Accumulated
Value: the full value of the annuity
contract; principal plus gain.
Annual Reset
Method: an indexing method under
which index growth is measured annually.
The index value starting point is reset
each year.
Annuitization:
waiving access to your accumulated
dollars in return for guaranteed
payments.
Annuity: a
contract designed to accumulate premiums
plus interest prior to maturity, then
distribute the proceeds through a series
of regular payments.
Averaged
Performance Method: An average of
the S&P Index is calculated either
daily, monthly, or annually, over a
specified period, usually one year. This
average is then compared to a
start-point value.
Back-end Load:
any fees deducted when the contract
is terminated; i.e. surrender charges.
Bailout: an
interest protection provision
guaranteeing the client liquidity,
without penalty, if the renewal interest
rate is ever declared below the stated
bailout rate; this penalty-free
surrender period is usually limited to
30 days from the date of notice.
Beneficiary:
the party who receives proceeds (in
most annuity contracts) if owner or
annuitant dies.
CAP: An
overriding maximum percentage that can
be credited in any single year or term.
Not used with all Equity Index Annuities
product designs.
Compounding of
gains: Interest is paid not only on
the initial deposit but also on any
interest accumulated from one period to
the next Contract Term: The length of
time that an account is subject to
surrender charges.
Corporate-owned
Annuity: an annuity owned by a
corporation or business. The interest is
not tax-deferred.
Cost Basis:
the original investment in a
non-qualified annuity, prior to any
transfers of the account; the cost basis
is used to determine the tax excludable
portion.
Death Benefit:
the amount paid to beneficiary upon
annuitant's death.
Deferred
Annuity: a tax favored annuity
account, deferring periodic payments
until a later date.
Direct
Transfer: a tax-free transfer of
qualified funds from one custodian to
another custodian.
Equity Indexed
Annuities: Investment vehicle for
consumers who want to achieve stock
market-linked gains, no market risk,
minimum guaranteed values and tax
deferral.
Exclusion
Ratio: the ratio of the tax
excludable portion of an annuity payment
to the total annuity payment (always
non-qualified funds only).
Fixed Annuity:
an annuity contract with a
guaranteed and projected rate of
interest; a current life insurance
license is all that is required to sell
a fixed annuity.
Flexible
Premium: multiple deposits made at
regular intervals, or at the clients
discretion to fund an annuity contract.
Front-end Load:
any fees deducted from the premium,
before deposit, i.e. administrative or
sales fees.
Guarantee of
Principal: provision in some annuity
contracts that guarantee owners that
they will get their initial premium back
if they change their minds shortly after
purchase.
Guaranteed
Minimum Interest rate: mandated by
states that annuity contracts provide
some sort of minimum guarantee for life
of contract; rates of 3% and 4% are
typical.
High Water Mark
Method: The difference between the
highest Index value achieved on any of
the contract anniversaries, is compared
to the Index value on the policy start
date. At the end of the contract term,
the account is credited with the highest
S&P Index value during the term
multiplied by the participation rate and
credited as interest.
Immediate
Annuity: a series of periodic
payments beginning within one year of
the deposit of funds.
Interest
Protection Provision: see bailout.
Interest Spread
Method: A "spread" percentage is
deducted from the S&P Index appreciation
and the net percentage credited as
interest. Example: If the S&P Index
increased by 15%, and the spread is 2%,
the interest percent credited would be
13%.
IRA Rollover:
a way to reposition one IRA to
another IRA account and defer taxation.
Life Expectancy
Retirement Option (LERO): the method
of calculating the minimum distribution
which must be made each year from a
qualified annuity in order to satisfy
IRS requirements after age 70 1/2.
Life Only:
a settlement option that owner may
select upon annuitization. Payments
continue for life of annuitant, payments
stop when annuitant dies.
Life and 10
Year Certain: a settlement option
that owner may select upon annuitization;
payments continue for life of annuitant
like Life Only option but 10 years of
payments are guaranteed.
Life:
Installment Refund: a settlement
option that owner may select upon
annuitization. Payments continue for
life of annuitant like Life Only option,
but beneficiary may continue to receive
payments until insurance company has
paid out payments equaling the initial
premium.
Nonqualified
Annuity: an annuity whose premiums
are paid with after-tax dollars. When
proceeds are distributed, only the
interest portion will be taxable.
Partial
Withdrawal: the amount an owner can
withdraw from their annuity.
Participation
Rate: A percentage of the gain of
the S&P 500 Index credited to the
accumulation value for a certain period.
The participation rate is declared by
the insurance company and may be
guaranteed annually or for the contract
term. Example: If the Index increased
10% in one year, and the Participation
Rate was 90%, the gain for that year
would be 9%. (Sometimes called the
Interest Index Factor).
Penalty-Free
Withdrawals (Annuity Contracts): a
partial withdrawal from the contract
value, during the surrender charge
period, from which the company will not
subtract a surrender charge.
Point-to-Point
Method: The S&P Index value on the
date of issue is compared to the Index
valued at the end of the contract term.
This percentage is then multiplied by
the participation rate and credited as
interest.
Qualified
Annuity: an annuity that is funded
with pre-tax contributions. Payments are
generally 100% reportable as income in
the tax year the payment is received.
Qualified
Funds: funds deposited in retirement
plans before taxes are deducted (IRA,
SEPs, Keogh Plans, etc.). All
withdrawals totally taxable.
S&P 500 Index:
The Standard & Porto Corporation
publishes this index which measures the
current price behavior of a
representative group of 500 stocks in
relation to a base value set at an
earlier point in time
(1941-1943).Section 1035(a) Exchange:
the tax-free exchange of one
nonqualified annuity contract or life
insurance policy for another, generally
with a different company (life to life;
life to annuity; annuity to annuity).
Settlement
Options: the methods by which the
insurer may pay policy proceeds to the
annuitant, contract owner, policy owner
or beneficiary.
Simple Interest:
Interest paid only on the actual balance
for the actual amount of time it is on
deposit.
Single Premium:
a single deposit made to fund an
annuity. Additional premiums cannot be
added to this policy.
Split Annuity:
combination of two annuities, one
immediate annuity and one deferred
annuity. Immediate provides guaranteed
monthly income for 5, 7, or 10 years on
a tax advantaged basis. During the
interim, the moneys deposited into the
deferred annuity are increasing; the
ultimate goal is that the value of the
deferred annuity will equal the sum of
dollars initially paid into the split
annuity.
Surrender
Charges: a charge deducted from the
accumulated value at the time of full or
partial surrender of an annuity
contract.
Surrender
Value: the value of the annuity
contract after surrender charges have
been deducted from the accumulated
value.
Tax Deferral:
major benefit of annuities. Paying
taxes later instead of now. Allowing
dollars you would normally pay in taxes
to stay inside of the annuity to
accumulate additional compound interest
for the purchaser.
Trust: a
written document, creating a legal
entity to take over ownership of
property, documents, request or other
assets on behalf of the grantor.
Trustee:
one entrusted with the property of
another.
Variable
Annuity: an annuity contract in
which the account value fluctuate
according to market performance; there
is no minimum interest rate guarantees,
nor projections of future rates; the
sale of variable annuities is governed
by the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
Withdrawal
Privileges: usually refers to the
right of the owner to make withdrawals
from the annuity, without surrender
penalty, up to a certain percentage of
accumulated value. |