Reliance life insurance Company in India is a life insurer in private sector. It is one of the major life insurers in insurance sector. It is a part of Reliance Capital limited of the Reliance-Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group. It is one of the India’s fastest growing life insurance companies and is also count as the top 4 private sector insurer. The Reliance life insurance offers you all the things which will fulfill your savings and protection needs. Their aim is to emerge as a transactional life insurer of global scale and standard. The reliance company has crossed the 1.7 million policies in just 2 years.
The reliance life insurance company in India has launched its 600 branches in just 10 months. It is one of the ISO 9001:2000 certified company of India. One of the major achievements of this company is – it is awarded by the Jamnalal Bajaj Uchit Vyavahar Puraskar 2007 – a merit certificate in the financial services category by council for Fair Business Practices (CFBP).
There are so many policies provided by the Reliance life insurance company which are as following:
- Protection plans
- Child plans
- Savings and investment plans
- Retirement plans
- Group plans
Reliance insurance company has very quick and hassle-free online buying process which offers you the luxury of buying insurance from the comfort of your home. You can instantly buy insurance from our wide range of innovative products including health, home, car/motor, travel and more.
WPMixer
March 2, 2010 at 2:53 am
Well said. Well done.
new name
March 2, 2010 at 3:12 am
If you are looking for cheap you found the company cheap and crappy. It is like a skydiver purchasing and having his parachute packed by a wal mart greeter. Might be ok for a short time but is not a way you want to protect your family or to keep testing your luck. Your family not worth an extra $10 for a great company?
elrvkca
March 2, 2010 at 3:15 am
Wordpress
March 2, 2010 at 3:18 am
that’s real talk, girl
YI
March 2, 2010 at 8:52 am
1) insurance companies are generally risk averse. In order to beat index returns, I'd imagine there would be significant risk an insurer is not willing to take. At least any insurer I'd want to do business with. Liquidity is a concern, especially with the volatility in the markets not completely diminished. There was a push towards holding higher risk-based capital and the companies would likely not risk money for unsure things at this moment.
2) I wouldn't be so sure about the cap reductions in the near term. It depends on the market fluctuations and other considerations. I don't know if there was a question in point 2.
3a. It would depend on the company, there is no blanket answer for the whole industry. I'm not familiar with Western Reserve Life. I don't think many whole life policies (at least policies considered whole life) have any kind of variable element to them. That sounds like Variable universal life or some other kind of product. Whole life I see is strictly pay your premium(s) and your cash values accrue at a certain rate and that's the end of the story.
3b. Some of the EIA problems stemmed from the accusation that companies issuing EIAs were preying on the elderly and charging unreasonable fees for the products the buyers didn't understand. Variable annuities got creamed in general with the recent market decline and EIAs have guarantees which were probably not favorable for the writers of them. Like your guaranteed minimum return of 2% when the stock markets drop 30%. Another consideration is the prevalence of other benefits. It seems rare that a policy is sold plainly anymore and there are usually things like guaranteed minimum accumulation benefits, or income benefits or death benefits that act as buffers against certain uncertain future events. Most of the above options go into the money as the market declines, so there may be some of that happening.
sushma k
March 2, 2010 at 9:15 am
From Fortune magazine's Global Most Admired list for Life & Health Insurance companes from 2006. Company execs rank each other companies in their industry and this is the result:
1 Northwestern Mutual 7.49
2 New York Life 7.19
3 Prudential Financial 7.01
4 ING Group 6.23
5 AXA 6.08
6 MetLife 5.94
7 Aegon 5.36
8 Nippon Life Insurance 5.17
9 Prudential PLC 5.03
10 Aviva 4.97
11 Dai-ichi Mutual Life 4.92
12 CNP Assurances 4.71
13 Assicurazioni Generali 4.64
14 Sumitomo Life Insurance 4.45
15 Meiji Yasuda Life Insurance 4.14
16 China Life Insurance 3.83
Anonymous
March 2, 2010 at 9:44 am
It’s truly my honor Ma’am
Free Blog
March 2, 2010 at 1:42 pm
Thanks, kiohitita for watching.
-Johlae
Blogger
March 2, 2010 at 8:45 pm
totally luv how u look and wat u say totally beautiful and sexi im totally feeling u sweetie, much luv and respect
Cee J
March 3, 2010 at 7:58 pm
$1 down? I don't think so. How much is the insurance after the $1 down?
Sounds like a bad deal in the end. Try some big companies, like Prudential, State Farm, Farmers or the company that carries your auto insurance. And, just ask for some term life insurance quotes.
vemuri r
March 3, 2010 at 8:14 pm
Well, posting to the USA board isn't likely to get you leads for a job in Australia.
WPBlog Shop
March 3, 2010 at 9:40 pm
I missed you girl…and I needed to hear this . Thank you.
pshhh
March 3, 2010 at 10:59 pm
1. GET LIFE INSURANCE
At your age it's the bestthing you can do, especially if you are a non-tobacco user. It provides your loved ones with the ability to cope with your loss financially.
2. ROTH IRA MEANS ADDED MONEY
Roth IRAs are effective monetary saving techniques because of one main up-sell: you don't pay taxes on the interest until you withdraw the money. All legal. This means that the money that would have immediately went to Uncle Sam is compounding on your behalf. Imagine this amount compounded when you're 65, or 42 years down the line. The downside to Roth IRAs is that (1) there are different types out there, and thus require study and knowledge to find the right one for you, and (2) some of those have limitations as to how much money can de invested on a yearly basis.
http://search.yahoo.com/search?ei=utf-8&fr=slv8-hptb5&p=roth%20IRA&type=
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roth_IRA
http://www.rothira.com/
This is a biased site. Don't let the name fool you, as ".com" means commercial.
3. LOW RISK MUTUAL FUNDS
With the economy in the shape that it is now, any mutual funds should be kept LOW RISK. Aside from the stock market, one factor that should aid you in determining the strength of your investment is the unemployment rate. After the economy bounces back, you can then decide to go MODERATE or HIGH RISK.
~~~~~~~
YOU are in control of YOUR funds! Only accept accounts that are flexible FOR you! As a consumer, you DO NOT want to be treated any other way. Remember: you want OPTIONS over ULTIMATUMS.
Don't let your financial 'tastebuds' be lulled by a salesman's 'candy' voice. They can slip in an ultimatum or two that can get by the best of us. There is too much information on the net and too many videos on youTube:
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=roth+ira&search_type=
..that help you. This is free help.
~~~~~~~~
http://search.yahoo.com/search?ei=UTF-8&fr=slv8-hptb5&p=mutual+funds&SpellState=n-1093607227_q-NGwAm2OuV1xIrMY1taAfvgAAAA%40%40&fr2=sp-qrw-corr-top
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutual_fund
Here is information on your representative's banking institution:
http://www.nmfn.com/
The abbreviated name of your institution is "nmfn". In this yahoo! search, you will notice that Northwestern has sites specifically for ertain areas:
http://www.nmfn-nebraska.com/
http://www.nmfn-chicago.com/
http://www.nmfn-maryland.com/
http://www.nmfn.com/toledofinancial
Take this into consideration.
~~~~~~~~
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdocqxSDsAw
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=student+loans&search_type=&aq=0&oq=student+loan
CraZyCaT
March 3, 2010 at 11:15 pm
There are several reliable, highly-rated life isnurance companies you can choose from.
Here is a list of some highly-rated life insurance companies for you to consider:
Top Term Life Insurance Companies and Their A.M. Best Financial Strength Ratings
New York Life A++ rated by A.M. Best
Nationwide A+ rated
Globe Life A+ rated
Allstate A+ rated
Prudential A+ rated
Liberty Mutual A rated
Farmers A rated
State Farm A++ rated
AAA Life Insurance A- rated
Metropolitan (MetLife) A+ rated
Northwestern Mutual A++ rated
AIG A++ rated
Liberty National A+ rated
Mutual of Omaha A rated
Country Insurance A+ rated
MEGA Health and Life A- rated
American Family A+ rated
RBC Insurance A rated
I hope that helps.
Free Blog
March 4, 2010 at 7:39 am
tampajohn, that is so sweet. Thank You.
Blessings,
Johlae
raje_santosh
March 4, 2010 at 1:07 pm
if you want life security you have to check more info
http://www.freewebs.com/getinsurance
Free Blog
March 5, 2010 at 9:51 am
I’m glad you enjoyed. anytime!
-Johlae
Free Blog
March 5, 2010 at 10:04 am
This isn’t for me…but keep doing what you love!