Michael Weisbrot: Why Do I Need A License Surety Bond?
Article Title: Why Do I Need A License Surety Bond?
Author Name: Michael Weisbrot
Word Count: 635
Author's Email: mike@jwsuretybonds.com
Article URL: www.articlesender.com/articles/article334.html
Quick Publisher: www.articlesender.com/publisher/334.html
-------------------------------------------------------
Publishing Terms for this Article
-------------------------------------------------------
- Permission is granted to publish this article electronically in
free-only publications such as a website or an ezine as long as the biobox
is included.
- Permission is NOT granted to publish in any medium that contains or
supports hate, violence, porn, and illegal activities.
- Permission is granted to publish in opt-in email lists, not in any UCE
or spam campaigns.
- Please notify the author via email if you use this article.
- We request that you ask permission from the author if you want to
publish this article in print.
-------------------------------------------------------
Article Body
-------------------------------------------------------
Why Do I Need A License Surety Bond?
Written by Michael Weisbrot
There are thousands of different surety bonds in the United States alone.
One of the most common types are license bonds. Simply put, these bonds
are required by the government in order to obtain a license to legally
operate a business.
Often, people ask, “Why Do I Need A Surety Bond For My License?”. To fully
understand why the bond is required, you must first know how a surety bond
works. First you must understand the parties involved in the bond. There
is the ‘obligee’, or who is requiring the bond (ie licensing department of
the state). The ‘principal’, or the business/individual required to obtain
the bond. Finally, there is the ’surety’, or the bonding company
financially backing the bond. To review, the obligee requires a bond of
the principal, who obtains it from the surety (usually the principal must
deal with an appointed agency rather than directly with the surety).
Now that you know the parties involved with a surety bond, you will want
to know what it does/covers exactly. In the event of a claim, the surety
will make sure it is valid. If the claim is valid, the surety pays the
obligee the amount of the claim up the the amount of the bond. The obligee
(typically the state for license bonds), will then distribute the funds to
the principal’s client(s) that were effected. Therefore, it is the
principal’s clients who are truly the benficiary in the event of a claim,
not the principal as with typical insurance.
Understanding the parties involved in a bond and how it works in the event
of a claim is not the full picture. You should also know what you are
actually paying for with a bond. Bonds are not insurance, they should be
thought of as credit. The surety will turn to the principal for repayment
of a claim and any legal fees.
It is currently an industry standard to have principals and their spouses
personally indemnify for the bond. This worries many, as this gives the
right to the surety to go after the principal’s personal assets to recoop
losses from a claim. However, bonding companies will not go after the
owners personally right away. After a claim is paid out the surety will
send the principal (the company that purchased the bond) a bill for the
amount paid out to the obigee and legal fees incurred. If the business
fails to pay, the bonding company has the right to go after the owner’s
personal assets.
Why would anyone want a bond if they have to pay the surety for a claim?
It is quite simple, the alternative is a letter of credit posted directly
to the state. In other words, you would have the full amount of assets
frozen and you would be paying the bank for the guarantee. For strong
accounts, a surety bond is the same rate or even less than a letter of
credit. Therefore, it makes no sense to tie up capital and pay the bank a
fee that often costs about the same as the bond.
To summarize, a bond is not insurance, but should be thought of as surety
credit. A claim will pay out to the obligee (the state), who will
distribute the funds to the principal’s client(s) that were effected by
the principal’s negligence. If a claim is paid, the surety will look to
the principal for repayment, per the terms of an agreement signed prior to
release of the bond. The alternative is a letter of credit, which usually
costs roughly the same price, but will tie up capital that could be better
used. Surety Bonds have been around for quite some time now, and will be
here for quite some time to come.
Michael Weisbrot is Vice-President of JW Surety Bonds, a bond only agency.
Commercial Bonds: mortgage broker bonds, dealer bonds, all license bonds,
etc.
Contract Bonds: bid bonds, performance bonds, subdivision bonds, etc.
View their website at: www.jwsuretybonds.com
-------------------------------------------------------
Distributor Information
-------------------------------------------------------
This article was distributed by The Free Article Distribution center.
Website: www.articlesender.com
ArticleSender does not own this article, please contact the copyright
holder (Michael Weisbrot) for any permissions needed that are not clearly
spelled out above.
|