New York State Life Insurance Exam Questions
Question 1 of 5.
A fiduciary duty involves which of the following?
A. Proper handling of all client premiums
B. Underwriting all applications
C. Approving or disapproving the policy
D. Setting premium amounts
Explanation: A fiduciary duty requires an agent to act in the best interest of the insurer and client, including proper handling of premiums, whereas underwriting, policy approval, or setting premiums are insurer responsibilities, not fiduciary duties.
Question 2 of 5.
An annuity product linked to a market-related rate of return is called
A. a fixed annuity
B. an indexed annuity
C. a deferred annuity
D. a tax-sheltered annuity
Explanation: An indexed annuity earns interest or provides gains linked to a stock market index, such as the S&P 500, unlike a fixed annuity which offers a guaranteed rate of return that remains constant, a deferred annuity where payments are made at a later date, or a tax-sheltered annuity which is a type of retirement plan not specifically defined by its return structure.
Question 3 of 5.
The Group Life Underwriting risk selection process helps protect insurers from
A. risk selection
B. medical underwriting
C. adverse selection
D. risk underwriting
Explanation: The Group Life Underwriting risk selection process mitigates adverse selection, where individuals with higher-than-average risk are more likely to seek insurance, by ensuring a balanced risk pool, whereas risk selection and risk underwriting are redundant terms and medical underwriting is a component of the process, not the risk it addresses.
Question 4 of 5.
What is the purpose of the policy review when an agent delivers a new life insurance policy to the insured?
A. to confirm that the insured understands all aspects of the policy
B. to give the agent a chance to sell another policy to the insured
C. to allow the insured to return the policy for a refund of the premium
D. to permit the parties to revise the policy provisions, terms, and conditions
Explanation: The policy review at delivery ensures the insured understands the policy, confirms it meets their needs, verifies correct document signing, and reduces the likelihood of returns during the "free-look" period, unlike selling another policy, allowing premium refunds, or revising policy terms which are not primary purposes.
Question 5 of 5.
The PRIMARY purpose of the Fair Credit Reporting Act is to
A. alert insurers regarding applicants who may have poor credit histories and may be adverse risks to the company
B. safeguard consumers from creditors who may use an applicant's credit history for purposes other than underwriting
C. forewarn an insurer about an applicant's recent bankruptcy
D. protect consumers using specific guidelines established by the Federal Government
Explanation: The Fair Credit Reporting Act regulates consumer credit information to protect consumers by ensuring report accuracy and access, establishing consumer rights rather than primarily benefiting insurers or creditors, though it impacts their use of credit histories.
Related Questions
Prior to annuitization, what is the nonforfeiture value of an annuity?
Which rider allows the policyowner to increase the face amount to adjust for inflation?
The difference between the face value of a life insurance policy and its cash value is the
Which of the following represents a reduced paid-up nonforfeiture option?