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Uhhhh, the minimum guaranteed return? What do I win...?
Well that's why you should allocate a little to the fixed bucket.
If the market is flat and you are in the market, what is it costing me?
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Uhhhh, the minimum guaranteed return? What do I win...?
I will definitely agree with sman. Some call last year "flat", my managed portfolio gained 16%.
I realize too how my much smaller fixed annuity pulled 4%.
No one is saying to put people who can tolerate market risk into annuities. But they offer a great alternative to people who "thought" 2009 was a down year, and 2010 was a flat year.
Maybe someone can find the study, but one of the large investment firms polled the average person. Over half thought the stock market was down for 2009. Most of the rest thought it was flat.
While I'm a fan of the market, I realize not everyone can tolerate the ups and downs of the market. That is why there is a place for annuities and why I offer them in those situations. I'm just not a fan of those who try and make them fit everyone's situation.
For the past quarter century, except for a few brief corrections, we have experienced a market that grew exponentially. Compare this to the market's return during the previous 25 year period and you see a market that is mainly flat. I'm sure Investment Reps in the 60's and 70's weren't so bullish.
My main point is that even though many of us are experienced advisors, we are not going to be able to continue the strategies we've always used and expect the same overall good results.
Who said they were perfect for everyone? I never did, nor did I try to imply they were. I like the market too. The article was about many 20 and 30 year olds being afraid of the market. If we don't help them and show them alternatives for their retirement, the money is going to end up under the mattress or in a bank CD.
Both of you are making excellent points. The firm I founded works with insurance companies and FMO's, etc. trying to recruit brokers.
They for profit reasons keep ramming out Equity Indexed Annuities. That is not the sad part.
It is that good salespeople can sell what they present to the client.
For commission reasons far too many greedy agents sell risky annuities to those not wanting to be a 7 to 10 risk, or way too old.
Neither does it help when insurance agencies hire new agents and call then financial reps and with quick extra licensing, give them EQIA 's to sell all.