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Annuities and IRAs

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Title: Annuities and IRAs


1
Annuities and IRAs
  • Lecture 18

2
Annuities
  • Annuity a periodic payment that continues for a
    fixed period or for the duration of a designated
    life or lives
  • Purpose to provide lifetime income that cannot
    be outlived
  • Advantage Investment income accumulates on
    tax-deferred basis taxed when paid out

3
Tax-deferred Compounding Builds Wealth Faster
4
Annuities
  • Types
  • Fixed Annuity
  • Variable Annuity
  • Equity Indexed

5
Fixed Annuity
  • Pays periodic income payments that are guaranteed
    and fixed in amount
  • Two rates
  • Guaranteed rate minimum rate credited
  • Current rate based on market conditions
  • Accumulation period
  • Liquidation Period

6
Illustration of the Accumulation Period and the
Liquidation Period
7
Fixed Annuity, cont.
  • Immediate annuity first payment begins one
    interval from date of purchase
  • Deferred annuity income payments begin at
    future date
  • Annuitant dies death benefit paid out typically
    equal to sum of premiums or cash value, whichever
    is higher
  • Single-premium deferred annuity
  • Flexible premium annuity

8
Annuity Settlement Options
  • Cash option lump sum or in installments
  • Life annuity (no refund) provides life income
    while annuitant alive payments end at death
  • Highest periodic income
  • Suitable for income needs w/ no dependents
  • Life annuity w/ guaranteed payments
  • Usually 5, 10, 15 or 20 years

9
Annuity Settlement Options
  • Installment refund pays life income to
    annuitant
  • If annuitant dies, payments continue to a
    designated beneficiary until they equal the
    purchase price
  • Joint and survivor pays benefits based on the
    lives of two or more annuitants
  • Income paid until last survivor dies

10
Variable Annuity
  • Pays lifetime income, but income payments vary
    depending on stock prices
  • Considered an inflation hedge
  • Premiums invested in portfolio of stocks and
    other investments
  • Premiums purchase accumulation units
  • More or less units depending on price

11
Variable Annuity
  • At retirement, accumulation units converted into
    annuity units
  • Number of annuity units remains constant, but the
    value of each unit changes with stock prices
  • Ex 10,000 accumulation units converted into 100
    annuity units (monthly)
  • If value of unit 10, receive 1,000 if value
    falls to 9.90, receive 990

12
Variable Annuities, cont.
  • Typically provide a guaranteed death benefit
  • Paid higher of
  • Amount invested in contract
  • Cash value of account
  • Some pay enhanced benefits rising floor or
    stepped up benefits

13
Variable Annuities, cont.
  • Fees and expenses
  • Investment management charge
  • Administrative charge
  • Management and expense risk (ME) charge
    mortality risk associated with guaranteed death
    benefit
  • Surrender charge
  • Front and/or back-end loads
  • Can easily exceed 2 of assets

14
Five Low-Cost Variable Annuities
15
Annuity Funds Performance and Fees
16
Equity-Indexed Annuity
  • Fixed, deferred annuity that
  • Allows participation in growth of stock market
  • Provides downside protection against loss of
    principal if held to term
  • Participation rate percentage of growth in
    stock index credited to account (25 to 90)
  • Maximum percentage of gain
  • Guaranteed minimum value (usually 90 of premium
    accumulated at 3)

17
Taxation of Annuities
  • Do not qualify for retirement plan benefits
  • Premiums not tax-deductible and are paid with
    after-tax dollars
  • Taxable portion taxed as ordinary income
  • 10 penalty for distribution prior to 59 ½
  • Exclusion ratio investment in contract/
    expected return (expected total payments)
  • Net cost is recovered using exclusion ratio
    income tax free

18
Individual Retirement Accounts
  • Traditional IRAs
  • Roth IRAs
  • Education IRAs

19
Traditional IRA
  • Can deduct part or all of contribution
  • Investment income accumulates income-tax free on
    tax-deferred basis
  • Distributions taxed as ordinary income
  • Nonworking spouse can increase contribution to
    4,000 (spousal IRA)

20
Traditional IRA - eligibility
  • Must have taxable compensation
  • Must be under age 70 ½
  • Contribution limits 2,000, or 100 of taxable
    income, whichever is less
  • Contributions deductible if
  • Not a participant in employee sponsored plan
  • Is a participant, but modified AGI below certain
    thresholds also, spouse can make deductible
    contrib.
  • Can still contribute in non-deductible way (Roth)

21
2001 Tax act
  • Contribution limits changed
  • 2001 2,000
  • 2002 2004 3,000
  • 2005 2007 4,000
  • 2008 after 5,000
  • Catch-up IRA contributions
  • Age 50 and older
  • Increases from 2000 to 6000 in 2008

22
Withdrawal
  • Withdrawals prior to age 59 ½ are premature
    distributions 10 tax penalty
  • Exceptions
  • Death or disability
  • Annuitized
  • Return of non-deductible contributions
  • Certain medical expenses or medical insurance
  • Qualified higher education expenses
  • Qualified expenses for 1st time home-buyer (to
    10,000)

23
Taxation of traditional IRA
  • Distributions are taxed as ordinary income
  • Except nondeductible contributions, which are
    income-tax free
  • 10 penalty for early withdrawal
  • IRA rollover tax-free distribution from one
    retirement plan directly into another (note if
    you receive funds, 20 is withheld for federal
    income taxes)

24
How Long Will Your Retirement Assets Last?
25
Roth IRA
  • Maximum contribution 2,000 (see 2001 tax act
    slide however)
  • Contributions are NOT tax deductible
  • Income accumulates income-tax free
  • Distributions are not taxable if certain
    requirements are met

26
Roth IRA
  • Qualified distributions made after a five year
    period after first contribution and
  • Age 59 ½ or older
  • Disabled
  • Paid to beneficiary or estate after death
  • First-time homebuyer (max of 10,000)
  • Contributions can be made after 70 ½, and no
    minimum distribution rules
  • Conversion should do calculation

27
Education IRA
  • Non-deductible contributions of 500 annually for
    qualified higher education expenses
  • Investment income accumulates income-tax free
  • Distributions not taxable if for qualified higher
    education expenses (tuition, room, board, books,
    fees, supplies)
  • AGI limits apply

28
2001 Tax Act
  • Now includes elementary and secondary school
    expenses, including
  • Tuition at private schools
  • Computer expenses
  • Contribution limits expanded increases to 2000
    in 2002
  • Income eligibility limits raised
  • Phaseout 190,000 220,000 married couples
  • 95,000 to 110,000 single

29
Comparison of IRA Accounts
30
Comparison of IRA Accounts
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