Annuity with a guaranteed 8% annual return

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I have no issue with someone using *part* of their retirement savings to "buy a pension" with an SPIA (but not now because rates are so terrible). But when you start selling complicated, "guaranteed" deferred annuity products, I run the other way.
Hi Ziggy,

Actually. with a SPIA, you are giving the insurance company all control of your money for the benefit of annuitization. Do it wrong, and the company could actually end up with the bulk of your hard earned savings and nothing for the beneficiaries. That was the annuity of your father's day. Today's annuity, with income riders, keeps the control to the side of the annuity owner, and offers guarantees that mutual funds, bonds, and stocks cannot offer. It's the one vehicle that can secure your retirement without regard to the volitility of the marketplace.

I've heard the word 'complicated' plenty of times when referring to annuities. Complicated is a word that has been used so much that people automatically use it without any real reference point. Have you ever read a mutual fund prospectus? The average prospectus is 120 pages in length vs an annuity disclosure at 12 pages. Are you familiar with 12b1 fees, management fees, admin fees, 'A' shares vs. 'B' shares? These are just some of the fees in most mutual funds.

People tend to buy mutual funds and stocks without any real knowledge of what they have done, yet, they have been lead to believe that annuities are too complicated to purchase. In 2008 not one of my clients lost one dollar in their retirement savings and in 2009 they averaged a 15% return for the year. Another 9% average return for 2010. Once credited, the interest cannot be lost in future down markets.

When I go to the doctor he explains in laymans terms what is going on inside of my body. Much too complicated in technical terms. Either I trust him or I find a new doc. Same thing with mutual funds and with annuities.

My afvice to most: Don't parrot what others say. Find an advisor you can trust and ask him his opinion. By the way. most equity brokers are at a total lost as to how annuities work. Their vested interest is in what they sell - mutual funds.
The fact is. the annuity is the bedrock of the retirement pension back when pensions were made available to the employee. Many a retired person wishes that he had a pension today rather than his deflated 401k.
 
Oh boy a genuine insurance representative, this should be fun. Time to makes some popcorn.
 
Have you ever read a mutual fund prospectus? The average prospectus is 120 pages in length vs an annuity disclosure at 12 pages. Are you familiar with 12b1 fees, management fees, admin fees, 'A' shares vs. 'B' shares? These are just some of the fees in most mutual funds.
Yes, and I'm also familiar with the concept of "back-end loaded mutual funds". Sounds a lot like "surrender charges" to me.

Not to mention that when annuities are invested in mutual funds -- as many do -- they are paying the fund fees *in addition* to costs of the annuity anyway.

Actually I shouldn't use the term "investing" in an annuity because they are an insurance product and not regulated by the SEC, right?
 
Oh boy a genuine insurance representative, this should be fun. Time to makes some popcorn.

here, I put the kettle on...
popcorn.gif
 
Actually I shouldn't use the term "investing" in an annuity because they are an insurance product and not regulated by the SEC, right?
True. They are overseen/regulated by the indivudial state insurance department.

Yes, we have an annuity (SPIA), and no, I won't get into the discussion other than to say that they are not for everybody and there is no standard policy that applies to everyone, with today's policy options.

It has, and is working for us as an ER income vehicle which is allowing us to delay our respective SS. However our plan is unique for our situation and would not apply to most folks.

However, the SPIA (for us) is the right "tool" for the job...
 
Well, kindly allow me to fix a bit of misinformation. You are mixing up two types of annuities, as most people do. There is the fixed and fixed index annuity and there is the variable annuity. The variable annuity typically has all the different charges you speak of. They also have the potential for loss as their downside risk is not protected. Because the variable annuity is directly invested in mutual funds they are regulated by the SEC and FINRA. The variable annuity has charges from the insurance side of the business and sub account fees from the investment side of the business. I personally am hard pressed to ever recommend a variable annuity.

A fixed and fixed index annuity is a type of an annuity that guarantees your principle and all future gains. A fixed annuity offers an annual fixed rate of return whereas, a fixed index annuity offers an annual rate of return that is a percentage of the performance of an index such as the S&P500 or the DOW. The upside potential is typically greater than a fixed annuity but will not receive 100% of the index growth for any particular year. Although it does not receive 100% of the market upside, it is 100% protected from the market downside. If you are approaching retirement or already retired, what would you rather do: Have a sure bet or a roll of the dice? The average indexed annuity has earned an annual 5.5% for the last ten years. The average index has been, for the most part, flat as my Aunt Nelly.

There is a cost to everything. Surrender charges are neccessary to protect the insurance company. The annuity owner does not incur surrender when the rules are understood and followed. An annuity is a long term retirement strategy, not a short term strategy to buy that boat you have your eye on.

Uhhh, my fingers are getting tired. Too many typos.
 
Actually. with a SPIA, you are giving the insurance company all control of your money for the benefit of annuitization. Do it wrong, and the company could actually end up with the bulk of your hard earned savings and nothing for the beneficiaries. That was the annuity of your father's day. Today's annuity, with income riders, keeps the control to the side of the annuity owner, and offers guarantees that mutual funds, bonds, and stocks cannot offer. It's the one vehicle that can secure your retirement without regard to the volitility of the marketplace.

In other words the commissions aren't as good with the SPIA.

You are wasting your time here.
 
A fixed and fixed index annuity is a type of an annuity that guarantees your principle and all future gains. A fixed annuity offers an annual fixed rate of return whereas, a fixed index annuity offers an annual rate of return that is a percentage of the performance of an index such as the S&P500 or the DOW. The upside potential is typically greater than a fixed annuity but will not receive 100% of the index growth for any particular year. Although it does not receive 100% of the market upside, it is 100% protected from the market downside.
If you roll your own "EIA" with index funds and put options on the index, you *can* eliminate almost all the downside while only losing the cost of expiring option premiums on the upside. There's a small chance of losing a little money if the market is flat (you lose the option premiums while getting no gain from the equities), but that's a small "fee" compared to the chance of getting "capped" at (say) an 8% gain in 2009 when the S&P rose 27%.
 
By the way. most equity brokers are at a total lost as to how annuities work. Their vested interest is in what they sell - mutual funds.

Really, how long have you been an equity broker? Do you have a securities license? Are you an RIA? Typical insurance agent, thinking all brokers sell mutual funds........:ROFLMAO:

If you last more than 150 posts on this forum, I have to buy REWahoo lunch..........;)
 
The upside potential is typically greater than a fixed annuity but will not receive 100% of the index growth for any particular year.

Well, you finally are right on something!

The average indexed annuity has earned an annual 5.5% for the last ten years.

So have a fair number of other investment portfolios, and without locking up your money for 10 years!
 
Well Ziggy, it appears you are pretty astute when it comes to investing. The annuity option may not be your best option. I have sat down with a surviving spouse who was at a total loss as to what to do with her husband's portfolio. This at a time when the markets were sinking. Her advisor assured her the markets would recover. She was at the age of 79 at the time. Someone kindly told her annuities were a bad thing. The annuity is not the total answer. But it serves very well the retired population who does not have the time window or the savvy to invest in the markets.
 
Well Ziggy, it appears you are pretty astute when it comes to investing. The annuity option may not be your best option. I have sat down with a surviving spouse who was at a total loss as to what to do with her husband's portfolio. This at a time when the markets were sinking. Her advisor assured her the markets would recover. She was at the age of 79 at the time. Someone kindly told her annuities were a bad thing. The annuity is not the total answer. But it serves very well the retired population who does not have the time window or the savvy to invest in the markets.
Not too many 79 year-old widows on the Early-Retirement forum...
 
Finance Dude, the term 'locking up' is inaccurate and over used. When someone buys a bond is his money locked up. How about a cd? Even with a stock there is always a chance of selling at the wrong time. Remenber that the annuity is for long term planning, not short term liquidity. Do you have all your funds in one mutual fund or one stock? I should hope not. Lets open up to the proper use of an annuity.
 
Well Ziggy, it appears you are pretty astute when it comes to investing. The annuity option may not be your best option. I have sat down with a surviving spouse who was at a total loss as to what to do with her husband's portfolio. This at a time when the markets were sinking. Her advisor assured her the markets would recover. She was at the age of 79 at the time. Someone kindly told her annuities were a bad thing. The annuity is not the total answer. But it serves very well the retired population who does not have the time window or the savvy to invest in the markets.
Too bad for her she didn't stop by here first...
 
Finance Dude, the term 'locking up' is inaccurate and over used. When someone buys a bond is his money locked up. How about a cd? Even with a stock there is always a chance of selling at the wrong time. Remenber that the annuity is for long term planning, not short term liquidity. Do you have all your funds in one mutual fund or one stock? I should hope not. Lets open up to the proper use of an annuity.
A treasury bond is anything but locked up.
 
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