Laddering Annuities- A Strategy that may be of Interest to Retirees

Oct 03, 2022
Laddering Annuities- A Strategy that may be of Interest to Retirees

Annuity laddering is a financial strategy of purchasing several annuities of lower value over a period of several years. When interest rates are low, laddering can offset the small returns from annuities by allowing the owner to stagger the end dates of the contracts.

What is Laddering?

Financial laddering is typically a method of investing in bonds and CDs, but it’s also a good financial strategy for maximizing the value of annuities. 
 
Financial expert and Forbes contributor Matt Carey said, “Laddering spreads out maturities of different fixed income instruments so that you are consistently able to access some funds for liquidity, while simultaneously taking advantage of higher rates on longer-term instruments.” 
 
So, it’s basically a way to increase the chance of earning more money when interest rates swing upward. You might, for example, open a new CD, invest in a different 
bond or buy an annuity every year for several years to get the best deal available under the economic conditions of the time period during which you make each transaction. 
 
Those conditions include changing interest rates, which the insurance companies determine using factors that include your age and life expectancy, your age at the time of an annuity purchase and, more importantly, your age when payouts begin will affect the offer you get for an annuity.

Why This Strategy Makes Sense

Laddering annuities is meant to offset slow returns. There is a significant opportunity cost to investing in a long-term product when the market is performing poorly. This strategy serves to mitigate this loss.

Laddering is attractive to investors for other reasons, too. “The main benefits of laddering are spreading interest rate and reinvestment risk over time and getting short-term liquidity while taking advantage of longer-term rates,” Carey told Forbes.
 
This can be especially consequential when you’re talking about setting up your retirement funds, which should not be so rigid that your income can’t keep up with the increases in your cost of living.

In other words, you don’t want to tie up all your money in low-rate vehicles and forgo the opportunity to move it into investments that would perform better. At the same time, you don’t want to invest in hopes interest rates will go up only to see the rates sink even lower.

Different Ways to Ladder

A financial professional, such as Summerlin Benefits Consulting, can help you determine the best laddering strategy for your situation and may suggest one of the following methods.

Spreading Out Your Principal

Maybe you have a total of $500,000 to invest in annuities. You can use $100,000 each year toward an annuity purchase. This also allows you to invest just a part of your retirement savings to give annuities a try before tying up a large percentage of your savings.

Annuities With Different Surrender Periods

Another way to ladder annuities is to buy several fixed-rate annuities with different surrender periods. The surrender period is the amount of time you must wait to withdraw funds from your annuity without facing a penalty. If you do need to withdraw more than what is allowed in the contract, you will have to pay a surrender charge.

At the end of the surrender periods, you can withdraw your money without penalty as long as you’re at least 59.5 years old. Alternatively, you can move the funds to an annuity with better terms through a 1035 exchange. These exchanges are a way to trade in one annuity for another without tax consequences. The 1035 refers to the provision in the tax code that covers them.

If the annuity contract is as good as the offerings at the end of the surrender period, you can keep the annuity contract as is. Having several annuities with different surrender periods allows you to review the terms of each contract at the end of its surrender period and decide whether you could get better returns in another annuity.

Take Advantage of Different Features

You can also ladder various types of annuities. For example, you can invest some of your money into the purchase of fixed annuities while investing other funds into indexed or variable annuities. This allows you to have a balance of the advantages and disadvantages of each type. Each type of annuity has unique benefits and drawbacks — such as the reliability of predetermined interest rates on fixed annuities versus the less stable rates of variable annuities.

Increase Your Payments by Staggering Payout Dates

Finally, in addition to laddering the actual purchase of annuities, you can ladder when they will start paying you income, beginning at the age of 59 ½. The older you are when you start receiving the payments, the higher the payments will be. This is because life expectancy is one of the factors that determine annuity payout amounts. The longer your life expectancy, the lower your payments will be. 

Hence, you’ll receive larger payments from a deferred annuity that doesn’t start paying out until you turn 75 years old than you would from an immediate annuity that starts paying you at age 60.

Where do I Begin?

You may be thinking to yourself, “Laddering sounds fine and dandy, but how am I going to figure out which strategy is best for me?” At Summerlin Benefits Consulting, it is our job to help you navigate through this process; we try to take out the guesswork for you. While each client’s specific financial situation may be different, our goals remain the same: protecting your principal, helping you obtain a reasonable rate of return, and keeping it simple. Call us today and let’s start protecting your money!

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