InLife Amorsolo Circle for high-end policy holders was introduced

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25 February 2022

InLife – Insular Life has introduced a new program the Amorsolo Circle, a new program for high-end policy holders, and presented an economic briefing to coincide with the launch.

The Amorsolo Circle is named after National Artist Fernando Amorsolo, whose works portray the Philippines’ rich beauty, culture, and history. His name symbolizes prestige, which is exactly what InLife wants to provide the members of the InLife Amorsolo Circle.

Members of the Amorsolo Circle will receive first-class service, including first-rate financial advising from competent and professional InLife financial advisors who have undergone advanced training on financial/wealth planning, a backroom support that prioritizes the members’ needs through priority lanes and dedicated staff to assist them; relaxed underwriting requirements up to a total policy coverage of P25 million; shortened applicable financial questions; and a backroom support that prioritizes the members’ needs through priority lanes and dedicated staff to assist them

InLife Amorsolo Circle members will also get access to “…financial advisors’ know-how on risk management, wealth creation and decumulation, investment asset allocation, retirement and estate planning,” according to InLife president and CEO Raoul Antonio Littaua.

The event included an economic briefing from JP Morgan Asset Management executive director for South East Asia Funds Anis Tiasiri, ATR Asset Management product manager DJ de Jesus, and InLife assistant vice president Paolo Puno, giving Amorsolo Circle members front-row access to financial markets.

According to Tiasiri, the world is rebounding at different rates, with Europe and the United States shifting from early to mid-cycle. “This will be a year for equities, but it will be a year in which equities may not deliver as high returns as they have in the past.” “At the moment, we prefer more equity than fixed income in balanced (portfolios),” Tiasiri added.

According to those who have shared their experiences from the Philippines, the year 2021 has shown to be beneficial to the economy. “Corporate earnings rebounded overall, with most companies outperforming market expectations. Inflation for the full year was 4.5 percent, slightly higher than the objective, owing to pent-up demand as Filipinos resumed spending after refusing to do so in 2020 due to a lack of mobility. Lockdowns, the virus itself, and inflation all contributed to a drop in market optimism.”

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