Indexed Annuity

When an annuity’s capital appreciation potential is tied to the performance of an index, it is referred to as an indexed annuity (IA). Indexed annuities are also commonly referred to as equity indexed annuities (EIA) or fixed indexed annuities (FIA). Generally, the annuity’s losses are limited while a portion of its gains are tied to the individual equity index’s returns. Some common indexes include the S&P, DIJA and the NASDAQ. With an indexed annuity: 1) the money can go in as a single premium payment or a series of payments; 2) the money is invested at a variable rate although there is a guaranteed minimum rate of return that provides a floor, and; 3) payments begin at a future date and are at a fixed rate that is based on market performance and is supported by the guaranteed minimum rate.

Individual Annuity Sales Decline in 2009

LIMRA reports that total individual annuity sales declined by 11 percent in 2009. Sales of all types of individual annuity products in the United States totaled $234.9 billion in 2009. Variable annuity sales totaled $127 billion, a decrease of 18 percent for the year. Indexed annuity sales totaled $29.4 billion, an increase of 9 percent relative to 2008.
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Inflation and Fixed Indexed Annuities

This forum thread is a continuation of a conversation that began as a comment and can be found here:

http://www.annuitydigest.com/blog/tom/fixed-annuity-sales-continue-soar-while-massive-inflation-risks-are-ignored#comment-363

The comment came from Phillip Hawley and is as follows:

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