No Result
View All Result
  • Login
Wednesday, February 4, 2026
FeeOnlyNews.com
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading
No Result
View All Result
FeeOnlyNews.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Financial Planning

NASCAR champ Kyle Busch’s case slams IUL insurance

by FeeOnlyNews.com
3 weeks ago
in Financial Planning
Reading Time: 6 mins read
A A
0
NASCAR champ Kyle Busch’s case slams IUL insurance
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LInkedIn



A champion NASCAR driver’s lawsuit against a giant insurer will provide financial advisors with front row tickets to a case testing one of the most complicated types of life policies.

Processing Content

Samantha and Kyle Busch accuse Pacific Life and an agent who sold them indexed universal life insurance policies of negligence, breaches of fiduciary duty and other violations of the law that cost them nearly $8.6 million in losses. The retirement income products were supposed to be “something safe and secure that would grow tax-free and protect our family long after racing” but instead “turned out to be a financial trap,” Kyle Busch said in a statement after he and his wife filed the lawsuit this past fall. The case is shining a prominent spotlight on indexed universal life insurance — permanent policies with adjustable premiums and death benefits that tie part of their cash value to stock and bond indices.

The suit has already revealed important takeaways for advisors and other practitioners, according to a webinar last month led by Leonard “Paul” Hood, a veteran estate and tax planning lawyer, through Leimberg Information Services, a training and educational resource for financial professionals with high net worth customers. He noted during the webinar that neither he nor the company have an interest in the case.

“The IUL is powerful, but it is fragile,” Hood said. “A policy can either provide retirement protection or death benefit. There’s almost never enough money to do both, and they were, in essence, led to the plan by the retirement benefit aspect of it, but it was the death benefit that sucked all the money out of the policies and lapsed them within a seven-year period.”

READ MORE: Why financial advisors chase certifications clients ignore

Case moved to federal court

Last month Pacific Life successfully petitioned to have the case moved from state court to federal court in Charlotte, North Carolina in a filing that cited the size of the Busches’ monetary claim and various geographic factors. (A lawyer for the Busches’ agent, Rodney A. Smith of Las Vegas-based Red River, did not respond to phone or email inquiries about the allegations.)

The company “does not comment on the specifics of individual matters” in order to “maintain the privacy and trust of our clients,” a Pacific Life spokesperson said in a statement.

However, Pacific Life’s business “has been built on providing valuable insurance products to help millions of families and businesses plan for their future financial security,” the statement said. “We stand by all our life insurance products, including indexed universal life (IUL). An IUL policy provides valuable life insurance protection, helping ensure that families and other beneficiaries receive financial protection in the event of an unexpected or premature death of a loved one. IUL also offers the opportunity to build cash value over time, which may be accessed for a variety of purposes, including supplementing retirement income. It is important that individuals work with their financial professionals to help ensure their intended insurance needs and financial objectives are met.”

In a video with 1.2 million views that the Busches posted to X after filing the lawsuit in October, Samantha Busch alleged that their indexed universal life policies were “a major scam.” To anyone who has been “approached with a ‘no-risk’ retirement plan tied to an index universal life product (IUL),” Kyle Busch wrote, “RUN!” The two-time champion of the NASCAR Cup Series has 63 victories in Cup races — more than any other active driver and the ninth most of all time.

“We’re out here speaking out about what happened, because this isn’t just happening to athletes and celebrities,” Samantha Busch said in the video. “This is happening to teachers, police officers, veterans —”

“Widows,” Kyle added.

“They’re widows,” Samantha Busch continued. “These are people who are 70 years old. They have nothing else to fall back on. These are people who have worked hard, they’ve made a small business. They are ready to retire, and they buy into these scams and they lose absolutely everything. So you know Kyle and I will use this platform to try to do all the good that we can and so we’re going to keep fighting Pacific Life and we’re going to show the world that this was a huge and utter scam.”

The lawsuit quickly drew notice across both sports and insurance worlds, with industry outlet InsuranceNewsNet asking if it might mark “a day of reckoning for indexed universal life.” 

For advisors and their clients — as well as insurance agents, trustees of trusts with life insurance and other financial professionals — the allegations present a cautionary reminder to order “inforce illustrations” from carriers showing the current and projected policy value, Hood said.

“I would order inforce illustrations for the policies that I was aware of for every client,” he said. “The best protection here is transparency, documentation and ongoing review. … If I was an agent, I’d order inforce illustrations for all of my insurers from all the carriers in which I did business to protect themselves from carrier misrepresentations too, because that can easily happen. That can very, very easily happen here. So the bottom line is, you know what? We don’t know the other sides of the story. It may well be that either the agent or the carrier turn on each other. I expect some of that to happen at some point, but it may be that they simply turn the cannons back on the Busches. So you know, what due diligence did you do in your capacity as trustee to buy these policies, become the owner and beneficiary of the policies?”

READ MORE: Financial advisor study sheds light on insurance regulation

Allegations of negligent financial advice

The lawsuit accuses Pacific Life and Smith of negligence and negligent misrepresentation, violations of a North Carolina law against unfair and deceptive trade practices, and breaches of their fiduciary duty. The Busches lost more than $8.5 million after paying $10.4 million in premiums and commissions for Pacific Discovery Xelerator policies and a later 1035 exchange that “were engineered not to maximize value for the policyholders, but to maximize commissions for Pacific Life’s distribution network and its agent,” the complaint said.

“These policies were not just poorly structured, they were actively designed to fail under the weight of excessive fees and commissions,” it said. “This policy was designed in such a way that benefited Pacific Life and its agent at plaintiffs’ expense, ensuring that the policies would erode in value and ultimately fail once the commission revenue had been realized.”

The Busches argue that Smith and the insurer’s pitch of tax-free retirement income involved the work of a financial advisor providing wealth management and estate planning-related advice that extended beyond merely a sales transaction. Besides the sheer size of the commissions, the lawsuit attacks the products’ structure. 

“Indexed universal life products, and particularly Pacific Life’s Pacific Discovery Xelerator (PDX and PDX2) policies, are among the most complex financial instruments marketed to consumers,” the complaint said. “These products combine life insurance, derivatives-based index crediting strategies and variable cost structures that even seasoned investors cannot readily decipher. The policies include multiple proprietary indices, participation rates, multipliers, caps, thresholds and riders such as the ‘enhanced performance factor,’ each of which affects performance in ways that cannot be predicted or understood without specialized actuarial and financial training.”    

By paying $1 million annually for half a decade, the Busches expected to get withdrawals of up to $800,000 per year by the time Kyle Busch, 40, would turn 52, he told AP. In 2023, the notice from Pacific Life of an unexpected sixth payment led the Busches to hire an independent firm to examine the policies, which the third-party company found would lose all of their value in 16 months.

“The Pacific Life Indexed Universal Life policies sold and implemented through Smith violated basic suitability and disclosure standards and failed to reveal the true risks associated with variable interest crediting, policy charges, underperformance and potential policy lapse,” the complaint said. “Smith and Pacific Life represented that the policies would be fully funded and self-sustaining after a limited number of annual premium payments, and would thereafter generate substantial, tax-free income for retirement. Those representations were negligent and false. The illustrations and sales materials emphasized hypothetical growth rates and multiplier effects that could not be sustained under real-world market conditions, and neither Smith nor Pacific Life disclosed the sensitivity of the policies to cap reductions, policy expenses or changes in non-guaranteed elements.”

READ MORE: The tax and planning problems with ‘elephant’ IRAs

Upshot for financial advisors and other industry professionals

The fact that the Busches are public figures, combined with the underlying complexities of IUL policies, means the industry will be watching as Pacific Life and Smith respond to the allegations and the case proceeds in court, Hood said.

“It’s gotten more complicated by the fact that the Busches not only filed suit against the insurance carrier and the agent, but they made it a cause celebre,” Hood said. “Whatever ends up happening, what we now know, with some evidence, is itself rich with lessons on both how insurance companies as well as their agents should conduct themselves.”



Source link

Tags: BuschsCaseChampInsuranceIULKyleNASCARslams
ShareTweetShare
Previous Post

BASF – BAS: Der Chemieriese setzt auf das China-Geschäft!

Next Post

Asia to spearhead the global acetic acid capacity additions by 2030

Related Posts

Raymond James launches new ESOP advisory practice

Raymond James launches new ESOP advisory practice

by FeeOnlyNews.com
February 3, 2026
0

Raymond James is expanding its investment banking capabilities with the launch of a dedicated employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) advisory...

SEC moves to settle Commonwealth suit following M penalty reversal

SEC moves to settle Commonwealth suit following $93M penalty reversal

by FeeOnlyNews.com
February 3, 2026
0

In a sudden turn in a long-running case, the SEC has decided to settle a lawsuit over mutual fund recommendations...

Ask an Advisor: The future of legacy CRMs in an AI world

Ask an Advisor: The future of legacy CRMs in an AI world

by FeeOnlyNews.com
February 2, 2026
0

For years, customer relationship management (CRM) systems have been the backbone of advisors' tech stacks.That primacy is now being questioned...

NewEdge snags 24-person, .4B team from Ameriprise

NewEdge snags 24-person, $1.4B team from Ameriprise

by FeeOnlyNews.com
February 2, 2026
0

NewEdge Capital Group is building out its channel for RIAs with a mammoth 24-person team pulled from Ameriprise.Processing ContentClearTrust Wealth...

Vanguard cuts costs on 84 mutual funds and ETFs

Vanguard cuts costs on 84 mutual funds and ETFs

by FeeOnlyNews.com
February 2, 2026
0

In what's turning into a yearly tradition under CEO Salim Ramji, Vanguard revealed that the firm will be saving investors...

How ESOPs, 1042 rollovers are shaping RIA succession plans

How ESOPs, 1042 rollovers are shaping RIA succession plans

by FeeOnlyNews.com
January 30, 2026
0

With a growing share of financial advisors nearing retirement, succession planning has become a major challenge for the industry. More...

Next Post
Asia to spearhead the global acetic acid capacity additions by 2030

Asia to spearhead the global acetic acid capacity additions by 2030

Trump Administration nears deal with Taiwan

Trump Administration nears deal with Taiwan

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Self-driving startup Waabi raises up to  billion, partners with Uber to deploy 25,000 robotaxis

Self-driving startup Waabi raises up to $1 billion, partners with Uber to deploy 25,000 robotaxis

January 28, 2026
Student Beans made him a millionaire, a heart condition made this millennial founder rethink life

Student Beans made him a millionaire, a heart condition made this millennial founder rethink life

December 11, 2025
Sellers Are Accepting Even Less

Sellers Are Accepting Even Less

January 23, 2026
Episode 242. “Our couples therapist couldn’t fix this. Please help.”

Episode 242. “Our couples therapist couldn’t fix this. Please help.”

January 6, 2026
US SEC Issues Key Crypto Custody Guidelines For Broker-Dealers

US SEC Issues Key Crypto Custody Guidelines For Broker-Dealers

December 19, 2025
How to sell a minority stake in RIA M&A

How to sell a minority stake in RIA M&A

November 11, 2025
TASE Friday trading deemed a success

TASE Friday trading deemed a success

0
Book Review: Principles of Bitcoin

Book Review: Principles of Bitcoin

0
XRP Open Interest Falls to Lowest Level Since 2024: Market Reset Or Warning Signal?

XRP Open Interest Falls to Lowest Level Since 2024: Market Reset Or Warning Signal?

0
A Warsh Fed is ‘golden’ for banks

A Warsh Fed is ‘golden’ for banks

0
9 Reasons More Than Half of Americans Are Terrified of Their Emergency Savings

9 Reasons More Than Half of Americans Are Terrified of Their Emergency Savings

0
Chunghwa Telecom Delivers Stable FY2025 Performance as Mobile and Broadband Support Growth

Chunghwa Telecom Delivers Stable FY2025 Performance as Mobile and Broadband Support Growth

0
XRP Open Interest Falls to Lowest Level Since 2024: Market Reset Or Warning Signal?

XRP Open Interest Falls to Lowest Level Since 2024: Market Reset Or Warning Signal?

February 4, 2026
Clorox outlines 0–1% category growth target and innovation-led recovery as ERP transition ends (NYSE:CLX)

Clorox outlines 0–1% category growth target and innovation-led recovery as ERP transition ends (NYSE:CLX)

February 3, 2026
Sun shines on Waaree Energies as tariff clouds clear

Sun shines on Waaree Energies as tariff clouds clear

February 3, 2026
China set to attend India’s upcoming AI summit signaling improving relations with New Delhi

China set to attend India’s upcoming AI summit signaling improving relations with New Delhi

February 3, 2026
Ukraine & Trump | Armstrong Economics

Ukraine & Trump | Armstrong Economics

February 3, 2026
9 Reasons More Than Half of Americans Are Terrified of Their Emergency Savings

9 Reasons More Than Half of Americans Are Terrified of Their Emergency Savings

February 3, 2026
FeeOnlyNews.com

Get the latest news and follow the coverage of Business & Financial News, Stock Market Updates, Analysis, and more from the trusted sources.

CATEGORIES

  • Business
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Economy
  • Financial Planning
  • Investing
  • Market Analysis
  • Markets
  • Money
  • Personal Finance
  • Startups
  • Stock Market
  • Trading

LATEST UPDATES

  • XRP Open Interest Falls to Lowest Level Since 2024: Market Reset Or Warning Signal?
  • Clorox outlines 0–1% category growth target and innovation-led recovery as ERP transition ends (NYSE:CLX)
  • Sun shines on Waaree Energies as tariff clouds clear
  • Our Great Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use, Legal Notices & Disclaimers
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2022-2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.

Welcome Back!

Sign In with Facebook
Sign In with Google
Sign In with Linked In
OR

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading

Copyright © 2022-2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.