Secondary Market Structured Settlements

Secondary Market Structured Settlements

 

Secondary Market Structured Settlements

Individuals involved in legal claims for personal injury often accept a structured settlement in which they receive regular, fixed payments over a set period of years and/or lump sums at stipulated times from an annuity. As circumstances change, the annuitants may find that they need cash now instead of payments later.  Using the services of a factoring company, they sell future payments at a discount for cash. Financial Partners, in turn, offers the payment rights to these annuities, called Secondary Market Structured Settlements, to buyers, who invest in structured settlement. The purchase process can take 30 to 90 days, and requires that the individual selling the payments receive approval to sell from a court of competent jurisdiction (even if it was an out-of-court settlement!) for a change in the terms of their settlement.  
The future income stream is generally a fixed, definite payment contract.  It may include lump sums, annual increases, deferral periods, or it may be contingent on the lifespan of the seller.  Typically, the Secondary Market Structured Settlement payments are made regardless of whether or not the existing annuitant or the buyer is alive, meaning these payments are not contingent on any individual’s life.

  • Think you may sell your structured settlement payments? Have you considered...?
  • Are you looking for contact information and a list of structured settlement companies? We have it.

Second Market Annuities

Sometimes annuitants can elect to sell their future payments from an existing annuity income stream, either from an Immediate Annuity, a Factored Structured Settlement, or a Lottery Prize Payout contract to someone else in exchange for a lump sum payment today. The "resale" of these annuities are Secondary Market Annuities or factored structured settlements.
Yields on Secondary Market Annuities are higher simply because the seller of the payment stream is willing to sell at a discount for cash today. Clients benefit from that discount and receive a higher yield on the cash flow compared to comparable annuity products available in the open markets. In contrast to variable annuities and fixed indexed annuities, secondary market annuities have no fees or ongoing costs other than account servicing and IRA costs if applicable.  The purchase price for a secondary market annuity includes all legal review, closing costs, and transaction costs.  There is no annual cost, with the sole exception of nominal account servicing and costs to administer your IRA if applicable.

30 Structured Settlement Companies

structured settlement companies

 

30 Structured Settlement Companies

We've compiled both a list of firms that distribute settlement payments payments and a list of brokers you can approach if you want to sell your settlement payments for a lump sum. Inclusion on this list is not an endorsement of any firm.
Which settlement company is the best overall? Which structured settlement company is the best in the secondary market? While I'm not sure there's a way to have a definitive answer, there are a number of factors that you may consider:
  1. How long has the company been in business?
  2. What do others say about the company? Does the company have a Better Business Bureau profile?  What's it rating? Does it normally respond to problems quickly? Does it have a Yelp review? 
/s/ Jovan Johnson

Annuity and Settlement Buyers and Brokers

Annuity Transfers, Ltd.

(972) 952-0260
annuitytransfers.com
800 E Campbell Rd
Richardson, Texas 75081

Campbell Financial Corp.

(719) 687-6220
campbellfinancialcorp.com
350 W. Henrietta Avenue
Woodland Park, Colorado 80863

Capital Planning, Inc.

(952) 541-9464
info@capitalplanninginc.com
capitalplanninginc.com
2051 Killebrew Drive
Suite #640
Bloomington, Minnesota 55425

CBC Settlement Funding

877.564.8508
info@cbcsettlementfunding.com
cbcsettlementfunding.com
500 Delaware Ave. 11th Floor
Wilmington, Delware 19801

Client First Settlement Funding

(888) 594-1195
(888) 594-1190
Clientfirstfunding.com
301 Yamato Rd #3200
Boca Raton, Florida 33431

DRB Capital

(855) 693-6100
(866) 744-9935
drbcapital.com
701 Park of Commerce Blvd, Suite 301
Boca Raton, Florida 33487

EPS Settlements Group

(303) 337-0400
info@epssettlements.com
epssettleents.com
5613 DTC Parkway, Suite 600
Greenwood Village, Colorado 80111

Fairfield Funding

(404) 814-0225
info@fairfieldfunding.com
fairfieldfunding.com
3424 Peachtree Rd
Atlanta, GA 30326

J.G. Wentworth

(866) 477-9729
(484) 434-2300
rconnelly@jgwentworth.com
jgwentworth.com
201 King of Prussia Road
Radnor, Pennsylvania 19087-5148

Liberty Settlement Funding

(954) 357-7235
(954) 763-1165
info@libertysf.com
libertysettlementfunding.com
16 N.E. 4th St, Suite 210
Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33301

Millennium Settlements

(850) 894-4265
(800) 573-8853
kbollman@msettlements.com
msettlements.com
3500 Financial Plaza, 4th Floor
Tallahassee, Florida 32312

Novation Settlement Solutions

(561) 615-9360
(888) 390-6200
novationsettlementsolutions.com
1641 Worthington Road Suite 410
West Palm Beach, Florida 33409


Pat Farber's Structured Settlement

(949) 833-3910
pat@patrickfarber.com
patrickfarber.com
1301 Dove Street Suite 960
Newport Beach, California 92660

SenecaOne

(301) 913-9131
(800) 513-1394
info@senecaone.com
senecaone.com
7920 Norfolk Ave #300
Bethesda, MD 20814

Settlement Capital Corp.

(972) 770-7875
(800) 959-0065
info@setcap.com
settle4cash.com
14755 Preston Rd #130
Dallas, TX 75254

Stone Street Capital

(301) 951-8900
7316 Wisconsin Avenue, 5th Floor
Bethesda, Maryland 20814-2937

Strategic Planners

(916) 714-7200
bishop@structurepro.com
settlementplanners.com
8841 Williamson Dr
Elk Grove, California 95624

Woodbridge Structured Funding, LLC

(561) 447-0401
woodbridgeinvestments.com
123 NW 13th St #307
Boca Raton, Florida 33432

Annuity Distributors

Mutual of Omaha

(402) 342-7600
rp.groupannuity.services@mutualofomaha.com
Mutual of Omaha Plaza
Omaha, Nebraska 68175

Pacific Life

(888) 728-5611
pacificlife.com
P.O. Box 84307
Lincoln, Nebraska 68501-4307

Prudential

(973) 802-6000
ssasales@prudential.com
retire.prudential.com/view/page/rs/16977
751 Broad St.
Newark, New Jersey 07102-3777

Stone Street

(301) 951-8900
info@stonestreet.com
7316 Wisconsin Avenue, 5th Floor
Bethesda, Maryland 20814-2937

Strategic Capital

(866) 256-0088
info@strategiccapital.com
strageticcapital.com
575 Madison Ave
Ste 1006
New York, New York 10022-2511

UBS Financial Services Inc.

(877) 827-8001
settlementsolutions@ubs.com
financialservicesinc.ubs.com/team/settlementsolutionsgroup
1285 Avenue of the Americas, 16th Floor 
New York, New York 10019

Settlement and Annuity Consultants

Bradford Settlement Company

(404) 851-1772
cbradford@bradfordsettlement.com
bradfordsettlement.com
1100 Johnson Ferry Road
Suite 665
Atlanta, GA 30342

Creative Capital Inc.

(732) 249-8669
info@creative-capital.com
creative-capital.com
1200 Tices Lane
East Brunswick, NJ 08816

Guardian Settlements, LLC

(480) 478-0159
guardiansettlements.com
8306 East Welsh Trail
Scottsdale, AZ 85258

JMW Settlements

jmwselltements.com
info@jmwselltements.com
(202) 463-1990
1130 Connecticut Avenue, NW Ste 540
Washington, D.C. 20036

The McNay Group

wwwinfo@mcnay.com
mcnay.com
(859) 626-3600
122 North Second Street
Richmond, Kentucky 40475
PO BOX 747
Richmond, Kentucky 40476

Ringer Associates

(504) 454-9520
wwagner@ringlerassociates.com
ringlerassociatesneworleans.com
5000 Pike Drive
Metairie, Louisiana 70003 

4Structures.com

(203) 325-8640
jdarer@4structures.com
4structures.com
43 Harbor Drive, Unit 309
Stamford, Connecticut 06902

What Structured settlement

 
What Structured settlement

What Structured settlement

A structured settlement is a financial or insurance arrangement whereby a claimant agrees to resolve a personal injury tort claim by receiving periodic payments on an agreed schedule rather than as a lump sum. Structured settlements were first utilized in Canada after a settlement for children affected by Thalidomide.[1] Structured settlements are widely used in product liability or injury cases (such as the birth defects from Thalidomide). A structured settlement can be implemented to reduce legal and other costs by avoiding trial.[2] Structured settlement cases became more popular in the United States during the 1970s as an alternative to lump sum settlements.[3] The increased popularity was due to several rulings by the IRS, an increase in personal injury awards, and higher interest rates. The IRS rulings changed policies such that if certain requirements were met then claimants could have federal income tax waived.[4] Higher interest rates result in lower present values, hence annuity premiums, for deferred payments versus a lump sum.
Structured settlements have become part of the statutory tort law of several common law countries including Australia, Canada, England and the United States. Structured settlements may include income tax and spendthrift requirements as well as benefits and are considered to be an asset-backed security.[5] Often the periodic payment will be created through the purchase of one or more annuities, which guarantee the future payments. Structured settlement payments are sometimes called periodic payments and when incorporated into a trial judgment is called a “periodic payment judgment."