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VALUED POLICY |
A policy under which the
insurer pays a specified amount of money to or on
behalf of the insured upon the occurrence of a
defined loss. The money amount is not related to
the extent of the loss. Life insurance policies
are an example.
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VANDALISM |
The malicious and often
random destruction or spoilage of another person’s
property.
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VARIABLE ANNUITY |
An annuity whose contract
value or income payments vary according to the
performance of the stocks, bonds and other
investments selected by the contract owner.
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VARIABLE LIFE INSURANCE |
A policy that combines
protection against premature death with a savings
account that can be invested in stocks, bonds, and
money market mutual funds at the policyholder’s
discretion.
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VIATICAL SETTLEMENT
COMPANIES |
Insurance firms that buy
life insurance policies at a steep discount from
policyholders who are often terminally ill and
need the payment for medications or treatments.
The companies provide early payouts to the
policyholder, assume the premium payments, and
collect the face value of the policy upon the
policyholder’s death.
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VOID |
A policy contract that for
some reason specified in the policy becomes free
of all legal effect. One example under which a
policy could be voided is when information a
policyholder provided is proven untrue.
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VOLATILITY |
A measure of the degree of
fluctuation in a stock’s price. Volatility is
exemplified by large, frequent price swings up and
down.
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VOLCANO COVERAGE |
Most homeowners policies
cover damage from a volcanic eruption.
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VOLUME |
Number of shares a stock
trades either per day or per week.
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