Annuity meltdown will eventually end


Updated on 28 July 2012 | 2 Comments

If you're younger than 55, you don't need to worry too much about the annuity meltdown. Rates should recover eventually. But it's a different story if you're older.

I was down the pub last week with some lovemoney.com colleagues and the conversation turned to pensions.

Both colleagues had reviewed their pensions recently and they were shocked to see how small an income they’d get if they were retiring in 2012.

Low, low rates

I can understand why they were shocked. Many new retirees are getting very disappointing pensions because annuity rates have fallen to such low levels.  In fact, data from MGM Advantage shows that annuity rates have fallen by 14% since June 2009 and by around 2% since March 2012.

So if you’re a 65 year-old single man with a £50,000 pension pot, you’d only get an income of £3,129 a year if you bought a conventional annuity today*. Back in 2009, a 65-year old man would have got £3,638 a year, and he would have got far more ten or twenty years ago.

Even worse, I fear that annuity rates are going to fall even further over the next two or three years, which is terrible news if you’re approaching retirement. There are two main reasons for this:

1. EU ruling on gender discrimination

By the end of the year, the EU won’t allow annuity providers to pay bigger annuities to men – even though men typically live shorter lives than women. In theory, male annuities should fall while female annuities rise, but the expectation is that male annuities will fall and female annuities will barely move.

2. Solvency 2

Solvency 2 is another EU ruling that will force annuity providers to take less risk with their portfolios. This will also drive down annuity rates.

And, of course, life expectancy will continue to rise too.

Good news

However, I’m more positive when I look at the long-term picture. Even though I expect annuity rates to fall over the next two or three years, I do think they’ll eventually start to rise again. And if you’re not going to retire for at least another ten years, you’ll probably be able to get a better annuity than people retiring in 2012.

It’s all connected to the price of UK government bonds or gilts. These bonds are basically IOUs issued by the British government and they’re normally regarded as very safe investments.

When you buy an annuity, your annuity provider will use your pension pot to buy gilts and then use the income from the gilts to pay you a pension. (Read more in Why gilts matter.)

So if gilts are expensive, they produce a small income relative to the price, and annuity providers will only be able to pay a low income to new retirees.

That’s been the case in recent years and the high price of gilts has triggered a meltdown in annuity rates.

There are four main reasons for the rise in gilt prices:

Things will change 

As I said, I’m confident that annuity rates will eventually start to rise and that’s because I expect gilt prices to fall at some point in the next few years. 

For starters, the Bank of England can’t carry on creating new money forever, and when Quantitative Easing stops, there will be less demand for gilts. 

And more importantly, gilt yields are just astonishingly low. As I write, the yield on 10-year gilts is just 1.44%! In other words, if you bought a gilt that was due to expire in ten years’ time, you’d only receive a return of 1.44% a year.  You’d do far better in one of the best instant access savings accounts

That kind of yield only makes sense if:

and 

and 

In fairness, I think there’s a strong chance that our economy will stay sluggish for years to come and that inflation will stay low too. But, for me, a 1.44% yield more than reflects that outlook. And anyway, we will eventually recover from the 2008 financial crisis. When that happens, gilt prices will fall, annuity rates will rise, and new retirees will get a better deal.

That’s great news for someone like me who is only 44. But for anyone over the age of 55, it’s harder to be so sanguine.

If you’re in the latter situation, it may make sense to buy a short-term annuity when you first retire. Then you’ll be hopefully be able to benefit later when annuity rates finally go up. Or you could delay your retirement. Find out more in How to combat falling annuity rates and Why your retirement just got better.

*This is a level annuity for a single man. There are no guarantees. In other words, the 65 year-old man will receive £3,129 a year until he dies. The sum will never increase and payments will cease as soon as he dies.

More on pensions

The next pensions scandal

20 reasons pensions go wrong

Is your work pension any good?

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