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Saturday, July 14, 2012

Prudential Retirement for individuals



Prudential is recognized as a global provider of retirement solutions. Let us help you make the most of your retirement years through a broad collection of products and services. Start the process today through an appointment with one of our financial professionals.
Our offerings

Retirement Planning Strategies
For most people, a great way to achieve financial independence is by establishing a personal retirement plan strategy using the right combination of solutions.

Annuities
With tax-deferred growth and no IRS-imposed annual contribution limits on non-qualified money, annuities offer the potential of an income stream you can't outlive.

Mutual Funds and Separate Accounts
To help grow your retirement savings, Prudential offers a variety of mutual fund and separate account solutions, featuring our own money management expertise through Prudential Investments.

IRAs and IRA Rollovers
Earnings in traditional IRA accounts, whether funded by rollovers from employer plans or through annual contributions, are tax-deferred until you start to make withdrawals. Roth IRA contributions are never tax-deductible, but qualified withdrawals are tax-free.

Life Insurance
Help protect your loves ones and your retirement dreams. A life insurance policy's death benefit may help a surviving spouse maintain his or her standard of living, and any cash value that a permanent policy accumulates can help supplement your retirement income. But note that any withdrawals or loans will reduce the policy's cash values and the death benefit may have tax consequences.

Real Estate
Prudential has professionals nationwide who provide a full range of real estate services.

Products are issued by Prudential Retirement Insurance and Annuity Company (PRIAC), Hartford, CT, a Prudential Financial Company. (California Certificate of Authority # 08003) Life insurance and annuities issued by The Prudential Insurance Company of America, Newark, NJ, and its affiliates. Each is solely responsible for its own contractual obligations and financial responsibility. Availability of long-term care varies by carrier and state.

Securities products and service are offered by Prudential Investment Management Service, LLC (PIMS), Three Gateway Center, 14th Floor, Newark, NJ 07102-4077. PIMS is a Prudential Financial Company.

Prudential, the Prudential logo, the Rock symbol and Bring Your Challenges are service marks of Prudential Financial, Inc., and its related entities, registered in many jurisdictions worldwide.

0213571-00002-00

prudential Life Insurance For Individuals & Families


The "Give My DependEnts Something to Depend On" Challenge
Make buying life insurance a priority today... it's a gift of love.
It can help:

    Send your children to college
    Pay off the mortgage and other debts
    Replace your income
    Cover last expenses

Types of Life Insurance

An important part of a sound financial plan, life insurance from The Prudential Insurance Company of America and its affiliates provides a valuable death benefit to your beneficiaries upon your death. Your beneficiaries can then use this money to replace some of the income you would have earned or to help pay off debts or other expenses.

The two types of life insurance are term and permanent. The one that's right for you depends on many factors, including your budget, the amount of coverage you need, and the length of time you'd like the coverage to last.
Term Life Insurance

Term policies issued by Pruco Life Insurance Company can help meet a wide variety of business and personal needs and often provide the most coverage for your premium dollar for set periods of time. Whether you want to supplement your existing coverage or simply purchase insurance to meet a specific need, our term policies have the flexibility to help meet your needs. Learn more about our term life insurance policies.
Permanent Life Insurance

Permanent policies can provide lifetime protection. There are several different types of permanent policies:

Universal Life Insurance
Universal life insurance can help meet the needs of people who desire long-term death benefit protection with a flexible premium structure. Learn more about our products with a potential to accumulate non-guaranteed tax-deferred cash value.

Variable Life Insurance
Variable life insurance offers a choice of death benefit options and a potential to accumulate non-guaranteed tax-deferred cash value that fluctuates based on the performance of underlying investment options that you choose. Learn more about our products.

> View Variable Life Insurance Prospectus and Performance.

Survivorship Life Insurance
Survivorship (second-to-die) life insurance insures two people and pays the death benefit when both have died. It is used primarily for wealth preservation. Learn more about our product.

prudential insurance



Whatever your budget and your needs, a life insurance policy from Prudential can help protect those who matter most to you.
Prudential . . . Get a Piece of the Rock®


Products

Annuities
Planning for retirement? An annuity can provide retirement income you can't outlive.

Long-Term Care Insurance
Find out how much care will cost, and review our funding solutions.

Auto, Home, RV, Watercraft, and Personal Liability Insurance
Help protect your family and your assets from the unexpected.

Life Insurance
Life insurance helps protect your family or provide a benefit for others.
         
Advice & Planning

Retirement Planning
The responsibility for securing a comfortable retirement continues to shift from the government and employers to the individual. We've created a special section to help you plan.

Women & Money
Discover information, tools, and experts' columns about financial and other matters important to women of all ages.

Prudential Special Needs Solutions... For All Ages®
Prudential has financial professionals specifically trained to address the unique financial concerns of parents of children with special needs.

Friday, July 13, 2012

Prudential History

We've been helping people meet their financial goals for more than 135 years.
The Prudential Friendly Society was founded by insurance agent John Fairfield Dryden in a basement office in downtown Newark, N.J., in 1875. It was the first company in the U.S. to make life insurance available to the working class. The company sold Industrial Insurance, which provided funeral and burial expenses for low-income families, with some weekly premiums as low as three cents.
Four years later, Prudential's sales extended beyond New Jersey, into New York City and Philadelphia, and the company's customer base expanded to the newly emerging middle class. With growing sales, assets reached $1 million, and in 1885, the one-millionth policy was sold to John Dryden. Renamed "The Prudential Insurance Company of America," Prudential later adopted The Rock of Gibraltar as its company symbol, reflecting the strength and security it offered to customers.
A lot has changed since 1875, but not our commitment to helping people achieve financial security and peace of mind. For more than 135 years we have demonstrated that we know what it means to keep the promises and commitments we make.
We have built our company on our proud heritage of life insurance and asset management expertise. Today, we offer individuals and institutions in the United States, Asia, Europe, and Latin America a wide array of financial products and services, including life insurance, annuities, mutual funds, investment management, and retirement related services.

Welcome to Prudential Financial, Inc



Welcome to Prudential Financial, Inc.
For more than 135 years, Prudential Financial, Inc., has helped individual and institutional customers grow and protect their wealth. Today, we are one of the world's largest financial services institutions with operations in the United States, Asia, Europe, and Latin America. We also have one of the most recognized and trusted brand symbols: The Rock ®, an icon of strength, stability, expertise, and innovation.

Prudential Financial

Prudential Financial - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Prudential Financial

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Prudential Financial, Inc.
Type Public
Traded as NYSE: PRU
S&P 500 Component
Industry Financial Services
Genre Financial
Founded 1875
Founder(s) John F. Dryden
Headquarters Prudential Plaza
Newark, New Jersey
, U.S.
Area served Nationwide
Key people John Strangfeld
Chairman and CEO
Products Life Insurance
Mutual Funds
Retirement
Annuity
Real Estate
Revenue US$34.4 billion
Net income US$3.70 billion
Total assets US$485.8 billion
Employees 39,422
Website www.prudential.com

Newark skyline with the Prudential Financial headquarters at right.
Prudential Financial, Inc. (NYSE: PRU), also known by its primary subsidiary The Prudential Insurance Company of America, is a Fortune Global 500 and Fortune 500 company whose subsidiaries provide insurance, investment management, and other financial products and services to both retail and institutional customers throughout the United States and in over 30 other countries. Principal products and services provided include life insurance, annuities, mutual funds, pension- and retirement-related investments, administration and asset management, securities brokerage services, and commercial and residential real estate in many states of the U.S. It provides these products and services to individual and institutional customers through distribution networks in the financial services industry. Prudential has operations in the United States, Asia, Europe and Latin America and has organized its principal operations into the Financial Services Businesses and the Closed Block Business.
Prudential is composed of hundreds of subsidiaries and holds more than $2 trillion of life insurance.[1] The company uses the Rock of Gibraltar as its logo.

Contents

 [hide] 
  • 1 Logo
  • 2 History
  • 3 Acquisitions and divestitures
  • 4 Investor fraud
  • 5 US military life insurance lawsuit
  • 6 Ratings, awards and The Prudential Foundation

[edit]

Prudential's logo, The Rock of Gibraltar, is one of the most recognized corporate symbols in the world.[2] The use of the rock began after an advertising agent passed Laurel Hill, a volcanic neck, in Secaucus, New Jersey on a train in the 1890s.[3] The related slogans "Own a Piece of the Rock" and "Strength of Gibraltar" are also still quite widely associated with Prudential,[4] though current advertising uses neither of these. In 1985, the Rock of Gilbraltar image was changed to a lined 2D plainer version for the logo, but by 1989, the original illustration of the Rock of Gilbraltar returned. The type was designed by Doyald Young and based on the Century Schoolbook typeface.[5]

[edit] History

Started in Newark, New Jersey in 1875, Prudential Financial was originally called The Widows and Orphans Friendly Society and then the Prudential Friendly Society and was founded by John F. Dryden, who later became a U.S. Senator. It sold one product in the beginning, burial insurance. Dryden was president of Prudential until 1912. He was succeeded by his son Forrest F. Dryden, who was the president until 1922.[6]

Old advert of the Prudential Insurance Co. of America (1909).
A history of The Prudential Insurance Company of America up to about 1975 is the topic of the book Three Cents A Week, referring to the premium paid by early policyholders.
At the turn of the 20th century, Prudential and other large insurers reaped the bulk of their profits from industrial life insurance, or insurance sold by solicitors house-to-house in poor urban areas.[7] For their insurance, industrial workers paid double what others paid for ordinary life insurance, and due to high lapse rates, as few as 1 in 12 policies reached maturity.[8] Prominent lawyer and future Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis helped pass a 1907 Massachusetts law to protect workers by allowing savings banks to sell life insurance at lower rates.[9]

Prudential logo from 1948.

Homeland Security secured the Prudential Headquarters in August, 2004.
Prudential has evolved from a mutual insurance company (owned by its policyholders) to a joint stock company. It is now traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol PRU. The Prudential Stock was issued and started trading on the New York Stock Exchange on December 13, 2001. On October 16, 2007 the Fox Business Channel picked Prudential as part of its Fox50 Index.
On August 1, 2004, the U.S. Office of Homeland Security announced the discovery of terrorist threats against the Prudential Headquarters in Newark, New Jersey, prompting large-scale security measures such as concrete barriers and internal security changes such as X-ray machines.[10]
On August 28, 2006, federal and state securities regulators and the Department of Justice announced parallel settlements and a total of $600 million in monetary sanctions against Prudential Securities, Inc. (now known as Prudential Equity Group ) for misconduct relating to improper market timing.[11] In 2001 Mark Wood (Financial Figure) moved from AXA to join Prudential to become its UK and European Chief Executive until 2005,[12] when he founded and became chief executive of Paternoster; a regulated insurance company that takes on the risks associated with companies’ final salary/defined benefit pension schemes.
On November 28, 2007, Prudential Financial board of directors elected a new CEO, John R. Strangfeld, to replace retiring Arthur F. Ryan.[13]

[edit] Acquisitions and divestitures

In 1981, the company acquired Bache & Co., a stock brokerage service that operated as a wholly owned subsidiary until 2003, when Wachovia and Prudential combined their retail brokerage operations into Wachovia Securities, with Prudential a minority stake holder.[14][15] In 1999, Prudential sold its healthcare division, Prudential HealthCare, to Aetna for $1 billion. On May 1, 2003, Prudential formalized the acquisition of American Skandia, the largest distributor of variable annuities through independent financial professionals in the United States. The CEO of American Skandia, Wade Dokken, partnered with Goldman Sachs and sold the division to Prudential for $1.2 billion.[16] The combination of American Skandia variable annuities and Prudential fixed annuities was part of Prudential’s strategy to acquire complementary businesses that help meet retirement goals.
In April 2004, the company acquired the retirement business of CIGNA Corporation. In late 2009, Prudential sold its minority stake in Wachovia Securities Financial Holdings LLC to Wells Fargo & Co.[17]

[edit] Investor fraud

During the 1980s and 1990s, Prudential Securities Incorporated (PSI), formerly a division of Prudential Financial, was investigated by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for suspected fraud.[18] During the investigation, it was found that PSI had defrauded investors of close to $8 billion, the largest fraud found by the SEC in US history to that point.[19] The SEC charged that Prudential allowed rogue executives to cheat customers on a large scale and blithely ignored a 1986 SEC order to overhaul its internal enforcement of securities laws.[20] In all, some 400,000 individual investors lost money on the deals.[19][21]
Prudential financial eventually settled with investors for $330 million.[18] Prudential said it would repay customers across the U.S. who lost money on the company's limited partnerships in the 1980s. In addition, the firm was required to pay another $41 million in fines.[19] The settlement also resolved investigations of the firm by the National Association of Securities Dealers and 49 states, including California, where 52,000 investors lost money in Prudential limited partnerships.[20][22] Further investigation was conducted by the SEC into the executives of the company to determine the extent of the fraud.[23]

[edit] US military life insurance lawsuit

In 2010, various media outlets noted allegations that the Prudential Life Insurance Company was manipulating the payout of life insurance benefits due to the families of American soldiers in order to gain extra profits. The company provided life insurance to people in the armed forces under a government contract. Rather than paying the full amount due to the families at once, the company would instead deposit the funds into a Prudential corporate account. These accounts are referred to as 'retained asset accounts' and are essentially an I.O.U. from the company to the payee (in many cases a fallen service members' family). While in early 2010 Prudential was making profits of up to 4.2% in its general account, they paid out 0.5% interest in these non-FDIC insured "Alliance" accounts.[24][25] In some cases, when families requested to be sent a full payout in the form of a check, the family was sent a checkbook, rather than the amount due.[24]
It is not clear if the practice was in violation of law or the contract. In August 2010, the company was sued by a number of the bereaved families.[26] The company's response included an open letter to the military community in which it addressed what it characterized as "misinformation" about the nature of the accounts.[27][28] Military Times noted that prior lawsuits against insurance companies pertaining to the use of retained asset accounts have been dismissed in federal courts without action.[27]

[edit] Ratings, awards and The Prudential Foundation

Prudential has received a 100% rating on the Corporate Equality Index released by the Human Rights Campaign every year since 2003, the second year of the report. In addition, the company is in the "Hall of Fame" of Working Mothers magazine among other companies that have made their "100 Best Companies for Working Mothers" list for 15 or more years.[29] It is still achieving that list, as of 2010.[30] According to Business Week's The Best Places to Launch a Career 2008, Prudential Insurance was ranked #59 out of 119 companies on the list.[31] In 2007, The Prudential Foundation provided over $450,000 in Prudential CARES Volunteer Grants to 444 nonprofit organizations worldwide. The Prudential CARES Volunteer Grants Program recognizes individual and team volunteers based on a minimum of 40 hours of volunteer service per individual. Grants range from $250 to $5,000 for each award winner's charitable organization.[32]
The foundation also supports the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission.