Voya Financial is hoping to capitalize on the recent popularity of buffer annuities by launching a product around the end of this year or early next, after having exited the market less than two years ago, and joining a small group of insurers currently offering such products.
"I think we just came to the market too early for it," said Carolyn Johnson, CEO of annuities and individual life at Voya.
"It wasn't really moving," Ms. Johnson said of product sales. Voya originally launched the annuity, called PotentialPLUS, in 2014 and closed it in October 2015. "In hindsight maybe we should have left it on [the shelf]."
However, buffer annuities, also known as structured annuities, a cross between indexed and variable annuities, have become a bright spot of sorts in an otherwise sluggish annuity market.
Variable annuity sales have been on a multi-year slide, and are forecast to dip to their lowest level this year since 1998, according to the Limra Secure Retirement Institute. Indexed annuities, which had been on a decade-long bull run, have
begun to fall off of late, largely because of the looming Department of Labor fiduciary rule, which will introduce more rigorous sales standards.
And overall annuity sales in the first quarter of 2017 were down for the fourth consecutive quarter, Limra said.
Sales of buffer annuities, though, were up 60% year-on-year in the first quarter. They still only represent between 5% and 10% of the overall variable annuity market, according to Limra.
There are currently
around five insurers offering buffer annuities, including AXA Equitable Life Insurance Co., Allianz Life Insurance Co. of North America, Brighthouse Financial, and Members Life Insurance Co., each of which has come to market since 2010.
Allianz this week announced the addition of two more buffer annuities to its suite.
Insurers sold $7.3 billion in structured annuities last year, double the sales from 2015 and nearly four times the total in 2014, according to Limra.
However, Voya is hopping back into the market amid heightened regulator scrutiny of these products and their distribution.
Donald Lopezi, senior vice president and regional director for the western region of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc., which oversees broker-dealers, said earlier this year that
complaints about buffer annuities have started to surface and that the products are "very complicated."
"To be honest, my head spins," Mr. Lopezi said at the annual Financial Services Institute meeting in January.
Buffer annuities are similar to indexed annuities in that they traditionally provide a buffer to the downside in the event of poor market returns.
Whereas indexed annuities can't credit less than 0% over a specified time period, buffer annuities may hedge perhaps 10% to the downside, meaning the insurer eats the first 10% of losses but leaves the investor on the hook for any additional negative returns. They typically have higher caps on returns to the upside, though, than indexed annuities.
Insurers achieve this product structure through exposure to structured products.
"We have some individuals who really understand [variable annuities] and they were struggling with this," said Mr. Lopezi, whose territory encompasses all states west of Denver. "You have to wonder, does the firm understand it? Does the rep?"
The products typically have an accumulation, rather than income, focus and are categorized as a type of variable annuity because of the risk of principal loss.
Ms. Johnson of Voya said the firm conducts training with all its representatives "to ensure every adviser has product-specific training, so potential customers understand the features and benefits of any product."