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Applying for a Student Loan
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Annuities | Variable Annuities
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Ask
Questions Before You Invest
Financial professionals who
sell variable annuities have a duty to advise you as to whether
the product they are trying to sell is suitable to your particular
investment needs. Don't be afraid to ask them questions. And write
down their answers, so there won't be any confusion later as to what
was said.
Variable annuity contracts typically have a "free look" period
of ten or more days, during which you can terminate the contract
without paying any surrender charges and get back your purchase
payments (which may be adjusted to reflect charges and the performance
of your investment). You can continue to ask questions in this period
to make sure you understand your variable annuity before the "free
look" period ends.
Before you decide to buy a variable annuity, consider the
following questions:
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Will you use the variable annuity
primarily to save for retirement or a similar long-term goal?
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Are you investing in the variable
annuity through a retirement plan or IRA (which would mean that you
are not receiving any additional tax-deferral benefit from the
variable annuity)?
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- Are you willing to take the risk
that your account value may decrease if the underlying mutual
fund investment options perform badly?
- Do you understand the features of
the variable annuity?
- Do you understand all of the fees
and expenses that the
variable annuity charges?
- Do you intend to remain in the
variable annuity long enough to avoid paying any surrender
charges if you have to withdraw money?
- If a variable annuity
offers a bonus credit, will the bonus outweigh any higher fees and
charges that the product may charge?
- Are there features of the
variable annuity, such as long-term care insurance, that you
could purchase more cheaply separately?
- Have you consulted with a tax
adviser and considered all the tax consequences of purchasing an
annuity, including the effect of annuity payments on your tax status
in retirement?
- If you are exchanging one annuity
for another one, do the benefits of the exchange outweigh the costs,
such as any surrender charges you will have to pay if you withdraw
your money before the end of the surrender charge period for the new
annuity?
Remember: Before purchasing a
variable annuity, you owe it to yourself to learn as much as
possible about how they work, the benefits they provide, and the
charges you will pay. |
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Sources: Wikipedia, FCIC, SEC and other public sources.
Annuities | Variable Annuities
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