Saturday, December 27, 2008

Annuity Surrender Charges and How To Avoid Them.

Is there any way to avoid the annuity surrender or early withdrawal charges?





Yes.
With most fixed deferred annuities, surrender or withdrawal charges are
waived if you (1) die;
(2) become confined to a hospital or nursing
home for a specified period; or
(3) you choose to take a guaranteed
income stream. In addition, most fixed deferred annuities allow you
take up to 10% of your annuity contract value each year without incurring a
surrender or withdrawal charge.
See tax consequences of early
annuity withdrawals. Annuity rollover.

There
are no penalties on distributions if:
(1) You are older than age 59 ½ (2) Distributions are made on or after
the death of the owner of the annuity (3) Become disabled
(4) Distributions are made as a series of substantially equal periodic
payments (not less than annually) for your life or your life expectancy
or joint life expectancies of you and your designated beneficiary
(5) Distributions are made under a single premium immediate annuity
with a starting date no later than one year from the date you purchase
the annuity.
(6) If the distributions are made under certain annuities issued as a
part of a structured settlement agreement.
There are additional exceptions in the case of IRAs. Please contact
your tax advisor for more details.

401k Annuity

Annuity Rate

Friday, December 26, 2008

What Are Advantages and Disadvantages of a Fixed Annuity?

What are the advantages and disadvantages of a Fixed Deferred Annuity?

The
major advantages of a fixed deferred annuity are guarantee of premium
and tax deferral. Generally, fixed deferred annuities appeal to the
risk averse who are looking to preserve funds for retirement with
guarantee of premium, competitive fixed rate interest guarantees and no
risk to premium. The major disadvantage of a fixed rate deferred
annuity
is that fixed rate guarantee-type products have provided lower
growth than those available historically in the equity markets. Of
course, many factors are important in determining whether a fixed rate
deferred annuity is right for you, including your age, retirement goals
and aversion to risk. If you are older and closer to retirement, or
simply desire to preserve your assets in a secure vehicle, a fixed
deferred annuity may be the best choice. If you are younger and looking
to preserve significant funds for your long-term financial needs and
are willing to take greater risk, an Equity-Indexed or Variable Annuity
might be a better alternative at the present time.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

What is a Fixed Deferred Annuity?

A Fixed Deferred Annuity is a contract between you and the insurance company which pays a guaranteed current interest rate.
The interest rate may be guaranteed for one or more years and earns compound interest. The interest earnings compound on a tax-deferred basis.
Fixed deferred annuities are offered either on a single premium basis, i.e. you give the insurance company a lump sum premium payment, (typically $5,000 or more) or on a flexible premium basis, i.e. you pay a lower re-occurring premium payment on a monthly, quarterly, or annual basis. In addition to tax deferral, fixed deferred annuities offer safety of your premium.
Fixed deferred annuities offer a current interest rate which may never be less than a lifetime minimum guaranteed interest rate (typically 3%).
The current interest rate is declared and guaranteed by the insurance company. Thus your premium in a fixed deferred annuity is not subject to market risk associated with volatile financial markets.
Fixed deferred annuities have penalties for early withdrawal called surrender charges or withdrawal charges. These charges typically decline over the length of the surrender charge period.