT OPPORTUNITY FUND
2005 $10.000 $11.040 510,068
2006 $11.040 $12.235 431,405
2007 $12.235 $12.884 339,846
2008 $12.884 $7.622 257,232
2009 $7.622 $11.120 196,311
2010 $11.120 $13.591 157,062
* The Accumulation Unit Values in this table reflect a mortality and expense
risk charge of 1.15% and an administrative expense charge of 0.10%.
59 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY PLUS DEATH BENEFIT AND INCOME BENEFIT RIDER II
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.7
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ALGER CAPITAL APPRECIATION PORTFOLIO--CLASS I-2
2001 $7.680 $6.340 136,468
2002 $6.340 $4.116 264,242
2003 $4.116 $5.447 542,296
2004 $5.447 $5.788 727,607
2005 $5.788 $6.506 721,253
2006 $6.506 $7.621 732,706
2007 $7.621 $9.995 759,050
2008 $9.995 $5.385 521,910
2009 $5.385 $7.992 457,894
2010 $7.992 $8.951 466,843
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ALGER INCOME & GROWTH PORTFOLIO--CLASS I-2
2001 $9.280 $7.810 92,660
2002 $7.810 $5.284 202,665
2003 $5.284 $6.738 354,359
2004 $6.738 $7.137 396,418
2005 $7.137 $7.252 381,157
2006 $7.252 $7.786 339,270
2007 $7.786 $8.421 308,605
2008 $8.421 $5.006 254,925
2009 $5.006 $6.499 249,853
2010 $6.499 $7.166 199,795
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ALGER LARGE CAP GROWTH PORTFOLIO--CLASS I-2
2001 $8.160 $7.070 97,242
2002 $7.070 $4.651 108,296
2003 $4.651 $6.175 308,042
2004 $6.175 $6.398 439,952
2005 $6.398 $7.041 492,261
2006 $7.041 $7.271 413,156
2007 $7.271 $8.565 371,317
2008 $8.565 $4.529 324,912
2009 $4.529 $6.565 298,212
2010 $6.565 $7.311 266,498
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ALGER MID CAP GROWTH PORTFOLIO--CLASS I-2
2001 $9.440 $8.670 107,872
2002 $8.670 $5.996 295,309
2003 $5.996 $8.703 836,891
2004 $8.703 $9.663 999,864
2005 $9.663 $10.424 1,007,060
2006 $10.424 $11.277 894,467
2007 $11.277 $14.569 822,716
2008 $14.569 $5.959 721,972
2009 $5.959 $8.878 656,392
2010 $8.878 $10.410 560,969
60 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY PLUS DEATH BENEFIT AND INCOME BENEFIT RIDER II
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.7
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ALGER SMALLCAP GROWTH PORTFOLIO--CLASS I-2
2001 $7.220 $4.990 116,699
2002 $4.990 $3.619 128,015
2003 $3.619 $5.060 283,201
2004 $5.060 $5.793 359,793
2005 $5.793 $6.651 408,709
2006 $6.651 $7.840 400,994
2007 $7.840 $9.027 386,201
2008 $9.027 $4.734 324,933
2009 $4.734 $6.765 302,059
2010 $6.765 $8.326 273,464
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DWS BALANCED VIP--CLASS A
2005 $10.000 $10.562 140,966
2006 $10.562 $11.437 117,438
2007 $11.437 $11.776 108,626
2008 $11.776 $8.404 99,008
2009 $8.404 $10.189 96,552
2010 $10.189 $11.130 85,675
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DWS BOND VIP--CLASS A
2001 $10.610 $11.020 60,002
2002 $11.020 $11.655 89,305
2003 $11.655 $12.026 179,258
2004 $12.026 $12.447 242,774
2005 $12.447 $12.544 235,908
2006 $12.544 $12.902 203,670
2007 $12.902 $13.200 192,164
2008 $13.200 $10.790 162,984
2009 $10.790 $11.665 139,150
2010 $11.665 $12.234 131,495
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DWS GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES VIP--CLASS A
2001 $9.120 $6.750 24,877
2002 $6.750 $5.313 51,809
2003 $5.313 $7.780 159,642
2004 $7.780 $9.425 254,808
2005 $9.425 $10.942 309,298
2006 $10.942 $13.120 368,488
2007 $13.120 $14.087 319,396
2008 $14.087 $6.922 292,135
2009 $6.922 $10.076 295,598
2010 $10.076 $12.533 247,927
61 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY PLUS DEATH BENEFIT AND INCOME BENEFIT RIDER II
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.7
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DWS GROWTH & INCOME VIP--CLASS A
2001 $9.590 $8.350 23,428
2002 $8.350 $6.305 37,769
2003 $6.305 $7.849 76,611
2004 $7.849 $8.492 99,749
2005 $8.492 $8.847 85,054
2006 $8.847 $9.874 79,081
2007 $9.874 $9.829 76,673
2008 $9.829 $5.955 67,583
2009 $5.955 $7.846 85,215
2010 $7.846 $8.815 73,664
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DWS INTERNATIONAL VIP--CLASS A
2001 $8.710 $5.910 18,248
2002 $5.910 $4.740 36,822
2003 $4.740 $5.948 144,072
2004 $5.948 $6.808 174,503
2005 $6.808 $7.768 190,759
2006 $7.768 $9.606 229,934
2007 $9.606 $10.810 202,975
2008 $10.810 $5.498 253,788
2009 $5.498 $7.210 164,420
2010 $7.210 $7.197 126,785
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERATED CAPITAL INCOME FUND II
2001 $9.140 $7.740 1,970
2002 $7.740 $9.115 92,428
2003 $9.115 $6.855 51,656
2004 $6.855 $7.401 76,744
2005 $7.401 $7.726 76,010
2006 $7.726 $8.776 100,300
2007 $8.776 $8.966 65,968
2008 $8.966 $7.012 98,652
2009 $7.012 $8.834 87,864
2010 $8.834 $9.725 54,559
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERATED FUND FOR U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES II
2001 $10.610 $11.150 69,662
2002 $11.150 $11.942 408,779
2003 $11.942 $12.006 580,553
2004 $12.006 $12.218 605,532
2005 $12.218 $12.243 530,059
2006 $12.243 $12.523 381,051
2007 $12.523 $13.072 721,964
2008 $13.072 $13.388 610,475
2009 $13.388 $13.834 473,221
2010 $13.834 $14.289 324,041
62 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY PLUS DEATH BENEFIT AND INCOME BENEFIT RIDER II
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.7
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERATED HIGH INCOME BOND FUND II
2001 $9.190 $9.150 52,109
2002 $9.150 $5.784 24,658
2003 $5.784 $10.941 246,278
2004 $10.941 $11.870 444,657
2005 $11.870 $11.968 439,857
2006 $11.968 $13.026 430,206
2007 $13.026 $13.231 379,607
2008 $13.231 $9.617 307,223
2009 $9.617 $14.437 275,990
2010 $14.437 $16.268 242,351
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIDELITY VIP ASSET MANAGER PORTFOLIO--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $9.590 $9.030 33,474
2002 $9.030 $8.095 73,114
2003 $8.095 $9.379 116,121
2004 $9.379 $9.716 181,632
2005 $9.716 $9.929 176,415
2006 $9.929 $10.466 129,882
2007 $10.466 $11.872 125,667
2008 $11.872 $8.311 130,724
2009 $8.311 $10.540 122,598
2010 $10.540 $11.828 129,616
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIDELITY VIP CONTRAFUND PORTFOLIO--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $9.380 $8.080 104,405
2002 $8.080 $7.195 348,537
2003 $7.195 $9.078 888,353
2004 $9.078 $10.296 1,158,838
2005 $10.296 $11.826 1,260,810
2006 $11.826 $12.977 1,273,768
2007 $12.977 $14.986 1,188,207
2008 $14.986 $8.461 1,080,956
2009 $8.461 $11.277 1,046,007
2010 $11.277 $12.983 998,155
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIDELITY VIP EQUITY-INCOME PORTFOLIO--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $11.040 $10.300 75,559
2002 $10.300 $8.405 174,403
2003 $8.405 $10.759 306,020
2004 $10.759 $11.786 434,981
2005 $11.786 $12.255 395,964
2006 $12.255 $14.468 396,481
2007 $14.468 $14.426 349,218
2008 $14.426 $8.125 273,985
2009 $8.125 $10.390 270,828
2010 $10.390 $11.751 237,804
63 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY PLUS DEATH BENEFIT AND INCOME BENEFIT RIDER II
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.7
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIDELITY VIP GROWTH PORTFOLIO--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $8.390 $6.790 98,555
2002 $6.790 $4.659 305,305
2003 $4.659 $6.080 625,498
2004 $6.080 $6.173 939,071
2005 $6.173 $6.415 831,880
2006 $6.415 $6.732 682,021
2007 $6.732 $8.394 682,803
2008 $8.394 $4.356 663,776
2009 $4.356 $5.488 676,234
2010 $5.488 $6.693 597,279
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIDELITY VIP INDEX 500 PORTFOLIO--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $9.040 $7.800 312,663
2002 $7.800 $5.960 365,351
2003 $5.960 $7.516 978,400
2004 $7.516 $8.166 1,444,339
2005 $8.166 $8.407 1,362,101
2006 $8.407 $9.557 1,346,569
2007 $9.557 $9.896 1,295,792
2008 $9.896 $6.123 1,150,557
2009 $6.123 $7.614 1,043,678
2010 $7.614 $8.602 911,514
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIDELITY VIP MONEY MARKET PORTFOLIO--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $10.230 $10.470 140,649
2002 $10.470 $10.456 310,441
2003 $10.456 $10.373 819,516
2004 $10.373 $10.311 618,241
2005 $10.311 $10.435 694,730
2006 $10.435 $10.750 725,670
2007 $10.750 $11.108 714,035
2008 $11.108 $11.240 1,173,850
2009 $11.240 $11.119 894,758
2010 $11.119 $10.947 697,719
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIDELITY VIP OVERSEAS PORTFOLIO--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $8.440 $6.540 58,855
2002 $6.540 $5.119 109,892
2003 $5.119 $7.208 235,043
2004 $7.208 $8.045 382,839
2005 $8.045 $9.406 426,944
2006 $9.406 $10.909 513,031
2007 $10.909 $12.569 470,601
2008 $12.569 $6.937 476,598
2009 $6.937 $8.620 469,624
2010 $8.620 $9.577 413,895
64 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY PLUS DEATH BENEFIT AND INCOME BENEFIT RIDER II
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.7
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INVESCO V.I. BASIC VALUE FUND--SERIES I FORMERLY, AIM V.I. BASIC VALUE
FUND--SERIES I
2004 $10.000 $10.781 244,914
2005 $10.781 $11.197 251,607
2006 $11.197 $12.450 294,765
2007 $12.450 $12.415 241,174
2008 $12.415 $5.881 236,766
2009 $5.881 $8.549 231,753
2010 $8.549 $9.014 197,346
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INVESCO VAN KAMPEN V.I. GROWTH AND INCOME FUND--SERIES II FORMERLY,
VAN KAMPEN LIT GROWTH AND INCOME PORTFOLIO, CLASS II
2002 $10.000 $8.133 12,359
2003 $8.133 $10.199 106,750
2004 $10.199 $11.431 238,529
2005 $11.431 $12.319 277,577
2006 $12.319 $14.033 291,195
2007 $14.033 $14.129 213,247
2008 $14.129 $9.407 187,559
2009 $9.407 $11.466 182,380
2010 $11.466 $12.635 151,891
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INVESCO VAN KAMPEN V.I. MID CAP GROWTH FUND--SERIES II FORMERLY,
VAN KAMPEN LIT MID CAP GROWTH PORTFOLIO, CLASS II
2004 $10.000 $11.114 77,019
2005 $11.114 $12.130 52,894
2006 $12.130 $12.500 60,010
2007 $12.500 $14.437 59,849
2008 $14.437 $7.538 46,687
2009 $7.538 $11.577 51,595
2010 $11.577 $14.472 53,523
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INVESCO VAN KAMPEN V.I. MID CAP VALUE FUND--SERIES I FORMERLY, UIF
U.S. MID CAP VALUE PORTFOLIO, CLASS I
2004 $10.000 $11.290 220,091
2005 $11.290 $12.455 280,918
2006 $12.455 $14.765 311,438
2007 $14.765 $15.638 269,763
2008 $15.638 $9.017 244,967
2009 $9.017 $12.329 201,588
2010 $12.329 $14.802 159,248
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JANUS ASPEN ENTERPRISE PORTFOLIO--INSTITUTIONAL SHARES
2001 $6.650 $3.960 266,218
2002 $3.960 $2.799 307,400
2003 $2.799 $3.715 412,644
2004 $3.715 $4.405 466,868
2005 $4.405 $4.860 505,828
2006 $4.860 $5.423 510,006
2007 $5.423 $6.499 505,513
2008 $6.499 $3.592 433,329
2009 $3.592 $5.110 419,789
2010 $5.110 $6.316 360,339
65 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY PLUS DEATH BENEFIT AND INCOME BENEFIT RIDER II
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.7
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JANUS ASPEN JANUS PORTFOLIO--INTERNATIONAL SHARES
2001 $8.320 $6.150 116,481
2002 $6.150 $4.441 162,987
2003 $4.441 $5.746 251,235
2004 $5.746 $5.898 275,805
2005 $5.898 $6.042 257,364
2006 $6.042 $6.610 266,266
2007 $6.610 $7.471 225,942
2008 $7.471 $4.423 195,932
2009 $4.423 $5.923 193,524
2010 $5.923 $6.662 183,375
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JANUS ASPEN OVERSEAS PORTFOLIO--SERVICE SHARES
2008 $10.000 $7.225 81,678
2009 $7.225 $12.707 127,139
2010 $12.707 $15.603 120,730
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JANUS ASPEN SERIES BALANCED PORTFOLIO--INSTITUTIONAL SHARES
2001 $9.620 $9.000 199,196
2002 $9.000 $8.273 356,912
2003 $8.273 $9.267 699,022
2004 $9.267 $9.878 705,500
2005 $9.878 $10.473 691,502
2006 $10.473 $11.389 664,165
2007 $11.389 $12.364 559,884
2008 $12.364 $10.220 522,134
2009 $10.220 $12.636 495,193
2010 $12.636 $13.451 424,233
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JANUS ASPEN SERIES FLEXIBLE BOND PORTFOLIO--INSTITUTIONAL SHARES
2001 $10.400 $11.010 104,700
2002 $11.010 $11.943 114,051
2003 $11.943 $12.480 254,643
2004 $12.480 $12.743 312,969
2005 $12.743 $12.767 291,063
2006 $12.767 $13.069 350,195
2007 $13.069 $13.738 380,041
2008 $13.738 $14.306 355,482
2009 $14.306 $15.908 323,948
2010 $15.908 $16.870 295,938
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JANUS ASPEN SERIES FOREIGN STOCK PORTFOLIO--SERVICE SHARES
2002 $10.000 $7.734 36,688
2003 $7.734 $10.132 37,023
2004 $10.132 $11.765 71,988
2005 $11.765 $12.276 79,929
2006 $12.276 $14.235 72,800
2007 $14.235 $16.532 78,321
2008 $16.532 $15.537 0
66 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY PLUS DEATH BENEFIT AND INCOME BENEFIT RIDER II
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.7
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JANUS ASPEN WORLDWIDE PORTFOLIO--INSTITUTIONAL SHARES
2001 $8.190 $6.240 167,331
2002 $6.240 $4.564 245,789
2003 $4.564 $5.558 365,025
2004 $5.558 $5.719 414,342
2005 $5.719 $5.947 364,847
2006 $5.947 $6.905 335,256
2007 $6.905 $7.434 327,739
2008 $7.434 $4.040 279,358
2009 $4.040 $5.464 445,607
2010 $5.464 $6.216 264,635
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LEGG MASON CLEARBRIDGE VARIABLE LARGE CAP VALUE PORTFOLIO--CLASS I
SHARES FORMERLY, LEGG MASON CLEARBRIDGE VARIABLE INVESTORS
PORTFOLIO--CLASS I
2004 $10.000 $10.913 47,102
2005 $10.913 $11.419 45,145
2006 $11.419 $13.264 47,405
2007 $13.264 $13.534 46,980
2008 $13.534 $8.557 42,904
2009 $8.557 $10.464 43,855
2010 $10.464 $11.250 44,795
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LSA BALANCED
2002 $10.000 $8.646 2,157
2003 $8.646 $10.973 46,166
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MFS GROWTH--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $8.150 $5.330 107,324
2002 $5.330 $3.465 123,692
2003 $3.465 $4.432 227,669
2004 $4.432 $4.917 274,686
2005 $4.917 $5.273 269,766
2006 $5.273 $5.588 247,942
2007 $5.588 $6.650 220,878
2008 $6.650 $4.087 314,346
2009 $4.087 $5.527 175,017
2010 $5.527 $6.261 155,208
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MFS INVESTORS TRUST SERIES--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $9.850 $8.130 22,985
2002 $8.130 $6.308 52,812
2003 $6.308 $7.567 121,843
2004 $7.567 $8.276 136,211
2005 $8.276 $8.724 135,382
2006 $8.724 $9.682 134,594
2007 $9.682 $10.488 127,128
2008 $10.488 $6.893 180,349
2009 $6.893 $8.591 197,186
2010 $8.591 $9.375 86,881
67 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY PLUS DEATH BENEFIT AND INCOME BENEFIT RIDER II
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.7
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MFS NEW DISCOVERY SERIES--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $8.970 $8.360 118,208
2002 $8.360 $5.615 205,837
2003 $5.615 $7.374 477,819
2004 $7.374 $7.715 623,501
2005 $7.715 $7.975 560,525
2006 $7.975 $8.868 514,110
2007 $8.868 $8.928 480,804
2008 $8.928 $5.320 407,025
2009 $5.320 $8.527 412,667
2010 $8.527 $11.418 350,753
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MFS RESEARCH SERIES--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $8.870 $6.860 23,332
2002 $6.860 $5.084 32,958
2003 $5.084 $6.227 50,336
2004 $6.227 $7.085 53,593
2005 $7.085 $7.502 52,102
2006 $7.502 $8.141 49,634
2007 $8.141 $9.050 50,049
2008 $9.050 $5.681 46,891
2009 $5.681 $7.284 43,067
2010 $7.284 $8.291 38,811
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MFS TOTAL RETURN SERIES--INITIAL CLASS
2001 $11.200 $11.030 60,889
2002 $11.030 $10.273 250,026
2003 $10.273 $11.736 454,021
2004 $11.736 $12.832 590,723
2005 $12.832 $12.959 622,265
2006 $12.959 $14.243 569,919
2007 $14.243 $14.577 589,170
2008 $14.577 $11.148 454,138
2009 $11.148 $12.923 417,681
2010 $12.923 $13.953 393,032
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPPENHEIMER MAIN STREET SMALL CAP FUND/VA--SERVICE SHARES
2002 $10.000 $7.818 41,593
2003 $7.818 $11.076 193,863
2004 $11.076 $12.965 323,468
2005 $12.965 $13.972 312,606
2006 $13.972 $15.735 325,308
2007 $15.735 $15.238 316,074
2008 $15.238 $9.278 291,787
2009 $9.278 $12.473 266,203
2010 $12.473 $15.075 255,321
68 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY PLUS DEATH BENEFIT AND INCOME BENEFIT RIDER II
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.7
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PIMCO VIT FOREIGN BOND PORTFOLIO (U.S. DOLLAR-HEDGED)--
ADMINISTRATIVE SHARES
2002 $10.000 $10.526 4,596
2003 $10.526 $10.571 79,683
2004 $10.571 $10.960 100,873
2005 $10.960 $11.319 106,489
2006 $11.319 $11.362 99,214
2007 $11.362 $11.563 106,231
2008 $11.563 $11.086 122,885
2009 $11.086 $12.591 135,635
2010 $12.591 $13.417 119,213
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PIMCO VIT TOTAL RETURN PORTFOLIO--ADMINISTRATIVE SHARES
2002 $10.000 $10.518 85,455
2003 $10.518 $10.851 428,033
2004 $10.851 $11.178 604,097
2005 $11.178 $11.247 614,406
2006 $11.247 $11.473 512,461
2007 $11.473 $12.255 483,376
2008 $12.255 $12.616 572,089
2009 $12.616 $14.135 536,002
2010 $14.135 $15.010 502,876
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PREMIER VIT NACM SMALL CAP PORTFOLIO CLASS 1
2002 $10.000 $7.173 8,929
2003 $7.173 $10.051 172,641
2004 $10.051 $11.637 244,720
2005 $11.637 $11.436 236,295
2006 $11.436 $13.938 205,170
2007 $13.938 $13.767 172,785
2008 $13.767 $7.892 167,008
2009 $7.892 $8.958 160,896
2010 $8.958 $10.376 0
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PREMIER VIT OPCAP BALANCED PORTFOLIO
2004 $10.000 $10.772 91,944
2005 $10.772 $10.870 106,673
2006 $10.870 $11.829 97,834
2007 $11.829 $11.102 94,157
2008 $11.102 $7.504 80,619
2009 $7.504 $7.230 0
69 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY PLUS DEATH BENEFIT AND INCOME BENEFIT RIDER II
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.7
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PUTNAM VT INTERNATIONAL VALUE FUND--CLASS IB FORMERLY, PUTNAM VT
INTERNATIONAL GROWTH AND INCOME FUND--CLASS IB
2002 $10.000 $8.168 6,727
2003 $8.168 $11.059 39,731
2004 $11.059 $13.141 58,105
2005 $13.141 $14.727 61,333
2006 $14.727 $18.403 109,461
2007 $18.403 $19.339 175,336
2008 $19.339 $10.253 80,251
2009 $10.253 $12.707 72,272
2010 $12.707 $13.369 62,701
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RIDGEWORTH LARGE CAP GROWTH STOCK FUND
2001 $9.630 $8.950 7,596
2002 $8.950 $6.870 31,178
2003 $6.870 $7.992 54,246
2004 $7.992 $8.380 63,858
2005 $8.380 $8.157 58,249
2006 $8.157 $8.879 51,761
2007 $8.879 $10.052 47,830
2008 $10.052 $5.856 43,139
2009 $5.856 $5.951 0
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RIDGEWORTH LARGE CAP VALUE EQUITY FUND
2001 $11.700 $11.360 18,026
2002 $11.360 $9.262 19,587
2003 $9.262 $11.201 30,898
2004 $11.201 $12.683 100,258
2005 $12.683 $12.925 68,271
2006 $12.925 $15.546 93,618
2007 $15.546 $15.810 49,278
2008 $15.810 $10.437 30,278
2009 $10.437 $9.859 0
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T. ROWE PRICE EQUITY INCOME PORTFOLIO--I
2001 $11.520 $11.480 47,501
2002 $11.480 $9.895 228,732
2003 $9.895 $12.073 526,597
2004 $12.073 $13.627 761,565
2005 $13.627 $13.909 796,314
2006 $13.909 $16.254 661,730
2007 $16.254 $16.483 601,481
2008 $16.483 $10.343 537,201
2009 $10.343 $12.759 523,378
2010 $12.759 $14.414 428,716
70 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY PLUS DEATH BENEFIT AND INCOME BENEFIT RIDER II
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.7
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL STOCK PORTFOLIO--I
2001 $8.550 $6.530 16,460
2002 $6.530 $5.239 39,170
2003 $5.239 $6.716 110,909
2004 $6.716 $7.505 176,753
2005 $7.505 $8.554 203,771
2006 $8.554 $10.006 257,698
2007 $10.006 $11.107 256,965
2008 $11.107 $5.596 188,929
2009 $5.596 $8.375 202,112
2010 $8.375 $9.415 262,241
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T. ROWE PRICE MID-CAP GROWTH PORTFOLIO--I
2001 $10.060 $9.790 82,744
2002 $9.790 $7.569 231,318
2003 $7.569 $10.288 574,018
2004 $10.288 $11.957 675,635
2005 $11.957 $13.476 621,478
2006 $13.476 $14.114 575,076
2007 $14.114 $16.289 538,625
2008 $16.289 $9.638 472,274
2009 $9.638 $13.787 438,741
2010 $13.787 $17.348 371,524
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T. ROWE PRICE NEW AMERICA GROWTH PORTFOLIO--I
2001 $9.010 $7.800 14,973
2002 $7.800 $5.489 80,509
2003 $5.489 $7.284 84,065
2004 $7.284 $7.933 120,707
2005 $7.933 $8.140 126,892
2006 $8.140 $8.581 132,467
2007 $8.581 $9.589 126,622
2008 $9.589 $5.816 125,436
2009 $5.816 $8.555 120,111
2010 $8.555 $10.054 108,637
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
WELLS FARGO ADVANTAGE VT DISCOVERY FUND
2005 $10.000 $11.435 177,119
2006 $11.435 $12.876 174,427
2007 $12.876 $15.468 167,923
2008 $15.468 $8.453 150,363
2009 $8.453 $11.648 130,113
2010 $11.648 $15.507 125,559
71 PROSPECTUS
LBL CONSULTANT I VARIABLE ANNUITY--PROSPECTUS
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE AND NUMBER OF ACCUMULATION UNITS OUTSTANDING FOR EACH
VARIABLE SUB-ACCOUNT*
BASIC POLICY PLUS DEATH BENEFIT AND INCOME BENEFIT RIDER II
MORTALITY & EXPENSE = 1.7
Number of
Accumulation Accumulation Units
For the Year Unit Value Unit Value Outstanding
Ending at Beginning at End at End
Sub-Accounts December 31 of Period of Period of Period
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
WELLS FARGO ADVANTAGE VT OPPORTUNITY FUND
2005 $10.000 $10.996 449,486
2006 $10.996 $12.120 420,788
2007 $12.120 $12.692 391,679
2008 $12.692 $7.467 344,261
2009 $7.467 $10.835 303,876
2010 $10.835 $13.169 278,789
* The Accumulation Unit Values in this table reflect a mortality and expense
risk charge of 1.70% and an administrative expense charge of 0.10%.
72 PROSPECTUS
APPENDIX B
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ILLUSTRATION OF A MARKET VALUE ADJUSTMENT
Purchase Payment: $40,000.00
---------------------------------------------------------
Guarantee Period: 5 Years
---------------------------------------------------------
Guaranteed Interest Rate: 5% Annual Effective Rate
---------------------------------------------------------
5-year Treasury Rate at Time of
Purchase Payment: 6%
---------------------------------------------------------
The following examples illustrate how the Market Value Adjustment and the
Withdrawal Charge may affect the values of a Contract upon a withdrawal. The 5%
assumed Guaranteed Interest Rate is the rate required to be used in the
"Summary of Expenses." In these examples, the withdrawal occurs one year after
the Issue Date. The Market Value Adjustment operates in a similar manner for
transfers, except that there is no free amount for transfers. No Withdrawal
Charge applies to transfers.
Assuming that the entire $40,000.00 Purchase Payment is allocated to the
Guaranteed Maturity Fixed Account for the Guarantee Period specified above, at
the end of the five-year Guarantee Period the Contract Value would be
$51,051.26. After one year, when the withdrawals occur in these examples, the
Contract Value would be $42,000.00. We have assumed that no prior partial
withdrawals or transfers have occurred.
The Market Value Adjustment and the Withdrawal Charge only apply to the portion
of a withdrawal that is greater than the Free Withdrawal Amount. Accordingly,
the first step is to calculate the Free Withdrawal Amount.
The Free Withdrawal Amount is equal to:
(a) the greater of:
. earnings not previously withdrawn; or
. 15% of your total Purchase Payments in the most recent seven years; plus
(b) an amount equal to your total Purchase Payments made more than seven
years ago, to the extent not previously withdrawn.
Here, (a) equals $6,000.00, because 15% of the total Purchase Payments in the
most recent seven years ($6,000.00 = 15% X $40,000.00) is greater than the
earnings not previously withdrawn ($2,000.00). (b) equals $0, because all of
the Purchase Payments were made less than seven years age. Accordingly, the
Free Withdrawal Amount is $6,000.00.
The formula that we use to determine the amount of the Market Value Adjustment
is:
.9 X (I - J) X N
where: I = the Treasury Rate for a maturity equal to the relevant Guarantee
Period for the week preceding the beginning of the Guarantee Period;
J = the Treasury Rate for a maturity equal to the relevant Guarantee Period for
the week preceding our receipt of your withdrawal request, death benefit
request, transfer request, or annuity option request; and
N = the number of whole and partial years from the date we receive your request
until the end of the relevant Guarantee Period.
We will base the Market Value Adjustment on the current Treasury Rate for a
maturity corresponding in length to the relevant Guarantee Period. These
examples also show the Withdrawal Charge (if any), which would be calculated
separately from the Market Value Adjustment.
EXAMPLE OF A DOWNWARD MARKET VALUE ADJUSTMENT
A downward Market Value Adjustment results from a full or partial withdrawal
that occurs when interest rates have increased. Assume interest rates have
increased one year after the Purchase Payment, such that the five-year Treasury
Rate is now 6.5%. Upon a withdrawal, the market value adjustment factor would
be:
.9 X (.06 - .065) X 4 = -.0180
The Market Value Adjustment is a reduction of $648.00 from the amount withdrawn:
$ - 648.00 = -.0180 X ($42,000.00 - $6,000.00)
A Withdrawal Charge of 7% would be assessed against the Purchase Payments
withdrawn that are less than seven years old and are not eligible for free
withdrawal. Under the Contract, earnings are deemed to be withdrawn before
Purchase Payments. Accordingly, in this example, the amount of the Purchase
Payment eligible for free withdrawal would equal the Free Withdrawal Amount
less the interest credited or $4,000.00 ($6,000.00 - $2,000.00).
Therefore, the Withdrawal Charge would be:
$2,520.00 = 7% X (40,000.00 - $4,000.00)
As a result, the net amount payable to you would be:
$38,832.00 = $42,000.00-$648.00 - $2,520.00
73 PROSPECTUS
EXAMPLE OF AN UPWARD MARKET VALUE ADJUSTMENT
An upward Market Value Adjustment results from a withdrawal that occurs when
interest rates have decreased. Assume interest rates have decreased one year
after the Purchase Payment, such that the five-year
Treasury Rate is now 5.5%. Upon a withdrawal, the market value adjustment
factor would be:
.9 X (.06 - .055) X 4 = .0180
The Market Value Adjustment would increase the amount withdrawn by $648.00, as
follows:
$648.00 = .0180 X ($42,000.00 - $6,000.00)
As above, in this example, the amount of the Purchase Payment eligible for free
withdrawal would equal the Free Withdrawal Amount less the interest credited or
$4,000.00 ($6,000.00 - $2,000.00). Therefore, the Withdrawal Charge would be:
$2,520.00 = 7% X ($40,000.00 - $4,000.00)
As a result, the net amount payable to you would be:
$40,128.00 = $42,000.00 + $648.00 - $2,520.00
EXAMPLE OF A PARTIAL WITHDRAWAL
If you request a partial withdrawal from a Guarantee Period, we can either
(1) withdraw the specified amount of Contract Value and pay you that amount as
adjusted by any applicable Market Value Adjustment or (2) pay you the amount
requested, and subtract an amount from your Contract Value that equals the
requested amount after application of the Market Value Adjustment and
Withdrawal Charge. Unless you instruct us otherwise, when you request a partial
withdrawal we will assume that you wish to receive the amount requested. We
will make the necessary calculations and on your request provide you with a
statement showing our calculations.
For example, if in the first example you wished to receive $20,000.00 as a
partial withdrawal, the Market Value Adjustment and Withdrawal Charge would be
calculated as follows:
Let: AW = the total amount to be withdrawn
from your Contract Value
MVA = Market Value Adjustment
WC = Withdrawal Charge
AW' = amount subject to Market Value
Adjustment and Withdrawal
Charge
Then AW - $20,000.00 = WC - MVA
Since neither the Market Value Adjustment nor the Withdrawal Charge apply to
the free withdrawal amount, we can solve directly for the amount subject to the
Market Value Adjustment and the Withdrawal Charge (i.e., AW'), which equals AW
- $6,000.00. Then, AW = AW' + $6,000, and AW' + $6,000.00 - $20,000.00 = WC -
MVA.
MVA. = - .018 X AW'
WC.. = .07 X AW'
WC.. - MVA = .088AW'
AW'. - $14,000.00 = .088AW'
AW'. = $14,000.00 / (1 - .088) = $15,350.88
MVA. = - .018 X $15,350.88 = - $276.32
WC.. = .07 X $15,350.88 = $1,074.56
AW = Total amount withdrawn = $15,350.88 + $6,000.00 = $21,350.88
You receive $20,000.00; the total amount subtracted from your contract is
$21,350.88; the Market Value Adjustment is $276.32; and the Withdrawal Charge
is $1,074.56. Your remaining Contract Value is $20,649.12.
If, however, in the same example, you wished to withdraw $20,000.00 from your
Contract Value and receive the adjusted amount, the calculations would be as
follows:
By definition, AW = total amount withdrawn from your Contract Value = $20,000.00
AW' = amount that MVA & WC are applied to
= amount withdrawn in excess of Free
Amount = $20,000.00 - $6,000.00 =
$14,000.00
MVA = - .018 X $14,000.00 = - $252.00
WC = .07 X $14,000.00 = $980.00
You would receive $20,000.00 - $252.00 - $980.00 = $18,768.00; the total amount
subtracted from your Contract Value is $20,000.00. Your remaining Contract
Value would be $22,000.00.
EXAMPLE OF FREE WITHDRAWAL AMOUNT
Assume that in the foregoing example, after four years $8,620.25 in interest
had been credited and that the Contract Value in the Fixed Account equaled
$48,620.25. In this example, if no prior withdrawals have been made, you could
withdraw up to $8,620.25 without incurring a Market Value Adjustment or a
Withdrawal Charge. The Free Withdrawal Amount would be $8,620.25, because the
interest credited ($8,620.25) is greater than 15% of the Total Purchase
Payments in the most recent seven years ($40,000.00 X .15 = $6,000.00).
74 PROSPECTUS
LBL3055-7
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