Stick or twist risk: It could take 41 years to replace lost annuity income if you delay purchase for two years
Annuities may well have come under
fire over the past couple of years for the derisory returns they offer
for decades of saving, but putting off buying one in the hope the market
improves is a risky venture.
When
to cash in retirement savings is a huge conundrum for thousands of
people with defined contribution pension pots, particularly considering
that annuity rates were at record lows this time last year.
Rates
have improved by between five and eight per cent since the turn of the
year, but choosing to delay a purchase in the hope of further
improvements could mean losing out on income that could take decades to
replace, and could particularly backfire if rates don't get better.
Enhanced annuity provider MGM
Advantage has calculated that if someone delayed buying an annuity for
two years and come 2015 the rates are the same as they are now, then it
could take them up to 41 years to make up for the income they lost in
those two years.
Were rates to improve by 6 per cent in that time, then it would take 19 years to make up for the shortfall.
Andrew Tully, of MGM, said: 'We have
seen annuity rates improve over the first half of the year, from their
historic lows in 2012, but the long-term outlook for rates is uncertain. It
would take a betting man to take a punt on annuity rates improving by
at least 6 per cent over the next couple of years to make any delay
worthwhile.'
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