Al Martinez
America's Financial Solutions Group
4 Common Myths about Annuities
Myths or facts, make sure your understand the difference
Corporate media is mostly aligned against annuities. Could financial bias drive this demonization? Traditional financial institutions (Wall Street) spend vast amounts of money advertising on corporate media properties.What is the truth about annuities? How can one product be so loved and vilified at the same time? It is because annuities are not the same, there are two different categories of annuities.All they share is the name “annuity.”Annuities fall into two different and distinct categories.Annuities issued as securities and sold by brokers are called Variable Annuities.Annuities issued as insurance products and sold by insurance salespeople are called Fixed Annuities (also Fixed Indexed Annuities).Fixed annuities have guarantees and no market risk exposure, but their returns might not be as high as a variable annuity. Variable annuities are securities with FULL market exposure and contain fees and expenses. The annuitant can lose value with a variable annuity.Here are common myths perpetuated by the media:
1: Annuities have high feesThe Truth: Annuity buyers pay no fees when purchasing a fixed indexed annuity. Insurance agents who sell annuities don’t earn a commission from the money a person invests.Instead, insurance companies pay the agent a finder’s fee, a fee for finding the annuity buyer. 100% of the deposit in a new fixed annuity goes to work immediately.The only fee a fixed indexed annuity holder would pay is if there is a separate charge for a “special” income rider which is used to maximize income options in the future. If the annuity is surrendered before the contractual period, a surrender fee can be imposed. Almost all annuities have options in place to remove money when needed, generally 10% of the annuity value annually. Also, if the annuitant decides to convert the annuity to income, there are no fees.If an annuity holder abides by the term, they will never pay a fee.Terms and surrender fees vary by insurance companies and the specific annuity products.One annuity may only have a 3-year term, another a 10-year term. It’s important to know these terms and the surrender fees upfront before purchasing an annuity.A variable annuity (a security) works differently with potentially three different types of fees.- Investment management fees
- Insurance company expenses
- Guaranteed income rider fees

Al Martinez
America's Financial Solutions Group
1635 Foxtrail Dr.
Loveland, Colorado 80538
al.martinez@retirevillage.com
(888) 418-3358


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