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Annuities
An annuity provides an income, either for life or for
a specified period, in exchange for a lump sum investment. Once the annuity
has been bought, you cannot get your lump sum back and you are tied into the
income agreed.
The level of income that you will receive from an annuity depends upon:
Generally speaking, the older you are the more pension annuity (income) you
will receive. Once you've bought an annuity, the income you will receive will
be stipulated for either the rest of your life or the term of the annuity. The
joker in the pack, however, is the fact that annuity income rates vary so much
over time and from provider to provider, just like bank and building society
rates.
How they work
Annuities are supplied by life offices. Like any organisation, they exist to
make a profit and will endeavour to do so out of you. The income you will
receive from an annuity is dependent upon many things, such as the investment
conditions at the time you take it out.
Most, but not all, annuities offer some form of guaranteed income. To support
this guarantee, the life offices invest in fixed interest investments, usually
long term government gilts. The rate of return of these gilts varies over
time and so therefore do annuity rates.
Another big influence is your age. The insurance company will adjust the
payments it offers you depending upon how long it expects you to live. It
follows that if you buy an annuity at 75 you will secure a much better rate
than you would at 55. Also women statistically live about seven years longer
than men, so women tend to attract lower annuity rates than men. However
certain annuities, like the ones funded by 'appropriate personal pensions' are
calculated on a unisex basis, with both men and women receiving the same
rates.
Health can also affect an annuity's rates. Someone suffering from a fatal
disease will often secure higher rates since the insurance company will expect
to pay out for a shorter time.
The major drawback of traditional annuities is that the terms are set and
cannot be changed once you've handed over your lump sum. This is obviously a
disadvantage if you happen to be retiring when rates are low. To counter this,
there are now methods of phasing your retirement, to allow you greater control
over when you commit to an annuity.
There are two main types of annuity.
Compulsory purchase annuities (CPAs) must, and can only, be bought with the
bulk of the proceeds from a money purchase pension, such as a personal pension
plan or the proceeds of a money purchase employer's scheme.
Purchased life annuities (PLAs), on the other hand, can be bought by anyone
with spare capital.
The difference between the two is that with CPAs, the full income is taxable
whereas with PLAs, only the interest element is taxed. The element of income
that represents a return of capital is not taxed.
Hence, a tax free lump sum from a pension will for some people produce more
income via a PLA than if it had been left with the rest of the pension
fund and purchased a CPA.
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