An annuity contract
is a financial product, typically offered by a financial institution,
that may accumulate value and take a current value and pay
it out over a period of years. These contracts are regulated
by various jurisdictions and this has led to the term being
focused on different features in different parts of the world.
There are two possible phases for an
annuity, one phase in which the customer deposits and accumulates
money into an account (the deferral phase), and the annuity
phase in which the insurance company makes income payments
until the death of the customers (the "annuitants")
named in the contract. It is possible to structure an annuity
contract so that it has only the annuity phase; such a contract
is called an immediate annuity. Annuity contracts with a
deferral phase are similar to bank CDs and have a growth
phase prior to distribution of income, and are called deferred
annuities. The newest incarnation is the fixed, equity indexed
product which can be either a fixed annuity or pure life
insurance.
In the US, an "annuity" generally refers to a deferred
investment contract that, upon "annuitization," will
make regular payments (e.g., on a monthly or annual basis)
to a person (called the "annuitant") for a period
certain, over one or more specified individuals' lifetimes,
or over a combination of life and a period certain.
Such contracts provide an income during retirement or a stream
of payments as a settlement of a personal injury lawsuit (i.e.,
a structured settlement). Some annuities (called "joint
life" or "joint and survivor" annuities) continue
paying a second person (i.e., the "beneficiary")
after the annuitant dies, until that person dies as well. (For
example, an annuity may be structured to make payments to a
married couple, such payments ceasing on the death of the second
spouse.)
Annuities that make payments in fixed amounts or in amounts
that increase by a fixed percentage are called fixed annuities.
Variable annuities, by contrast, pay amounts that vary according
to the investment performance of a specified set of investments,
typically bond and equity mutual funds.
Variable annuities are used for many different objectives.
One common objective is deferral of the recognition of taxable
gains. Money deposited in a variable annuity grows on a tax-deferred
basis, so that taxes on investment gains are not due until
a withdrawal is made. Variable annuities offer a variety of
funds ("subaccounts" in the parlance of the industry)
from various money managers. This gives investors the ability
to move between subaccounts without incurring additional fees
or sales charges.
An annuity is an insurance product; annuities are typically
issued by the same companies that issue life insurance policies,
and the risks undertaken by the issuer are fundamentally the
same for both products -- that is, the insurance company bets
on the life expectancy of the customer. The result is to transfer
the effects of the uncertainty of an individual's lifespan
from the individual to the insurer, which reduces its own uncertainty
by pooling many clients.
With a "single premium" or "immediate" annuity,
the annuitant pays for the annuity with a single lump sum.
The annuity starts making regular payments to the annuitant
within a year. A common use of a single premium annuity is
as a destination for roll-over retirement savings upon retirement.
In such a case, a retiree withdraws all of the money the retiree
has saved in, for example, a 401(k) (i.e., tax-advantaged)
savings vehicle during the retiree's working life and uses
the money to buy an annuity whose payments will replace the
retiree's wage payments for the rest of the retiree's life.
The advantage of such an annuity is that the annuitant has
a guaranteed income for life, whereas if the retiree were instead
to withdraw money regularly from the retirement account, the
retiree might run out of money before the retiree dies or not
have as much to spend while the retiree is alive.
Another kind of annuity is a combination of retirement savings
and retirement payment plan: the annuitant makes regular contributions
to the annuity until a certain date and then receives regular
payments from the annuity until the annuitant dies. Sometimes
there is a life insurance component added so that if the annuitant
dies before annuity payments begin, a beneficiary gets either
a lump sum or annuity payments.
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