3) Deferred Fixed Annuity
A deferred fixed annuity, such as a qualified longevity annuity contract (QLAC), requires participants to surrender their assets up front, like the SPIA. But with a QLAC, income payments start many years later. A person surrendering their assets at age 65 might receive payments starting at age 80. In exchange for waiting, payment rates are higher than those of a SPIA. Participants must manage their own assets and avoid running out of money until guaranteed income payments start.
As with a SPIA, participants with QLACs forgo the liquidity and growth potential of the assets they surrender to the insurer. The deferred payments make outcomes more sensitive than a SPIA to the age of death. For example, a person who dies before payments start may get nothing. Adding death benefits can address this, but they reduce the income rate. QLACs also face more inflation risk: fixed payments are bought many years before they start, so rising prices will reduce their purchasing power. A QLAC’s income level is more sensitive than a SPIA’s to prevailing interest rates at the time of purchase, so participants face more market-timing risk and potential buyer’s remorse.
Fixed annuities like the SPIA and QLAC face significant risks and impose implicit costs that are neither transparent nor clearly visible at purchase. This sets up a potential unwelcome surprise for those who don’t fully understand them.
4) Guaranteed Lifetime Withdrawal Benefit (GLWB)
A GLWB is a lifetime income insurance contract on a participant’s investment portfolio. Participants keep ownership of all their assets and retain growth potential, because assets covered by the GLWB are typically invested in a well-diversified mix of stocks, bonds and inflation-sensitive assets.
Guaranteed income is initially withdrawn from the participant’s insured portfolio. If that portfolio runs out of funds, an insurer (or insurers) steps in to pay guaranteed income for the rest of the participant’s life. The GLWB also includes “step up” provisions that may boost income if the insured portfolio grows with rising markets. If there’s a balance left when the participant dies, it’s transferred to beneficiaries.
A GLWB contract charges an annual insurance premium—typically a percentage of the insured portfolio balance. Insurance can be bought before or at retirement, and participants can cancel some or all of it at any time with no restrictions, so they benefit from liquidity and flexibility.
The specific features, costs and risks of these representative retirement-income solutions vary quite a bit, and some risks and costs aren’t obvious on the surface. Understanding the distinctions is a vital step for plan sponsors to take in assessing which one is best suited to meet the individual needs of each plan participant.