Insurance Exam Prep

[Health Insurance] 54, COBRA Continuation Coverage

3 min · 20. maj 2026
episode [Health Insurance] 54, COBRA Continuation Coverage cover

Description

This podcast is made by Ran Chen, who holds an EA license, Insurance and Securities licenses (Series 6, 63, 65), and the CFP® designation. He is passionate about opening access to high-quality exam preparation resources and helping learners prepare more effectively for professional certification exams. In this episode you will learn: - That COBRA is a federal law applying to employers with 20 or more employees. - The difference in qualifying events for employees (termination, reduced hours) versus dependents (death, divorce, Medicare eligibility). - The standard continuation period is 18 months for termination or reduction in hours. - Dependents are eligible for a longer, 36-month continuation period for events like death of the employee or divorce. - Beneficiaries must pay up to 102% of the premium, which includes the full cost plus a 2% administrative fee. For more free exam prep tools, practice questions, and AI-powered explanations, visit https://open-exam-prep.com/ or YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Open-exam-prep

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148 episodes

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Property & Casualty Exam Prep 6, Proximate Cause and Concurrent Causation

This podcast is made by Ran Chen, who holds an EA license, Insurance and Securities licenses (Series 6, 63, 65), and the CFP® designation. He is passionate about opening access to high-quality exam preparation resources and helping learners prepare more effectively for professional certification exams. In this episode you will learn: - Proximate cause is the initial event in an unbroken chain that leads to a loss. - Damage from subsequent events is typically covered if the proximate cause was a covered peril. - Concurrent causation involves both a covered and an excluded peril contributing to a single loss. - Anti-concurrent causation clauses are used by insurers to exclude losses even when a covered peril was involved. - The windstorm-then-flood scenario is a classic exam trap testing your knowledge of these causation rules and exclusions. For more free exam prep tools, practice questions, and AI-powered explanations, visit https://open-exam-prep.com/ or YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Open-exam-prep

Yesterday2 min
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Property & Casualty Exam Prep 5, Actual Cash Value and Replacement Cost

This podcast is made by Ran Chen, who holds an EA license, Insurance and Securities licenses (Series 6, 63, 65), and the CFP® designation. He is passionate about opening access to high-quality exam preparation resources and helping learners prepare more effectively for professional certification exams. In this episode you will learn: - The fundamental difference between Actual Cash Value (ACV) and Replacement Cost is depreciation. - How to calculate ACV using the formula: Replacement Cost - Depreciation = ACV. - Why Agreed Value is used for unique items like classic cars to guarantee a specific payout and avoid disputes. - The critical exam trap of confusing Stated Amount, which is a limit, with Agreed Value, which is a guarantee. - How Salvage Value represents the residual worth of damaged property that an insurer can recover to reduce the total loss payment.

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This podcast is made by Ran Chen, who holds an EA license, Insurance and Securities licenses (Series 6, 63, 65), and the CFP® designation. He is passionate about opening access to high-quality exam preparation resources and helping learners prepare more effectively for professional certification exams. In this episode you will learn: - Insurable interest in Property & Casualty insurance must exist at the time of the loss. - The principle of indemnity means insurance restores you to your pre-loss financial state, preventing profit from a claim. - Having an insurable interest means you would suffer a financial hardship if the insured property were damaged. - Mortgagees and lienholders have an insurable interest limited to the amount of their financial stake in the property. - A key exam trap is distinguishing the timing of insurable interest for P&C (at time of loss) versus life insurance (at time of application). For more free exam prep tools, practice questions, and AI-powered explanations, visit https://open-exam-prep.com/ or YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Open-exam-prep

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