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July 02, 2008

New York Imposes New Requirements on Gift Annuities

As the economy worsens, donors are increasingly interested in making their gifts through annuities, an approach that allows people to donate money or other assets to their favorite causes in exchange for a secure income stream. Now charities that offer gift annuities In New York face new requirements, under recently revised state law.

In essence, the new law requires charities to increase the amount of surplus funds they hold in reserve accounts linked to the annuities. The reserve funds ensure that charities are able to meet their financial obligations to donors.

Currently in New York, the minimum gift-annuity reserve fund is set at 110 percent of the actuarially determined reserves; those are based on the amount of the annuity, interest rates, mortality rates, and other factors. That percentage will now increase to 115 percent over three years, rising by 5 percent annually, beginning this year.

Charities will be affected by the New York law in varying ways, depending on how they currently handle gift annuities. Some will be unaffected, while others will have to make substantial changes. More information and details are available on the American Council of Gift Annuities’ Web site.

— Holly Hall

Comments

  1. Do you mean to say in this article that the annuity reserve fund will increase from 110% to 125%, with a 5% annual increase over three years?

    — Thomas E. Brandlin, MNA    Jul 3, 04:34 PM    #

  2. The article is incorrect. The 110% reserve requirement will increase 15% to 126.5% of the actuarially determined reserve, over a three-year phase-in period.

    — Jeff Steele    Jul 3, 05:16 PM    #

  3. Thomas and Jeff: Thanks for writing. The release from the gift annuity council stipulated that the annuity reserve fund will increase to 115 percent, not 125 percent. Jeff, it is my understanding that the annuity reserve fund will be capped at 115 percent of the actuarially determined reserve fund. I got the data from Planned Giving Services, the firm that worked with the New York officials to come up with the new requirement. But I will check this coming week and let you know if there was erroneous information.

    — Holly Hall    Jul 6, 02:54 PM    #

Commenting is closed for this article.




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