What is a Fixed Index Annuity? - YouTube

Channel: Your Money, Your Wealth

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Today we're going to talk about fixed index annuities.
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The definition of an annuity is a series of periodic payments.
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But what we're going to talk about are annuity contracts, which are sold by insurance companies.
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Contracts tend to be 30 plus pages long and there's tons of annuities.
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So what I'm going to talk about today is very general.
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You'll have to read your specific contracts if you ever find yourself in one of these.
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When you put your money into a fixed indexed annuity, what you're doing is you're giving
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your money to an insurance company for the promise that they'll protect that principal,
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that they'll try to get you some amount of growth, and then in the future you can turn
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it into an income stream if you want.
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The promise for asset protection is based primarily on you being willing to leave the
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money in for a certain period of time.
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If you take the money out, there are surrender charges and those surrender charges are usually
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applied to pay the insurance company back for the commission they pay the salesperson.
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So recognize that you are spending something on this, even though they're promising to
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give your money back eventually.
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So then what's the word “index” all about?
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That has to do with what they tie your money to to give you a rate of return.
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So they'll tie it to the S&P 500, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, one of many other
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potential indexes - but you're not exactly invested in that index.
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The index is a factor that they use, and they apply participation rate, caps, floors, other
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types of formulas to say how much of that index return you're going to get over time,
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or in any given year, or even over a given month.
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The reason the word “fixed” is in these products is because ultimately, even though
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you're being tied to a stock index, they're designed to give you somewhere between 3 and
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5 percent or whatever traditional fixed annuities are paying at the given time.
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So even though you think you're going to be getting the upside of the stock market, that's
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a bit misleading.
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They really aren't designed that way.
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As a matter of fact, all the different options they give you are designed to pay you approximately
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the same percentage, because otherwise why would an annuity company give you options
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to get “3, 4, or 5 percent - which one do you want?”
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Obviously everybody would choose the five.
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So when they give you these other options of what index to participate in, they've already
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figured out that they'll all give you about the same over time.
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So then you're given the opportunity to get a periodic payment if you ever decide to annuitize
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the contract, which means turn it into a series of periodic payments.
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And that is often based on a factor that is based on your original investment plus bonuses,
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and sometimes even interest boosts, none of which apply to your actual dollars - just
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the factor that determines how fast you can access your underlying dollars.
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When you start taking the money out it, actually reduces your assets but not that actual factor.
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When you pass away, your heirs get what's left of the underlying number, not that factor.
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Some annuity companies have started giving heirs the factor amount, but only if they
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take it over five or more years.
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And so finally, just one extra word of caution when it comes to annuities.
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Try to avoid putting non-qualified assets into an annuity.
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Non-qualified assets are assets that aren't in IRAs, retirement accounts, something like that.
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The problem with annuities is that once you put money, non-qualified money in, that's
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money that could be earning capital gains growth but it turns it into ordinary income
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so it's taxed more.
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If you want to get the money out, you have to take the growth out first, so you pay maximum
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tax when you access it.
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And then when you die, it does not get a step-up in basis for your heirs - which as far as
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I'm aware it's the only investment that does not give you that tax benefit.
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So those are reasons to avoid it from a non-qualified standpoint if you can help it.
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There's a lot more information involved with fixed indexed annuities, and
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if you'd like more information please contact Pure Financial Advisors.