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Friday, May 23, 2025

$631m Clico pay-out due to begin Friday

by

20090725

Colo­nial Life In­sur­ance Co Ltd (Cli­co)–a sub­sidiary of cash-strapped CL Fi­nan­cial–is be­ing forced to pay out $631 mil­lion to thou­sands of its pol­i­cy­hold­ers, who sur­ren­dered their poli­cies af­ter the com­pa­ny went bel­ly up. From Fri­day, Cli­co's head of­fice in Port-of-Spain will is­sue cheques to pol­i­cy­hold­ers who can­celled their in­sur­ance poli­cies–some old and new–for their cash val­ue. The $631 mil­lion com­pris­es pay­ments of TT$250 mil­lion and US$60 mil­lion (TT$381), which came from main­ly the Ex­ec­u­tive Flex­i­ble Pre­mi­um An­nu­ity plan, an in­sur­ance prod­uct that gave high in­ter­est and an­nu­ity rates.

Of the $250 mil­lion worth of poli­cies sur­ren­dered, ap­prox­i­mate­ly $100 mil­lion came from Cli­co's Val­park branch, a well- placed source said. Many of them had sur­ren­dered their poli­cies with­in hours of the bailout, sources in­di­cat­ed. Poli­cies sur­ren­dered dur­ing the ear­ly years of own­er­ship were like­ly to have a re­duced cash val­ue, it was not­ed. The can­cel­la­tion of poli­cies came af­ter the Gov­ern­ment and the Cen­tral Bank res­cued the fi­nan­cial pow­er­house last Jan­u­ary 30, in re­turn for an im­me­di­ate in­jec­tion of $1.3 bil­lion to pro­tect the com­pa­ny's de­pos­i­tors and pol­i­cy­hold­ers and a com­mit­ment to en­sure that all in­ter­est on ex­ist­ing poli­cies and de­posits would be paid by the State.

Cli­co, the largest in­sur­ance com­pa­ny in the re­gion, with more than 100,000 pol­i­cy­hold­ers, of­fered a va­ri­ety of in­sur­ance plans for its clients. At a meet­ing on Thurs­day at Cli­co's head of­fice on St Vin­cent Street in Port-of-Spain, con­ser­va­tion unit team mem­bers, Tom­my Ram­jat­tan and Mona Browne, met with its cus­tomer care work­ers to ad­vise how to treat with the in­flux of pol­i­cy­hold­ers to their var­i­ous branch­es this week. They are ex­pect­ed to re­ceive cheques that would have to be cashed at lo­cal banks. Faced with a to­tal of $350 mil­lion in sur­ren­dered poli­cies ini­tial­ly, the con­ser­va­tion unit, a source said, was able to in­flu­ence sev­er­al pol­i­cy­hold­ers not to can­cel $100 mil­lion-plus worth in poli­cies.

Work­ers con­cerned for safe­ty

One work­er said dur­ing the meet­ing that he was not pre­pared for any hos­til­i­ty af­ter hear­ing that Cli­co want­ed to pay its US pol­i­cy­hold­ers in TT dol­lars. "Sub­tle threats were made on the tele­phone by pol­i­cy­hold­ers that if they don't get their mon­ey all hell would break loose," the em­ploy­ee added, stat­ing that beef­ing up its se­cu­ri­ty would bring lit­tle com­fort to them.

Stat­ing it was the calm be­fore the storm, work­ers draft­ed a let­ter on Ju­ly 20, to be sent to Cen­tral Bank Gov­er­nor Ewart Williams, query­ing the six-month an­niver­sary pay-out. "We are ad­vised that on­ly $1.5 bil­lion has been pro­vid­ed by the Cen­tral Bank to Cli­co to con­duct trans­ac­tions, main­ly pay­ments of pen­sions, group health and life claims and an­nu­ity in­vest­ments in­ter­est," the draft let­ter stat­ed. "This amount is prob­a­bly the stip­u­lat­ed amount the Cen­tral Bank has been au­tho­rised to pro­vide to date, but when will ad­di­tion­al funds be for­ward­ed?" the work­ers penned.

The work­er not­ed that Fri­day, Ju­ly 31, was the end of the six-month wait­ing pe­ri­od that Cli­co had giv­en to the gen­er­al pub­lic who bom­bard­ed their of­fices since Jan­u­ary 30 for pay­ments. "Our staff mem­bers have been try­ing to con­serve the busi­ness. How­ev­er, the ques­tion again is, if and when will Gov­ern­ment re­lease ad­di­tion­al funds to deal with these pay­ments and fu­ture costs?" the let­ter queried. The let­ter al­so was copied to CL Fi­nan­cial chair­man Shafeek Sul­tan-Khan, chief ex­ec­u­tive Claude Mu­saib-Ali, and chair­man Eu­ric Bobb. The let­ter al­so was sent to Vin­cent Cabr­era, pres­i­dent of the Bank­ing, In­sur­ance and Gen­er­al Work­ers Union.

Williams had said in April that Gov­ern­ment had to spend $5 bil­lion dur­ing the next two years to fund its bailout of the cash-strapped sub­sidiaries of CL Fi­nan­cial Group. Williams said ini­tial in­ves­ti­ga­tions re­vealed that there was a hole of at least $10 bil­lion in the group's fi­nances. Lo­cal pol­i­cy­hold­ers had com­plained, last month, to Tabaquite MP Ramesh Lawrence Ma­haraj that they were get­ting their month­ly in­ter­est pay­ments late, de­spite the fact that they de­pend­ed heav­i­ly on such pay­ments to meet their dai­ly liv­ing ex­pens­es and pay their med­ical bills. They had ap­pealed to Ma­haraj to raise the is­sue in Par­lia­ment.


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