Title: Annuities
1Annuities
- Objectives
- Identify the characteristics, features, and usage
of deferred annuities - Identify the characteristics, features, and usage
of immediate annuities - Understand how to calculate immediate annuity
payments. - Understand how to calculate the exclusion ratio
for immediate annuity payments.
2Annuities Introduction
- What is the risk that you insure with an
annuity? - Risk Of Old Age
- basically, the risk of outliving income/wealth
- The annuity product transfers this risk to an
insurer
3What is an annuity?
- Financial Definition A Stream Of Payments
Through Time - Contracts providing for the systematic
liquidation principal and interest in the form of
a series of payments over a period of time
4Insurers separate an annuity into two phases
- Annuities may be deferred or immediate
- An immediate annuity has no accumulation phase
Investor makes cash payments to the insurance
company. The money remains invested with the
insurance company and is periodically credited
with some growth factor
The insurance company agrees to pay the owner a
specified amount periodically, beginning on a
specified date.
5Types of Annuities just the basics
- Immediate annuity Payout begins within one year
of the date the contract is established - Deferred annuity Payout begins more than one
year of the date the contract is established - Life annuity Payouts will continue as long as
the annuitant lives - Fixed period annuity Company promises a payout
for a fixed or guaranteed period of time,
independent of the survival of the annuitant - Combination of life and fixed period payout for
example, the greater of ten years for the life of
the annuitant - Fixed annuity Invested in the general fixed
account of the insurance company - Variable annuity Invested in the separately
managed sub-accounts selected by the annuity
owner - Additional features
- Guaranteed death benefits
- Living benefits - company guaranteed benefits
for owners or beneficiaries - That would be higher than actual investment
performance would provide for - Variable annuitization
- Payments fluctuate depending on the investment
performance of the underlying sub-accounts
6Taxation of Annuities
- Taxation is governed by IRC section 72
- Accumulation phase
- Growth is tax deferred
- Withdrawals during this phase are taxed on a LIFO
basis - Withdrawals are considered to be withdrawals of
growth first and principal second - Payout phase
- A portion of each payout is considered a return
of principal - A portion of each payout is considered interest
or growth - Calculation of those portions (the exclusion
ratio) depends on the principal invested, the
period of the payout and an internal growth
factor for the payout period
7Taxation - Details
- An exclusion ratio is used to determine the
amount that is taxed vs. the amount that is
exempt from taxation. -
- Applies to each annuity payment equally
throughout the payout phase - Example Male aged 70 pays 12,000 for the
annuity. His expected return throughout the
payout phase is 19,200. - The exclusion ratio is 62.50
- If the monthly payment is 100, then
- 62.50 is considered a return of principal
- 37.50 is considered taxable income
- Once the entire investment in the contract has
been recovered, then 100 of each annuity payment
received is taxable income
8Taxation - Details
- The expected return is the total amount the
annuity owner should receive - Payments specified x life expectancy (or term
certain if elected) - Life expectancy based on IRS Table V (single
lives) or Table VI ( joint lives) - If annuitant dies before receiving the full
amount guaranteed under a refund or period
certain annuity - Balanced received will not be taxed (unless it
exceeds the investment in the contract) - For joint and survivor annuities
- Surviving owner excludes from income the same
percentage of each payment that was excludible by
the first annuitant - An income tax deduction may be available to the
survivor owner to the extent inclusion of the
annuity in the estate of the first annuitant
generated an estate tax (IRD)
9Taxation - Details
- Partial withdrawals are subject to income tax,
e.g., if the owner makes a partial withdrawal and
takes a reduced annuity - If the owner takes a partial withdrawal chooses
same payments for different term - To the extent cash value exceeds investment in
the contract, gain will be realized in the form
of a taxable withdrawal of interest - Variable Annuities
- No tax will be paid until the earlier of
- Surrender of the contract
- Withdrawals from the contract
- Time that payments commence from the annuity
- To obtain annuity treatment the underlying
investments must be adequately diversified under
IRS regulations
10Taxation - Details
- A different exclusion ratio is applied to
variable annuities - Example
- Male aged 65 purchases variable annuity for
20,000 - Life expectancy of 20 years (Based on Table V)
- He can exclude 1,000 from each payment (20,000
/ 20) - Assume at age 70 he receives only 200 (800 less
than his excludible amount) - Assume at age 70 his life expectancy is 16 years
- He can add 50 (800/16) to his 1,000 excludible
amount
11Taxation - Details
- If the annuitant dies before payments received
equal cost - A loss deduction allowed for the amount of
un-recovered investment, as an itemized deduction - Amounts payable under a deferred annuity at the
death of annuitant - Partially taxable as ordinary income to the
beneficiary - Equal to excess of death benefit over gross
premiums - Dividends, loans, cash withdrawals and other
amounts that are taken out before the annuity
starting date are taxed as ordinary income to
extend the cash value exceeds the investment in
the contract - LIFO basis
12Taxation - Details
- Premature Distributions are subject to ordinary
income tax plus a 10 penalty tax - Tax applies to amount of distribution included in
income - Penalty for premature distributions does not
apply to - Payments that are part of a substantial equal
periodic payments made for life - Payments on or after age 59½
- Payments made on account of contracts owner
disability - Payments from qualified retirement plans and
IRAs - Payments to beneficiary after death of annuitant
- Distributions under an immediate annuity contract
- Annuity purchased on the termination of certain
qualified employer retirement plans - Payments allocable to investment in the contract
before August 14th, 1982
13Taxation - Details
- If annuitant dies before annuity starting date
- Cash value must be distributed within 5 years of
death or - Used within one year to provide for a life
annuity or installments payments not longer than
the beneficiaries life expectancy - If spouse is the beneficiary, spouse can elect to
become the new owner of the contract instead - If an annuity contract is transferred by gift,
tax deferral allowed on the inside build-up is
terminated - Tax-free build-up is allowed only to natural
persons - For non-natural persons income is treated as
ordinary income in the year received - Some exceptions include annuities received by the
executor of a decedent, annuities held by a
qualified retirement plan or IRA, Annuities
purchased by an employer on termination of a
qualified plan
14When should one consider using an annuity?
- When a person wants a retirement income that
cannot be outlived - When an individual wants a retirement income
higher than their other conservative investments
and is willing to have principal liquidated - To avoid probate and pass a large sum of money by
contract to an heir and reduce the possibility of
a will contest - When tax deferred growth is desired for an
investment - When an investor wants to be free of the
responsibility of investing and managing assets - As a supplement to an IRA
15Fixed or Variable?
- Variable
- Investor wants more control over the investments
and is willing to bear the risk - Investor is looking for potentially increasing
retirement income - Investor wants to be invested in variable
sub-accounts, but also desires some aspect of
risk management - Guaranteed death benefits / living benefits
- Fixed
- Safety of principal is paramount
- Investor wants to guarantee a level of interest
- Investor desires a conservative complement to
other investments
16Advantages of Annuities
- Guarantees of safety, interest rates and lifelong
income - Protects and preserves persons cash reserves
- Allows investment in the market while moderating
risk - Client can time the receipt of income and shift
it into lower tax bracket years - An annuity paying the same rate of interest as a
taxable investment will result in a higher
effective yield - Underlying guarantees in variable annuities allow
client to take on greater risk in the underlying
investment options (equities, small market
capitalizations, high yield bonds etc.) while
still maintaining a reasonable risk exposure - Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) may be reduced in
years where the annuity is held without
withdrawals - Lower taxable income may be recognized during the
payout phase, due to partial recovery of basis
associated with each payment
17Disadvantages of Annuities
- Receipt of lump sum could result in a significant
tax burden - Income averaging may not be available
- Cash flow received may not keep pace with
inflation - A 10 penalty tax imposed on withdrawals prior to
age 59 ½ - Growth in corporate-owned annuities is subject to
taxation - Liquidation in the early years
- Management, maintenance fees could prove
expensive - Management fees and mortality charges could run
from 1 to 21/2 of the value of the contract - Back end surrender charges
- Investment earnings are taxed at owners ordinary
income tax rate - Regardless of the source or nature of the return
- Returns associated with long term capital
appreciation do not enjoy the capital gains tax
rate
18Deferred Annuities
- Goal Long-Term, Tax-Deferred Savings
- Premium types
- Investment
- Single (SPDA)
- Ongoing (FPA)
- Regular
- Flexible
19Timely Advice from Consumer Reports
- The fixed-dollar, deferred annuity offers safety
of principal and, often, outstanding long-term
guaranteed rates that could be very valuable over
15 or 20 years, should market-interest rates go
down. (If market-interest rates go up, the
insurance company would probably credit higher
rates.) - It is the only investment that can provide, at
your option, the security of a monthly payment
for life, regardless of how long you live. These
features make annuities a good way to save for
retirement.
20Types Of Deferred Annuities
- Fixed
- No Acquisition Charge
- Investment growth based on interest earnings
- Mortality Charge
- Other Charges
- Variable
- No Acquisition Charge
- Multiple investment options
- Investment growth based on investment choices and
performance - Mortality Charge
- Other Charges
21Deferred Sales Charges
22The Life Insurance Business (Sources of Income
in 1975)
23The Life Insurance Business (Sources of Income
in 2004)
24Sales Of Individual Annuities By Distribution
Channels
Source LIMRA International and the Insurance
Information Institute
25Variable Annuity Net Assets by Investment
Objective
26Sales of Variable Annuities, by producer type
27Net Assets of Variable Annuities, (1997-2006), in
billions
28Individual Annuity Considerations (1997-2003)
29(No Transcript)
30(No Transcript)
31Life Expectancy and the Need to Save
32Retirement Supports 3 Legged Stool (U.S. Model)
33Tax-Deferred Savings Benefits
Investment 25,000 I6 Tax Rate 28
- Two Options
- Pay yearly tax on investment gain
- FV71,966
- Defer tax on investment gain
- FV107,297-
- 23,043 84,254
34Examples of Surrender Charge and Rate Differences
Source http//www.annuityadvantage.com
35Withdrawals
- Partial Surrender
- Cash Out
- Annuitize
- Purchase Immediate Annuity
- Taxation
- Prior To 59 ½
- After 59 ½
- Partial Surrender
- Full Surrender
36Flexible Premium Deferred Annuity Constant
Funding
37Immediate Annuities
- Payment For Life
- Types
- Single Life, No Refund
- Period Certain
- Joint Survivor
- Variable Payout Based On Earnings
38Effect of Gender and Age on Immediate Annuity
Payments
Monthly income per 1000 of deposit Can
you explain these patterns?
39Nonparticipating Immediate Annuity Rates (Male)
40How are Immediate Annuities Used?
- Retirement Benefits
- Supplemental Benefits
- Legal Awards (Structured Settlements)
- Parent/Handicapped Child
- Private Annuities
41Using Deferred Annuities in Retirement Plans
Deferred Annuity
42Alternatives to Annuities
- Municipal bond funds
- Income exempt from federal and some state income
taxes - Money can be withdrawn without tax penalty
- Disadvantage
- Lack of guaranteed return
- Potential for capital losses if interest rates
rise and bonds sold before maturity - Single Premium Life Insurance
- Tax free death benefit
- Tax deferred growth of cash surrender values
- Withdrawals loans subject to LIFO taxation and
10 penalty if distribution occurred before age
59 ½
43Annuity Fees and Acquisition Costs
- Fees and acquisition costs
- Investment management fees
- Typically from .25 to about 1
- Administrative expense and mortality risk charge
- Typically from a low of about .5 to as high as
2 - Annual maintenance charge
- Typically 25 to 100
- Charges per fund exchange
- Usually less than 10
- Some companies permit a limited number of
charge-free exchanges per year - Maximum surrender charge
- Varies from company to company
- Generally phases out over a number of years
44Selecting the Best Annuity
- Compare costs and features in a spreadsheet
- Fixed annuities compare the total outlay with
the total annual annuity payments - Variable annuities evaluate the total returns
for the variable annuity sub-accounts over
multiple time periods - Morningstar and Lipper Analytical Services Inc.
- Compare the relative financial strength of the
company to other similar companies - Rating agencies - A.M. Best / Moodys/ Standard
Poors
45Suitability
- In June 2008, Florida passed into law the John
and Patricia Seibel Act. - The Act amends state laws with regard to the sale
of annuities to senior consumers. - The Act outlines standards agents must meet to
evaluate and determine suitability - Objective measures, vs. previous reasonable
standard - More details in writing comparisons and
disclosures - New Requirements for corrective action and
penalties