What advisors don’t know about variable annuities: How VAs fit into a client’s portfolio

Commentary April 30, 2013 at 08:21 AM
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This is the fifth and final in a series of blogs on what advisors don't know, but should, about variable annuities. Previous installments in the series have covered the mechanics of how Guaranteed Lifetime Withdrawal Benefits (GLWB) and Guaranteed Lifetime Income Benefits (GLIB) provisions work inside of variable annuities. In the most recent post, we discussed how current market conditions impact the benefits of VAs.

In the previous installments in this series we've taken a serious look at the mechanics behind variable annuities. We've tried to demonstrate that these are complex products with features and benefits that advisors need to weigh before they go down this path with a client. After taking all those factors into consideration, however, there are still valid reasons for advisors, under the right circumstances, with the proper metrics and allocation framework, to include a variable annuity in a client's portfolio of investments.

One of the tricky parts of dealing with variable annuities for advisors is that not only do they have to ask the right questions, but the answers to those questions are likely to change depending on a large number of variables. All VAs are not the same, nor are the investor portfolios where they need to fit due to factors such as asset allocation, risk exposure, expense levels and how much income is needed.

Properly assessing the viability of a variable annuity for a particular client entails considerably more than just adding it alongside a standard model portfolio. Advisors instead should use a process that will allow them to calculate the optimal allocations toward guaranteed income products including modeling the difference between a specific guaranteed income product and a model, asset-allocated portfolio used for systematic withdrawal (SWiP).

There are three key factors for which advisors should examine when determining the potential success of any retirement plan, particularly those that include a guaranteed income product:

Probability of Ruin

This is the probability that the retiree runs out of money and will not be able to fund their income goal while still alive. This probability depends on two random processes: the returns on the investor's investment portfolio and the time of death.

Expected Shortfall

This is the average, mortality-weighted, discounted amount across all Monte Carlo forecasts of the extra retirement wealth needed at the start of retirement to make a given investment strategy successful.

Expected Death Benefit

This is the present value of the projected remainder of the retiree's investable portfolio at the end of their mortality-weighted lifetime.

Run Scenarios in Monte Carlo

Given the complexity of the problem, using a Monte Carlo approach is preferable to an analytic method when looking at most guaranteed income products. It is also imperative that the advisor keep in mind that the income derived from both a guaranteed income product and a SWiP are dependent on the performance of the capital markets, and that the performance of one product/portfolio can influence the cash flows needed from the other. By using a Monte Carlo approach, the advisor can model the nuances of any guaranteed income product, look at how the capital markets impact their behavior and accurately capture the intertwined relationships of the possible combinations.

In the optimization process used by my company, Achaean, a Monte Carlo forecast is generated for a given set of client circumstances using each combination between the SWiP and the guaranteed income product. This starts by allocating zero percent to the guaranteed income product and 100 percent to the SWiP portfolio and then ratchets up the increments in the allocation to the guaranteed income product in 5 percent increments (e.g., 95 percent SWiP/5 percent annuity, 90 percent SWiP/10 percent annuity, etc.).

The Probability of Ruin, Expected Shortfall and Expected Death Benefit are recorded for each allocation combination. These statistics are then reviewed to find the allocation that balances minimizing Expected Shortfall and Probability of Ruin while meeting an Expected Death Benefit constraint (e.g., 20 percent of initial wealth at death). The client circumstances that need to be included are age, gender, desired withdrawal rate and a portfolio risk level.

Changing any of these characteristics can change the allocation to VAs. For example, let's take changing the withdrawal rate. If a client desires a high withdrawal rate, then VAs (or nothing much else for that matter) probably aren't going to do very much for the client's chance of success. If the withdrawal rate is really low, an annuity might not be needed at all, because the chances of the client running out of money during his lifetime are very small.

Given all the different inputs and characteristics needed to determine how much to allocate to a VA, it is difficult to show much other than a few examples. To do that let's look at two simple cases, a male age 65 and a couple age 65. For both examples we will start with a VA with a 5 percent GLWB with a 400 basis point fee and look at how that fits with an asset allocated portfolio with roughly a 50/50 stock/bond allocation.

Two Examples

First, let's look at the 65-year-old male and assume he wishes to leave nothing behind as a bequest. The allocations change depending on how much of his overall wealth he wishes to spend each year (his overall withdrawal rate). If he can live on a 3 percent withdrawal rate then the optimal allocation to the VA is zero. However, if his withdrawal rate is between 4 percent and 5 percent, the allocation goes up to 50 percent. At a 6 percent withdrawal rate the allocation to the VA drops to 15 percent and disappears again at anything higher. If he changes his mind and would like to target leaving 30 percent of his wealth behind as a bequest, then he really does not allocate anything to the VA unless his withdrawal rate is in the 4 percent range.

For the 65-year-old couple, let's assume they also initially do not want to leave anything behind and they use the same 50/50 stock bond portfolio. At a 3 percent withdrawal rate they should allocate nothing to the VA, at a 4 percent withdrawal rate they should allocate 50 percent to the VA, at a 5 percent withdrawal rate, 25 percent should go the VA. For withdrawal rates much above that the allocation to the VA falls to zero. If they change their mind and wish to target that same 30 percent of wealth as a bequest then they should not allocate to the VA at all no matter what their withdrawal rate.

Yes, this process is complicated, but by looking at these kinds of statistics the advisor can combine a VA with living benefits and a regular asset-allocated portfolio and, using Monte Carlo, can measure how well the combinations do along those dimensions.

View the complete series of blogs on what advisors don't know, but should, about variable annuities

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