Variable annuities have become a part of the
retirement and investment plans of many Americans. Before you buy a variable
annuity, you should know some of the basics – and be prepared to ask your
insurance agent, broker, financial planner, or other financial professional lots
of questions about whether a variable annuity is right for you.
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What Is a Variable Annuity?
A variable annuity is a contract between you and an insurance company, under
which the insurer agrees to make periodic payments to you, beginning either
immediately or at some future date. You purchase a variable annuity contract by
making either a single purchase payment or a series of purchase payments.
A variable annuity offers a range of investment options. The value of your
investment as a variable annuity owner will vary depending on the performance of
the investment options you choose. The investment options for a variable annuity
are typically mutual funds that invest in stocks, bonds, money market
instruments, or some combination of the three.
Although variable annuities are typically invested in mutual funds, variable
annuities differ from mutual funds in several important ways:
- Variable annuities let you receive periodic
payments for the rest of your life (or the life of your spouse or any other
person you designate). This feature offers protection against the possibility
that, after you retire, you will outlive your assets.
- Variable annuities have a death benefit. If
you die before the insurer has started making payments to you, your beneficiary
is guaranteed to receive a specified amount – typically at least the amount of
your purchase payments. Your beneficiary will get a benefit from this feature
if, at the time of your death, your account value is less than the guaranteed
amount.
- Variable annuities are tax-deferred. That
means you pay no taxes on the income and investment gains from your annuity
until you withdraw your money. You may also transfer your money from one
investment option to another within a variable annuity without paying tax at the
time of the transfer. When you take your money out of a variable annuity,
however, you will be taxed on the earnings at ordinary income tax rates rather
than lower capital gains rates. In general, the benefits of tax deferral will
outweigh the costs of a variable annuity only if you hold it as a long-term
investment to meet retirement and other long-range goals.
How Variable Annuities Work
A variable annuity has two phases: an accumulation phase and a payout phase.
During the accumulation phase, you make purchase payments, which you can
allocate to a number of investment options. For example, you could designate 40%
of your purchase payments to a bond fund, 40% to a U.S. stock fund, and 20% to
an international stock fund. The money you have allocated to each mutual fund
investment option will increase or decrease over time, depending on the fund's
performance. In addition, variable annuities often allow you to allocate part of
your purchase payments to a fixed account. A fixed account, unlike a mutual
fund, pays a fixed rate of interest. The insurance company may reset this
interest rate periodically, but it will usually provide a guaranteed minimum
(e.g., 3% per year).
Example: You purchase a variable annuity
with an initial purchase payment of $20,000. You allocate 50% of that purchase
payment ($10,000) to a bond fund, and 50% ($10,000) to a stock fund. Over the
following year, the stock fund has a 10% return, and the bond fund has a 5%
return. At the end of the year, your account has a value of $21,500 ($11,000 in
the stock fund and $10,500 in the bond fund), minus fees and charges (discussed
below).
Your most important source of information about
a variable annuity's investment options is the prospectus. Request the
prospectuses for the mutual fund investment options. Read them carefully before
you allocate your purchase payments among the investment options offered. You
should consider a variety of factors with respect to each fund option, including
the fund's investment objectives and policies, management fees and other
expenses that the fund charges, the risks and volatility of the fund, and
whether the fund contributes to the diversification of your overall investment
portfolio.
During the accumulation phase, you can typically transfer your money from one
investment option to another without paying tax on your investment income and
gains, although you may be charged by the insurance company for transfers.
However, if you withdraw money from your account during the early years of the
accumulation phase, you may have to pay "surrender charges", which are discussed
below. In addition, you may have to pay a 10% federal tax penalty if you
withdraw money before the age of 59 (1/2).
At the beginning of the payout phase, you may receive your purchase payments
plus investment income and gains (if any) as a lump-sum payment, or you may
choose to receive them as a stream of payments at regular intervals (generally
monthly).
If you choose to receive a stream of payments, you may have a number of choices
of how long the payments will last. Under most annuity contracts, you can choose
to have your annuity payments last for a period that you set (such as 20 years)
or for an indefinite period (such as your lifetime or the lifetime of you and
your spouse or other beneficiary). During the payout phase, your annuity
contract may permit you to choose between receiving payments that are fixed in
amount or payments that vary based on the performance of mutual fund investment
options.
The amount of each periodic payment will depend, in part, on the time period
that you select for receiving payments. Be aware that some annuities do not
allow you to withdraw money from your account once you have started receiving
regular annuity payments.
In addition, some annuity contracts are structured as immediate annuities, which
means that there is no accumulation phase and you will start receiving annuity
payments right after you purchase the annuity.
The Death Benefit and Other Features
A common feature of variable annuities is the death benefit. If you die, a
person you select as a beneficiary (such as your spouse or child) will receive
the greater of:
- all the money in your account
or
- some guaranteed minimum (such as all purchase
payments minus prior withdrawals).
Example: You own a variable annuity that
offers a death benefit equal to the greater of account value or total purchase
payments minus withdrawals. You have made purchase payments totaling $100,000.
In addition, you have withdrawn $10,000 from your account. Because of these
withdrawals and investment losses, your account value is currently $80,000. If
you die, your designated beneficiary will receive $90,000 (the $100,000 in
purchase payments you put in minus $10,000 in withdrawals).
Some variable annuities allow you to choose a
"stepped-up" death benefit. Under this feature, your guaranteed minimum death
benefit may be based on a greater amount than purchase payments minus
withdrawals. For example, the guaranteed minimum might be your account value as
of a specified date, which may be greater than purchase payments minus
withdrawals if the underlying investment options have performed well. The
purpose of a stepped-up death benefit is to "lock in" your investment
performance and prevent a later decline in the value of your account from
eroding the amount that you expect to leave to your heirs. This feature carries
a charge, however, which will reduce your account value.
Variable annuities sometimes offer other optional features, which also have
extra charges. One common feature, the guaranteed minimum income benefit,
guarantees a particular minimum level of annuity payments, even if you do not
have enough money in your account (perhaps because of investment losses) to
support that level of payments. Other features may include long-term care
insurance, which pays for home health care or nursing home care if you become
seriously ill.
You may want to consider the financial strength of the insurance company that
sponsors any variable annuity you are considering buying. This can affect the
company's ability to pay any benefits that are greater than the value of your
account in mutual fund investment options, such as a death benefit, guaranteed
minimum income benefit, long-term care benefit, or amounts you have allocated to
a fixed account investment option.
Variable Annuity Charges
You will pay several charges when you invest in a variable annuity. Be sure you
understand all the charges before you invest. These charges will reduce the
value of your account and the return on your investment. Often, they will
include the following:
- Surrender charges – If you withdraw
money from a variable annuity within a certain period after a purchase payment
(typically within six to eight years, but sometimes as long as ten years), the
insurance company usually will assess a "surrender" charge, which is a type of
sales charge. This charge is used to pay your financial professional a
commission for selling the variable annuity to you. Generally, the surrender
charge is a percentage of the amount withdrawn, and declines gradually over a
period of several years, known as the "surrender period." For example, a 7%
charge might apply in the first year after a purchase payment, 6% in the second
year, 5% in the third year, and so on until the eighth year, when the surrender
charge no longer applies. Often, contracts will allow you to withdraw part of
your account value each year – 10% or 15% of your account value, for example –
without paying a surrender charge.
Example: You purchase a variable annuity contract with a $20,000 purchase
payment. The contract has a schedule of surrender charges, beginning with a 7%
charge in the first year, and declining by 1% each year. In addition, you are
allowed to withdraw 10% of your contract value each year free of surrender
charges. In the first year, you decide to withdraw $10,000, or one-half of your
contract value of $20,000 (assuming that your contract value has not increased
or decreased because of investment performance). In this case, you could
withdraw $2,000 (10% of contract value) free of surrender charges, but you would
pay a surrender charge of 7%, or $560, on the other $8,000 withdrawn.
- Administrative fees – The insurer may
deduct charges to cover record-keeping and other administrative expenses. This
may be charged as a flat account maintenance fee (perhaps $25 or $30 per year)
or as a percentage of your account value (typically in the range of 0.15% per
year).
Example: Your variable annuity charges administrative fees at an annual
rate of 0.15% of account value. Your average account value during the year is
$100,000. You will pay $150 in administrative fees.
- Underlying Fund Expenses – You will
also indirectly pay the fees and expenses imposed by the mutual funds that are
the underlying investment options for your variable annuity.
- Fees and Charges for Other Features –
Special features offered by some variable annuities, such as a stepped-up death
benefit, a guaranteed minimum income benefit, or long-term care insurance, often
carry additional fees and charges.
Other charges, such as initial sales loads, or
fees for transferring part of your account from one investment option to
another, may also apply. You should ask your financial professional to explain
to you all charges that may apply. You can also find a description of the
charges in the prospectus for any variable annuity that you are considering.
Tax-Free “1035” Exchanges
Section 1035 of the U.S. tax code allows you to exchange an existing variable
annuity contract for a new annuity contract without paying any tax on the income
and investment gains in your current variable annuity account. These tax-free
exchanges, known as 1035 exchanges, can be useful if another annuity has
features that you prefer, such as a larger death benefit, different annuity
payout options, or a wider selection of investment choices.
You may, however, be required to pay surrender charges on the old annuity if you
are still in the surrender charge period. In addition, a new surrender charge
period generally begins when you exchange into the new annuity. This means that,
for a significant number of years (as many as 10 years), you typically will have
to pay a surrender charge (which can be as high as 9% of your purchase payments)
if you withdraw funds from the new annuity. Further, the new annuity may have
higher annual fees and charges than the old annuity, which will reduce your
returns.
Bonus Credits
Some insurance companies are now offering variable annuity contracts with "bonus
credit" features. These contracts promise to add a bonus to your contract value
based on a specified percentage (typically ranging from 1% to 5%) of purchase
payments.
Example: You purchase a variable annuity
contract that offers a bonus credit of 3% on each purchase payment. You make a
purchase payment of $20,000. The insurance company issuing the contract adds a
bonus of $600 to your account.
Frequently, insurers will charge you for bonus
credits in one or more of the following ways:
- Higher surrender charges – Surrender
charges may be higher for a variable annuity that pays you a bonus credit than
for a similar contract with no bonus credit.
- Longer surrender periods – Your
purchase payments may be subject to surrender charges for a longer period than
they would be under a similar contract with no bonus credit.
- Higher mortality and expense risk charges
and other charges – Higher annual mortality and expense risk charges may be
deducted for a variable annuity that pays you a bonus credit. Although the
difference may seem small, over time it can add up. In addition, some contracts
may impose a separate fee specifically to pay for the bonus credit.
Before purchasing a variable annuity with a
bonus credit, ask yourself – and the financial professional who is trying to
sell you the contract – whether the bonus is worth more to you than any
increased charges you will pay for the bonus. This may depend on a variety of
factors, including the amount of the bonus credit and the increased charges, how
long you hold your annuity contract, and the return on the underlying
investments. You also need to consider the other features of the annuity to
determine whether it is a good investment for you.
Example: You make purchase payments of
$10,000 in Annuity A and $10,000 in Annuity B. Annuity A offers a bonus credit
of 4% on your purchase payment, and deducts annual charges totaling 1.75%.
Annuity B has no bonus credit and deducts annual charges totaling 1.25%. Let's
assume that both annuities have an annual rate of return, prior to expenses, of
10%. By the tenth year, your account value in Annuity A will have grown to
$22,978. But your account value in Annuity B will have grown more, to $23,136,
because Annuity B deducts lower annual charges, even though it does not offer a
bonus.
You should also note that a bonus may only
apply to your initial premium payment, or to premium payments you make within
the first year of the annuity contract. Further, under some annuity contracts
the insurer will take back all bonus payments made to you within the prior year
or some other specified period if you make a withdrawal, if a death benefit is
paid to your beneficiaries upon your death, or in other circumstances.
Example: You currently hold a variable
annuity with an account value of $20,000, which is no longer subject to
surrender charges. You exchange that annuity for a new variable annuity, which
pays a 4% bonus credit and has a surrender charge period of eight years, with
surrender charges beginning at 9% of purchase payments in the first year. Your
account value in this new variable annuity is now $20,800. During the first year
you hold the new annuity, you decide to withdraw all of your account value
because of an emergency situation. Assuming that your account value has not
increased or decreased because of investment performance, you will receive
$20,800 minus 9% of your $20,000 purchase payment, or $19,000. This is $1,000
less than you would have received if you had stayed in the original variable
annuity, where you were no longer subject to surrender charges.
Ask Questions Before You Invest
Financial professionals who sell variable annuities have a duty to advise you as
to whether the product they are trying to sell is suitable to your particular
investment needs. Don't be afraid to ask them questions. And write down their
answers, so there won't be any confusion later as to what was said.
Variable annuity contracts typically have a "free look" period of ten or more
days, during which you can terminate the contract without paying any surrender
charges and get back your purchase payments (which may be adjusted to reflect
charges and the performance of your investment). You can continue to ask
questions in this period to make sure you understand your variable annuity
before the "free look" period ends.
Before you decide to buy a variable annuity, consider the following questions:
- Will you use the variable annuity primarily to
save for retirement or a similar long-term goal?
- Are you investing in the variable annuity
through a retirement plan or IRA (which would mean that you are not receiving
any additional tax-deferral benefit from the variable annuity)?
- Are you willing to take the risk that your
account value may decrease if the underlying mutual fund investment options
perform badly?
- Do you understand the features of the variable
annuity?
- Do you understand all of the fees and expenses
that the variable annuity charges?
- Do you intend to remain in the variable
annuity long enough to avoid paying any surrender charges if you have to
withdraw money?
- If a variable annuity offers a bonus credit,
will the bonus outweigh any higher fees and charges that the product may charge?
- Are there features of the variable annuity,
such as long-term care insurance, that you could purchase more cheaply
separately?
- Have you consulted with a tax adviser and
considered all the tax consequences of purchasing an annuity, including the
effect of annuity payments on your tax status in retirement?
- If you are exchanging one annuity for another
one, do the benefits of the exchange outweigh the costs, such as any surrender
charges you will have to pay if you withdraw your money before the end of the
surrender charge period for the new annuity?