Annuities

Financial Planning - Financial planning in general. (Moderated) 

get this group's latest topics as an RSS feed add this group's latest topics to your My MSN content add this group's latest topics to your My Yahoo content  add this group's latest topics to your Google content  YahooMyWeb Yahoo!  Google Google  Windows Live Favorites Windows Live  del.icio.us del.icio.us  digg digg  Add to Netscape Netscape
Subject Author Date
Annuities M C 08-10-2007
Posted by M C on August 10, 2007, 8:14 am
After reading some of your posts, I have been checking a little into
today's fixed and variable annuities. What specifically are the
advantages and logical uses of the immediate annuities and the fixed
annuities?

What would be a good informational source to compare all annuities? Why
are variable annuities so much worse?

Are any annuities a good savings vehicle?
What would be some good companies and their products?

Thanks to all of you for information given in this group.




Posted by joetaxpayer on August 10, 2007, 9:18 am
M C wrote:

> After reading some of your posts, I have been checking a little into
> today's fixed and variable annuities. What specifically are the
> advantages and logical uses of the immediate annuities and the fixed
> annuities?
>
> What would be a good informational source to compare all annuities? Why
> are variable annuities so much worse?
>
> Are any annuities a good savings vehicle?
> What would be some good companies and their products?
>
> Thanks to all of you for information given in this group.

I wrote a list of 8 'cons' to VAs at http://www.joetaxpayer.com/annuity.html
The Jefferson National VA may be appropriate for specific situations,
especially if one believes the favorable treatment of dividends and
capital gains is going away, and will be taxed at ordinary rates. In
that case, This VA can be thought of as an unlimited, non-deductable
IRA, more or less (of course there are still differences, I'm speaking
to the non-tax deduction going in, full income tax on growth coming
out). Others have insurance wrappers with total fees as high as 3%/yr.
Googling on [Scott Burns Variable Annuities] will return many of his
articles holding this view.

At the other end, an immediate annuity (see
http://www.immediateannuities.com/ ) can be a good way for an older
person to get a high return, with no principle left on their passing. I
have an 80yr old woman who is afraid to spend. She had longevity in her
family, and will likely live past 90. An immediate annuity will give her
$11900/yr on $100K. If she simply put that in CDs at 5%, and withdrew
the same $11,900/yr, she'd run out of money at 90. If she passes before
90, the insurance company benefits, much after, and they lose out.
That's a brief example of how the immediate annuity works.
JOE


Similar ThreadsPosted
Variable Annuities October 12, 2006, 5:01 am
annuities question(s) October 24, 2006, 8:33 am
in-plan annuities September 1, 2007, 5:28 pm
longevity annuities October 24, 2007, 10:55 am
Variable annuities not so bad? October 22, 2008, 8:14 pm
Re: Annuities...are they a crap shoot? March 28, 2008, 3:27 pm
Re: Annuities...are they a crap shoot? March 28, 2008, 4:40 pm
Re: Annuities...are they a crap shoot? March 28, 2008, 6:10 pm
Re: Annuities...are they a crap shoot? March 30, 2008, 1:29 am
Re: Annuities...are they a crap shoot? March 29, 2008, 4:15 pm

other essential online resources:
United States Treasury
US Securities and Exchange Commission
New York Stock Exchange
Tokyo Stock Exchange
Accounting and Tax Software Forums

Contact Us | Privacy Policy   XML SitemapXML Sitemap