Low Interest Rates Archives | Annuity Guys® https://annuityguys.org/tag/low-interest-rates/ Annuity Rates, Features & Ratings: America's trusted annuity resource. Compare best options for hybrid, index, fixed, variable & immediate annuity quotes. Mon, 11 Apr 2016 19:14:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 Is a Pre-Issued Annuity right for you? – Part 2 https://annuityguys.org/pre-issued-annuity-right-for-you-part-2/ https://annuityguys.org/pre-issued-annuity-right-for-you-part-2/#respond Thu, 05 Jul 2012 20:12:47 +0000 http://annuityguys.org/?p=4970 This is a two part blog on Pre-Issued Annuities. In part 1 we examined some of the reasons why someone might consider a Pre-Issued Annuity for a portion of their portfolio. In this entry we highlight some of the concerns and and negatives that must be considered when examining a Pre-Issued Annuity. [embedit snippet=”video-specialist-button”]   **Guarantees, […]

The post Is a Pre-Issued Annuity right for you? – Part 2 appeared first on Annuity Guys®.

]]>
This is a two part blog on Pre-Issued Annuities. In part 1 we examined some of the reasons why someone might consider a Pre-Issued Annuity for a portion of their portfolio.

In this entry we highlight some of the concerns and and negatives that must be considered when examining a Pre-Issued Annuity.

[embedit snippet=”video-specialist-button”]

 

**Guarantees, including optional benefits, are backed by the claims-paying ability of the issuer, and may contain limitations, including surrender charges, which may affect policy values. During this segment, Dick and Eric are referring to Fixed Annuities unless otherwise specified.

So now let’s consider some of the negatives on a PRE-ISSUED ANNUITY ™ :

  •     Limited liquidity selling your payment stream prior to maturity could result in a considerable loss.
  •     The court order process should be monitored by an expert attorney that is retained by you.
  •     The best PRE-ISSUED ANNUITIES ™ never make it to the internet or retail lists.
  •     The industry is controlled by a few power players catering to institutional investors.
  •     Contracts require a 10% to 20% escrow to secure your future ownership during the court order process tying up some of your money at low or no interest for up to 90 days.
  •     Approximately thirty percent of initiated contracts get rejected by the court and you get your escrow back to start over.
  •     The industry is full of highly motivated commission oriented sales people that will promise the world and then fall short on delivery they would prefer for you to not have your own expert attorney.
  •     Contracts are often discounted by two to four brokers away from the source diluting your potential yield.
  •     Most contracts available on the internet are older inventory that has been picked over already
  •     Life contingent contracts can end abruptly with an insurance company paying back your principal and yield early since the annuitant died unexpectedly.
  •     Not FDIC insured.

Is a PRE-ISSUED ANNUITY™ right for you? [Read More…]

Annuity guys Video Transcript:

Eric: We talked about IRAs, and this always my biggest concern with IRA’s because you have RMDs that you’re going to have to eventually get to. Liquidity is of one that concerns because you’re buying that stream, or that lump sum, it’s already predicated. It’s already set out.

Dick: You need to balance that, in terms of your overall IRA, that you’ve got money to draw your RMDs from, or that your income stream will be adequate from the pre-issued annuity to cover your RMD. That is a consideration that you have to look at.

Eric: Liquidity in and of itself.

Dick: Let’s just talk about liquidity. That is probably, in all fairness, folks, that is the biggest negative of a pre-issued annuity. Once you buy it you have to know that you’re in a good position to hold it to maturity. If you’re in a good position, it can be a great strategy, a great financial vehicle, but if you’re not and you buy one, then you’re going to be forced to sell it on the secondary market, go through the court order process so your payments streams. That will be at a considerable loss typically.

Eric: There’s a reason that there’s so many players in this market. They’re able to sell low buy high, or . . .

Dick: Buy low, sell high.

Eric: Unfortunately in this case, the people selling are selling at a low point. We really encourage you to know exactly that you can handle that payment stream as it’s been setup, or that lump sum, those criteria fit your situation.

Dick: Another aspect of this, that folks get a little bit frustrated. You talk to a lot of people out there that are basically a commission sales person, they’re claiming to be an expert, they may have done several of these transactions, but they really don’t have what’s called a fiduciary responsibility to the client. If they are incompetent, if they’ve not done well, they’re on to their next client after they’ve placed you with something that may not have been handled properly. This is where we highly recommend that you work with someone, first of all, that is very experienced, but in addition to that, that would be an attorney, because there is a court order process that these go through and you really want to make certain that it’s properly identified, named, that all the parties involved are properly represented, and your closing documents and everything have been reviewed by an attorney; and that that attorney actually has a certain fiduciary obligation to look out for your best interest. If they don’t, they’re in danger of losing their practice.

Eric: We actually would say, we’d encourage you to actually have a retainer with an attorney signed in order to ensure that client/attorney privilege that they’re obligated to basically act in your best interest. That’s that fiduciary responsibility.

Dick: Let’s be fair, that’s going to cut down on the yield a little bit, but when we’re talking about a substantial yield, way better than what’s available in the market and you have to put out $500 out of your pocket to ensure that’s done correctly, that’s a very small part of that yield. It might be 10 basis points over 10 years or 1/10th%. I’m just throwing out some approximations here. It could be way less than that, it could be slightly more.

Eric: Exactly. Next thing is you’re not just going to run down to the corner drugstore and pick one of these up off the shelf.

Dick: No. There’s really some major players in this, and there’s not that many of the major players, 4 or 5 of them. Of those players some of them sell pretty much exclusively to institutional investors, so that leaves less to pick from. There are some smaller entities that are in this distribution vein, but what you really want, and we always are telling our clients this or the website visitors, is you want someone that’s really connected to the sources. They can have multiple avenues to look at the better pre-issued annuities that come along with better yields and better payment terms in this type of thing that most people that are out on the internet buying from a commissioned salesperson, they’re not going to actually know about these.

Eric: The earlier you are in the process, the better return you’re going to get. Insider’s advantage.

Dick: It really is. There’s nothing illegal or wrong about it. It’s not like insider trading or something, this is just knowing how to get to the item first that’s paying the highest yield. There’s another aspect, Eric, that we need to be aware of. I’m going to look back here at my notes so I can make sure that I don’t just keep rambling on and on here, make sure that we hit all of these points.

Eric: We talked about the escrow.

Dick: Right. That was . . . go ahead.

Eric: Where you were going to go?

Dick: Where I was going on it, yes.

Eric: It’s basically when you start to work with somebody, and especially on the insider aspect where you indicate this is what you’re looking for; typically, you’re going to put an escrow out there in order to initiate the process.

Dick: Right. That is the aspect that we want to be aware of, and that is that about 30% of these that enter the court order process will not go through. They’ll be declared invalid by the court system. About 70% of them are going to go through. Just what you were talking about, you have to escrow, get ahead of the curb to get the better ones, you have to actually be willing to say, “That’s a payment stream I would like to have.” Like you said escrow 10%to 20%, to hold that particular contract, that particular pre-issued annuity while it goes through the court order process, and it takes about 90 days. The worst case scenario is you’ll get your escrow back.

Eric: You’ve lost time, that’s all you’ve lost in a sense. Again, the court is protecting your process so that’s a safety side. The negative side is there are procedures and pieces that have to go through in order for this to come to fruition.

How many people are competing in this world? There’s a whole bunch of motivated commissioned people that are in there, but it’s a very small insiders group.

Dick: Yes. When we start getting into attorney’s that work in this area, that are very proficient in this area, that have some real experience, a lot of those attorney’s are actually working for the companies that are buying the settlements, selling the settlements, and this type of thing. There are some available, you can find them typically on the internet. If you’re somehow connected to the industry, you may know some, and that’s something that we can do for our site visitors, is recommend an attorney that we can refer, that would assist them.

Eric: That’s the key, I think. Our strength in this area is working with insiders. We work with somebody that’s key in the industry, that has an insider advantage, and that’s what’s benefited our clients.

Dick: It really makes the difference. I think, folks, that when you look at this whole strategy and this direction for a higher yield, I think you just need to do a little bit more homework, a little more research, become comfortable with how it works. Once you understand it, it can be a very effective, very high-yield safe type of financial strategy.

Eric: It’s an excellent tool for your toolbox. Especially in this extremely low rate environment, it gives you another option.

Dick: For that portion of your money that you want to see grow with a good yield and you can structure the payment stream to fit your needs, it’s hard to beat.

Eric: Thank you for checking out our pre-issued annuities section.

Dick: Yes. We’ll come back with more on this at a later date, and maybe go into more of the mechanics of it.

Eric: Sounds good. Have a great day.

Dick: Thank you.

The post Is a Pre-Issued Annuity right for you? – Part 2 appeared first on Annuity Guys®.

]]>
https://annuityguys.org/pre-issued-annuity-right-for-you-part-2/feed/ 0
Low Interest Rates Hurt Seniors https://annuityguys.org/low-interest-rates-hurt-seniors/ https://annuityguys.org/low-interest-rates-hurt-seniors/#respond Fri, 20 Apr 2012 14:29:07 +0000 http://annuityguys.org/?p=4911 The Federal Reserve Board has not formally relaxed its intention to keep interest rates low through the end of 2014. And there is little new to say about the way non-existent interest rates on savings accounts, certificates of deposit, and U.S. Treasury securities have hurt all savers, particularly risk-averse investors. Retirees are, of course, the […]

The post Low Interest Rates Hurt Seniors appeared first on Annuity Guys®.

]]>
The Federal Reserve Board has not formally relaxed its intention to keep interest rates low through the end of 2014. And there is little new to say about the way non-existent interest rates on savings accounts, certificates of deposit, and U.S. Treasury securities have hurt all savers, particularly risk-averse investors.

Retirees are, of course, the poster children for risk-adverse investments, and their nest eggs have been hammered by the Fed’s policy. The Fed has said that low rates help the economic recovery. So it argues, in effect, that investors should enjoy the solid stock market returns and that savers should display a stiff upper lip. [Read More at US News…]

**Guarantees, including optional benefits, are backed by the claims-paying ability of the issuer, and may contain limitations, including surrender charges, which may affect policy values. During this segment, Dick and Eric are referring to Fixed Annuities unless otherwise specified.

4 Ways New Annuity Rules Will Help Retirees

The White House last week strongly endorsed annuities as a needed but missing piece of Americans’ retirement plans. Insurance companies and annuity trade groups had something nice to say about Washington regulators for a change. And the new rules just might set in motion some interesting retirement-plan changes.

Among financial products, annuities have long been a very hard sell. It’s easy to understand the appeal of buying Apple stock or getting in on the ground floor of Facebook’s IPO. Understanding annuities and their benefits, however, is not on the minds of many investors.

The premise of an annuity is easy to state: Give some money to an insurance company and it will make **guaranteed payments to you for the rest of your life. The money can be paid now or in the future. The payments can begin at any time the investor chooses. And the lifetime stream of income promised by an annuity can augment Social Security and help put to rest a person’s fear that he or she will run out of money before they die.

[Read More at US News…]

Annuity Guys® Video Transcript:

Dick: One thing that really gets our blood boiling, and I would have to say a lot of the folks that we speak with, is this low interest rate environment that is really being penalizing to retirees.

Eric: The unfortunate thing is you’ve got a government who is forcing low interest rates down our throat.

Dick: Why would that be to our government’s benefit, Eric?

Eric: Let’s see here. If I print cheap money, and if I don’t have to pay it back at high interest rates . . .

Dick: If I owe $16 trillion, and there’s a way I can actually manipulate and hold interest rates low, that might be a good thing for me?

Eric: Just borrowing free money. We’ve been propping up the banks and propping up and, supposedly, economy by keeping these rates low, but the return effect is we’ve taken our retirees and our savers, and we’ve thrown them under the bus.

Dick: We’ve penalized them in a major way. When you look at the financial institutions that these interest rates were put into effect, supposedly, to help and to shore-up, these financial institutions are all passing their stress tests.

Eric: They’re making money.

Dick: They’re making money; they’re coming back. There’s a few that are having a challenge, but overall, our financial system at least gives the appearance that it’s been restored to some degree.

Eric: What they did is they designed this to basically push money into the economy to make it better to borrow. Borrowing helps the economy; that’s what the theory is here.

Dick: Stimulating the economy.

Eric: If you want to borrow money right now, it’s a great time, but if you’re getting close to retirement and you’ve already saved up everything, you’re now earning next to nothing on most of your major options or your safe money options: Your CDs, your money markets, the FDIC-insured options. You’re being forced to look at other alternatives.

Dick: Our corporations are cash-rich. The banks have a lot of cash that they don’t know what to do with. The demand isn’t there to borrow the money, even though the rates are extremely low. What I believe that this is leading up to, and I think, Eric, we’ve discussed this, is that there is no short-term fix.

Eric: No. In fact, Uncle Ben Bernanke has promised us that we’re going to keep interest rates at this level at least until the beginning of 2015. We’re sitting here, years away now, and people are saying, “Are rates ever going to increase?” The crystal ball in front of us says no, because we’ve got a **guarantee, or a pledge, to keep rates at a hyper-low level.

Dick: Our government’s motivation isn’t there to stimulate and raise the rates for savings, which encourages savings and that type of thing. The more that consumers spend, the more that they borrow, the more that drives the economy, and it has that other side effect of holding the government’s borrowing costs down. When we look at Japan, we go back to 20 years of very, very low interest rate environment, and the savers over there have had . . . who knows if we’re really following that model or not, but there are some similarities there.

Eric: I’ll be honest, and Dick’s heard me say, I don’t care about Japan. I’m worried about what happens here at home.

Dick: What happens to our clients right here in Central Illinois, United States.

Eric: That’s right. We’ve got people that are constantly walking in the door. I’ve had umpteen people that are typical CD borrowers, who walk in with their hands in the air, and they go, “What can I do? What are the alternatives?”

Dick: We’ve been pretty fortunate. We’ve been able to establish at least the foundational portion of many of our clients’ portfolios in annuities, and we’ve been able to ladder those annuities and get 8% **guaranteed growth on the income base anyway. Maybe the cash accumulation isn’t growing at 8%, but their income base is growing, that they can draw their income off of. It will have a tendency to outpace or stay ahead of inflation.

Eric: Just real quickly, when we talk about laddering annuities, what we’re talking about is basically having different start-points for annuities. You may turn on Year-1 and you may wait 5 years before you turn on another, and another 10 years before you would turn on a third.

Dick: You’ve got this 8% or 7% compounding year-after-year. The longer you can stretch it out, the better. You may need some income immediately or income in 5 years, and then income in 10, in 15.

Eric: To turn those on after those have been in deferral so they have a greater compounding effect.

Dick: The other choice that we have if somebody needs income right away, is to setup some type of an immediate annuity or a hybrid annuity that will actually have some cost of living adjustment built into it.

Eric: The one thing with [inaudible: 05:11] the immediate annuities, if you start them with a cost of living adjustment, they usually start a little bit lower than those that just have a normal life expectancy.

Dick: Similarly on some of the hybrids, but there are some hybrids that will actually start about the same point and still have a cost of living adjustment built into them.

Eric: That’s what we always talk about with the client: What’s the longevity expectation? If you have a longer than normal life expectancy in your family, that’s especially the time to look at those things, because that’s [inaudible: 05:39].

Dick: You can really come out ahead. Our goal is never to do out and beat up on the insurance company, but when it comes down to . . . Eric says, “Yes we do.” When it comes down to the client or the insurance company, we’re for the client.

Eric: That’s exactly right. We want you to make the most money possible back.

Dick: If you can win against the insurance company, then obviously, longevity is one of those variables, those wildcards.

Eric: Our goal is for everybody to win. I say that facetiously. I don’t want to take the insurance company down, but that being said, I want all my clients to benefit.

Dick: To benefit in the best way possible. We really come down to, Eric, a low-rate interest environment. It’s affecting retirees all over the country, and their choices aren’t that many.

Eric: No, very limited. I don’t want to say ‘in closing,’ necessarily, but in summary . . .

Dick: It’s okay. We can close.

Eric: Look at your full range of options because of the interest rate environment. It’s not the time to be sitting on the fence, unfortunately. People keep on saying, “If I wait.’ I’ve had somebody out there waiting for 3 years now, waiting for rates to increase, and the opposite has happened.

Dick: It lost ground, and they don’t have the same options they had a few years ago.

Eric: How long can you sit in a 0.5% CD?

Dick: With 3% inflation.

Eric: Exactly. You’re losing money by putting yourself in a . . .

Dick: You’re going backwards at 2½% to 4% a year, probably.

Eric: In summary, yes. Low interest rates hurt retirees, they’re very painful, but it shouldn’t stop you from taking action and making a progressive retirement plan.

Dick: Yeah, making a good decision. Use a good financial advisor and just weigh all the options. Thank you.

The post Low Interest Rates Hurt Seniors appeared first on Annuity Guys®.

]]>
https://annuityguys.org/low-interest-rates-hurt-seniors/feed/ 0
Are Annuities a Good Choice in a Low Interest Rate Environment? https://annuityguys.org/are-annuities-a-good-choice-in-a-low-interest-rate-environment/ https://annuityguys.org/are-annuities-a-good-choice-in-a-low-interest-rate-environment/#respond Fri, 09 Mar 2012 21:19:35 +0000 http://annuityguys.org/?p=4860 One of the questions we have heard asked quite a bit lately, “Is it the right time to buy an annuity?” A prolonged low interest rate environment does impact returns and interest crediting on annuities. Payouts, **guarantees and riders have all been impacted in the annuity marketplace during the last five years. In fact, one […]

The post Are Annuities a Good Choice in a Low Interest Rate Environment? appeared first on Annuity Guys®.

]]>
One of the questions we have heard asked quite a bit lately, “Is it the right time to buy an annuity?”

A prolonged low interest rate environment does impact returns and interest crediting on annuities. Payouts, **guarantees and riders have all been impacted in the annuity marketplace during the last five years. In fact, one recent example showed that immediate annuity payouts were down about five percent from just eight months ago.

So, if you are considering an annuity — is this the right time or should you wait?

[embedit snippet=”video-specialist-button”]

 

**Guarantees, including optional benefits, are backed by the claims-paying ability of the issuer, and may contain limitations, including surrender charges, which may affect policy values. During this segment, Dick and Eric are referring to Fixed Annuities unless otherwise specified.

Firstly, proper financial planning would indicate that a balance of assets and asset classes should be utilized in constructing a quality retirement plan. Many financial planners now utilize annuities as part of the fixed income allocation adding additional layers of security by eliminating longevity and credit risk. When it comes to providing income, annuities offer unparalleled combinations of safety and security when navigating through 20 to 40 years of retirement.

Secondly, if you are trying to time the market you may just end up guessing wrong. How can we guess wrong when the Federal Reserve has indicated they plan to keep interest rates at near zero levels until 2014? Only hindsight will be certain, but what are the costs to your portfolio when you park money in an account earning zero or stuff it in your mattress. While you may not lose principle you most likely will lose buying power. Inflation, which has averaged somewhere around four percent for about the last 30 to 40 years is sure to erode your future spending power.

However, nothing could be worse than losing principal and depleting your retirement savings just because you choose to stay invested in riskier asset classes due to a perceived lack of choice.

What is the best plan for when I prepare for retirement – NOW?

  1. Protect the Basics – If you are in or near retirement protect your income by selecting safe money options that provide reliable and steady income. Consider CD’s or annuities for this portion. Annuities are superior for providing income, while CD’s are federally insured.
  2. Spread out your assets – Look at all assets classes, not just stocks and bonds to provide diversification. You can spread out your risk by choosing assets classes than are not as heavily correlated to each other. Consider MLPs, REITs, preferred stock, commodities, currencies, options, carry trades and annuities.
  3. Take reasonable risks – Once you have protected your foundational level of income you can be more comfortable in engaging traditional more aggressive asset classes that can provide additional returns to combat inflation.
  4. Get a second opinion – Ideas and philosophies about financial planning are plentiful. Seek out professional advice and don’t be afraid to get a second opinion. When it comes to retirement planning some advisor are definitely better than others.

Lastly remember you are in charge, too often we hear from clients who say “I did not want to do that but my advisor said I should”… if you don’t like their advice or service. Get a new advisor. It’s your money and more importantly it is your retirement.

Annuity Guys® Video Transcript:

Dick: Today we have with us the new and improved Eric. He’s done a little shaving and he’s got that youthful appearance. Hey, we’re going to talk about annuity timing today and what is the best time to buy an annuity?

Eric: Yeah, it’s really we’re looking at today’s low interest rate environment. One of the questions we constantly get asked is “Is it the right time, or am I better off waiting?”

Dick: That’s the big question and I think that is the good thing about an annuity is that they are structured for income, and they’re not really structured just for the aspect, of treating them like a CD. So they’re more of a potentially, foundational place in your portfolio that can get you the higher income that you’re desiring even in a low rate environment. So I think that that’s just part of structuring an overall portfolio. What would you say, Eric?

Eric: Yeah, it’s about asset allocation, so when it comes down to it, you start with a plan. You can’t hit a target, you can’t see. So what’s your retirement financial plan? And then you start building from that, all right? We always talk about the foundation, taking care of the foundation and if income is part of the foundation, that’s really where annuity makes sense.

Eric: An annuity makes sense for fitting that income foundation portion, securing it so you don’t have to worry about running out of money.

Eric: One of the biggest concerns a lot of people we talk to have is with the rates being as low, you know…

Dick: Yeah, right, when is the right timing? And we do know, Eric. I mean it is a fact, if we keep money in a low-rate environment and we do nothing, put it in our mattress or put it…

Eric: Put it in a savings account.

Dick: When you put it in the bank it’s about like putting it in the mattress. It’s going to earn about the same amount of money, so we know that we’re not going to keep up with inflation.

Eric: Right, we know that zero is what we’re getting…

Dick: We know that our spending power is dropping, dramatically.

Eric: So if inflation’s averaging 4.0%, over the last 30 to 40 years, what are you getting when you put it in a zero-earning environment? You’re losing money. You don’t like to think of it as losing money, but you are.

Dick: Well by contrast, let’s just talk about for a minute, because we hear a lot about it. The hybrid annuity and what makes the hybrid annuity unique in this low-rate environment when it comes to income?

Eric: Well, it’s the income riders. You’ve got that **guaranteed return, sometimes as high as 8.0%, 7.0-8.0%, that those dollars can be used to **guarantee income in the future and that’s a way of securing income.

Dick: Right, it’s another layer of security that we’re really asking the insurance company to take that risk, instead of us taking the risk by going into riskier investments, we’re saying, “Hey, if I can grow my income base in a similar way, if I just put it in the stock market and tried to earn 8.0%, I mean I realize it’s not going into my cash accumulation account.” But if I can draw income off of it on a similar level that I could, if my stock account grew then that’s a way of transferring some of that risk.

Eric: Right and it’s about putting the right pieces or filling the right buckets. You want to have that secure portion taken care of, so then you can add those other allocations that can help you combat inflation, help you earn a little bit higher, because you’re taking care of your foundation.

Eric: So it allows you to take more risk in other areas.

Dick: Exactly, folks. I think that you can kind of understand that. That if you’ve got your income foundation very secure, you feel a lot more comfortable taking risk, or being more aggressive with that portion of your assets that’s more discretionary.

Eric: That’s really what we’re going after, so if you have somebody that you’re working with and, you have to be comfortable with your advisor.

Dick: Yes, you do.

Eric: First of all, get professional advice. It never hurts to get a second opinion.

Dick: No, no.

Eric: No matter, if you’re at the first stage or you’ve been investing and are ready for retirement, for a long time, you’re getting to that stage, ask for a second opinion.

Dick: Well, one of our slogans that we use quite a bit is, “Your Retirement Deserves a Second Opinion,” and it’s true. It’s really true.

Eric: We work with a lot of folks who had a very good accumulation specialist to get them to retirement.

Dick: Good strategy. They’ve earned well.

Eric: But when you get to retirement, you need to work with a retirement planning specialist and that’s where we would encourage people, to get that comfort level with your retirement plan.

Dick: If you do not feel comfortable with what is being proposed or the plan just doesn’t seem to make sense, get that second opinion. Don’t just go along, because how many times have we heard someone come in to us new and say, “Well, my advisor told me to do this.” Well, this is a reciprocating two-way street when you work with an advisor. We want our clients to tell us…

Eric: There has to be a comfort. There’s a relationship that you have to have with your advisor. If you cannot tell your advisor no, you’re working with the wrong guy or gal. Don’t want to be gender specific. But it’s about that relationship and letting them know where you feel comfortable and how you’re going to work to achieve, they’re going to work to achieve your goals, and you have to feel comfortable with that client.

Dick: And yet, Eric, there is that balance that we do know things that, because of our training, because of the way that we forecast, project and look at the way that these things interrelate, that there has to be a mutual level of trust and comfort between us and the client. That’s why they have us. We’re the professional. We know what we’re doing. We have the expertise. But they should never feel forced. You should never feel in some way that you’re being coerced into something.

Eric: Right, and if you don’t agree with the advisor’s assessment get a second opinion. That’s what it’s about. It’s about your retirement.

Dick: Have we fairly answered the question of annuity timing? Is it a good time to buy an annuity?

Eric: Well, I would tell you that it’s always the right time, if it fits the situation. You don’t wait until it’s too late.

Dick: Right, I do agree. I could say a lot more, but why don’t we…?

Eric: That’s a great gag line. Don’t wait until it’s too late.

Dick: That’s right. That’s right. Thank you.

The post Are Annuities a Good Choice in a Low Interest Rate Environment? appeared first on Annuity Guys®.

]]>
https://annuityguys.org/are-annuities-a-good-choice-in-a-low-interest-rate-environment/feed/ 0