"Then, you need to convince yourself that your new insurance company isn’t similarly troubled or won’t be soon. “Consumers don’t have much option other than to rely on agency ratings” of insurance company soundness, said Joseph Belth, a professor emeritus of insurance at Indiana University who edits a periodical about the industry. “They can’t do the analysis themselves.”
A.M. Best, Fitch Ratings, Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s all rate insurance companies and have free information on their Web sites. There are links from the version of this column at nytimes.com/yourmoney. The company’s grading systems differ from one another, so look them up first."
Great. You need to rely on ratings agencies.
"If you’re looking to switch insurance companies, start with a top-rated one, but also keep an eye out for too-good-to-be-true terms or brand new riders or features. They may not be truly battle-tested. Also, don’t stop paying premiums on your old policy until the new one is up and running. You don’t want to be caught dead, literally, during a coverage gap.
And if you want to be as close to safe as possible, said Francine Duke of Aqua Financial Planning in Lincolnshire, Ill., split your coverage between two companies in case one of them runs into trouble. “It’s like double locking your door,” she said.
Or triple locking it if you need to work with three companies to put your mind at ease. Or sextuple locking it. This level of paranoia, alas, is what we’ve come to now. "In other words, it's like putting money in CD's with FDIC insurance and spreading it among various banks after you hit the limit. Seems wise.
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