Title: Annuities and IRAs
1Annuities and IRAs
2Annuities
- 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
3Tax-deferred Compounding Builds Wealth Faster
4Annuities
- Types
- Fixed Annuity
- Variable Annuity
- Equity Indexed
5Fixed 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
6Illustration of the Accumulation Period and the
Liquidation Period
7Fixed 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
8Annuity 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
9Annuity 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
10Variable 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
11Variable 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
12Variable 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
13Variable 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
14Five Low-Cost Variable Annuities
15Annuity Funds Performance and Fees
16Equity-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)
17Taxation 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
18Individual Retirement Accounts
- Traditional IRAs
- Roth IRAs
- Education IRAs
19Traditional 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)
20Traditional 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)
212001 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
22Withdrawal
- 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)
23Taxation 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)
24How Long Will Your Retirement Assets Last?
25Roth 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
26Roth 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
27Education 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
282001 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
29Comparison of IRA Accounts
30Comparison of IRA Accounts