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Annuity Fundamentals Linda L. Lanam Vice President, Annuities & Market Regulation May 2005
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Copyright American Council of Life Insurers 2004 Why annuities? Changing workplace retirement plans Increasing longevity Continuing low savings rate Growing possibility of outliving assets
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Copyright American Council of Life Insurers 2004 What is an annuity? An annuity is a contract issued by a life insurance company. An annuity can provide for savings and income in retirement. An annuity can offer either deferred or immediate payout. An annuity can offer fixed or variable earnings.
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Copyright American Council of Life Insurers 2004 Deferred Annuities A deferred annuity has two phases: accumulation and payout. A deferred annuity provides tax-deferred savings in accumulation and insurance against outliving accumulated assets in payout. In a deferred annuity, the policyholder may make single or multiple premium payments. There are no federal premium limits but the premiums are paid with after-tax dollars. Earnings on the premium(s) are credited until the contract is surrendered or annuitized. The earnings are tax-deferred until withdrawal or annuitization.
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Copyright American Council of Life Insurers 2004 Deferred Annuities Deferred annuity policyholders can obtain funds from their annuity by: –full surrender –partial surrender/withdrawal –term certain payout –lifetime payout (annuitization)
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Copyright American Council of Life Insurers 2004 Deferred Annuities Withdrawals from a deferred annuity before the policyholder is age 59 ½ are generally subject to a 10% penalty tax. Surrenders are taxed on an “income out first” basis. Surrender of a deferred annuity may be subject to a charge in the initial years of the contract. The surrender charge is a percentage of the account value of the contract.
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Copyright American Council of Life Insurers 2004 Deferred Annuities Payout from a deferred annuity may be either for a fixed term or for life (i.e., life contingent). A life contingent payout is also referred to as annuitization. Life contingent annuity payouts provide a higher level of sustainable lifetime income than withdrawals from non- annuitized investments alone
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Copyright American Council of Life Insurers 2004 Immediate Annuities An immediate annuity has only one phase: payout. Periodic payments from an immediate annuity must begin within one year after the initial premium payment. Periodic payments can be monthly, quarterly or annual.
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Copyright American Council of Life Insurers 2004 Fixed vs. Variable Annuities A fixed annuity earns a fixed rate of return and provides a fixed periodic payout at annuitization. A variable annuity earns a return based on the performance of an underlying account, usually of stocks and bonds, and payout can be either fixed or variable.
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Copyright American Council of Life Insurers 2004 Death Benefits Most annuities provide a death benefit if the policyholder dies prior to annuitization. The beneficiary of the contract will usually receive a death benefit based on the premiums paid or the cash value.
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Copyright American Council of Life Insurers 2004 Regulation of Annuities Product Content Advertising and disclosure materials Sales Practices
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Copyright American Council of Life Insurers 2004 Qualified Annuities Qualified annuities are those issued in connection with workplace retirement plans, such as 403(b) or 457(b) plans. Premiums paid into a qualified annuity are excluded from income. An IRA can also be an annuity (Individual Retirement Annuity). Funds accumulated in a 401(k) plan may be “rolled over” into an Individual Retirement Annuity.
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Copyright American Council of Life Insurers 2004 Who owns individual annuities? Based on the Gallup Survey Of Owners Of Non-Qualified Annuity Contracts, November 2001
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Copyright American Council of Life Insurers 2004 Who owns individual annuities? Based on the Gallup Survey Of Owners Of Non-Qualified Annuity Contracts, November 2001
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