Annuity rules.As part of recent investigations into companies that sell variable annuities Variable annuities Investment contracts whose issuer pays a periodic amount linked to the investment performance of an underlying portfolio. , the Securities and Exchange Commission this month proposed new standards lot sale practices, disclosure and training for deferred variable annuity Variable Annuity An insurance contract in which, at the end of the accumulation stage, the insurance company guarantees a minimum payment. The remaining income payments can vary depending on the performance of the managed portfolio. products. The SEC and National Association of Securities Dealers National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) Nonprofit organization formed under the joint sponsorship of the investment bankers' conference and the SEC to comply with the Maloney Act, which provides for the regulation of the OTC market. . the securities industry trade group, have received a large number of complaints from individual investors about variable annuities, a complex investment product that allows tax-deferred treatment of earnings, a death benefit and an annuity payout that can provide guaranteed income for life. A variable annuity's rate of return varies with the underlying stock, bond or money market investment. Generally, such products include sales fees, surrender lees lees pl.n. Sediment settling during fermentation, especially in wine; dregs. [Middle English lies, pl. and a host of other fees. Because of their complexity, the SEC called variable annuities "unsuitable" for older people and cited instances when individuals had to mortgage their homes to purchase products pitched by brokers. The insurance industry has embraced variable annuity products and investments by Americans in them have jumped 20 percent in the past year to $985 billion. The NASD NASD See: National Association of Securities Dealers NASD See National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD). advised investors not to invest in variable annuities within individual retirement accounts, a common practice in the insurance industry, because the annuity provides no additional tax advantage. |
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