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TYPES
OF ANNUITIES, GUIDE TO TYPES OF ANNUITIES, INFO: TYPES OF
ANNUITIES, ANNUITY TYPES,
UNDERSTANDING THE TYPES OF ANNUITES
"Invest in many different
income tools brings financial stabilty - Eric Brenn"
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LEARN ABOUT THE DIFFERENT TYPES OF ANNUITIES
Financial
Quote of the Day: " A good person leaves an inheritance
to his children’s children" - Eric Brenn
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TYPES OF
Annuities
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ABOUT
US:
FREE
INFORMATION RESOURCE FOR
THE DIFFERENT
TYPES OF ANNUITIES
DISCLAIMER:
We have provided this information for information
and educational purposes only. Our site is no
substitute for professional financial planning,
legal advice, tax planning, estate planning or
any other professions. It is not a legal interpetation
or statement of fact. It is neither a legal interpretation
or a statement of fact, truth or law, please consult
with an attorney, financial planner or other advisor
who specializes in securities law and annuities.
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TYPES
OF ANNUITIES
Guide to Annuity Types
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What
are Annuities?
"What it the world is an Annuity?"
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An
annuity is a contract between you and an insurance company
that is designed to meet retirement and other long-range
goals, under which you make a lump-sum payment or series
of payments. In return, the insurer agrees to make periodic
payments to you beginning immediately or at some future
date.
Annuities
typically offer tax-deferred growth of earnings and
may include a death benefit that will pay your beneficiary
a specified minimum amount, such as your total purchase
payments. While tax is deferred on earnings growth, when
withdrawals are taken from the annuity, gains are taxed
at ordinary income rates, and not capital gains rates.
If you withdraw your money early from an annuity, you
may pay substantial surrender charges to the insurance
company, as well as tax penalties.
There
are generally three types of annuities — fixed,
indexed, and variable.
In a fixed annuity, the insurance company agrees to pay
you no less than a specified rate of interest during the
time that your account is growing. The insurance company
also agrees that the periodic payments will be a specified
amount per dollar in your account. These periodic payments
may last for a definite period, such as 20 years, or an
indefinite period, such as your lifetime or the lifetime
of you and your spouse.
In
an indexed annuity, the insurance company credits
you with a return that is based on changes in an index,
such as the S&P 500 Composite Stock Price Index. Indexed
annuity contracts also provide that the contract value
will be no less than a specified minimum, regardless of
index performance.
In
a variable annuity,
you can choose to invest your purchase payments from among
a range of different investment options, typically mutual
funds. The rate of return on your purchase payments, and
the amount of the periodic payments you eventually receive,
will vary depending on the performance of the investment
options you have selected.
Variable
annuities are securities regulated by the SEC. An
indexed annuity may or may not be a security; however,
most indexed annuities are not registered with the SEC.
Fixed annuities are not securities and are not regulated
by the SEC.
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Immediate
Annuities:
An
annuity that is purchased with a lump sum and that begins
making payments one period after the purchase. Immediate
annuities are most commonly purchased by people who have
accumulated a sum of money and are ready for retirement.
Deferred
Annuities:
A
deferred annuity contract allows you to accumulate tax-deferred
earnings during the term of the contract and sometimes
add assets to your contract over time. In contrast, an
immediate annuity starts paying you income right after
you buy. Your deferred annuity earnings can be either
fixed or variable, depending on the way your money is
invested. Deferred annuities are designed primarily as
retirement savings accounts, so you may owe a penalty
if you withdraw principal, earnings, or both before you
reach age 59 1/2.
Life
Annuities:
A
life annuity is a financial contract in the form of an
insurance product according to which a seller (issuer)
— typically a financial institution such as a life insurance
company — makes a series of future payments to a buyer
(annuitant) in exchange for the immediate payment of a
lump sum (single-payment annuity) or a series of regular
payments (regular-payment annuity), prior to the onset
of the annuity.
The
payment stream from the issuer to the annuitant has an
unknown duration based principally upon the date of death
of the annuitant. At this point the contract will terminate
and the remainder of the fund accumulated is forfeited
unless there are other annuitants or beneficiaries in
the contract. Thus a life annuity is a form of longevity
insurance, where the uncertainty of an individual's lifespan
is transferred from the individual to the insurer, which
reduces its own uncertainty by pooling many clients. Annuities
can be purchased to provide an income during retirement,
or originate from a structured settlement of a personal
injury lawsuit.
Fixed
Annuities:
Fixed
annuities are regulated by state insurance departments
and sold through insurance agents, banks, or registered
representatives.Fixed annuities pursuant to state insurance
law must provide a minimum rate of interest as provided
in the annuity policy. How the actual rate of interest
is credited on the policy differentiates traditional fixed
annuities from indexed annuities. Traditional fixed annuities
pay interest on the premium contributed at a rate declared
by the insurer in advance. This rate can never be less
than the minimum guaranteed rate stated in the policy.
Fixed annuities are a very conservative safe money place
for retirement dollars
Indexed
Annuities:
Indexed
annuities are retirement savings vehicles and are not
meant for short term savings. Most indexed annuities do
provide some penalty free amount that may be withdrawn
each year (for example,the right to withdraw 10% of the
annuity’s value per year). These products may also waive
surrender charges if the policy is annuitized (paying
the owner the value of the policy in equal payment amounts
over the life of the annuitant). Some annuities provide
additional riders to have surrender charges waived (which
may have a cost) in the event the annuitant is confined
to a nursing home or contracts a catastrophic illness.
Variable
Annuities:
A
variable annuity
is a contract between you and an insurance company, under
which you make a lump-sum payment or series of payments.
In return, the insurer agrees to make periodic payments
to you beginning immediately or at some future date. You
can choose to invest your purchase payments in a range
of investment options, which are typically mutual funds.
The value of your account in a variable annuity will vary,
depending on the performance of the investment options
you have chosen.
Variable
annuities also offer many of the features of other types
of annuities. These include:
1.
Tax-deferred growth of earnings;
2.
A death benefit that will pay to your beneficiary the
greater of your account value or a guaranteed minimum
amount, such as your total purchase payments; and
3.
The option of receiving a stream of periodic payments
for either a definite period, such as 20 years or an indefinite
period, such as your lifetime or the life of your spouse.
Variable
annuities have become a part of the retirement and investment
plans of many Americans. Before you buy a variable annuity,
you should know some of the basics and be prepared
to ask your insurance agent, broker, financial planner,
or other financial professional lots of questions about
whether a variable annuity is right for you.
This
is a general description of variable annuities
what they are, how they work, and the charges you will
pay. Before buying any variable annuity, however, you
should find out about the particular annuity you are considering.
Request a prospectus from the insurance company or from
your financial professional, and read it carefully. The
prospectus contains important information about the annuity
contract, including fees and charges, investment options,
death benefits, and annuity payout options. You should
compare the benefits and costs of the annuity to other
variable annuities and to other types of investments,
such as mutual funds.
What
Is a Variable Annuity?
A
variable annuity is a contract between you and an insurance
company, under which the insurer agrees to make periodic
payments to you, beginning either immediately or at some
future date. You purchase a variable annuity contract
by making either a single purchase payment or a series
of purchase payments.
A
variable annuity offers a range of investment options.
The value of your investment as a variable annuity owner
will vary depending on the performance of the investment
options you choose. The investment options for a variable
annuity are typically mutual funds that invest in stocks,
bonds, money market instruments, or some combination of
the three.
Although
variable annuities are typically invested in mutual funds,
variable annuities differ from mutual funds in several
important ways:
First,
variable annuities let you receive periodic payments
for the rest of your life (or the life of your spouse
or any other person you designate). This feature offers
protection against the possibility that, after you retire,
you will outlive your assets.
Second,
variable annuities have a death benefit. If you
die before the insurer has started making payments to
you, your beneficiary is guaranteed to receive a specified
amount typically at least the amount of your purchase
payments. Your beneficiary will get a benefit from this
feature if, at the time of your death, your account value
is less than the guaranteed amount.
Third,
variable annuities are tax-deferred. That means
you pay no taxes on the income and investment gains from
your annuity until you withdraw your money. You may also
transfer your money from one investment option to another
within a variable annuity without paying tax at the time
of the transfer. When you take your money out of a variable
annuity, however, you will be taxed on the earnings at
ordinary income tax rates rather than lower capital gains
rates. In general, the benefits of tax deferral will outweigh
the costs of a variable annuity only if you hold it as
a long-term investment to meet retirement and other long-range
goals.
Caution!
Other investment vehicles, such as IRAs and employer-sponsored
401(k) plans, also may provide you with tax-deferred
growth and other tax advantages. For most investors,
it will be advantageous to make the maximum allowable
contributions to IRAs and 401(k) plans before investing
in a variable annuity.
In addition, if you are investing in a variable
annuity through a tax-advantaged retirement plan
(such as a 401(k) plan or IRA), you will get no
additional tax advantage from the variable annuity.
Under these circumstances, consider buying a variable
annuity only if it makes sense because of the annuity's
other features, such as lifetime income payments
and death benefit protection. The tax rules that
apply to variable annuities can be complicated
before investing, you may want to consult a tax
adviser about the tax consequences to you of investing
in a variable annuity.
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Remember:
Variable annuities are designed to be long-term
investments, to meet retirement and other long-range
goals. Variable annuities are not suitable for meeting
short-term goals because substantial taxes and insurance
company charges may apply if you withdraw your money
early. Variable annuities also involve investment risks,
just as mutual funds do.
How
Variable Annuities Work
A
variable annuity has two phases: an accumulation phase
and a payout phase.
During
the accumulation phase, you make purchase payments,
which you can allocate to a number of investment options.
For example, you could designate 40% of your purchase
payments to a bond fund, 40% to a U.S. stock fund, and
20% to an international stock fund. The money you have
allocated to each mutual fund investment option will increase
or decrease over time, depending on the fund's performance.
In addition, variable annuities often allow you to allocate
part of your purchase payments to a fixed account. A fixed
account, unlike a mutual fund, pays a fixed rate of interest.
The insurance company may reset this interest rate periodically,
but it will usually provide a guaranteed minimum (e.g.,
3% per year).
Example:
You purchase a variable annuity with an initial
purchase payment of $10,000. You allocate 50% of that
purchase payment ($5,000) to a bond fund, and 50% ($5,000)
to a stock fund. Over the following year, the stock
fund has a 10% return, and the bond fund has a 5% return.
At the end of the year, your account has a value of
$10,750 ($5,500 in the stock fund and $5,250 in the
bond fund), minus fees and charges (discussed below).
Your
most important source of information about a variable
annuity's investment options is the prospectus. Request
the prospectuses for the mutual fund investment options.
Read them carefully before you allocate your purchase
payments among the investment options offered. You should
consider a variety of factors with respect to each fund
option, including the fund's investment objectives and
policies, management fees and other expenses that the
fund charges, the risks and volatility of the fund, and
whether the fund contributes to the diversification of
your overall investment portfolio. The SEC's online publication,
Mutual
Fund Investing: Look at More Than a Fund's Past Performance,
provides information about these factors. Another SEC
online publication, Invest
Wisely: An Introduction to Mutual Funds, provides
general information about the types of mutual funds and
the expenses they charge.
During
the accumulation phase, you can typically transfer your
money from one investment option to another without paying
tax on your investment income and gains, although you
may be charged by the insurance company for transfers.
However, if you withdraw money from your account during
the early years of the accumulation phase, you may have
to pay "surrender charges," which are discussed
below. In addition, you may have to pay a 10% federal
tax penalty if you withdraw money before the age of 59½.
At
the beginning of the payout phase, you may receive
your purchase payments plus investment income and gains
(if any) as a lump-sum payment, or you may choose to receive
them as a stream of payments at regular intervals (generally
monthly).
If
you choose to receive a stream of payments, you may have
a number of choices of how long the payments will last.
Under most annuity contracts, you can choose to have your
annuity payments last for a period that you set (such
as 20 years) or for an indefinite period (such as your
lifetime or the lifetime of you and your spouse or other
beneficiary). During the payout phase, your annuity contract
may permit you to choose between receiving payments that
are fixed in amount or payments that vary based on the
performance of mutual fund investment options.
The
amount of each periodic payment will depend, in part,
on the time period that you select for receiving payments.
Be aware that some annuities do not allow you to withdraw
money from your account once you have started receiving
regular annuity payments.
In
addition, some annuity contracts are structured as immediate
annuities, which means that there is no accumulation
phase and you will start receiving annuity payments right
after you purchase the annuity.
The
Death Benefit and Other Features
A
common feature of variable annuities is the death benefit.
If you die, a person you select as a beneficiary (such
as your spouse or child) will receive the greater of:
(i) all the money in your account, or (ii) some guaranteed
minimum (such as all purchase payments minus prior withdrawals).
Example:
You own a variable annuity that offers a death benefit
equal to the greater of account value or total purchase
payments minus withdrawals. You have made purchase payments
totaling $50,000. In addition, you have withdrawn $5,000
from your account. Because of these withdrawals and
investment losses, your account value is currently $40,000.
If you die, your designated beneficiary will receive
$45,000 (the $50,000 in purchase payments you put in
minus $5,000 in withdrawals).
Some
variable annuities allow you to choose a "stepped-up"
death benefit. Under this feature, your guaranteed minimum
death benefit may be based on a greater amount than purchase
payments minus withdrawals. For example, the guaranteed
minimum might be your account value as of a specified
date, which may be greater than purchase payments minus
withdrawals if the underlying investment options have
performed well. The purpose of a stepped-up death benefit
is to "lock in" your investment performance
and prevent a later decline in the value of your account
from eroding the amount that you expect to leave to your
heirs. This feature carries a charge, however, which will
reduce your account value.
Variable
annuities sometimes offer other optional features, which
also have extra charges. One common feature, the guaranteed
minimum income benefit, guarantees a particular minimum
level of annuity payments, even if you do not have enough
money in your account (perhaps because of investment losses)
to support that level of payments. Other
features may include long-term care insurance, which pays
for home health care or nursing home care if you become
seriously ill.
You
may want to consider the financial strength of the insurance
company that sponsors any variable annuity you are considering
buying. This can affect the company's ability to pay any
benefits that are greater than the value of your account
in mutual fund investment options, such as a death benefit,
guaranteed minimum income benefit, long-term care benefit,
or amounts you have allocated to a fixed account investment
option.
Caution!
You will pay for each benefit provided by your variable
annuity. Be sure you understand the charges. Carefully
consider whether you need the benefit. If you do,
consider whether you can buy the benefit more cheaply
as part of the variable annuity or separately (e.g.,
through a long-term care insurance policy).
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Variable
Annuity Charges
You
will pay several charges when you invest in a variable
annuity. Be sure you understand all the charges before
you invest. These charges will reduce the value of
your account and the return on your investment. Often,
they will include the following:
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Surrender
charges If you withdraw money from a variable
annuity within a certain period after a purchase payment
(typically within six to eight years, but sometimes
as long as ten years), the insurance company usually
will assess a "surrender" charge, which
is a type of sales charge. This charge is used to
pay your financial professional a commission for selling
the variable annuity to you. Generally, the surrender
charge is a percentage of the amount withdrawn, and
declines gradually over a period of several years,
known as the "surrender period."
For example, a 7% charge might apply in the first
year after a purchase payment, 6% in the second year,
5% in the third year, and so on until the eighth year,
when the surrender charge no longer applies. Often,
contracts will allow you to withdraw part of your
account value each year 10% or 15% of your
account value, for example without paying a
surrender charge.
Example:
You purchase a variable annuity contract with a
$10,000 purchase payment. The contract has a schedule
of surrender charges, beginning with a 7% charge
in the first year, and declining by 1% each year.
In addition, you are allowed to withdraw 10% of
your contract value each year free of surrender
charges. In the first year, you decide to withdraw
$5,000, or one-half of your contract value of $10,000
(assuming that your contract value has not increased
or decreased because of investment performance).
In this case, you could withdraw $1,000 (10% of
contract value) free of surrender charges, but you
would pay a surrender charge of 7%, or $280, on
the other $4,000 withdrawn.
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Mortality
and expense risk charge This charge is
equal to a certain percentage of your account value,
typically in the range of 1.25% per year. This charge
compensates the insurance company for insurance risks
it assumes under the annuity contract. Profit from
the mortality and expense risk charge is sometimes
used to pay the insurer's costs of selling the variable
annuity, such as a commission paid to your financial
professional for selling the variable annuity to you.
Example:
Your variable annuity has a mortality and expense
risk charge at an annual rate of 1.25% of account
value. Your average account value during the year
is $20,000, so you will pay $250 in mortality and
expense risk charges that year.
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Administrative
fees The insurer may deduct charges to
cover record-keeping and other administrative expenses.
This may be charged as a flat account maintenance
fee (perhaps $25 or $30 per year) or as a percentage
of your account value (typically in the range of 0.15%
per year).
Example:
Your variable annuity charges administrative fees
at an annual rate of 0.15% of account value. Your
average account value during the year is $50,000.
You will pay $75 in administrative fees.
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Underlying
Fund Expenses You will also indirectly
pay the fees and expenses imposed by the mutual funds
that are the underlying investment options for your
variable annuity.
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Fees
and Charges for Other Features Special
features offered by some variable annuities, such
as a stepped-up death benefit,
a guaranteed minimum income benefit,
or long-term care insurance, often
carry additional fees and charges.
Other
charges, such as initial sales loads, or fees for transferring
part of your account from one investment option to another,
may also apply. You should ask your financial professional
to explain to you all charges that may apply. You can
also find a description of the charges in the prospectus
for any variable annuity that you are considering.
Tax-Free
1035 Exchanges
Section
1035 of the U.S. tax code allows you to exchange an existing
variable annuity contract for a new annuity contract without
paying any tax on the income and investment gains in your
current variable annuity account. These tax-free exchanges,
known as 1035 exchanges, can be useful if another annuity
has features that you prefer, such as a larger death benefit,
different annuity payout options, or a wider selection
of investment choices.
You
may, however, be required to pay surrender charges on
the old annuity if you are still in the surrender charge
period. In addition, a new surrender charge period generally
begins when you exchange into the new annuity. This means
that, for a significant number of years (as many as 10
years), you typically will have to pay a surrender charge
(which can be as high as 9% of your purchase payments)
if you withdraw funds from the new annuity. Further, the
new annuity may have higher annual fees and charges than
the old annuity, which will reduce your returns.
Caution!
If
you are thinking about a 1035 exchange, you should
compare both annuities carefully. Unless you plan
to hold the new annuity for a significant amount
of time, you may be better off keeping the old annuity
because the new annuity typically will impose a
new surrender charge period. Also, if you decide
to do a 1035 exchange, you should talk to your financial
professional or tax adviser to make sure the exchange
will be tax-free. If you surrender the old annuity
for cash and then buy a new annuity, you will have
to pay tax on the surrender.
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Bonus
Credits
Some
insurance companies are now offering variable annuity
contracts with "bonus credit" features. These
contracts promise to add a bonus to your contract value
based on a specified percentage (typically ranging from
1% to 5%) of purchase payments.
Example:
You purchase a variable annuity contract that
offers a bonus credit of 3% on each purchase payment.
You make a purchase payment of $20,000. The insurance
company issuing the contract adds a bonus of $600 to
your account.
Caution!
Variable
annuities with bonus credits may carry a downside,
however higher expenses that can outweigh
the benefit of the bonus credit offered.
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Frequently,
insurers will charge you for bonus credits in one or more
of the following ways:
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Higher
surrender charges Surrender charges
may be higher for a variable annuity that pays you
a bonus credit than for a similar contract with no
bonus credit.
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Longer
surrender periods Your purchase payments
may be subject to surrender charges for a longer period
than they would be under a similar contract with no
bonus credit.
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Higher
mortality and expense risk charges and other charges
Higher annual mortality and expense risk charges
may be deducted for a variable annuity that pays you
a bonus credit. Although the difference may seem small,
over time it can add up. In addition, some contracts
may impose a separate fee specifically to pay for
the bonus credit.
Before
purchasing a variable annuity with a bonus credit, ask
yourself and the financial professional who is
trying to sell you the contract whether the bonus
is worth more to you than any increased charges you will
pay for the bonus. This may depend on a variety of factors,
including the amount of the bonus credit and the increased
charges, how long you hold your annuity contract, and
the return on the underlying investments. You also need
to consider the other features of the annuity to determine
whether it is a good investment for you.
Example:
You make purchase payments of $10,000 in Annuity
A and $10,000 in Annuity B. Annuity A offers a bonus
credit of 4% on your purchase payment, and deducts annual
charges totaling 1.75%. Annuity B has no bonus credit
and deducts annual charges totaling 1.25%. Let's assume
that both annuities have an annual rate of return, prior
to expenses, of 10%. By the tenth year, your account
value in Annuity A will have grown to $22,978. But your
account value in Annuity B will have grown more, to
$23,136, because Annuity B deducts lower annual charges,
even though it does not offer a bonus.
You
should also note that a bonus may only apply to your initial
premium payment, or to premium payments you make within
the first year of the annuity contract. Further, under
some annuity contracts the insurer will take back all
bonus payments made to you within the prior year or some
other specified period if you make a withdrawal, if a
death benefit is paid to your beneficiaries upon your
death, or in other circumstances.
Caution!
If
you already own a variable annuity and are thinking
of exchanging it for a different annuity with a
bonus feature, you should be careful. Even if the
surrender period on your current annuity contract
has expired, a new surrender period generally will
begin when you exchange that contract for a new
one. This means that, by exchanging your contract,
you will forfeit your ability to withdraw money
from your account without incurring substantial
surrender charges. And as described above, the schedule
of surrender charges and other fees may be higher
on the variable annuity with the bonus credit than
they were on the annuity that you exchanged.
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Example:
You currently hold a variable annuity with an
account value of $20,000, which is no longer subject
to surrender charges. You exchange that annuity for
a new variable annuity, which pays a 4% bonus credit
and has a surrender charge period of eight years, with
surrender charges beginning at 9% of purchase payments
in the first year. Your account value in this new variable
annuity is now $20,800. During the first year you hold
the new annuity, you decide to withdraw all of your
account value because of an emergency situation. Assuming
that your account value has not increased or decreased
because of investment performance, you will receive
$20,800 minus 9% of your $20,000 purchase payment, or
$19,000. This is $1,000 less than you would have received
if you had stayed in the original variable annuity,
where you were no longer subject to surrender charges.
In
short: Take a hard look at bonus credits. In
some cases, the "bonus" may not be in your best
interest.
Ask
Questions Before You Invest
Financial
professionals who sell variable annuities have a duty
to advise you as to whether the product they are trying
to sell is suitable to your particular investment needs.
Don't be afraid to ask them questions. And write down
their answers, so there won't be any confusion later as
to what was said.
Variable
annuity contracts typically have a "free look"
period of ten or more days, during which you can terminate
the contract without paying any surrender charges and
get back your purchase payments (which may be adjusted
to reflect charges and the performance of your investment).
You can continue to ask questions in this period to make
sure you understand your variable annuity before the "free
look" period ends.
Before
you decide to buy a variable annuity, consider the following
questions:
- Will
you use the variable annuity primarily to save for retirement
or a similar long-term goal?
- Are
you investing in the variable annuity through a retirement
plan or IRA (which would mean that you are not receiving
any additional tax-deferral benefit from the variable
annuity)?
- Are
you willing to take the risk that your account value
may decrease if the underlying mutual fund investment
options perform badly?
- Do
you understand the features of the variable annuity?
- Do
you understand all of the fees and expenses that the
variable annuity charges?
- Do
you intend to remain in the variable annuity long enough
to avoid paying any surrender charges if you have to
withdraw money?
- If
a variable annuity offers a bonus credit, will the bonus
outweigh any higher fees and charges that the product
may charge?
- Are
there features of the variable annuity, such as long-term
care insurance, that you could purchase more cheaply
separately?
- Have
you consulted with a tax adviser and considered all
the tax consequences of purchasing an annuity, including
the effect of annuity payments on your tax status in
retirement?
- If
you are exchanging one annuity for another one, do the
benefits of the exchange outweigh the costs, such as
any surrender charges you will have to pay if you withdraw
your money before the end of the surrender charge period
for the new annuity?
Remember:
Before purchasing a variable annuity, you owe
it to yourself to learn as much as possible about how
they work, the benefits they provide, and the charges
you will pay.
For
More Information
Other
SEC Online Publications
Other
Web Sites That May Be Helpful
- FINRA
FINRA is an independent self-regulatory organization
charged with regulating the securities industry, including
sellers of variable annuities. The FINRA has issued
several investor alerts on the topic of variable annuities,
and has also issued a release to its members giving
guidance on how to present information on the impact
of taxes upon investment returns in a variable annuity
as compared to a non-specific taxable account. If you
have a complaint or problem about sales practices involving
variable annuities, you should contact the District
Office of FINRA nearest you. A list of FINRA District
Offices is available on FINRA's
web site.
CD
Annuities:
A
CD type annuity is a hybrid of a fixed annuity and CD.
The CD-type annuity guarantees a fixed rate for the entire
duration of the contract's terms, anywhere from 1 to 10
years. Rates range from 3-10%, depending on the insurance
company, national interest rates, and the chosen contract
term.
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The term
annuity is used in finance theory to refer to any terminating
stream of fixed payments over a specified period of time.
This usage is most commonly seen in discussions of finance,
usually in connection with the valuation of the stream of
payments, taking into account time value of money concepts
such as interest rate and future value. Examples of annuities
are regular deposits to a savings account, monthly home mortgage
payments and monthly insurance payments. Annuities are classified
by payment dates. The payments (deposits) may be made weekly,
monthly, quarterly, yearly, or at any other interval of time.
An ordinary
annuity (also referred as annuity-immediate) is an annuity
whose payments are made at the end of each period (e.g. a
month, a year). The values of an ordinary annuity can be calculated
through the following:
Let:
- r
= the yearly nominal interest rate.
- t
= the number of years.
- m
= the number of periods per year.
- i
= the interest rate per period.
- n
= the number of periods.
Note:


Also let:
- P
= the principal (or present value).
- S
= the future value of an annuity.
- R
= the periodic payment in an annuity (the amortized payment).
(annuity notation)
Also:
-
![P \,=\,R\left[\frac{1-\left(1+i\right)^{-n}}{i}\right] = R\cdot a_{\overline{n}|i}](images/6e16914c864f8fa0f67242b3778152e0.png)
Clearly,
in the limit as n increases,

Thus,
even an infinite series of finite payments (perpetuity) with
a non-zero discount rate has a finite present value.
Proof
The next
payment is to be paid in one period. Thus, the present value
is computed to be:
.
We notice
that the second factor is a geometric progression of scale
factor 1 and of common ratio
.
We can write
.
Finally,
after simplifications, we obtain
.
Similarly,
we can prove the formula for the future value. The payment
made at the end of the last year would accumulate no interest
and the payment made at the end of the first year would accumulate
interest for a total of (n-1) years. Therefore,
.
Hence:
.
Additional
formula
If an
annuity is for repaying a debt P with interest, the
amount owed after n payments is:

because
the scheme is equivalent with lending an amount
and putting part of that, an amount ,
in the bank to grow due to interest. See also fixed rate mortgage.
Also,
this can be though of the present value of the remaining payments:

Annuity-due
An annuity-due
is an annuity whose payments are made at the beginning of
each period.
Deposits in savings, rent or lease payments, and insurance
premiums are examples of annuities due.
Because
each annuity payment is allowed to compound for one extra
period, the value of an annuity-due is equal to the value
of the corresponding ordinary annuity multiplied by (1+i).
Thus, the future value of an annuity-due can be calculated
through the formula (variables named as above):[3]
(annuity notation)
It can
also be written as
(1
+ i)
An annuity-due
with n payments is the sum of one annuity payment now and
an ordinary annuity with one payment less, and also equal,
with a time shift, to an ordinary annuity with one payment
more, minus the last payment.
Thus we
have:
(value at the time of the first of n payments of
1)
(value one period after the time of the last of n
payments of 1)
Formula
for Finding the Periodic payment(R), Given A:
R = A/(1+?(1-(1+(j/m)
)?^(-(n-1))/(j/m))
Examples:
1. Find the periodic payment of an annuity due of $70000,
payable annually for 3 years at 15% compounded annually.
R=
70000/(1+?(1-(1+((.15)/1) )?^(-(3-1))/((.15)/1)) R = 70000/2.625708885
R = $26659.46724
2. Find
the periodic payment of an annuity due of $250700, payable
quarterly for 8 years at 5% compounded quarterly.
R= 250700/(1+?(1-(1+((.05)/4)
)?^(-(32-1))/((.05)/4)) R = 250700/26.5692901 R = $9435.71
Finding
the Periodic Payment(R), Given S:
R = S\,/((?((1+(j/m)
)?^(n+1)-1)/(j/m)-1)
Examples:
1. Find the periodic payment of an accumulated value of $55000,
payable monthly for 3 years at 15% compounded monthly.
R=55000/((?((1+((.15)/12) )?^(36+1)-1)/((.15)/12)-1)
R = 55000/45.67944932 R = $1204.04
2. Find
the periodic payment of an accumulated value of $1600000,
payable annually for 3 years at 9% compounded annually.
R=1600000/((?((1+((.09)/1) )?^(3+1)-1)/((.09)/1)-1) R = 1600000/3.573129
R = $447786.80
In the
U.S. an annuity contract is created when an insured
party, usually an individual, pays a life insurance company
a single premium that will later be distributed back to the
insured party over time. Annuity
contracts traditionally provide a guaranteed distribution
of income over time, until the death of the person or persons
named in the contract or until a final date, whichever comes
first. However, the majority of modern annuity customers use
annuities only to accumulate funds free of income and capital
gains taxes and to later take lump-sum withdrawals without
using the guaranteed-income-for-life feature.
General
Annuity
contracts in the United
States are defined by the Internal
Revenue Code and regulated by the individual states. Variable
annuities have features of both life
insurance and investment
products.
In the U.S., annuity insurance may be issued only by life
insurance companies, although private annuity contracts
may be arranged between donors to non-profits to reduce taxes.
Insurance companies are regulated by the states, so contracts
or options that may be available in some states may not be
available in others. Their federal tax treatment, however,
is governed by the Internal Revenue Code. Variable annuities
are regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission and
the sale of variable annuities is overseen by the Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) (the largest non-governmental
regulator for all securities firms doing business in the United
States).
There
are two possible phases for an annuity, one phase in which
the customer deposits and accumulates money into an account
(the deferral phase), and another phase in which customers
receive payments for some period of time (the annuity or income
phase). During this latter phase, the insurance company makes
income payments that may be set for a stated period of time,
such as five years, or continue until the death of the customer(s)
(the "annuitant(s)") named in the contract. Annuitization
over a lifetime can have a death benefit guarantee over a
certain period of time, such as ten years. Annuity contracts
with a deferral phase always have an annuity phase and are
called deferred annuities. An annuity contract may also be
structured so that it has only the annuity phase; such a contract
is called an immediate annuity. Note this is not always the
case.
Immediate
annuity
The term
"annuity," as used in financial theory, is most closely related
to what is today called an immediate annuity. This
is an insurance
policy which, in exchange for a sum of money, guarantees
that the issuer will make a series of payments. These payments
may be either level or increasing periodic payments for a
fixed term of years or until the ending of a life or two lives,
or even whichever is longer. It is also possible to structure
the payments under an immediate annuity so that they vary
with the performance of a specified set of investments, usually
bond and equity mutual funds. Such a contract is called a
variable immediate annuity. See also life annuity, below.
The overarching
characteristic of the immediate annuity is that it is a vehicle
for distributing savings
with a tax-deferred growth factor. A common use for an immediate
annuity might be to provide a pension
income. In the U.S., the tax treatment of a non-qualified
immediate annuity is that every payment is a combination of
a return of principal (which part is not taxed) and income
(which is taxed at ordinary
income rates, not capital gain rates). Immediate annuities
funded as an IRA do not have any tax advantages, but typically
the distribution satisfies the IRS RMD requirement and may
satisfy the RMD requirement for other IRA accounts of the
owner (see IRS Sec 1.401(a)(9)-6.)
When a
deferred annuity is annuitized, it works like an immediate
annuity from that point on, but with a lower cost basis and
thus more of the payment is taxed.
Annuity
with period certain
This type
of immediate annuity pays the annuitant for a designated number
of years (i.e., a period certain) and is used to fund a need
that will end when the period is up (for example, it might
be used to fund the premiums for a term life insurance policy).
Thus this option is not necessarily suitable for an individual's
retirement income, as the person may outlive the number of
years the annuity will pay.
Life annuity
A life
or lifetime immediate annuity is used to provide an income
for the life of the annuitant similar to a defined
benefit or pension
plan.
A life
annuity works somewhat like a loan that is made by the
purchaser (contract owner) to the issuing (insurance) company,
which pays back the original capital or principal (which isn't
taxed) with interest and/or gains (which is taxed as ordinary
income) to the annuitant on whose life the annuity
is based. The assumed period of the loan is based on the life
expectancy of the annuitant. In order to guarantee that the
income continues for life, the insurance company relies on
a concept called cross-subsidy or the "law of large
numbers". Because an annuity population can be expected
to have a distribution of lifespans around the population's
mean (average) age,
those dying earlier will give up income to support those living
longer whose money would otherwise run out. Thus it is a form
of longevity
insurance (see also below).
A life
annuity, ideally, can reduce the "problem" faced by a person
that he/she doesn't know how long he/she will live, and so
he/she doesn't know the optimal speed at which to spend his/her
savings. Life annuities with payments indexed to the Consumer
Price Index might be an acceptable solution to this problem,
but there is only a thin market for them in North America.
Life
annuity variants
For an
additional expense (either by way of an increase in payments
(premium) or a decrease in benefits), an annuity or benefit
rider can be purchased
on another life such as a spouse, family member or friend
for the duration of whose life the annuity is wholly or partly
guaranteed. For example, it is common to buy an annuity which
will continue to pay out to the spouse of the annuitant after
death, for so long as the spouse survives. The annuity paid
to the spouse is called a reversionary annuity or survivorship
annuity. However, if the annuitant is in good health, it may
be more advantageous to select the higher payout option on
his or her life only and purchase a life insurance policy
that would pay income to the survivor.
The pure
life annuity can have harsh consequences for the annuitant
who dies before recovering his or her investment in the contract.
Such a situation, called a forfeiture, can be mitigated by
the addition of a period-certain feature under which the annuity
issuer is required to make annuity payments for at least a
certain number of years; if the annuitant outlives the specified
period certain, annuity payments continue until the annuitant's
death, and if the annuitant dies before the expiration of
the period certain, the annuitant's estate or beneficiary
is entitled to the remaining payments certain. The tradeoff
between the pure life annuity and the life-with-period-certain
annuity is that the annuity payment for the latter is smaller.
A viable alternative to the life-with-period-certain annuity
is to purchase a single-premium life policy that would cover
the lost premium in the annuity.
Impaired-life
annuities for smokers
or those with a particular illness are also available from
some insurance companies. Since the life expectancy is reduced,
the annual payment to the purchaser is raised.
Life annuities
are priced based on the probability of the annuitant surviving
to receive the payments. Longevity
insurance is a form of annuity that defers commencement
of the payments until very late in life. A common longevity
contract would be purchased at or before retirement but would
not commence payments until 20 years after retirement. If
the nominee dies before payments commence there is no payable
benefit. This drastically reduces the cost of the annuity
while still providing protection against outliving one's resources.
Deferred annuity
The second
usage for the term annuity came into being during the
1970s. Such a contract is more properly referred to as a deferred
annuity and is chiefly a vehicle for accumulating savings
with a view to eventually distributing them either in the
manner of an immediate annuity or as a lump-sum payment.
All varieties
of deferred annuities owned by individuals have one thing
in common: any increase in account values is not taxed until
those gains are withdrawn. This is also known as tax-deferred
growth.
A deferred
annuity which grows by interest rate earnings alone is called
a fixed deferred annuity (FA). A deferred annuity that
permits allocations to stock or bond funds and for which the
account value is not guaranteed to stay above the initial
amount invested is called a variable annuity (VA).
A new
category of deferred annuity, called the fixed indexed
annuity (FIA) emerged in 1995 (originally called an Equity-Indexed
Annuity).
fixed indexed annuities may have features of both fixed and
variable deferred annuities. The insurance company typically
guarantees a minimum return for EIA. An investor can still
lose money if he or she cancels (or surrenders) the policy
early, before a "break even" period. An oversimplified expression
of a typical EIA's rate
of return might be that it is equal to a stated "participation
rate" multiplied by a target stock
market index's performance excluding dividends. Interest
rate caps or an administrative fee may be applicable.
Deferred
annuities in the United States have the advantage that taxation
of all capital gains and ordinary income is deferred until
withdrawn. In theory, such tax-deferred compounding allows
more money to be put to work while the savings are accumulating,
leading to higher returns. A disadvantage, however, is that
when amounts held under a deferred annuity are withdrawn or
inherited, the interest/gains are immediately taxed as ordinary
income.
Features
A variety
of features and guarantees have been developed by insurance
companies in order to make annuity products more attractive.
These include death and living benefit options, extra credit
options, account guarantees, spousal continuation benefits,
reduced contingent deferred sales charges (or surrender charges),
and various combinations thereof. Each feature or benefit
added to a contract will typically be accompanied by an additional
expense either directly (billed to client) or indirectly (inside
product).
Deferred
annuities are usually divided into two different kinds:
- Fixed
annuities offer some sort of guaranteed rate of return over
the life of the contract. In general such contracts are
often positioned to be somewhat like bank CDs and offer
a rate of return competitive with those of CDs of similar
time frames. Many fixed annuities, however, do not have
a fixed rate of return over the life of the contract, offering
instead a guaranteed minimum rate and a first year introductory
rate. The rate after the first year is often an amount that
may be set at the insurance company's discretion subject,
however, to the minimum amount (typically 3%). There are
usually some provisions in the contract to allow a percentage
of the interest and/or principal to be withdrawn early and
without penalty (usually the interest earned in a 12-month
period or 10%), unlike most CDs. Fixed annuities normally
become fully liquid depending on the surrender schedule
or upon the owner's death. Most equity index annuities are
properly categorized as fixed annuities and their performance
is typically tied to a stock market index (usually the S&P
500 or the Dow Jones Industrial Average). These products
are guaranteed but are not as easy to understand as standard
fixed annuities as there are usually caps, spreads, margins,
and crediting methods that can reduce returns. These products
also don't pay any of the participating market indices'
dividends; the trade-off is that contract holder can never
earn less than 0% in a negative year.
- Variable
annuities allow money to be invested in insurance company
"separate accounts" (which are sometimes referred to as
"subaccounts" and in any case are functionally similar to
mutual funds) in a tax-deferred manner.
Their primary use is to allow an investor to engage in tax-deferred
investing for retirement in amounts greater than permitted
by individual retirement or 401(k)
plans. In addition, many variable annuity contracts offer
a guaranteed minimum rate of return (either for a future
withdrawal and/or in the case of the owner's death), even
if the underlying separate account investments perform poorly.
This can be attractive to people uncomfortable investing
in the equity markets without the guarantees. Of course,
an investor will pay for each benefit provided by a variable
annuity, since insurance companies must charge a premium
to cover the insurance guarantees of such benefits. Variable
annuities are regulated both by the individual states (as
insurance products) and by the Securities and Exchange Commission
(as securities under the federal securities laws). The SEC
requires that all of the charges under variable annuities
be described in great detail in the prospectus that is offered
to each variable annuity customer. Of course, potential
customers should review these charges carefully, just as
one would in purchasing mutual fund shares. People who sell
variable annuities are usually regulated by FINRA, whose
rules of conduct require a careful analysis of the suitability
of variable annuities (and other securities products) to
those to whom they recommend such products. These products
are often criticized as being sold to the wrong persons,
who could have done better investing in a more suitable
alternative, since the commissions paid under this product
are often high relative to other investment products.
There
are several types of performance guarantees, and one may often
choose them à la carte, with higher risk charges for guarantees
that are riskier for the insurance companies. The first type
is a guaranteed minimum death benefit (GMDB), which can be
received only if the owner of the annuity contract, or the
covered annuitant, dies.
GMDBs
come in various flavors, in order of increasing risk to the
insurance company:
- Return
of premium (a guarantee that you will not have a negative
return)
- Roll-up
of premium at a particular rate (a guarantee that you will
achieve a minimum rate of return, greater than 0)
- Maximum
anniversary value (looks back at account value on the anniversaries,
and guarantees you will get at least as much as the highest
values upon death)
- Greater
of maximum anniversary value or particular roll-up
Insurance
companies provide even greater insurance coverage on guaranteed
living benefits, which tend to be elective. Unlike death benefits,
which the contractholder generally can't time, living benefits
pose significant risk for insurance companies as contractholders
will likely exercise these benefits when they are worth the
most. Annuities with guaranteed living benefits (GLBs) tend
to have high fees commensurate with the additional risks underwritten
by the issuing insurer.
Some GLB
examples, in no particular order:
- Guaranteed
minimum income benefit (GMIB, a guarantee that one will
get a minimum income stream upon annuitization at a particular
point in the future)
- Guaranteed
minimum accumulation benefit (GMAB, a guarantee that the
account value will be at a certain amount at a certain point
in the future)
- Guaranteed
minimum withdrawal benefit (GMWB, a guarantee similar to
the income benefit, but one that doesn't require annuitizing)
- Guaranteed-for-life
income benefit (a guarantee similar to a withdrawal benefit,
where withdrawals begin and continue until cash value becomes
zero, withdrawals stop when cash value is zero and then
annuitization occurs on the guaranteed benefit amount for
a payment amount that is not determined until annuitization
date.)
Be careful
in regard to using GLB riders in non-qualified contracts as
most of the products in the annuity marketplace today create
a 100% taxable income benefit whereas income generated from
an immediate annuity in a non-qualified contract would partially
be a return of principal and therefore non-taxable.
Criticisms
of deferred annuities
Deferred
annuities are generally sold by financial professionals, some
of whom may work directly for an insurance company. Most financial
professionals, however, are independent agents of the insurance
company, not employees. The financial professional who sells
an annuity collects a commission from the insurance company.
This commission will be a percentage of the total premium
paid by the investor. This percentage can be as little as
1% and as high as 12%; the average is 6%. Since these commissions
appear high and there are deferred sales charges on annuities,
many financial gurus have criticized annuity products.
The investor
will, generally, not pay any of this commission directly to
the financial professional; the commission is paid by the
insurance company to the financial professional up front.
The insurance company will recapture the commission paid to
the financial professional through the fees charged to the
customer (in a variable or fixed indexed annuity) or the spread
in the interest rate market (for a fixed annuity). There are
also deferred back-end charges that will be applied if the
investor closes out his or her contract before the agreed-upon
time frame, usually 8 years. These charges can last for as
little as 1 year or as many as 20 years, depending on the
type of annuity and issuing company. These back-end charges
concern many financial professionals and financial gurus.
Some annuities
do not have any deferred surrender charges and do not pay
the financial professional a commission, although the financial
professional may charge a fee for his or her advice. These
contracts are called "no-load" variable annuity products and
are usually available from a fee-based financial planner or
directly from a no-load mutual fund company. Of course various
charges are still imposed on these contracts, but they are
less than those sold by commissioned brokers. It is important
that potential purchasers—of annuities, mutual funds, tax-exempt
municipal bonds, commodities futures, interest-rate swaps,
in short, any financial instrument—understand the fees on
the product and the fees a financial planner may charge.
Variable
annuities are controversial because many believe the extra
fees (i.e., the fees above and beyond those charged for similar
retail mutual funds that offer no principal protection or
guarantees of any kind) may reduce the rate of return compared
to what the investor could make by investing directly in similar
investments outside of the variable annuity. A big selling
point for variable annuities is the guarantees many have,
such as the guarantee that the customer will not lose his
or her principal. Critics say that these guarantees are not
necessary because over the long term the market has always
been positive, while others say that with the uncertainty
of the financial markets many investors simply will not invest
without guarantees. Past returns are no guarantee of future
performance, of course, and different investors have different
risk tolerances, different investment horizons, different
family situations, and so on. The sale of any security product
should involve a careful analysis of the suitability of the
product for a given individual.
A controversial
practice of insurance sales is the selling of insurance contracts
within an IRA or 401(k) plan. Since these investment vehicles
are already tax deferred, investors do not receive additional
tax shelters from the annuities. The benefit of the annuity
contract is the guaranteed lifetime income that all annuity
contracts must have by state law. Approximately 90% of annuitants,
however, have not taken the life annuity upon retirement.
If an investor does not intend to take the life income option
from an annuity contract at retirement he or she may want
to consider a low-cost deferred annuity.
If an
investor needs to take lifetime income at retirement, on the
other hand, he or she may want to try to buy an annuity upon
retirement or might consider selecting a 401(k) plan account
with an option to buy the annuity just before retirement.
Taxation
In the
U.S.
Internal
Revenue Code, the growth of the annuity value during the
accumulation phase is tax-deferred, that is, not subject to
current income
tax, for annuities owned by individuals. The tax deferred
status of deferred annuities has led to their common usage
in the United States. Under the U.S. tax code, the benefits
from annuity contracts do not always have to be taken in the
form of a fixed stream of payments (annuitization), and many
of annuity contracts are bought primarily for the tax benefits
rather than to receive a fixed stream of income. If an annuity
is used in a qualified pension plan or an IRA funding vehicle,
then 100% of the annuity payment is taxable as current income
upon distribution (because the taxpayer has no tax basis in
any of the money in the annuity). If the annuity contract
is purchased with after-tax dollars, then the contract holder
upon annuitization recovers his basis pro-rata in the ratio
of basis divided by the expected value, according to the tax
regulation Section 1.72-5. (This is commonly referred to as
the exclusion ratio.) After the taxpayer has recovered all
of his basis, then 100% of the payments thereafter are subject
to ordinary income tax.
Since
the Jobs
and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003, the
use of variable annuities as a tax shelter has greatly diminished,
because the growth of mutual funds and now most of the dividends
of the fund are taxed at long term capital gains rates. This
taxation, contrasted with the taxation of all the growth of
variable annuities at income rates, means that in most cases,
variable annuities shouldn't be used for tax shelters unless
very long holding periods apply (for example, more than 20
years).
Also,
any withdrawals before an investor reaches the age of 59 are
generally subject to a 10% tax penalty in addition to any
gain being taxed as ordinary income.
In the
October 2003 edition of Wealth Manager, an article titled
"Photo Finish" by W. McAfee, Jr.
examined the effects of taxation on annuities relative to
other investment vehicles. The author found that annuities
are generally not effective as a tax-deferral vehicle and
that there are significant flaws in the use of annuities for
financial planning during the accumulation phase.
Insurance
company default risk and state guaranty associations
An investor
should consider the financial strength of the insurance company
that writes annuity contracts. Major insolvencies have occurred
at least 62 times since the conspicuous collapse of the Executive
Life Insurance Company in 1991.[1]
Insurance
company defaults are governed by state law. The laws are,
however, broadly similar in most states. Annuity contracts
are protected against insurance company insolvency up to a
specific dollar limit, often $100,000, but as high as $500,000
in New York [2],
New Jersey [3],
and the state of Washington [4].
This protection is not insurance and is not provided by a
government agency. It is provided by an entity called the
state Guaranty Association. When an insolvency occurs, the
Guaranty Association steps in to protect annuity holders,
and decides what to do on a case-by-case basis. Sometimes
the contracts will be taken over and fulfilled by a solvent
insurance company.
The state
Guaranty Association is not a government agency, but states
usually require insurance companies to belong to it as a condition
of being licensed to do business. The Guaranty Associations
of the fifty states are members of a national umbrella association,
the National
Organization of Life and Health Insurance Guaranty Associations
(NOLHGA). The NOLHGA
website provides a description of the organization, links
to websites for the individual state organizations, and links
to the actual text of the governing state laws.
A difference
between guaranty association protection and the protection
e.g. of bank accounts by FDIC, credit union accounts by NCUA,
and brokerage accounts by SIPC, is that it is difficult for
consumers to learn about this protection. Usually, state law
prohibits insurance agents and companies from using the guaranty
association in any advertising and agents are prohibited by
statute from using this Web site or the existence of the guaranty
association as an inducement to purchase insurance(e.g. [5]).
Presumably this is a response to concerns by stronger insurance
companies about moral
hazard.
Compensation
for advisors or salespeople
Deferred
annuities, including fixed, fixed indexed and variable, typically
pay the advisor or salesperson 1 percent to 10 percent of
the amount invested as a commission, with possible trail options
of 25 basis points to 1 percent. Sometimes the advisor can
select his payout option, which might be either 7 or 10 percent
up front, or 5 percent up front with a 25 basis point trail,
or 1 percent to 3 percent up front with a 1 percent trail.
Trail commissions are most common in variable annuities while
fixed annuities typically only pay an up front commission.
Fixed indexed annuities with long surrender periods (10 years
or more) typically pay the highest commissions.
Some firms
allow an investor to pick an annuity share class, which determines
the salesperson's commission schedule. The main variables
are the up-front commission and the trailing commission.
"No-load"
variable annuities are available on a direct-to-consumer basis
from several no-load mutual
fund companies. "No-load" means the products have no sales
commissions or surrender charges. Fixed and Indexed Annuity
commissions are paid by the insurance companies the licensed
agent represents. Commissions are not paid out of the client's
principal.
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DISCLAIMER:
We have provided this information for information and educational
purposes only. Our site is no substitute for professional financial
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of fact. It is neither a legal interpretation or a statement
of fact, truth or law, please consult with an attorney, financial
planner or other advisor who specializes in securities law and
annuities.
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TYPESOFANNUITIES.INFO
UNDERSTANDING
THE TYPES OF ANNUITES
GUIDE TO TYPES OF ANNUITIES, GUIDE TO TYPES OF ANNUITIES,
INFO: TYPES OF ANNUITIES, ANNUITY TYPES,
TYPES OF ANNUITIES
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