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ronsin1 wrote:the lump sum you will get is 25% of the cash value of the plan the other 75% must be put towards an annuity where you will draw a monthly pension
I would rather go with a deffered annuity so you get the option of have the entire cash value in a lumpsum or you can opt for a montly pension, there is one annuity right now that gives 10% interest per year
PM AGENT RORO for more info on the deffered annuity
konartis wrote:I have this plan and received a end of year statement when I took it out in 2012, however I never received another one, only the statement for the TD1 form...am I supposed to get two statements for the specific year? One for the td1 form and another for the td4 if I choose not to file the td1 for the tax break at the beginning but decided to claim for the taxes at the end of the year?
Premchand1976 wrote:ronsin1 wrote:the lump sum you will get is 25% of the cash value of the plan the other 75% must be put towards an annuity where you will draw a monthly pension
I would rather go with a deffered annuity so you get the option of have the entire cash value in a lumpsum or you can opt for a montly pension, there is one annuity right now that gives 10% interest per year
PM AGENT RORO for more info on the deffered annuity
Which company offers 10% interest on annuity presently? Pm info. Thanks
Hammy Bolo wrote:not sure abt any company offering such high interest rate in this economy now and if they are I'll be happy to find out too...but be guided by the fact that high returns carries high risks. The Tisp is a deferred annuity tho but the option to have all in lump sum is guided by the present tax laws.Premchand1976 wrote:ronsin1 wrote:the lump sum you will get is 25% of the cash value of the plan the other 75% must be put towards an annuity where you will draw a monthly pension
I would rather go with a deffered annuity so you get the option of have the entire cash value in a lumpsum or you can opt for a montly pension, there is one annuity right now that gives 10% interest per year
PM AGENT RORO for more info on the deffered annuity
Which company offers 10% interest on annuity presently? Pm info. Thanks
Premchand1976 wrote:Being an agent I know fully well no company offers anything more than 4% presently, including the company I represent. With regards to a lumpsum payout, only way you can get this from any government registered pension type product would be to surrender the policy before maturity date. This way you are penalised 25% off the accumulated fund and get the remaining 75% as a lumpsum payment. A lot of clients seem to prefer this option in recent times.
Premchand1976 wrote:Being an agent I know fully well no company offers anything more than 4% presently, including the company I represent. With regards to a lumpsum payout, only way you can get this from any government registered pension type product would be to surrender the policy before maturity date. This way you are penalised 25% off the accumulated fund and get the remaining 75% as a lumpsum payment. A lot of clients seem to prefer this option in recent times.
Trinislacker wrote:On the topic of Annuity. Let's say my annuity reaches maturity date, would there be any conflict with having an annuity pension and continuing to work?
Premchand1976 wrote:Being an agent I know fully well no company offers anything more than 4% presently, including the company I represent. With regards to a lumpsum payout, only way you can get this from any government registered pension type product would be to surrender the policy before maturity date. This way you are penalised 25% off the accumulated fund and get the remaining 75% as a lumpsum payment. A lot of clients seem to prefer this option in recent times.
Hammy Bolo wrote:Not necessarily so Premchand1976. Republic's plans (Finance Act) operates differently from the Insurance Co (Insurance Act). Our plans offer 25% contribution and 100% interest as a lumpsum payout...TAX FREE. The 75% of contribution goes to the annuity ONLY IF the quotes we get back gives the plan holder a monthly payment of $500.00 and over. If it comes in under then the ENTIRE PLAN BALANCE is paid out...no taxes...no penalities...no charges. Only if you choose to surrender your plan before maturity then the 25% tax is levied by BIR.Premchand1976 wrote:Being an agent I know fully well no company offers anything more than 4% presently, including the company I represent. With regards to a lumpsum payout, only way you can get this from any government registered pension type product would be to surrender the policy before maturity date. This way you are penalised 25% off the accumulated fund and get the remaining 75% as a lumpsum payment. A lot of clients seem to prefer this option in recent times.
dredman1 wrote:Hammy Bolo wrote:Not necessarily so Premchand1976. Republic's plans (Finance Act) operates differently from the Insurance Co (Insurance Act). Our plans offer 25% contribution and 100% interest as a lumpsum payout...TAX FREE. The 75% of contribution goes to the annuity ONLY IF the quotes we get back gives the plan holder a monthly payment of $500.00 and over. If it comes in under then the ENTIRE PLAN BALANCE is paid out...no taxes...no penalities...no charges. Only if you choose to surrender your plan before maturity then the 25% tax is levied by BIR.Premchand1976 wrote:Being an agent I know fully well no company offers anything more than 4% presently, including the company I represent. With regards to a lumpsum payout, only way you can get this from any government registered pension type product would be to surrender the policy before maturity date. This way you are penalised 25% off the accumulated fund and get the remaining 75% as a lumpsum payment. A lot of clients seem to prefer this option in recent times.
I have a registered annuity with an insurance company, and they indicate that at retirement/maturity the maximim lumpsum I can receive is 25% of my accumulated fund value (i.e. 25% of premiums and 25% of interest) as premchand indicated. I've seen the TISP literature which states that the maximum lumpsum is 25% of contributions or premiums paid PLUS 100% of interest accumulated. The latter suggests more is available as a lumpsum with TISP. Is this because the 2 institutions operate under different Acts (Finance vs. Insurance Act) that this is possible? Or is it just different interpretations of the same thing?
Kronik wrote:Hmm, interesting. Republic one looks interesting, think I may go with this eventually
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