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Posts Tagged ‘Needed’

What’s needed for state insurance exam?

09 Apr

I am looking to sell index and fixed annuities (not variable). I was looking at being sponsored with a broker dealer but am leaning against it, at least for now. Do I need a sponsor to take the life/health insurance exam in Arizona (or anywhere)? I know the securities exam (6 and 63) require a BD to sponsor you, but I can’t find out if the L&H does.

 
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What documents are needed to see a Tax Attorney?

17 Mar

Member since: May 31, 2007
Total points: 287 (Level 2)
Points earned this week:
–% Best answer

Annoyed
S What documents are needed to see a Tax Attorney?
My boyfriend has an appointment tomorrow with a tax attorney, what documents should he take?
Its about a debt his ex-wife accrued over the years, she lied about making payments and now they are after him.
The debt is clearly hers, shes a real estate agent.

 

Assisted Living is deeply needed but we can’t afford it…?

12 Mar

My grandma is 84 and is in need of some type of assisted living community. She can take care of herself, but needs some assistance. My mom loves caring for my grandma but over the years, my grandma has become increasingly more demanding. My grandma is very stubborn and refuses to realize how much of a toll she is taking on my mom. My mom has a family of her own and although she loves helping my grandma, she has been forced into neglecting her immediate family to run errands on a daily basis for my grandma.

We would like to get her into an assisted living community but it is significantly more expensive than all of us can afford combined. We feel it would take much convincing to get her ti agree to moving in the first place, but she would love having accessible friends and help at the drop of a dime. Also, the activities would stimulate her mind and she would be happy there. We would visit on a daily basis and the visits would be happier visits than they are now.

The problem is how to afford such a thing. Any suggestions? (she currently has a house but doesn’t want to sell it right away, she has limited savings/CDs/annuities/etc. She receives a check every month for less than 1/3 the amount the assisted living rent would be, not the mention the phone and cable bill that would be attached to the rent…

Please help me find a solution if there is one………

 

What monthly payment is needed to make an ordinary annuity obtain $200,000 in 30 years at 9.75% interest?

10 Mar

What monthly payment is needed to make an ordinary annuity obtain $200,000 in 30 years at 9.75% interest?

 

Tax Attorney In Florida Reccomendations Needed!?

17 Feb

Dear Friends,
I plan to hire a Tax Attorney or Criminal Defense Attorney with expertise in Tax Law in order to meet with an IRS Criminal Investigation Officer, since my friend was requested by this officer to meet him in his office.
Any recommendation of experienced attorney in Florida, preferably in Miami area, will be greatly appreciated.
Kevin

 

Annuities May Be Needed To Fireproof Retirement

16 Jan


This is the first episode of AnnuitySpeak TV and highlights the historical financial turmoil which threatens those planning retirement and and outlines why fixed annuities are probably the best pla…

 

Annuities: Oversight Needed On Equity-Indexed Annuities

25 Sep

The sale of Equity-Indexed Annuities has increased 45% the first 6 months of this year. I’m concerned that the vast majority of those sales are unsuitable for the investors buying them. Oversight by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) is desperately needed to protect retirees from being taken to the cleaners by agents hungry for the large commission. Read on to find out how this oversight will benefit you.


For almost 2 years now, I’ve been warning people against buying Equity-Indexed Annuities. Hopefully, my articles have caused agents all across the country to lose sales. That’s why I am regularly attacked and berated by agents. When I started, I was a ‘lone voice in the wilderness’. Now, the SEC and the NASD are interested in the situation. The national media are covering the story more regularly. The chorus of voices calling for change is growing. For example, The Wall Street Journal had an article on October 15th that echoed my complaints.


Greater regulation and oversight of these products is needed because, even though they are technically an insurance product, they are being sold as an investment. Anyone looking at their sales literature can plainly see that. With promises of market gains and the ‘guarantee’ that you won’t suffer any losses, this investment is promoted as the answer to all your concerns. Investors are buying it as an investment, not insurance. Therefore, they should be regulated as investments and not as insurance.


Investors will benefit if Equity-Indexed Annuities are classified as an investment. It will reduce, but not eliminate, the potential for abuse. Here’s why.


First, being classified as an investment will result in better disclosure of the risks involved with this product. Equity-Indexed Annuities are complex products. Many of the agents selling them don’t even understand their intricacies. Consumers are not adequately warned of the dangers they face in these products. Most think they can’t lose money in this investment and that’s simply not true.


For instance, many of those purchasing one of the most popular Equity-Indexed Annuities fail to realize that if they pull their money out of the contract when the contract matures that they won’t receive the index-related returns they thought they would. In fact, those wanting a lump sum from this specific product after 10 years would be GUARANTEED of making a total return of about 1.5% for the entire 10 year period. Few would ever buy this investment if they clearly understood that.


Second, those selling investments are required to make sure that the investment they sell is suitable for the person they’re selling it to. When a commission-based investment is sold, it is reviewed by compliance officers to verify suitability. Compliance officers closely scrutinize investment sales because it’s their job to protect their firm from lawsuits and regulatory fines. And they know that their firms may be audited by the SEC.


No compliance officer would approve the sale of an Equity-Indexed Annuity for 100% of a person’s investable assets–but I see those recommendations all the time. No compliance officer would approve of a transaction where the investor pays a large penalty on one annuity contract to transfer the money into an Equity-Indexed Annuity. This has become such a problem, though, that the NASD has issued warnings about it.


Third, the high commissions equity-indexed annuities offer create a huge conflict of interest for the advisor. If you were an advisor and had the choice of making 2% or 15% on an account, which would you choose? Is it any wonder equity-indexed annuities have become so popular?


The Wall Street Journal article arrives at the same conclusion that I have–older investors should avoid equity-indexed annuities. And yet, who are these agents going after the most? Older investors, of course, because they’re the ones with the most assets.


Don’t be surprised if in the not-too-distant future, new regulations emerge to reign in the wild-west world of equity-indexed annuities. Until that day arrives, don’t fall for the equity-indexed annuity sales-pitch. There are much better ways to earn a decent market return with low risk, and you don’t have to give up control of your money to do it.