Introduction
Annuities are often considered complex investment products. Indeed, they can be complex with their many options, riders, fees, and so on. That is why it is so important to understand the documents associated with annuities. Two of the most important are the annuity prospectus and statement.
This article aims to clarify the distinctions and differences between the two.
What Is an Annuity Statement?
An annuity statement offers a snapshot of your investment’s performance over time, highlighting critical values like current cash value, surrender value, and guaranteed withdrawal amounts.
Key components typically included:
Account value
Contributions and withdrawals
Investment performance
Fees and charges applied
Death benefit or income benefit values (if applicable)
These documents can be delivered either monthly, quarterly, or annually. The target audience for annuity statements are current annuity holders.
What Is a Prospectus?
From Investopedia, “A prospectus is a written document used in finance to inform the public of the relevant details about an offering of securities, such as stocks, bonds, and mutual funds.”
“Variable annuities offer the potential for higher returns based on the performance of underlying investments, usually a selection of mutual funds.” (“The Ultimate Annuity Review Guide: Your One-Stop Resource for Annuity ...”) The Securities and Exchange Commission consider variable annuities to be securities. As part of the Securities Act of 1933, issuers of a variable type of annuity are required to provide a summary prospectus to an annuitant and a statutory prospectus available online (Rule 498A).
Key elements found in a prospectus:
Investment options and risks
Fee structures
Surrender charges
Riders and optional benefits
Company background and financials
The typical audience for this document would be prospective investors and financial professionals.
Key Differences Between a Statement and a Prospectus
There are key differences between a statement and a prospectus:
Feature | Annuity Prospectus | Annuity Statement |
---|---|---|
Purpose | Explains the annuity’s structure, terms, fees, and risks before purchase | Shows current performance, values, and transactions after purchase |
When You Receive It | Before or at the time of purchase | Regularly (quarterly or annually) after buying |
Focus | Product details, investment options, risks, costs | Account updates, growth/loss, fees charged, income status |
Contents | Investment descriptions, fee breakdowns, surrender schedules, rider options, risk disclosures | Accumulation value, surrender value, death benefit, withdrawals, investment returns |
Regulatory Requirement | Required by law for variable and indexed annuities | Required for regular client reporting |
Audience | Prospective buyers (those considering the product) | Current owners (those who already own the product) |
Analogy | Like a manual or product brochure | Like a bank or investment statement |
Understanding that a prospectus should be consulted prior to purchasing an annuity will aid in retirement planning. This may provide time and opportunity to notice any red flags in the prospectus (poor recent performance, rating issues with the insurance company, etc.).
Understanding that a statement should be consulted in both the planning and execution phases of retirement is crucial as well. While in the accumulation period (which may be prior to your official retirement) it is important to track the performance of the underlying investments to ensure they are returning what you anticipated. If not, then this information will need to be used in adjusting a retirement income plan. In sum:
Confusion about investment performance.
Missed details on fees or risks.
Poor decision-making about holding, withdrawing, or changing annuities.
Conclusion
Understanding the key differences between a prospectus and annuity statement is important for effective retirement planning. Staying informed and regularly reviewing both documents can prevent confusion about investment performance, help you avoid missing important details on fees or risks, and support better decision-making about holding, withdrawing, or changing annuities. By doing so, you will be better equipped to create and adjust a retirement income plan that meets your financial goals.