Saturday, October 11, 2008

Fixed Index Annuities

AMEB,AEL American Equity: Year-to-Date Annuity Sales Up 6% From Year Ago
American Equity: Year-to-Date Annuity Sales Up 6% From Year Ago

WEST DES MOINES, Iowa, Oct 07, 2008 (A. M. Best via COMTEX) -- AEL | Quote | Chart | News | PowerRating -- American Equity Investment Life Holding Co., a top seller of equity-indexed annuities in the United States, said year-to-date annuity sales rose 6% from the same period a year ago.

Ahead of releasing its third-quarter earnings next month, American Equity (NYSE: AEL | Quote | Chart | News | PowerRating) on Oct. 3 said annuity sales for the quarter totaled $571.8 million, bringing year-to-date sales to $1.7 billion for the first nine months of this year, up from $1.6 billion in the same period in 2007.

At the end of trading Oct. 6, American Equity Investment Life led the A.M. Best Global Insurance Composite Index -- up 17.93% from the previous close. The A.M. Best Global Index closed at 859.99 -- down 6.72%.

The West Des Moines, Iowa-based company will release third-quarter earnings Nov. 5 after the market closes. For year-end 2007, American Equity's net income declined 61.6% to $29 million, while total revenues dropped to $915.9 million, a decrease of 22%.

Debate surrounds indexed annuities. Back in June, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission proposed a rule, 151A, that would define certain indexed annuities as securities products. Under the rule, these annuities ? currently regulated as insurance products ? would be treated as securities if amounts payable by the insurer are more likely than not to exceed amounts guaranteed under the contract.

Insurance carriers would need to refile the products with the SEC and offer them via a prospectus. Agents who wish to continue selling them would need to become registered representatives overseen by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, a status held by only about 55% of those who currently sell the products (BestWire, Sept. 8, 2008).

The comment period for the SEC's proposal ended Sept. 10. As of that day, 2,400 comments were sent to the SEC and about 90% were in opposition, American Equity said. The SEC has continued to accept comments received after the deadline, it said.

American Equity said it co-hosted a Congressional "fly-in" in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 23 in which the Coalition for Indexed Products, made up nine companies and a group of national marketing organizations representing the coalition, met with nearly 80 members of Congress. They urged members to tell the SEC the measure isn't needed because indexed annuity sales "are already heavily regulated by state insurance departments and would restrict consumer choice at a time when access to principal-protected products like fixed-index annuities should be carefully guarded," American Equity said.

The SEC, which adopted the proposed rule unanimously, has pointed to allegations of abuses in the marketing of indexed annuities to seniors, and has sought supervision by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority of those who sell the products. According to the SEC, among complaints made to state securities regulators, cases involving annuities represented 65% of the caseload in Massachusetts, and 60% of the caseload in Hawaii and Mississippi (BestWire, July 28, 2008).

(By Fran Matso Lysiak, senior associate editor, BestWeek: fran.lysiak@ambest.com)

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Immediate Annuities - Women's financial security in retirement

Advice for men and women about women's financial security in retirement - The Boston Globe

I've thought about dying before my wife Georgina after reading two recent studies on women and retirement.

"Compared with men, women will likely have lower retirement savings yet they'll need to make those savings last longer and plan on being on their own at some point," concludes "Why Women Worry," part of ongoing research on retirement issues by the financial firm The Hartford and MIT's AgeLab.

On average, a woman, 65, can expect to live to 85, about three years longer than men, and has a 23 percent chance of living past 95, based on mortality tables.

"When a woman outlives her husband, her income decreases by 50 percent on average yet expenses only decrease by 20 percent," the study said.

The second study, "Lifetime Income for Women: A Financial Economist's Perspective," was authored by David Babbel, a professor at the Wharton School of Business, and cosponsored by New York Life Insurance Co.

Babbel argues women should allocate substantially less money to stocks and stock mutual funds in retirement and more to immediate annuities that guarantee an income for life in return for a lump-sum premium.

"Annuities are even more important for women because their risks are compounded by longer life expectancy as well as potentially outliving husbands by six years or more (wives tend to be younger than their husbands)," said Babbel. He concludes that income annuities from top-rated insurance companies can provide secure lifetime income for 25 to 40 percent less money than it would take an individual.

That's because insurance companies base their payouts on average life expectancies (premiums from those who die early subsidize payments to those who live longer). When we invest on our own, we must plan for our money to last several years beyond life expectancy, just in case.

For this reason, financial planners often recommend retirees withdraw no more than 4 percent of savings the first year of retirement, increasing the amount by 3 percent a year to counteract inflation.

But, several top-rated insurance companies offer lifetime annuities with payout rates of 5 percent or more the first year for a 65-year-old couple, raising the amount 3 percent a year and with a "refund" feature (if both spouses die before income payments equal the premium, a beneficiary gets the difference).

But with income annuities, we typically give up our principal and can't access it beyond the scheduled income payments. Some contracts allow exceptions at the cost of lowering income.

In all states, guaranty associations belonging to the National Organization of Life and Health Guaranty Associations back income annuity obligations up to a limit ($100,000 or more per company depending on the state) per policyholder if an insurance company goes bankrupt.

Humberto Cruz is a syndicated columnist. He can be reached at askhumberto@aol.com.

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