What
is an annuity?
In its most general sense, an annuity is an agreement for one person
or organization to pay another a stream or series of payments. Usually
the term “annuity” relates to a contract between you and
a life insurance company, but a charity or a trust can take the place
of the insurance company.
There are many categories of annuities. They can be classified
by:
Nature of the underlying investment – fixed or variable
Primary purpose – accumulation or pay-out (deferred
or immediate)
Nature of pay-out commitment – fixed period, fixed
amount, or lifetime
Tax status – qualified or nonqualified
Premium payment arrangement – single premium or flexible
premium
An annuity can be classified in several of these categories at once.
For example, you might buy a nonqualified single premium deferred
variable annuity. For brief definitions of these categories, click
here.
In general, annuities have the following attractive features:
Tax deferral on investment earnings
Many investments are taxed year by year, but the investment earnings—capital
gains and investment income—in annuities aren’t taxable
until you withdraw money. This tax deferral is also true of 401(k)s
and IRAs; however, unlike these products, there are no limits on
the amount you can put into an annuity. Moreover, the minimum withdrawal
requirements for annuities are much more liberal than they are for
401(k)s and IRAs.
Protection from creditors
If you own an immediate annuity (that is, you are receiving money
from an insurance company), generally the most that creditors can
access is the payments as they’re made, since the money you
gave the insurance company now belongs to the company. Some state
statutes and court decisions also protect some or all of the payments
from those annuities. And your money in tax-favored retirement plans,
such as IRAs and 401(k)s, are generally protected, whether invested
in an annuity or not.
An array of investment options, including “floors”
Many annuity companies offer a variety of investment options. You
can invest in a fixed annuity which would credit a specified interest
rate, similar to a bank Certificate of Deposit (CD). If you buy
a variable annuity, your money can be invested in stock or bond
(or other) mutual funds. In recent years, annuity companies have
created various types of “floors” that limit the extent
of investment decline from an increasing reference point. For example,
the annuity may offer a feature that guarantees your investment
will never fall below its value on its most recent policy anniversary.
Tax-free transfers among investment options
In contrast to mutual funds and other investments made with “after-tax
money,” with annuities there are no tax consequences if you
change how your funds are invested. This can be particularly valuable
if you are using a strategy called “rebalancing,” which
is recommended by many financial advisors. Under rebalancing, you
shift your investments periodically to return them to the proportions
that you determine represent the risk/return combination most appropriate
for your situation.
Lifetime income
A lifetime immediate annuity converts an investment into a stream
of payments that last as long as you do. In concept, the payments
come from three “pockets”: Your investment, investment
earnings and money from a pool of people in your group who do not
live as long as actuarial tables forecast. It’s the pooling
that’s unique to annuities, and it’s what enables annuity
companies to be able to guarantee you a lifetime income.
Benefits to your heirs
There is a common misconception about annuities that goes like this:
if you start an immediate lifetime annuity and die soon after that,
the insurance company keeps all of your investment in the annuity.
That can happen, but it doesn’t have to. To prevent it, buy
a “guaranteed period” with the immediate annuity. A
guaranteed period commits the insurance company to continue payments
after you die to one or more beneficiaries you designate; the payments
continue to the end of the stated guaranteed period—usually
10 or 20 years (measured from when you started receiving the annuity
payments). Moreover, annuity benefits that pass to beneficiaries
don’t go through probate and aren’t governed by your
will.
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