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Immediate or Deferred
Immediate Annuities
An annuity may be either immediate or deferred. If you want to begin receiving income
immediately, consider an immediate annuity. Immediate annuities, usually purchased
with a single premium, provide income payments that start no later than one year
after you pay the premium.
The reason for buying an immediate annuity is to obtain immediate income for the
purpose of retirement.
Deferred Annuities
If you are years away from retirement, consider a deferred annuity. Deferred annuities
provide income payments that often start many years later. Deferred annuities have
an accumulation period, which is the time between when you start paying premiums
and when income payments start.
The main reason for buying a deferred annuity is to accumulate money on a tax-deferred
basis, which can then provide an income at a later date.
Fixed or Variable
There are two basic types of annuity contracts—fixed and variable. At the time you
buy an annuity contract you will select between a fixed or variable. This
determines how earnings are credited in your contract.
A fixed annuity provides fixed-dollar income payments backed by the guarantees
in the contract. During the accumulation period of a fixed deferred annuity, your
money (less any applicable charges) earns interest rates set by the insurance company
spelled out in the annuity contract.
Every fixed annuity has a current interest rate and a minimum guaranteed interest
rate. The company guarantees that it will pay no less than a minimum rate of interest.
During the payout period, the amount of each income payment to you is generally
set when the payments start and will not change.
An equity-indexed annuity is a type of fixed annuity, which pays base return.
This kind of annuity returns may be higher upon the performance of an equity market
index, such as the Standard & Poor’s 500 Composite Stock Price Index (the S&P 500),
the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), or the National Association of Securities
Dealers Automated Quotations (NASDAQ).
The annuity’s principal investment is protected from losses in the equity market,
while gains add to the annuity’s returns. These types of annuity interest that is
credited and when it gets credited to your annuity will vary depending on the particular
contract.
A variable annuity offers a range of investment or funding options. During
the accumulation period of a variable annuity, the insurance company puts your premiums,
less any applicable charges, into a separate account.
You decide how the company will invest those premiums, depending on how much risk
you want to take. You may put your premium into a stock, bond, or other account,
with no guarantees, or into a fixed account, with a minimum guaranteed interest
rate.
During the payout period of a variable annuity, the amount of each income payment
to you may be fixed (set at the beginning) or variable (changing with the value
of the investments in the separate account).
How Premiums Are Paid
Single premium contracts require you to fully fund the annuity contract in
one single premium payment. You cannot add additional money to the account.
Multiple premium contracts allow an annuity to be funded by means of premium
payments over a period of time.
There are two kinds of multiple premium contracts—flexible and scheduled. A flexible
premium contract lets you pay as much as you want, whenever you want, within set
limits. A scheduled premium contract spells out the amount and frequency of your
premium payments.
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