Glossary
12b-1 Fees: Fees paid by the
fund out of fund assets to cover distribution expenses and sometimes
shareholder service expenses.
403(b): see Tax-Deferred Annuity
529 College Savings Plan ("qualified state tuition
program"): A tax-advantaged savings plan that helps
families and individuals save for higher education. These plans
offer a number of benefits including tax deferral on earnings,
professional money management and the flexibility to use the proceeds
at virtually any accredited educational institution.
5500 Form or Annual Report: A report required to
be filed annually by the program sponsor with the Internal Revenue Service,
regarding the qualification, financial condition and operations of
the funded plan.
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Accumulation Unit: Money paid in
or transferred into an investment division of the separate account
is credited in the form of accumulation units. Any increase or decrease
in value is based upon the investment performance of the underlying
investment portfolio.
After Tax Savings: Term used to describe investments
or contracts purchased with money that has already been taxed. Also
known as "non-qualified" investments or contracts.
Annuitant: The person(s) on whose life the income
payments are based. The contract owner decides who the annuitant(s)
will be.
Annuitize: To convert the account balance under
a deferred annuity contract into a stream of income, either for one
or more lifetimes or a specific period of time.
Annuity: A tax-deferred contract can provide an
income for a specified time period, such as a number of years or
for life. There are two types of annuities: deferred annuities, which
allow you to grow your assets tax deferred and convert your account
balance to income payments at a later date, and immediate annuities,
which generally allow you to receive income payments right away.
Annuity Date: The date when your annuity income
payments begin. This date usually appears in your annuity contract.
You may be able to change this date, with limitations, before you
reach the annuity date.
Asset Allocation: A financial strategy for investing
money into various asset classes such as stocks, bonds and cash — based
upon your financial goals, risk tolerance and time horizon. Asset
allocation has two main advantages: it can help increase investment
returns and reduce risk.
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Benchmark Index: Commonly referred
to stock or bond indices used to measure market performance and to
compare the relative performance of an investment portfolio. Investing
into indices directly is not possible. In addition, these benchmark
indices do not have transaction costs and other expenses which an
investment portfolio does.
Beneficiary: The person(s) who receive(s) money
upon the death of the annuity's contract owner or annuitant. The
contract owner decides who the beneficiary will be.
Bonds: An IOU or promissory note issued by companies
or governments and their agencies. Bonds provide income and some
growth potential but not as much growth potential or historical price
fluctuations as stocks. The amount of interest paid by a bond varies
depending on its credit risk (the risk the issuer will repay the
loan), and on its maturity risk. High quality, short-term bonds generally
pay the lowest yields, and low quality, long-term bonds pay higher
yields.
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Carrier: see Provider.
Cash Equivalents: A security that can be readily
converted into cash (e.g. Treasury bill or money market fund).
Closed-End Fund: A type of mutual fund that generally
does not continuously offer shares for sale. Rather, they sell a
fixed number of shares at one time (in the initial public offering),
after which the shares typically trade on a secondary market, such
as the New York Stock Exchange or the Nasdaq Stock Market. Closed-end
funds are permitted to invest in a greater amount of "illiquid" securities
than mutual funds, are not redeemable, and are managed by separate
entities known as "investmen advisors".
Contract Owner: The person(s) or entity who purchases
the annuity and has all rights to the contract. In a variable deferred
annuity, for example, this person can make investment decisions,
transfer money among funding options, make withdrawals, and name
the annuitant and the beneficiary.
Contribution: A payment made into a fund by a program sponsor or a participant. A participant contributing to a Tax-Deferred
Annuity generally deposits such funds on a before-tax basis through
salary reduction.
Credit Risk: The risk that a creditor or bond issuer
will not pay the interest and/or principal owed when it is due.
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Death Benefit: The guarantee that
if you should die before you convert your variable annuity into regular
income payments (annuitize your contract), your annuity's beneficiaries
will receive the higher of the account value or a different amount
specified in the annuity (such as the amount you contributed to the
annuity, less withdrawals). In many variable annuities, the death
benefit can increase over time.
Deferred Annuity: A type of personal retirement
account that provides tax-deferred growth potential for long-term
goals, such as retirement. When you are ready to receive income payments,
the deferred annuity provides many choices, including guaranteed
income for life. There are two types of deferred annuities: fixed
and variable.
Diversification: A financial strategy to help reduce
risk by spreading your assets across different asset classes, such
as stocks and bonds, or across different types of securities within
the same asset class. For example, you can diversify your stock holdings
into stocks of different industries.
Dollar Cost Averaging: A financial strategy of
making investments at regular intervals with a fixed dollar amount.
A key benefit is that over time, your average per unit cost should
be lower than either the market high or the average price. Dollar
cost averaging does not guarantee a profit or protect against a loss.
It involves continuous investment in securities regardless of fluctuating
prices. You should consider your financial ability to continue purchases
through periods of low price levels.
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ERISA: The Employee Retirement
Income Security Act, government legislation passed in 1974 which
regulates and mandates procedures for retirement plans for the Program
Sponsor and provides certain protections for the program participants.
Expense Ratio: The amount, as a percentage of your
total annuity account balance, that you pay annually for investment-
and insurance-related charges.
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FINRA (The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority): FINRA, is the largest non-governmental regulator for all securities firms doing business in the United States. All told, FINRA oversees nearly 5,100 brokerage firms, about 173,000 branch offices and more than 665,000 registered securities representatives. Created in July 2007 through the consolidation of NASD and the member regulation, enforcement and arbitration functions of the New York Stock Exchange, FINRA is dedicated to investor protection and market integrity through effective and efficient regulation and complementary compliance and technology-based services.
Fixed Annuity: A tax-deferred annuity
that guarantees you will earn stated or declared rates of return
during the savings phase. When you convert this money into income
payments, you will receive a fixed amount of income on a regular
schedule.
Flexible Premium Annuity: An annuity that accepts
periodic contributions, which can usually be made at any time (as
opposed to single premium).
Free Look Period: Period of time after an annuity
contract is issued and delivered (usually between 10 and 30 days)
when the owner may cancel the contract and receive either their initial
payment or the current value of the annuity contract. State rules
vary.
Fund Performance: The measurement of gains or losses
on the investment over a stated period of time.
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High-Yield Bonds: Lower-rated bonds,
or bonds rated below investment grade quality (also known as "junk
bonds"). These bonds typically have higher yields than investment
grade bonds but also have higher credit risk, or risk that the issuer
will not pay the interest and/or principal when it is due. High yield
bonds generally fluctuate more in value than investment grade bonds.
Historical Performance: The return on an investment
or an investment portfolio over its lifetime or certain periods of
time.
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Immediate Annuity: An annuity contract
that you generally buy with a lump sum and from which you begin receiving
income within a short period, always less than 13 months. An immediate
annuity can be either fixed or variable.
Income Options: The various ways to receive income
payments that an annuity contract offers. Many annuities offer a
variety of options you can choose from, including guaranteed income
for life.
Income for a Guaranteed Time Period Annuity: An
annuity income option that guarantees payments for a specific time
period, usually from 5 to 30 years. If the annuitant dies before
all payments have been made, then the owner (or beneficiary if the
owner is deceased) will receive the balance of payments for the rest
of the guaranteed period. You may be able to choose fixed or variable
payments, depending on the annuity.
Income for Life Annuity: An annuity income option
that guarantees income for the life of the annuitant, no matter how
long he/she lives. The amount of the payment depends on your account
value and the life expectancy of the annuitant. The payment amounts
may be fixed or variable, depending on the annuity.
Income for Life with a Guaranteed Time Period Annuity:
An annuity income option that guarantees payments for the annuitant's
life, with a guaranteed number of years. If the annuitant dies during
the guaranteed period, payments will continue to the annuity's owner
(or beneficiary if the owner is deceased), for the remainder of the
period. Many annuities also offer this option forthe lives of two
annuitants. You may be able to choose fixed or variable payments,
depending on the annuity.
Index Portfolio: Investment portfolio that attempts
to mirror the performance of a benchmark index, such as the Composite
Stock Price Index (S&P 500). The portfolio tends to hold all
or many of the same stocks or bonds that are tracked by the actual
index. Index portfolio fees may be lower than those on other portfolios
because there is relatively little buying and selling of portfolio
securities.
Individual Retirement Account/Annuity (IRA): A
tax-deferred retirement account for individuals that allows a contribution
of 100% of earned income up to a maximum of $3,000 per year. (A contribution
of up to $3,000 may also be made on behalf of a spouse.) With a Traditional
IRA, some or all of the contribution may be tax deductible, depending
on the individual's income level and coverage by qualified retirement
plans. With a Roth IRA, the contribution is not tax deductible, but
all earnings are tax free, provided certain conditions are met.
Individual Retirement Account/Annuity (IRA) Rollover:
An individual account that is established to place funds disbursed
from a qualified retirement plan to defer taxation.
Inflation Risk: The risk that the rising cost of
goods and services will reduce the value of your investment, and
your buying power, over time.
Insurance-Related Charge (of the Separate Account):
An annual fee in a variable annuity that pays for general administrative
expenses (such as financial, actuarial, accounting and legal expenses),
and for the mortality and expense risk.
Interest-Only Option: Only the interest earned
from the previous year will be paid to the participant as long as
principal remains invested.
Interest Rate Risk: The risk that interest rates
will rise and reduce the value of an investment. For example, bond
prices generally move in the opposite direction of interest rates.
As interest rates rise, bond prices generally fall, and vice versa.
International Stocks: Stocks of companies that
are domiciled outside of the United States.
Investment Company: A company (corporation, business
trust, partnership, or limited liability company) that issues securities
and is primarily engaged in the business of investing in securities.
Investment Objective: A financial goal a client
hopes to achieve through investing. Common investment objectives
include: Preservation of Capital, Income, Growth and Income, Growth
and Aggressive Growth.
Investment Choices: The investment portfolios offered
in a variable annuity are sometimes referred to as investment choices,
or subaccounts. Many variable annuities offer a wide range of stock
and bond investment options, with different risk levels.
Investment-Related Charges: In a variable annuity,
the investment-related charges are the annual amount you pay to cover
the costs of the professionals who manage the investment portfolios
and the expenses incurred by the portfolios. The percentage you pay
depends on which investment options you select.
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Joint Account: An account in which
two or more individuals are CO-owners.
Joint and Survivor Annuity: A fixed amount of money
each month paid to the participant. If the participant is survived
by a named contingent annuitant, payments will continue to this annuitant
in accordance with the option elected, e.g.,100%, 66 2/3%, 50%, etc.
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Large Cap U.S. Stocks: An asset
class that represents common stocks issued by large U.S. companies
that have a market capitalization of $5 billion or more. (Market
capitalization is the total market value of a company's outstanding
shares.) A common benchmark for large-sized U.S. stocks is the Standard & Poor's
Composite Stock Price Index.
Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond Index: Most widely
used benchmark for U.S. bond mutual funds and U.S. bond variable
annuity portfolios. Tracks performance of debt instruments issued
by corporations and the U.S. Government and its agencies.
Life Annuity: A fixed amount of money each month
that continues for lifetime and ceases with the death of the individual
Life with Period Certain Annuity: A fixed amount
of money each month that continues for the life of the individual
with a guarantee that a minimum number of payments will be received.
Lipper: A Reuters company and a leader in supplying
mutual fund information, analytical tools, and commentary. Lipper's
benchmarking provides a guide to asset managers, fund companies,
financial intermediaries, traditional media, web sites, and individual
investors.
Long Term Care Insurance: Insurance which pays
for long-term care services (such as nursing home and home care)
that Medicare and Medigap policies do not cover.
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Management Fees: Management fees
are fees that are paid out of fund assets to the fund's investment
adviser for investment portfolio management, any other management
fees payable to the fund's investment adviser or its affiliates,
and administrative fees payable to the investment adviser that are
not included in the "Other Expenses" category.
Market Risk: The chance that the stock or bond
markets, or the economy as a whole, may stumble.
Mid Cap U.S. Stock: An asset class that represents
common stocks of medium-sized U.S. companies, generally with a market
capitalization of $1 billion to $5 billion. Mid cap stocks have a
generally higher growth potential than large-sized companies, but
also have a higher degree of risk.
Minimum Distribution Service: Federal tax law and
regulations generally require that you begin taking minimum distributions
from your Traditional IRAs, SEPs and SIMPLEs by April 1st of the
calendar year following the year in which you reach age 701⁄2.
Morgan Stanley Capital International's EAFE® Index:
Most widely used benchmark for international stock mutual funds and
international stock variable annuity portfolios. Its holdings represent
80% of the world's stock market capital outside North America. EAFE® stands
for Europe, Australasia and the Far East.
Mutual Fund: A mutual fund is a company that pools
money from many investors and invests the money in stocks, bonds,
short-term money-market instruments, or other securities. Legally
known as an "open-end company," a mutual fund is one of
three basic types of investment companies. The two other basic types
are closed-end funds and Unit Investment Trusts (UITs).
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NAV (Net Asset Value): An investment
company's total assets minus its total liabilities. Mutual fund companies
generally must calculate their NAV at least once every business day,
typically after the major U.S. exchanges close. An investment company
calculates the NAV of a single share (or the "per share NAV")
by dividing its NAV by the number of shares that are outstanding.
NASDAQ Composite Index: A statistical measure that
indicates changes in The Nasdaq Stock Market. The Nasdaq Composite
Index measures all Nasdaq domestic and foreign common stocks. It
is market-value weighted: each company's security affects the index
in proportion to its market value. Securities in the Nasdaq Composite
Index generally are assigned to subindexes based on their Standard
Industrial Classification (SIC) codes.
Non-Qualified Annuity: A tax-deferred annuity generally
purchased by individuals with after-tax dollars, rather than as part
of a tax qualified retirement plan such as an IRA.
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Participant: An employee or former
employee who is eligible to be covered or to receive a benefit from
the plan.
Period Certain Annuity: A fixed amount of money
each month that is paid for the time specified.
Program Sponsor: The employer who maintains an employee
benefit plan on behalf of its eligible workers.
Prospectus: The legal document that provides detailed
information about your investment. It must be given to every person
who is offered to buy registered securities.
Provider: A company which underwrites,
invests contributions, or administers programs under a contractual
agreement.
Purchase Payments: The contribution(s) made to
an investment. Some annuities allow you to make a single contribution,
and some allow you to make multiple contributions on a regular basis,
or anytime you like.
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Qualified Annuity: An annuity contract
you generally buy with pretax dollars as part of a tax-qualified
retirement plan.
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Renewal Rate: The new, declared
interest rate for money that has completed the initial guaranteed
interest rate period. In a fixed deferred annuity, for example, the
interest rate on your contract may be renewed periodically, usually
every year, to reflect current market conditions.
Risk: A measure of the price volatility of an investment.
There are different types of risk, including credit risk, interest
rate risk, inflation risk and currency risk.
Risk Tolerance: The attitude of the investor as
to the willingness to accept losses compared to investment gains.
Roth IRA: An IRA that enables your earnings to
grow tax free, if certain conditions are met. Roth IRA contributions
are not tax deductible, and are purchased with after-tax dollars.
Like traditional IRAs, your contributions are limited to $3,000 per
year. Eligibility is based on income (AGI) limits. For single taxpayers,
you may contribute to a Roth IRA if your AGI is under $110,000. For
married filing joint taxpayers, your combined AGI must be under $160,000
(for 1999).
Russell 1000® Index: Measures the performance
of the 1,000 largest companies in the Russell 3000 Index, which represents
approximately 92% of the total market capitalization of the Russell
3000 Index. As of the latest reconstitution, the average market capitalization
was approximately $13 billion; the median market capitalization was
approximately $3.8 billion. The smallest company in the index had
an approximate market capitalization of $1.4 billion.
Russell 2000® Index: Most widely used benchmark
for small-cap stock mutual funds and small-cap stock variable portfolios.
Measures the performance of the 2,000 smallest companies in the Russell
3000 Index, which represents approximately 8% of the total market
capitalization of the Russell 3000 Index. As of the latest reconstitution,
the average market capitalization was approximately $530 million;
the median market capitalization was approximately $410 million.
The largest company in the index had an approximate market capitalization
of $1.4 billion.
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SEC (Securities & Exchange Commission):
The federal agency created by the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
to administer that act and the Securities Act of 1933. The statutes
administered by the SEC are designed to promote full public disclosure
and protect the investing public against fraudulent and manipulative
practices in the securities markets. Generally, most issues of securities
offered in interstate commerce or through the mails must be registered
with the SEC.
Salary Reduction Agreement (SRA): A form filled
out by the program participant that stipulates either a dollar amount
or percentage of salary to be deducted from the employee's wages
to be contributed to their retirement savings plan.
Savings and Investing Phase: Time period during
a deferred variable annuity contract when money is invested and/or
left to grow on a tax deferred basis. Also known as the Accumulation
Phase.
Separate Account: The account established by an
insurance company to hold the money you contribute to the investment
choices in your variable annuity. It is separate from the company's
general account. Money in the separate account is not available to
the company's general creditors.
Share Value: See Unit Value.
SIMPLE Plans: A retirement program designed for small
businesses. It can be set up either as an IRA or as a deferred arrangement
(401(k)). In general, they are funded by the employees' contributions
on a pretax basis, and employers are required to make matching contributions.
Contributions and earnings grow tax deferred.
Small-Cap U.S. Stocks: This asset class represents
common stocks of the smallest companies in the United States, with
market capitalizations of under about $1 billion. In general, small-sized
stocks are considered to be riskier than stocks of large companies,
but also tend to have greater return potential over time.
Standard & Poor's Composite Stock Price Index (S&P
500 Index): Most widely used benchmark for U.S. stock
mutual funds and U.S. stocks variable portfolios. The S&P 500
Index is an unmanaged index of stocks of 500 of the largest publicly
traded companies in the U.S., with the bigger ones given more weight
than the smaller ones.
Surrender Charge: — See Withdrawal
Charge.
Systematic Withdrawal Program: A program that allows
for periodic payments from an investment, for example on a monthly,
quarterly, semiannual or annual basis. In a variable deferred annuity,
you can generally make systematic withdrawals from your contract
while keeping the rest of your money invested in the funding options.
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Tax Reform Act of 1986: A major
piece of government legislation which regulates and promulgates rules
and procedures for retirement programs, including TDAs.
Tax-Deferred Annuity (TDA): A
tax effective retirement savings plan available to employees of not-for-profit
organizations. An employee makes contributions on a payroll-deduction
pretax basis into an individual account maintained on their behalf.
Tax-free Transfers: The ability to move money between
the investment choices and fixed account within a variable annuity.
In most annuities, these transfers are free of charge.
Tax-sheltered Annuity: A tax-deferred annuity available
only to employees of schools, nonprofit hospitals and certain other
tax-exempt organizations in which your contributions are made through
payroll reduction on a pretax basis (up to certain limits). All earnings
grow tax deferred until such time as you make any withdrawals.
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Unit Investment Trust: A type of
mutual fund that has the following characteristics: 1) typically
issues redeemable securities (or "units"), like a mutual
fund at approximate net asset value. 2) will make a one-time "public
offering" of only a specific, fixed number of units (like closed-end
funds) 3) will have a termination date (a date when the UIT will
terminate and dissolve) that is established when the UIT is created.
4) does not actively trade its investment portfolio. 5) does not
have a board of directors, corporate officers, or an investment adviser
to render advice during the life of the trust.
Unit Value: The dollar value
of a single accumulation unit or annuity unit in a particular investment
division. Unit value changes to reflect the current value of the
underlying investments that correspond to the investment division.
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Variable Annuity: A type of annuity
in which the account balance may fluctuate based on the value of
investment portfolios underlying the separate account. The contract
owner has the ability to allocate money among several available investment
choices. The contract owner, not the insurance company issuing the
contract, assumes the investment risk.
Variable Immediate Annuity: An income annuity that
begins providing income payments right away, or soon after purchase.
The amount of the payments is based upon the performance of investment
choices that you select.
Volatility: The speed and extent to which the price
of a security or an investment rises and falls within a given period
of time.
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Withdrawal Charge:
The penalty imposed by an issuer for early withdrawal. The withdrawal
charge will be set forth in the contract.
Withdrawals: Money that you withdraw from your
investment. In a deferred annuity, you can generally make full or
partial withdrawals, although a withdrawal charge may be imposed.
A tax penalty may also be imposed.
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Yield: The rate of return on an
investment, generally expressed as a percentage of the current price.
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