by Ben Mattlin May 26, 2021 at 05:26 PM Share &
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What You Need
to Know
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The bill would would open the door to popular options such as
cost-of-living increases and return-of-premium death benefits.
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Raising the RMD age makes purchasing an immediate or deferred
annuity more cost-effective, Melissa Kahn of State Street says.
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The bill would also curb limits on QLACs.
In early May, the U.S. House of Representatives introduced
the Securing a Strong Retirement Act of 2021. Known as Secure Act 2.0, since it builds on 2019′s Setting Every
Community Up for Retirement Enhancement (Secure) Act, the bipartisan bill
expands opportunities for retirement savers.
What’s been largely overlooked, however, are the
implications for annuities.
Boosting
Annuity Appeal
“Many retirement plans today do not offer annuities
due to perceived limitations in their flexibility and appeal,” says Keith
Namiot, chief operating officer for group retirement at Equitable in New York
City. But the new act, he says, might change that.
One provision would remove a prohibition against
non-level annuity payments in retirement plans — i.e., payments that start
small and increase over time. This would open the door to popular options such
as cost-of-living increases and return-of-premium death benefits.
Pushing the
RMD Age
Another key provision would, over the next 10 years,
incrementally increase from 72 to 75 the age at which retirees must take a
required minimum distribution from tax-deferred retirement accounts. It would
also reduce the penalty for those who fail to make the withdrawal and eliminate
the RMD completely for those with less than $100,000 in retirement savings.
“Often, annuities are purchased as supplemental
income opportunities [or] hedges against outliving other sources of income,”
says Kim O’Brien, CEO of the Federation of Americans for Consumer Choice
(formerly, Americans for Annuity Protection) in Phoenix, Arizona. Being able to
keep funds invested longer could be “a strong planning tool,” she says.
Melissa Kahn, a managing director at State Street
Global Advisors in Washington, D.C., says this change “makes the purchase of
either an immediate or deferred annuity more cost-effective” because it allows
retirees to “have more money in their accounts.”
Raising the RMD age makes sense, since Americans are
living longer and retiring later than they used to. But Philip Chao, chief
investment offer and principal at Experiential Wealth in Cabin John, Md.,
observes that it also can mean bigger annuity payouts. “The longer one delays in
starting to annuitize or draw income, the greater the amount of monthly income
made available,” he says.
Some Doubters
Still, some doubt an extra three years will make
much difference. Retirees and plan sponsors don’t typically “avoid annuities
because of RMD rules,” says Matthew Eickman, national retirement practice
leader at Qualified Plan Advisors in Overland Park, Kansas. Plan sponsors, he
says, “avoid them for fiduciary reasons and other concerns, such as product
availability, cost, and portability.”
https://www.thinkadvisor.com/2021/05/26/how-secure-act-2-0-delayed-rmd-age-would-boost-annuities/
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