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Comparing variable annuities

It can be harder to compare variable annuities since they don’t provide a fixed rate of return. Instead, you can begin by investigating the investment options each contract offers.

What you’re looking for is a contract that includes a group of choices that you think will offer the best potential for growth with the lowest expense ratio. Those choices will be identified as subaccounts, investment funds, or a similar term, and are comparable to mutual funds.

Among the factors to consider are each fund’s objective, its past performance, and the portfolio manager’s strategy. While past performance doesn’t guarantee future returns, it can give you a sense of how the investment has fared in up and down markets.

You can find this information for some annuity providers in the financial tables of newspapers. It may be available through the annuity company’s Web site or its print literature. Or you can ask your financial adviser to provide it. Your quest will be easier if the contract offers retail funds, which are managed by mutual fund companies, often by the same manager that runs a comparable mutual fund. It’s more difficult to find information about proprietary funds, which are owned by the insurance company.


 


         
   
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