To Be Or Not To Be: What Is An Annuity?

About Bill Broich

Bill Broich is a well-known annuity expert with over 30 years of experience. He has written hundreds of articles on annuities and other financial topics, and has been a featured commentator on TV, Radio and the Internet.

A guarantee or a guess, which would you choose?

Guarantees or a future guess, which would you choose?

Annuities are annuities. The term annuity, when used as a noun, can mean two entirely different products.
According to Investopedia, the definition of an annuity is: An annuity is a contractual financial product sold by financial institutions that are designed to accept and grow funds from an individual and then, upon annuitization, pay out a stream of payments to the individual at a later point in time.

In actuality, an annuity can be many things, it can be an accumulation product, it can be an income source, it can be an insurance product, and it can be a security product. An annuity can be a wide array of many different things. An annuity contract can be both for a period of a few years or a contract providing benefits for lifetimes. It is adjustable, and it is flexible.

An annuity can be fully guaranteed, or it can base its future on future market risk. The difference is which annuity we are speaking about.

There are two basic categories of annuities:

  • Those sold as insurance products
  • Those sold as investment securities.

Annuities sold as insurance products have no fees, have guarantees and have no market risk. An insurance annuity will provide contractual guarantees. These guarantees promise what the minimum value of an annuity will be at any future date, and it will guarantee exactly the guaranteed income will be at any future date.

An annuity issued by an insurance company may also fully guarantee an interest rate that will be used to determine the guaranteed value in the future that income will be paid.n. It will also guarantee in the contract the “factor” that will be used to determine exactly how much income will be available at any yearly time period. This important “factor” is essential because it only exists in annuities issued as insurance products.

The reason? Insurance annuities are state of residence specific and are regulated at the state level by the individual state department of insurance. State insurance departments demand that everything is guaranteed in the contract, nothing is based on future guesses. Insurance annuities are guaranteed by the insurance company never to lose value and to never participate in market risks.

The other category of annuity is a variable annuity, and while an insurance company technically issues it, it does not come under regulation by each state department of insurance, it is regulated as a security by the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC). This type of annuity is not an insurance product, it is a security, and those that invest in this category of the annuity are investing in the securities market. A variable annuity can increase in value, and it can decrease in value.

Variable annuities have fees and expenses, fees for the contract, fees for the management of investment, fees for enhanced policy benefits such as income riders.

The SEC publishes information and warnings regarding variable annuities.

What is the difference between income from a variable annuity issued as a security and income from an annuity issued by an insurance company and state regulated?

Both will offer a fixed and guaranteed interest rate which will be used to determine the income formula, annuities offered by insurance companies will also guarantee the “factor” used to determine the actual income. Variable annuities do not offer a guaranteed “factor,” instead they use a formula tied to numerous future events. This future “factor” should be considered a derivative.

Here is a definition of the word derivative:
de·riv·a·tive, derivatives
Something that is based on another source. An arrangement or instrument (such as a future, option, or warrant) whose value derives from and is dependent on the value of an underlying set of circumstances.

Why do variable annuities use a derivative to determine future income? Simple, this method allows for the insurance company to hedge their exposure to the long term liability of a long term income responsibility. In other words, the future event will never allow the variable annuity company to be exposed, the “factor” actually used will always benefit the insurance company.

How could 10% fully guaranteed for funds used to calculate the income accumulation be less available money than a similar product offering far less guaranteed interest?

Simple: the factor used to determine the income will be lower, it is all smoke and mirrors. It makes no difference how much interest is offered because the only financial calculator that makes a difference is the “factor.”

With guaranteed annuities, the factor in determining actual income is contractually guaranteed. In variable annuities, the “factor” is a derivative, and it depends on what happens in the future.

Guaranteed or a derivative, which would you use to base your important future income on?

About Bill Broich

Bill Broich is a well-known annuity expert with over 30 years of experience. He has written hundreds of articles on annuities and other financial topics, and has been a featured commentator on TV, Radio and the Internet.

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Content in our posted articles is deemed to be accurate but topics, facts and laws can change. It is always a good idea to verify facts before making decisions. Always seek authorized and professional advice regarding financial decisions which includes investing, annuity purchases, tax planning, changes in a financial portfolio and retirement planning.

This article is for informational purposes only and is based on the writer’s general research and understanding of the topic. The author and publisher do not assume responsibility for any actions taken based on the information presented.

All annuity guarantees are subject to the claims-paying ability of the insurer. Specific annuity contract terms may vary by provider. Annuity riders may be subject to eligibility and underwriting requirements, additional premium requirements and/or minimum or maximum coverage amounts. Availability and rider provisions may vary by state.

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