Displaying items by tag: retirement

Thursday, 26 August 2021 20:49

How To Help Clients with Long-term Care

(New York)

Here is a tough fact for clients to accept: the major of retirees will need long-term care as they age. From an emotional perspective, that is difficult to expect. From a financial perspective, it is even worse. The average cost of long-term care is between $53,000 to $105,000 per year. This presents a major funding challenge for retirees.


FINSUM: Advisors need to help clients come to terms with this likelihood. Long-term care insurance is a good option for this situation. This usually costs between $1,375 to $3,600 a year for a 55 year-old man, and between $2,150 and $6,4000 for a 55 year-old woman.

Published in Wealth Management

(New York)

Retirement costs are a major pitfall for advisors, if only because clients generally underestimate them! Nowhere is this more true than in regards to healthcare. Since healthcare costs tend to increasing very significantly as one ages, it is difficult for the average person to understand just how costly medical expenses can become when they get older. To make things more complicated, the situation is highly variable for each person. For example, in a married couple, do they enroll in Medicare at the same time or are they of different ages; does one spouse still work full-time and give healthcare access to other? There are also several financial products which can help in supporting these costs, such as HSAs and annuities, both of which can help offset the inevitable costs that arise even when covered by Medicare.


FINSUM: Retirement healthcare costs need to be a critical of advisors because they are generally poorly planned for by clients’ themselves.

Published in Wealth Management
Friday, 23 April 2021 15:31

Why This is the Perfect Time for Annuities

(New York)

There are a number of forces propelling annuities forward at the moment. Not only is their component of tax deferral getting more and more valuable given the new administration’s tax plans, but the need and desire to lock-in guaranteed income has grown over the last year. The single biggest force, however, is the US demographic trend. An astonishing 10,000 people per day are turning 65, and 16.5% of the population is now 65 or older. By 2030 all Baby Boomers will be over 65. That means this gigantic cohort is moving out of their wealth accumulating years and into their drawdown years. Many need guaranteed income.


FINSUM: A lot of advisors have an automatically negative reaction to annuities, but the market has improved a great deal in recent years, and for any clients they are a good option.

Published in Wealth Management
Wednesday, 14 April 2021 17:30

Annuities are the New Bridge to Social Security

(New York)

Retirement has never been so insecure. Part of the appeal of annuities has been as a strategy to offset the decline in pensions. Yet, if you dig deeper there is another good utility for annuities that some retirees and pre-retirees are using: as a bridge to getting social security. Many lower income retirees hit a wall where they only have tens of thousands to low hundreds of thousands of dollars when they turn 60. The issue is that if the claim Social Security early, they can grossly lower their income versus waiting a few years. Given that the average 60 year-old male right now is expected to live to 88, the difference of $500 a month really adds up. Accordingly, in this situation an annuity—such as an immediate annuity—can work very well, as it buys time for retirees to defer taking Social Security.


FINSUM: This strategy can make a ton of sense, but it takes some convincing as most retirees don’t want to part with their money even if they know it will give them more security.

Published in Wealth Management
Tuesday, 16 March 2021 18:41

What Annuities are Really Worth

(New York)

One of the challenges with annuities, whether as an annuities salesman or as an advisor explaining them to clients, is how to position them. The most fundamental utility of an annuity is the idea that it can provide income for life. In other words, the client can have peace of mind that they will have income even if they live to be 120. In this way, an annuity is not a market-based investment in the traditional sense, but rather it is an insurance contract. For advisors this concept will be second nature, but for clients this is not as clear. Accordingly, the main value of the annuity is not specifically in the income it provides, but in the risk mitigation it offers against very long lifespans for clients.


FINSUM: If you are active in annuities this might sound like a broken record; if you aren’t, it is a useful line of thinking. Either way, everyone needs to be reminded!

Published in Wealth Management
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