Registration No. 333-19725
Registration No. 811-08017
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM N-4
REGISTRATION STATEMENT
UNDER
THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
Pre-Effective Amendment No. | ☐ | |||
Post-Effective Amendment No. 44 | ☒ |
AND/OR
REGISTRATION STATEMENT
UNDER
THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940
Amendment No. 103 | ☒ |
(Check appropriate box or boxes)
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
(Exact Name of Registrant)
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY ®
(Name of Insurance Company)
P.O. Box 5423, Cincinnati, Ohio 45201-5423
(Address of Insurance Companys Principal Executive Offices)
Depositors Telephone Number (800) 789-6771
Copy to:
MARK F. MUETHING, ESQ. | JOHN P. GRUBER, ESQ. | |
President and Assistant Secretary | Senior Vice President, General Counsel | |
Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company | Secretary and Chief Compliance Officer | |
P.O. Box 5423 | Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company | |
Cincinnati, Ohio 45201-5423 | P.O. Box 5423 | |
(Name and Address of Agent for Service) | Cincinnati, Ohio 45201-5423 |
Approximate Date of Proposed Public Offering: Continuous Offering
It is proposed that this filing will become effective (check appropriate box)
☐ | immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b) of rule 485 |
☒ | on May 1, 2025 pursuant to paragraph (b) of Rule 485 |
☐ | 60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(1) of Rule 485 |
☐ | on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(1) of Rule 485 |
If appropriate, check the following box:
☐ | this post-effective amendment designates a new effective date for a previously filed post-effective amendment. |
Title of Securities Being Registered: | Units of Interest in Annuity Investors Variable Account B under | |
The Commodore Spirit® Individual and Group Flexible Premium Deferred Annuities |
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY®
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 5423, Cincinnati OH 45201-5423
Administrative Office: 191 Rosa Parks Street, Cincinnati OH 45202
Phone: 1-800-789-6771
ANNUITY INVESTORS® VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
THE COMMODORE SPIRIT®
PROSPECTUS FOR INDIVIDUAL AND GROUP FLEXIBLE PREMIUM DEFERRED ANNUITIES
PROSPECTUS DATED May 1, 2025
This prospectus describes individual and group flexible premium deferred annuity contracts. The individual contracts and interests in the group contracts (participants interest) are referred to in this prospectus as the Contract(s). Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company® (the Company) is the issuer of the Contracts.
A glossary of defined terms used herein can be found in the Definitions section starting on page 4 of this prospectus.
The Contracts are available for tax-qualified and non-tax-qualified annuity purchases. All Contracts are designed to be eligible for tax-deferred treatment during the Accumulation Period. The tax treatment of annuities is discussed in the Federal Tax Matters section of this prospectus.
The offering of the Contracts to new purchasers has been suspended. However, existing Contract owners may continue to make additional Purchase Payments. Owners of contracts issued with the riders described in this prospectus can no longer send a written request to us to receive the benefits under the rider (activation).
The Contracts offer both variable and fixed investment options. The variable investment options under the Contracts are Subaccounts of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B (the Separate Account). Each Subaccount invests in shares of a registered investment company or a portfolio of a registered investment company (each, a Portfolio). See Appendix A: Investment Options Available Under the Contract for additional information about each investment option available under the Contract.
The Contract is a complex investment and involves risk, including potential loss of principal and prior earnings.
The Contract is not a short-term investment. The Contract is not appropriate for investors who plan to take withdrawals (including required minimum distributions) during the first seven Contract Years. Withdrawals could result in contingent deferred sales charges, taxes, and if you are under age 591⁄2, a penalty tax.
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The Companys obligations under the Contracts are subject to its financial strength and claims-paying ability.
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NEITHER THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION NOR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION HAS APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED THESE SECURITIES OR PASSED UPON THE ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ABOUT CERTAIN INVESTMENT PRODUCTS, INCLUDING VARIABLE ANNUITIES, HAS BEEN PREPARED BY THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSIONS STAFF AND IS AVAILABLE AT INVESTOR.GOV.
| Neither the Contract nor a Participants interest in the Contract is a deposit or obligation of a bank or credit union or guaranteed by a bank or credit union. |
| Neither the Contract nor a Participants interest in the Contract is FDIC or NCUSIF insured. |
| Both the Contract and a Participants interest in the Contract involve investment risk and may lose value. |
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The capitalized terms defined in this section will have the meanings given to them when used in this prospectus. Other terms which may have a specific meaning under the Contracts, but which are not defined on this page, will be explained in the section of this prospectus where they are primarily used.
Account Value. The value of a Contract during the Accumulation Period. It is equal to the sum of the value of the Owners interest in the Subaccounts and the Owners interest in the Fixed Account options.
Accumulation Period. The period during which Purchase Payments and accumulated earnings are invested according to the investment options elected. The Accumulation Period ends when a Contract is annuitized or surrendered in full, or on the Death Benefit Commencement Date.
Accumulation Unit. A share of a Subaccount that an Owner purchases during the Accumulation Period.
Accumulation Unit Value. The value of an Accumulation Unit at the end of a Valuation Period.
The initial Accumulation Unit Value for each Subaccount other than the money market Subaccount was set at $10. The initial Accumulation Unit Value for the money market Subaccount was set at $1. The initial Accumulation Unit Value for a Subaccount was established at the inception date of the Separate Account, or on the date the Subaccount was established, if later.
After the initial Accumulation Unit Value is established, the Accumulation Unit Value for a Subaccount at the end of each Valuation Period is the Accumulation Unit Value at the end of the previous Valuation Period multiplied by the Net Investment Factor for that Subaccount for the current Valuation Period.
A Net Investment Factor of 1 produces no change in the Accumulation Unit Value for that Valuation Period. A Net Investment Factor of more than 1 or less than 1 produces an increase or a decrease, respectively, in the Accumulation Unit Value for that Valuation Period. The Accumulation Unit Value will vary to reflect the investment experience of the applicable Portfolios.
Annuity Commencement Date. The first day of the first payment interval for which an annuity benefit payment is to be made. For tax-qualified forms, the Annuity Commencement Date generally must be no later than the Contract anniversary following the Owners 70th birthday. For non-tax-qualified forms, the Annuity Commencement Date is generally the Owners 85th birthday, or five years after the Contracts effective date, if later.
Benefit Base Amount. The amount on which Rider charges and Benefit payments under a Rider are based.
Benefit Payment Period. The period during which either annuity benefit or death benefit payments are paid under a settlement option. The Benefit Payment Period begins on the first day of the first payment interval in which a benefit payment will be paid.
Benefit Unit. A share of a Subaccount that is used to determine the amount of each variable dollar benefit payment during the Benefit Payment Period.
Benefit Unit Value. The value of a Benefit Unit at the end of a Valuation Period.
The initial Benefit Unit Value for a Subaccount will be set equal to the Accumulation Unit Value for that Subaccount at the end of the first Valuation Period in which a variable dollar benefit is established by the Company. Thereafter, the Benefit Unit Value for a Subaccount at the end of a Valuation Period is determined by multiplying the previous Benefit Unit Value by the Net Investment Factor for that Subaccount for the current Valuation Period and multiplying the number again by a daily investment factor for each day in the Valuation Period. The daily investment factor reduces the previous Benefit Unit Value by the daily amount of the assumed interest rate, which is already incorporated in the calculation of variable dollar benefit payments.
CDSC. Contingent deferred sales charge.
Company. Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company. The words we us and our also refer to the Company.
Death Benefit Commencement Date. The first day of the first payment interval for a Death Benefit that is paid as periodic payments or the date of payment for a Death Benefit that is paid as a lump sum. The Beneficiary designates the Death Benefit Commencement Date when filing a claim by Written Request. It can be no earlier than the date that we have received at our administrative office both Due proof of the death of the Owner and a claim in Good Order with instructions as to the form of the Death Benefit.
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Death Benefit Valuation Date. The date the death benefit is valued. It is the date that the Company receives at its administrative office both proof of the death of the Owner and instructions as to how the death benefit will be paid. If instructions are not received within one year of the date of death, the Death Benefit Valuation Date will be one year after the date of death.
Good Order. We cannot process information or a request until we have received your instructions in Good Order at our administrative office. We will consider information or a request to be in Good Order when we have actually received a Written Request, along with all the information and other legal documentation that we require to process the information or request. To be in Good Order, instructions must be sufficiently clear so that we do not need to exercise any discretion to process the information or request.
We deem purchase payments, allocation instructions, transfer requests, withdrawal requests, surrender requests, other Written Requests, other information, and other instructions (paperwork) mailed to our post office box as received by us when the payment or the paperwork reaches our administrative office, which is located at 191 Rosa Parks Street, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202.
Net Asset Value. The price computed by or for each Portfolio, no less frequently than each Valuation Period, at which the Portfolios shares or units are redeemed in accordance with the rules of the SEC.
Net Investment Factor. The factor that represents the percentage change in the Accumulation Unit Values and Benefit Unit Values from one Valuation Period to the next. The Net Investment Factor for each Valuation Period reflects changes to the net asset value of the underlying Portfolio, dividends or capital gains distributions by the Portfolio, credits and charges for tax reserves with respect to the Subaccount, and the mortality and expense risk charges and administration charges.
Owner. For purposes of this prospectus, references to the Owner mean the owner of an individual annuity contract or the participant in a group annuity contract (even though the participant is not the owner of the group contract itself.) The words you and your also refer to the Owner.
Portfolio. A registered investment company or a portfolio of a registered investment company in which the corresponding Subaccount invests.
Purchase Payments. An amount paid to us for this Contract, less any fee charged by the person remitting payments and the deduction of applicable premium or other taxes.
SEC. Securities and Exchange Commission.
Separate Account. Annuity Investors Variable Account B, which is an account that was established and is maintained by the Company.
Subaccount. A subdivision of the Separate Account. Each Subaccount invests in the shares of the corresponding Portfolio.
Surrender Value. At any time, the Surrender Value is the Account Value as of the end of the applicable Valuation Period minus the CDSC that would apply upon a surrender; the outstanding balance of any loans; and any applicable premium tax or other taxes not previously deducted. On full surrender, the contract maintenance fee will also be deducted from the Surrender Value.
Tax-Qualified Contract. A contract that is intended to qualify for special tax treatment for retirement savings. The Contract specifications page indicates whether this Contract is a Tax-Qualified Contract.
Valuation Date. A day on which Accumulation Unit Values and Benefit Unit Values can be calculated. Each day that the New York Stock Exchange is open for business is a Valuation Date.
Valuation Period. The period starting at the close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange on any Valuation Date and ending at the close of trading on the next succeeding Valuation Date.
Written Request. Information provided to us or a request made to us that is:
| complete and satisfactory to us; |
| on our form or in a manner satisfactory to us; and |
| received by us at our administrative office. |
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A Written Request may, at our discretion, be made by telephone or electronic means.
We will treat a Written Request as a standing order. It may be modified or revoked only by a subsequent Written Request, when permitted by the terms of the Contract. A Written Request is subject to (1) any payment that we make before we acknowledge the Written Request and (2) any other action that we take before we acknowledge the Written Request.
To obtain one of our forms, contact us at P.O. Box 5423, Cincinnati, Ohio 45201-5423, or call us at 1-800-789-6771.
The Contracts offer you the opportunity to participate in the market on a tax deferred basis through investment options you choose while also providing a death benefit. The Portfolios and the Fixed Account are the investment options available. The Contracts are appropriate for investors who want a long-term investment or retirement savings.
The Accumulation Period and the Benefit Payment Period are the two phases of the Contracts.
Accumulation Period. During the Accumulation Period, the amounts you contribute can be allocated among any of the then available variable investment options and Fixed Account options. The variable investment options are the Subaccounts of the Separate Account, each of which is invested in a Portfolio. The Owner bears the risk of any investment gain or loss on amounts allocated to the Subaccounts. The Fixed Account options earn a rate of interest declared from time to time by the Company, which will be no less than the minimum interest rate permitted under the law of the state when and where the Contract is issued. The Company guarantees amounts invested in the Fixed Account options and the earnings thereon so long as those amounts remain in the Fixed Account.
Additional information about each investment option is available in Appendix A: Investment Options Available Under the Contract.
Benefit Payment Period. When the Contract is annuitized, we promise to pay a stream of annuity benefit payments for the duration of the settlement option selected. During the Benefit Payment Period, payments can be allocated between variable dollar and fixed dollar options. If a variable dollar option is selected, Benefit Units can be allocated to any of the same Subaccounts that are available during the Accumulation Period. After the Contract is annuitized, you will no longer be able to make a withdrawal from the Contract and the Death Benefit will terminate. Commuted values, if available, may be taken no sooner than five years after the applicable Commencement Date. Commuted values are not available for any option based on life expectancy.
| Annuity Benefit. When the Contract is annuitized, we promise to pay a stream of Annuity Benefit payments for the duration of the settlement option selected. |
| Death Benefit. A Death Benefit will be paid under the Contract if the Owner dies during the Accumulation Period. |
| Withdrawal or Surrender. An Owner may take a withdrawal or surrender a Contract during the Accumulation Period subject to certain restrictions and charges. A partial surrender or withdrawal from the Contract may result in the reduction of the Death Benefit that is greater than the amount of the partial surrender or withdrawal. |
| Contract Loans. An Owner may be able to borrow money if a Contract has a loan provision. If loans are available under a Contract, loan provisions are described in the loan endorsement to the Contract. We will charge interest on any loans taken. Under the terms of the guaranteed withdrawal riders, you must pay off all loans prior to the date that you first choose to take a benefit under the rider. If you activated an optional living benefit rider and have an outstanding loan, there are special transfer rules applicable to collateral for the loan. See the Contract Loans and Guaranteed Withdrawal Riders sections of this prospectus for more information. |
| Optional Benefits. Contracts issued before June 1, 2009 included optional living benefit riders for additional charges. These riders are no longer available. |
| Automatic Transfer Programs. During the Accumulation Period, an owner may enroll in automatic transfer programs such as Dollar Cost Averaging, Portfolio Rebalancing, and Interest Sweep. |
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IMPORTANT INFORMATION YOU SHOULD CONSIDER ABOUT THE CONTRACT
Fees, Expenses, and Adjustments |
Location in Prospectus | |||
Are There Charges or Adjustments for Early Withdrawals? | Yes.
If you withdraw money from your Contract within 7 years of your most recent purchase payment, you will be assessed a contingent deferred sales charge (or surrender charge) of up to 7% of the amount withdrawn.
For example, if you make a withdrawal within 7 years of your most recent purchase payment, you could pay a surrender charge of up to $7,000 on a $100,000 investment. This loss will be greater if you also have to pay taxes and, if before age 591⁄2, you are subject to a penalty tax. |
Fee Table
Charges and Deductions | ||
Are There Transaction Charges? | Yes. In addition to surrender charges, you will be charged a $25 transfer fee for each transfer between investment options in excess of 12 in any Contract Year. You may also be charged an annual automatic transfer program fee and an annual systematic withdrawal fee. | Fee Table
Charges and Deductions | ||
Are There Ongoing Fees and Expenses? | Yes. The table below describes the fees and expenses that you may pay each year, depending on the options you choose. Please refer to your Contact specifications page for information about the specific fees you will pay each year based on the options you have elected. | Fee Table
Charges and Deductions
Appendix A: Investment Options Available Under the Contract |
Annual Fee |
Minimum | Maximum | ||||||
Base Contract (varies by Contract Class) |
1.44 | %1 | 1.44 | %1 | ||||
Investment Options (Portfolio fees and expenses) |
0.27 | % | 1.30 | % | ||||
Optional benefits available for an additional charge (for a single optional benefit, if elected) |
0.40 | %2 | 1.20 | %3 |
1. | As a percentage of Account Value |
2. | As a percentage of Benefit Base Amount. This charge is for the least expensive optional benefit. |
3. | As a percentage of Benefit Base Amount. This charge is for the most expensive optional benefit. |
Because your Contract is customizable, the choices you make affect how much you will pay. To help you understand the cost of owning your Contract, the following table shows the lowest and highest cost you could pay each year, based on current charges. This estimate assumes that you do not take withdrawals from the Contract, which could add withdrawal charges that substantially increase costs.
Lowest Annual Cost: $1,529 | Highest Annual Cost: $3,519 | |
Assumes | Assumes | |
Investment of $100,000 5% annual appreciation Least expensive Portfolio fees No optional benefits No sales charges No additional purchase payments, transfers or withdrawals |
Investment of $100,000 5% annual appreciation Most expensive combination of optional benefits and Portfolio fees No sales charges No additional purchase payments, transfers or withdrawals |
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RISKS |
LOCATION IN PROSPECTUS | |||
Is There a Risk of Loss from Poor Performance? | Yes. You can lose money by investing in the Contract including loss of principal. | PRINCIPAL RISKS | ||
Is this a Short-Term Investment? | No. The Contract is not a short-term investment and is not appropriate for an investor who needs ready access to cash. The Contract provides tax deferral on earnings which makes it more beneficial as a long-term investment. A surrender charge may apply up to 7 years from the date of your last purchase payment which will reduce the amount you receive for a withdrawal or a surrender. Amounts withdrawn from the Contract may also result in taxes or, if before age 591⁄2, a penalty tax. | PRINCIPAL RISKS | ||
What Are the Risks Associated with the Investment Options? | An investment in the Contract is subject to the risk of poor investment performance and can vary depending on the performance of the investment options available under the Contract (e.g., Portfolios). Each investment option, including the Fixed Account, will have its own unique risks. You should review the investment options before making an investment decision. | PRINCIPAL RISKS | ||
What Are the Risks Related to the Insurance Company? | An investment in the Contract is subject to the risks related to the Company. Any obligations (including obligations under the Fixed Account), guarantees, or benefits are subject to the claims paying ability of the Company. Additional information about the Company, including its financial strength ratings, is available upon request by calling 1-800-789-6771. | PRINCIPAL RISKS | ||
RESTRICTIONS |
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Are There Limits on the Investment Options? | Certain Portfolios are no longer available as investment options. If you previously activated a guaranteed withdrawal rider that was attached to your contract, the Portfolios that are available as investment options are restricted. Transfers are subject to restrictions as to amount and timing. The Company reserves the right to remove or substitute Portfolios as investment options. | APPENDIX A: PORTFOLIOS AVAILABLE UNDER THE CONTRACT
TRANSFERS
GUARANTEED WITHDRAWAL RIDERS | ||
Are There any Restrictions on Contract Benefits? | The guaranteed withdrawal riders can no longer be activated.
Excess Withdrawals under the guaranteed withdrawal riders will reduce the Benefit Base Amount by the same percentage as the percentage reduction in the Account Value.
If you previously activated a guaranteed withdrawal rider that was attached to your contract, the Portfolios that are available as investment options are restricted.
A partial surrender or withdrawal may result in a reduction of the Death Benefit that is greater than the amount of the withdrawal or partial surrender.
Withdrawals that exceed the limits specified by the terms of an optional benefit may also terminate the benefit.
Under the terms of the guaranteed withdrawal riders, you must pay off all loans prior to the date that you first choose to take a benefit under the rider
Special transfer rules apply if you have a loan and activate a Rider. |
GUARANTEED WITHDRAWAL RIDERS
DEATH BENEFIT
APPENDIX C: DEATH BENEFIT AMOUNT (VERSION 2E) |
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TAXES |
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What Are the Contracts Tax Implications? | You should consult with a tax professional to determine the tax implications of an investment in and purchase payments received under the Contract. There is no additional tax benefit to you if the Contract is purchased through a tax-qualified plan or individual retirement account (IRA). Generally, withdrawals will be subject to ordinary income tax, and may be subject to tax penalties. | FEDERAL TAX MATTERS | ||
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST |
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How Are Investment Professionals Compensated? | Some investment professionals may receive compensation for selling the Contract to you. The compensation is typically paid as a commission calculated as a percentage of the purchase payments received for a Contract. These investment professionals may have a financial incentive to offer or recommend the Contract over another investment. | DISTRIBUTION OF THE CONTRACTS | ||
Should I Exchange My Contract? | Some investment professionals may have a financial incentive to offer you a new contract in place of the one you already own. You should only exchange your contract if you determine, after comparing the features, fees, and risks of both contracts, and any fees or penalties to terminate the existing contract, that it is preferable for you to purchase the new contract rather than continue to own your existing contract. | DISTRIBUTION OF THE CONTRACTS |
The following tables describe the fees and expenses that you will pay when buying, owning, and surrendering or making withdrawals from an investment option or the Contract. Please refer to your Contract specifications page for information about the specific fees you will pay each year based on the options you have elected.
The first table describes the fees and expenses you will pay at the time that you buy the Contract, surrender or make withdrawals from an investment option or the Contract, or transfer Account Value between investment options. State premium taxes may also be deducted.
Current | Maximum | |||||||
Contingent Deferred Sales Charge (or surrender charge) (as a percentage of Purchase Payments withdrawn or surrendered)(1) |
7.00 | % | 7.00 | % | ||||
Transfer Fee(2) |
$ | 25 | $ | 30 | ||||
Annual Automatic Transfer Program Fee |
None | $ | 30 | |||||
Annual Systematic Withdrawal Fee |
None | $ | 30 |
(1) | The contingent deferred sales charge is calculated as a percentage of Purchase Payments withdrawn or surrendered. This charge applies to each Purchase Payment separately. The charge on each Purchase Payment decreases to zero after 7 years. We may waive the contingent deferred sales charge under certain circumstances. See the Charges and Deductions section of this prospectus for more information about the contingent deferred sales charge and the circumstances in which it may be waived. |
(2) | The transfer fee currently applies to transfers in excess of 12 in any contract year. |
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The next table describes the fees and expenses that you will pay each year during the time that you own the Contract (not including Portfolio fees and expenses).
If you previously purchased an optional benefit, you will pay additional charges, as shown below.
Administrative Expenses (Note 1) |
$ | 30 | ||
Base Contract Expenses (Note 2) (as a percentage of account value) |
1.40 | % | ||
Optional Benefit Expenses (Note 3) |
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Enhanced Death Benefit Separate Account Annual Expenses (Issue Age 65 and younger) |
1.50 | % | ||
Enhanced Death Benefit Separate Account Annual Expenses (Issue Age over 65 and under 79) |
1.65 | % | ||
Guaranteed Lifetime Withdrawal Benefit Rider |
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maximum charge |
1.20 | % | ||
current charge |
0.55 | % | ||
Guaranteed Lifetime Withdrawal Benefit Rider with Spousal Continuation Charge |
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maximum charge |
1.20 | % | ||
current charge |
0.70 | % | ||
Guaranteed Minimum Withdrawal Benefit Rider (as a percentage of Benefit Base Amount) |
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maximum charge |
1.00 | % | ||
current charge |
0.40 | % |
Note 1. We call this the Contract Maintenance Fee. If you surrender your contract, we will apply the contract maintenance fee at that time. See the Charge and Deductions section of the prospectus.
Note 2. We call these Separate Account charges. The Separate Account Annual Expenses are: Mortality and Expense Charge (1.25%) and Administration Charge (0.15%). Certain groups that meet higher underwriting or other criteria may be eligible to obtain the enhanced group version of the contract which has lower Separate Account charges. When we also expect to incur reduced administrative expenses, we may also waive the Administration Charge. See the Charge and Deductions section of the prospectus.
Note 3. The optional benefits listed can no longer be added to your contract.
Note 4. The Separate Account Annual Expenses are: Mortality and Expense Charge (1.35%) and Administration Charge (0.15%).
Note 5. The Separate Account Annual Expenses are: Mortality and Expense Charge (1.50%) and Administration Charge (0.15%)
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The next table shows the minimum and maximum total operating expenses charged by the Portfolios that you may pay periodically during the time that you own the Contract. Expenses shown may change over time and may be higher or lower in the future. A complete list of Portfolios available under the Contract, including their annual expenses, may be found in Appendix A: Investment Options Available Under the Contract.
Annual Portfolio Expenses | Minimum | Maximum | ||||||
(expenses that are deducted from Portfolio assets, including management fees, distribution and/or service (12b-1) fees, and other expenses) |
0.27 | % | 1.30 | % |
This example is intended to help you compare the cost of investing in the Subaccounts with the cost of investing in other annuity contracts that offer Subaccounts. These costs include the Transaction expenses, the Annual Contract expenses, and Annual Portfolio expenses.
The example assumes all Contract value is allocated to Subaccounts. Your costs could differ from those shown below if you invest in fixed investment options.
The Example assumes that you invest $100,000 in the Subaccounts for the time periods indicated. The Example also assumes that your investment has a 5% return each year and assumes the most expensive combination of Annual Portfolio Expenses and optional benefits available for an additional charge. Although your actual costs may be higher or lower, based on these assumptions, your costs would be:
1 year | 3 years | 5 years | 10 years | |||||||||||||
We assume that you surrender your Contract at the end of the period. We also assume that the applicable contingent deferred sales charge is incurred. In this case, your costs would be: |
$ | 11,260 | $ | 18,679 | $ | 27,390 | $ | 57,642 | ||||||||
We assume that you do not surrender your Contract or you annuitize your Contract at the end of the period. |
$ | 4,260 | $ | 13,679 | $ | 24,390 | $ | 57,642 |
PRINCIPAL RISKS OF INVESTING IN THE CONTRACT
| Market Risk. The Subaccounts to which you allocate Purchase Payments may lose value, which would cause your Account Value to decrease. There is a risk of loss of the entire amount invested. See the prospectuses for the Portfolios for more information about the investment risks. |
| Early Withdrawal Risk. The Contract is a deferred annuity, which means the Benefit Payout Period will begin on a future date. We designed the Contract to be a long-term investment that you can use to help build a retirement nest egg and provide income for retirement. The limitations and charges included in the Contract reflect its long-term nature. The Contract may not be appropriate for investors who plan to take withdrawals (including required minimum distributions) during the first seven Contract Years, because of the assessment of a contingent deferred sales charge. This reduction may exceed any prior earnings. Withdrawals are also subject to the possibility of adverse tax consequences. |
| Insurance Company Risk. We may not be able to pay claims related to the annuity or death benefits if we experience financial difficulties or become insolvent. This could also impact our ability to meet our obligations under the Fixed Accounts. We rely on technology, including interconnected computer systems and data storage networks and digital communications, to conduct our variable product business activities. Because our variable product business is highly dependent upon the effective operation of our computer systems and those of our service providers and other business partners, our business is vulnerable to disruptions from utility outages, and susceptible to operational and information security risks resulting from information systems failure (e.g., hardware and software malfunctions) and cyber-attacks. Cyber-attacks may be systemic (e.g., affecting the internet, cloud services, or other infrastructure) or targeted (e.g., failures in or breach of our systems or those of third parties on whom we rely, including ransomware and malware attacks). Systems failures and cybersecurity incidents affecting us, our affiliates, the underlying funds, intermediaries, service providers, and other third parties on whom we rely may adversely affect your contract value and interfere with our ability to process contract transactions and calculate contract values. Systems failures and cybersecurity breaches may cause us to be unable to process orders from our website or with the underlying funds, cause us to be unable to calculate unit values and/or the underlying funds to be unable to calculate share values, cause the release or possible destruction of confidential customer and/or business information, impede order processing or cause other operational issues, subject us and our service providers and intermediaries to regulatory fines, litigation, and financial losses, and/or cause reputational damage. Cybersecurity risks may also impact the issuers of securities in which the underlying funds invest, which may cause the underlying funds to lose value. |
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| Contract Benefits Risk. You may never need or use certain features provided by the contract. You may pay for an optional feature for which you never realize a benefit. Excess Withdrawals under the guaranteed withdrawal riders will reduce the Benefit Base Amount by the same percentage as the percentage reduction in the Account Value. If you previously activated a guaranteed withdrawal rider that was attached to your contract, the Portfolios that are available as investment options are restricted, and amounts invested in accordance with those restrictions may earn a return that is less than the return you might have earned on those amounts in other Portfolios had you not been subject to any investment restrictions. A partial surrender or withdrawal may result in a reduction of the Death Benefit that is greater than the amount of the withdrawal or partial surrender. Withdrawals that exceed the limits specified by the terms of an optional benefit may also terminate the benefit. Under the terms of the guaranteed withdrawal riders, you must pay off all loans prior to the date that you first choose to take a benefit under the rider. Special transfer rules apply if you have a loan and activate a Rider. |
| Contract Changes Risk. The Company reserves the right to increase or decrease the minimum Purchase Payment under a periodic payment program, the minimum allowable additional Purchase Payment, or the maximum single Purchase Payment, at its discretion and at any time, where permitted by law. The Company may, in its sole discretion, restrict or prohibit the allocation of Purchase Payments to any Fixed Account option or any Subaccount from time to time on a nondiscriminatory basis. |
The Company reserves the right to establish new Subaccounts when, in our sole discretion, marketing, tax, investment or other conditions warrant. Any new Subaccounts will be made available to existing Owners on a basis to be determined by us and that is not discriminatory. We do not guarantee that any of the Subaccounts or any of the Portfolios will always be available for allocation of Purchase Payments or variable dollar benefit payments or for transfers. We may substitute the shares of a different portfolio or a different class of shares for shares held in a Portfolio, or merge and combine Subaccounts. In such an event, we will amend the prospectus. Such changes will be made in accordance with applicable laws.
| Limitations on Access to Cash Value through Withdrawals. A contingent deferred sales charge may apply if you withdraw money from your Contract or surrender your Contract. Withdrawals are subject to minimum amounts. See the Withdrawals section of the prospectus. |
| Adverse Tax Consequences. A penalty tax may be imposed at the time of a withdrawal or a surrender depending on your age and other circumstances. Generally, withdrawals will be treated as ordinary income for tax purposes. |
| Unsuitable as Short-Term Savings Vehicle. The Contracts are intended for retirement savings and are more beneficial for investors with a long-term investment horizon. The Contracts are unsuitable as a short-term savings vehicles. Therefore, if you need to withdraw money from the Contract for short-term needs, it may not be the right contract for you. |
The Separate Account is divided into Subaccounts. Each Subaccount invests in a Portfolio. Information regarding each Portfolio, including its name, its type (e.g. money market fund, bond fund, balanced fund, etc.) or a brief statement concerning its investment objectives, its investment adviser and any subadviser, current expenses and performance is available in Appendix A to this prospectus.
The prospectus of each Portfolio contains more complete information about its investment objectives, policies and practices, its investment advisor and other service providers, and its expenses. There is no assurance that the Portfolios will achieve their stated objectives. The SEC does not supervise the management or the investment policies and/or practices of any of the Portfolios.
You should read the Portfolio prospectuses carefully before making any decision concerning the allocation of Purchase Payments to, or transfers among, the Subaccounts. For a copy of any prospectus of any Portfolio, which contains more complete information about the Portfolio, contact us at P.O. Box 5423, Cincinnati, Ohio 45201-4523, call us at 1-800-789-6771, or go to our website at www. Massmutualascend.com/variable-compliance.
The Company and/or its affiliates may directly or indirectly receive payments from the Portfolios and/or their service providers (investment advisers, administrators and/or distributors) in connection with certain administrative, marketing and other services provided by the Company and/or its affiliates and expenses incurred by the Company and/or its affiliates. The Company and/or its affiliates generally receive three types of payments: Rule 12b-1 fees, support fees and other payments. The Company and its affiliates may use the proceeds from these payments for any corporate purpose, including payment of expenses related to promoting, issuing, distributing and administering the Contracts, marketing the underlying Portfolios, and administering the Separate Account. The Company and its affiliates may profit from these payments. More information about these payments is included in the Statement of Additional Information.
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Contract value allocated to a Subaccount will vary based on the investment experience of the corresponding Portfolio in which the Subaccount invests. There is a risk of loss of the entire amount invested.
The available fixed investment options are:
| Fixed Accumulation Account Option |
| Fixed Account Option One-Year Guarantee Period |
| Fixed Account Option Three-Year Guarantee Period |
| Fixed Account Option Five-Year Guarantee Period |
| Fixed Account Option Seven-Year Guarantee Period |
Note: Currently, you may not allocate Purchase Payments or transfer amounts to the Fixed Account Option One-Year Guarantee Period.
Interests in the Fixed Account options are not securities and are not registered with the SEC. Amounts allocated to the Fixed Account options will receive a stated rate of interest equal to or greater than 1% per year or the minimum required under the law of the state when and where the Contract is issued. Amounts allocated to the Fixed Account options and interest credited to the Fixed Account options are guaranteed by the Company.
There are restrictions on allocations to the Fixed Accounts, which are more fully described in the Purchase Payments and Investment Options-Allocations sections of this prospectus. There are also restrictions on transfers to and from the Fixed Accounts, which are described more fully in the Transfers section of this prospectus.
Amounts allocated to the Fixed Accumulation Account will receive a stated rate of interest equal to or greater than 1% per year or the minimum required under the law of the state when and where the Contract is issued. We may from time to time pay a higher current interest rate for the Fixed Accumulation Account.
Fixed Account Options with Guarantee Periods
Amounts allocated to a Fixed Account option with a guarantee period will receive a stated rate of interest for the guarantee period. The stated rate of interest will not change during the applicable guarantee period. The stated rate of interest will be equal to or greater than 1% per year or the minimum required under the law of the state when and where the Contract is issued.
Example: You allocate $5,000 to the Fixed Account Option Five-Year Guarantee Period when the stated rate of interest for the option is 3.5%. The $5,000 you allocated to the option will earn interest at a rate of 3.5% per year, compounded annually, for the next five years.
Renewal of Fixed Account Options with Guarantee Periods. At the end of a guarantee period and for 30 days preceding the end of the period, the Owner may elect a new option to replace the option that is then maturing. The Company will notify the Owner of the date on which the amount matures and Fixed Account options available at that time. Current rates may be obtained by calling us at 1-800-789-6771.
Re-allocations must be made in whole percentages. The minimum Purchase Payment amount that can be allocated to a Fixed Account option other than the Fixed Accumulation Account is $2,000.
The entire amount in the maturing option may be re-allocated to any of the then-current Fixed Account options or Subaccounts. The Owner may not re-allocate to a Fixed Account option with a guarantee period that would extend beyond the annuity commencement date (the latest date).
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If the Owner does not elect a new option, the entire amount maturing will be re-allocated to the maturing option so long as its guarantee period does not extend beyond the latest date. If the guarantee period extends beyond the latest date, the entire amount maturing will be re-allocated to the Fixed Account option with the longest available guarantee period that expires before the latest date or, failing that, the Fixed Accumulation option.
Example: You allocate $5,000 to the Fixed Account Option Five-Year Guarantee Period. At the end of the five-year guarantee period, the latest date will occur in nine years. You do not elect a new option. The $5,000 is re-allocated to the Fixed Account Option Five-Year Guarantee Period for another five years. At the end of second five-year guarantee period, the latest date will occur in four years. Once again, you do not elect a new option. The $5,000 cannot be re-allocated to the Fixed Account Option Five-Year Guarantee Period because the five-year guarantee period will extend beyond the latest date. No Fixed Account option with a shorter guarantee period is then available. The $5,000 is re-allocated to the Fixed Accumulation Account option.
Additional information regarding the features of each currently offered Fixed Account option, including its name, its term, and its minimum guaranteed interest rate is available in Appendix A: Investment Options Available Under the Contract.
PURCHASE PAYMENTS AND ALLOCATION TO INVESTMENT OPTIONS
Each Contract allows for an Accumulation Period during which Purchase Payments are invested according to the Owners instructions. During the Accumulation Period, the Owner can control the allocation of investments through transfers or through the following investment programs offered by the Company: dollar cost averaging, portfolio rebalancing and interest sweep. For more information on these programs, see the Automatic Transfer Programs section of this prospectus. The telephone, facsimile and Internet transfer procedures are described in the Transfers section of this prospectus. The Owner can access the Account Value during the Accumulation Period through surrenders or withdrawals, systematic withdrawals, or contract loans (if available). These withdrawal features are described more fully in the Withdrawals and Surrenders and Contract Loans sections of this prospectus.
Purchase payments may be made at any time during the Accumulation Period. The current restrictions on purchase payment amounts are set out in the table below.
Tax-Qualified | Non-Tax-Qualified | |||||||
Minimum initial Purchase Payment |
$ | 2,000 | $ | 5,000 | ||||
Minimum monthly payments under periodic payment program |
$ | 50 | $ | 100 | ||||
Minimum additional payments |
$ | 50 | $ | 50 | ||||
Maximum single Purchase Payment |
$ | 65,000 or Company approval | $ | 65,000 or Company approval | ||||
Maximum total Purchase Payments |
$ | 500,000 or Company approval | $ | 500,000 or Company approval |
The Company reserves the right to increase or decrease the minimum initial Purchase Payment or minimum Purchase Payment under a periodic payment program, the minimum allowable additional Purchase Payment, or the maximum single Purchase Payment, at its discretion and at any time, where permitted by law. The Company may, in its sole discretion, restrict or prohibit the allocation of Purchase Payments to any Fixed Account option or any Subaccount from time to time on a nondiscriminatory basis.
Processing of Purchase Payments. Each Purchase Payment will be applied by the Company to the credit of the Owners account.
| If the application or order ticket form is in Good Order, the Company will apply the initial Purchase Payment to the Owners account within two business days of receipt of the Purchase Payment at the Companys administrative office. |
| If the application or order ticket form is not in Good Order, the Company will attempt to get the application or order ticket form in Good Order within five business days. If the application or order ticket form is not in Good Order at the end of this period, the Company will inform the applicant of the reason for the delay and that the Purchase Payment will be returned immediately unless he or she specifically gives the Company consent to keep the Purchase Payment until the application or order ticket form is in Good Order. Once the application or order ticket form is in Good Order, the Purchase Payment will be applied to the Owners account within two business days. |
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Each additional Purchase Payment is credited to a Contract as of the Valuation Date on which the Company receives the Purchase Payment and any related allocation instructions in Good Order at its administrative office. If any portion of the additional Purchase Payment is allocated to a Subaccount, it will be applied at the next Accumulation Unit Value calculated after the Company receives the Purchase Payment and related allocation instructions in Good Order at its administrative office.
Unforeseen Processing Delays. We are exposed to risks related to natural and man-made disasters and catastrophes, such as (but not limited to) storms, fires, floods, earthquakes, public health crises, malicious acts, and terrorist acts, any of which could adversely affect our ability to conduct business. A natural or man-made disaster or catastrophe, including a pandemic (such as COVID-19), could affect the ability or willingness of our employees or the employees of our service providers to perform their job responsibilities. While many of our employees and the employees of our service providers are able to work remotely, those remote work arrangements may result in our business operations being less efficient than under normal circumstances and could lead to delays in our processing of contract-related transactions, including orders from contract owners. Catastrophic events may negatively affect the computer and other systems on which we rely, impact our ability to calculate Accumulation Unit Values, or have other possible negative impacts. There can be no assurance that our service providers will be able to successfully avoid negative impacts associated with natural and man-made disasters and catastrophes.
Investment OptionsAllocations
Purchase Payments can be allocated in whole percentages to any of the available Subaccounts or Fixed Account options. The current restrictions on allocations are set out in the table below. The Company may, in its sole discretion, restrict, delay or prohibit allocations to any Fixed Account option or any Subaccount from time to time on a nondiscriminatory basis.
Tax-Qualified and Non-Tax-Qualified | ||
Minimum allocation to any Subaccount | $10 | |
Minimum allocation to Fixed Accumulation Account | $10 | |
Minimum allocation to a Fixed Account option with a guarantee period | $2,000 No amounts may be allocated to a guarantee period option that would extend beyond the Annuity Commencement Date. | |
Restrictions on allocations to either Five-Year Guarantee Interest Rate Option or Seven-Year Guarantee Interest Rate Option | For Contracts issued after May 1, 2004 for states where the Company has received regulatory approval, amounts may be allocated to the Five-Year Guarantee Interest Rate Option and the Seven-Year Guarantee Interest Rate Option only during the first contract year. | |
Restrictions on allocations during right to cancel period | No current restrictions; however, the Company reserves the right to require that Purchase Payment(s) be allocated to the money market Subaccount or to the Fixed Accumulation Account option during the right to cancel period. |
Principal Guarantee Program. An Owner may elect to have the Company allocate a portion of a Purchase Payment to the Fixed Account Option Seven-Year Guarantee Period (the Seven Year Option) such that, at the end of the seven year guarantee period, that account will grow to an amount equal to the total Purchase Payment (so long as there are no surrenders or withdrawals or loans from the Contract). The Company determines the portion of the Purchase Payment that must be allocated to the Seven Year Option such that, based on the interest rate then in effect, that account will grow to equal the full amount of the Purchase Payment after seven years. The remainder of the Purchase Payment will be allocated according to the Owners instructions. The minimum Purchase Payment eligible for the principal guarantee program is $5,000. The principal guarantee program is only available during the first contract year.
Example: You make one Purchase Payment of $100,000 and you elect the principal guarantee program. At the time of your purchase, the interest rate for the Seven Year Option is 3.75%. We allocate $77,282.87 to the Seven Year Option. You allocate the remaining $22,717.13 to a variable investment option. The $77,282.87 allocated to the Seven Year Option earns interest at an annual rate of 3.75%. The variable investment option performs poorly and, for the seven-year period, has a return of -5%.
| Because you selected the principal guarantee program, the $77,282.87 allocated to the Seven Year Option grows to $100,000 after seven years. On the other hand, you lose $1,135.86 (-5% x $22,717.13) in the variable option during the seven-year period. The $22,717.13 allocated to the variable option declines to $21,581.27 ($22,717.13 - $1,135.86). As a result, your account value is $121,581.27 ($100,000 + $21,581.27) after seven years. |
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| If you did not select the principal guarantee program and allocated all of your Purchase Payment to the variable option, your account would have a 5% return for the seven-year period. In this case, you would lose $5,000 (-5% x $100,000) and your account value would be $95,000 ($100,000 - $5,000) after seven years. |
With Principal Guarantee Program | Without Principal Guarantee Program | |||||||||||||||
At time of purchase | After 7 years | At time of purchase | After 7 years | |||||||||||||
Seven Year Option |
$ | 77,282.87 | $ | 100,000.00 | $ | 0 | $ | 0 | ||||||||
Variable Option |
$ | 22,717.13 | $ | 21,581.27 | $ | 100,000 | $ | 95,000 | ||||||||
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Account Value |
$ | 100,000.00 | $ | 121,581.27 | $ | 100,000 | $ | 95,000 |
The amount that must be allocated to the Seven Year Option under the principal guarantee program varies based on the interest rate in effect at the time of the Purchase Payment.
| A higher interest rate means that a smaller portion of the Purchase Payment must be allocated to the Seven Year Option. |
| A lower interest rate means that a larger portion of the Purchase Payment must be allocated to the Seven Year Option. |
There are two types of charges and deductions assessed by the Company.
| Charges and deductions we assess against your Contract |
| Charges and deductions we assess against the Separate Account |
Charges and Deductions Assessed Against Your Contract
There are charges assessed to the Contract that are reflected in the Account Value of the Contract, but not in Accumulation Unit Values (or Benefit Unit Values). These charges are the contingent deferred sales charge, the annual contract maintenance fee, transfer fees, and premium taxes, where applicable.
Contingent Deferred Sales Charge (CDSC) | Purpose of Charge: Offset expenses incurred by the Company in the sale of the Contracts, including commissions paid and costs of sales literature. | |
Amount of Charge | Up to 7% of each Purchase Payment withdrawn from the Contract depending on number of years elapsed between the date of receipt of the Purchase Payment and the date written request for withdrawal or surrender is received. The CDSC is calculated as a percentage of the Purchase Payment withdrawn or surrendered. |
Number of full years elapsed |
0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 + | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
CDSC |
7 | % | 6 | % | 5 | % | 4 | % | 3 | % | 2 | % | 1 | % | 0 | % |
When and How Deducted | On surrenders or withdrawals of Purchase Payments, not earnings, during Accumulation Period. For purposes of calculating the CDSC, we process withdrawals and surrenders against Purchase Payments in the order in which we received the Purchase Payments. |
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Waivers | The CDSC may be waived as set forth below.
Free withdrawal privilege. See the Surrender and Withdrawals section of this prospectus for information.
In the Companys discretion where the Company incurs reduced sales and servicing expenses.
Upon separation from service if Contract issued with employer plan endorsement or deferred compensation endorsement.
If the Contract is issued with a tax-sheltered annuity endorsement (and without an employer plan endorsement): (1) upon separation from service if Owner has attained age 55 and Contract has been in force for at least seven years; or (2) after Contract has been in force 10 years or more.
Long-term care waiver rider. See the Surrender and Withdrawals section of this prospectus for information.
If the Social Security Administration determines after the Contract is issued that the Owner is disabled as that term is defined in the Social Security Act of 1935, as amended.
If your spouse becomes the successor owner, any CDSC which would have applied at that time will be waived. See the Step Up in Account Value for Successor Owner section of this prospectus for information.
Where required to satisfy state law or required for participation in certain retirement plans. |
Deduction for Contingent Deferred Sales Charge When You Take a Withdrawal. Unless you instruct us otherwise, any contingent deferred sales charge that applies to a withdrawal will be deducted from the amount remaining in your account after you receive the amount you requested. In other words, the amount of the withdrawal will be grossed-up to cover the charge. For example, if the charge is 4%, you request $100, and no waiver applies, you receive $100, the charge is $4.17, and the total withdrawal from your account is $104.17.
Contract Maintenance Fee | Purpose of Charge: Offset expenses incurred in issuing the Contracts and in maintaining the Contracts and the Separate Account. | |
Amount of Charge | $30.00 per year. | |
When and How Deducted | During the Accumulation Period, the charge is deducted pro rata from amounts invested in the Subaccounts on each anniversary of the effective date of the Contract, and at time of surrender. During the Benefit Payment Period, a portion of the charge is deducted from each variable dollar benefit payment. | |
Waivers | The Contract Maintenance Fee may be waived as set forth below.
During the Accumulation Period if the Account Value is at least $40,000 on the date the charge is due (individual contracts only).
During the Benefit Payment Period if the amount applied to a variable dollar benefit is at least $40,000 (individual contracts only).
In the Companys discretion where the Company incurs reduced sales and servicing expenses.
During the Benefit Payment Period where required to satisfy state law. |
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Transfer Fee | Purpose of Charge: Offset cost incurred in administering the Contracts. | |
Amount of Charge | $25 for each transfer in excess of 12 in any contract year. The Company reserves the right to change the amount of this charge at any time or the number of transfers that can be made without incurring the transfer fee. The maximum amount of the fee that the Company would impose on a transfer is $30. | |
When and How Deducted | During the Accumulation Period, the fee is deducted from the amount transferred. | |
Waivers | Currently, the transfer fee does not apply to transfers associated with the dollar cost averaging, interest sweep and portfolio rebalancing programs. Transfers associated with these programs do not count toward the 12 free transfers permitted in a contract year. The Company reserves the right to eliminate this waiver at any time. |
Premium Taxes. Currently some state governments impose premium taxes on annuity purchase payments. These taxes currently range from zero to 3.5% depending upon the jurisdiction. A federal premium tax has been proposed but not enacted. The Company will deduct any applicable premium taxes from the Account Value either upon death, withdrawal, surrender, annuitization, or at the time Purchase Payments are made, but no earlier than when the Company incurs a tax liability under applicable law.
Expenses Related to Loans. If loans are available under your Contract and you borrow money under the loan provisions of your Contract, we will charge interest on the loan. The maximum interest rate we charge on a loan is 8%. For more information about loans, see the Contract Loans section of the prospectus.
Charges and Deductions Assessed Against Your Separate Account
There are also charges assessed against the Separate Account. These charges are reflected in the Accumulation Unit Values (and Benefit Unit Values) of the Subaccounts. These charges are the administration charge and the mortality and expense risk charge.
Administration Charge | Purpose of Charge: Offset expenses incurred in administering the Contracts and the Separate Account. | |
Amount of Charge | Daily charge equal to 0.000411% of the daily Net Asset Value for each Subaccount, which corresponds to an annual effective rate of 0.15%. | |
When and How Deducted | During the Accumulation Period and during the Benefit Payment Period if a variable dollar benefit is elected, the charge is deducted from amounts invested in the Subaccounts. | |
Waivers | May be waived or reduced in the Companys discretion where the Company incurs reduced sales and servicing expenses. |
Mortality and Expense Risk Charge | Purpose of Charge: Compensation for bearing certain mortality and expense risks under the Contract. Mortality risks arise from the Companys obligation to make benefit payments during the Benefit Payment Period and to pay the death benefit. The expense risk assumed by the Company is the risk that the Companys actual expenses in administering the Contracts and the Separate Account will exceed the amount recovered through the contract maintenance fees, transfer fees and administration charges. | |
Amount of Charge | Daily charge equal to 0.003446% of the daily Net Asset Value for each Subaccount, which corresponds to an effective annual rate of 1.25%. | |
When and How Deducted | During the Accumulation Period, and during the Benefit Payment Period if a variable dollar benefit is elected, the charge is deducted from amounts invested in the Subaccounts. | |
Waivers | When the Company expects to incur reduced sales and servicing expenses with respect to a group contract, it may issue a Contract with a reduced mortality and expense risk charge. These Contracts are referred to as Enhanced Group Versions of the Contract. The mortality and expense risk charge under an Enhanced Contract is a daily charge of 0.002615% of the daily Net Asset Value for each Subaccount, which corresponds to an effective annual rate of 0.95%. |
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Expenses of the Portfolios. In addition to charges and deductions by the Company, there are Portfolio management fees and administration expenses, which are described in the prospectus and Statement of Additional Information for each Portfolio. Portfolio expenses, like Separate Account expenses, are reflected in Accumulation Unit Values (or Benefit Unit Values).
Living Benefit Riders
Contracts issued before June 1, 2009 included optional withdrawal riders for an additional charge as set out below.
RIDER NAME |
Separate Account Annual Expense | |||||||
Current | Maximum | |||||||
Guaranteed Lifetime Withdrawal Benefit |
0.55 | % | 1.20 | % | ||||
Guaranteed Lifetime Withdrawal Benefit with Spousal Continuation Charge |
0.70 | % | 1.20 | % | ||||
Guaranteed Minimum Withdrawal Benefit |
0.40 | % | 1.00 | % |
The current charges set out in the table are the Rider charges as of May 1, 2025. We may change the charge for your Rider at any time or times that:
| you activate the Rider if you activate it on a date other than the Rider Issue Date; |
| you elect to reset the Benefit Base Amount; or |
| you take an Excess Withdrawal. |
Only one of these optional Riders may be activated at any point in time. You may elect to activate a Rider on the contract effective date or on any contract anniversary by written request.
| If you choose to activate the Guaranteed Lifetime Withdrawal Benefit Rider, it will provide a lifetime withdrawal benefit, up to a certain amount each benefit year. |
| If you choose to activate the Guaranteed Minimum Withdrawal Benefit Rider, it will provide a minimum withdrawal benefit, up to a certain amount each benefit year. |
You can no longer activate either of these Riders.
If you activated one of these Riders, your investment options are limited to certain designated Subaccounts.
Guaranteed withdrawal benefit rider charges are assessed only if you activated one of these optional Riders. Rider charges are calculated as a percentage of the Benefit Base Amount determined under the Rider. The Benefit Base Amount starts with the Account Value of the Contract on the date that the Rider is activated. However, after activation, the Benefit Base Amount will not reflect income, gains, or losses in your Account Value unless you elect to reset the Benefit Base Amount.
After a Rider is activated, withdrawals from the Contract other than to pay Rider charges or Rider Benefits are considered Excess Withdrawals. Excess Withdrawals will reduce the Benefit Base Amount by the same percentage as the percentage reduction in the Account Value. Excess Withdrawals can adversely affect the benefit provided by these Riders. See the Guaranteed Withdrawal Riders section of this prospectus.
Enhanced Death Benefit. Some individual contracts issued in certain states after November 11, 2000 included an enhanced death benefit for a higher mortality and expense charge (1.35% or 1.50%). See the Death Benefits section and Appendix C of this prospectus.
Maximum Charges and Deductions
Except as indicated above, the Company will never charge more to a Contract than the fees and charges described above, even if its actual expenses exceed the total fees and charges collected. If the fees and charges collected by the Company exceed the actual expenses it incurs, the excess will be profit to the Company and will not be returned to Owners.
The Company reserves the right to increase the amount of the transfer fee in the future, and/or to charge fees for the automatic transfer programs described in the Transfers section of this prospectus, and/or for the systematic withdrawal program described in the Surrender and Withdrawals section of this prospectus if, in the Companys discretion, it determines such charges are necessary to offset the costs of administering transfers or systematic withdrawals.
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Discretionary Waiver of Charges
The Company will look at the following factors to determine if it will waive a charge, in part or in full, due to reduced sales and servicing expenses: (1) the size and type of the group to which sales are to be made; (2) the total amount of purchase payments to be received; and (3) any prior or existing relationship with the Company. The Company would expect to incur reduced sales and servicing expenses in connection with Contracts offered to employees of the Company, its subsidiaries and/or affiliates. There may be other circumstances, of which the Company is not presently aware, which could result in reduced sales and servicing expenses. In no event will the Company waive a charge where such waiver would be unfairly discriminatory to any person.
If allowed by the Company, in its sole discretion, during the Accumulation Period, an Owner may transfer amounts among Subaccounts, between Fixed Account options, and/or between Subaccounts and Fixed Account options by written request once each Valuation Period.
A transfer is effective on the Valuation Date during which the Company receives the request for transfer at its administrative office. Transfers to a Subaccount will be processed at the next Accumulation Unit Value calculated after the Company receives the transfer request in Good Order at its administrative office. The Company may, in its sole discretion, restrict, delay or prohibit transfers to any Fixed Account option or any Subaccount from time to time on a nondiscriminatory basis.
Current Restrictions on Transfers. The current restrictions on transfers are set out in the table below.
Minimum Transfer Amounts | Tax-Qualified and Non-Tax-Qualified | |
Minimum transfer from any Subaccount | $500 or balance of Subaccount, if less than $1,000 | |
Minimum transfer from Fixed Account option | $500 or balance of Fixed Account option, if less | |
Minimum transfer to Fixed Accumulation Account | None | |
Minimum transfer to Fixed Account option with guarantee period | $2,000 No amounts may be transferred to a guarantee period option that would extend beyond the Annuity Commencement Date. | |
Maximum Transfer Amounts | Tax-Qualified and Non-Tax-Qualified | |
Maximum transfer from Fixed Accumulation Account | During any contract year, 20% of the Fixed Account options value as of the most recent Contract anniversary. | |
Maximum transfer from maturing Fixed Account option with guarantee period | The amount contained in the maturing Fixed Account option with guarantee period. | |
Maximum transfer from non-maturing Fixed Account option with guarantee period | During any contract year, 20% of the Fixed Account options value as of the most recent Contract anniversary without penalty. | |
Timing Restrictions | Tax-Qualified and Non-Tax-Qualified | |
Timing restrictions on transfers from Fixed Account options | Transfers from Fixed Account options may not be made prior to first Contract anniversary.
Amounts transferred from Fixed Account options to Subaccounts may not be transferred back to Fixed Account options for a period of six months from the date of the original transfer. | |
Timing restrictions on transfers to Fixed Account option with guarantee period | For Contracts issued after May 1, 2004 in states where the Company has received regulatory approval, amounts may be transferred to the Three-Year Guarantee Interest Rate Option only during the first contract year. |
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How to Request a Transfer. Currently, instead of placing a request in writing, an Owner may place a request to transfer all or part of the Account Value by telephone or facsimile. All transfers must be in accordance with the terms of the Contract. Transfer instructions are currently accepted once each Valuation Period. Transfer instructions currently may be placed by telephone at 1-800-789-6771, or via facsimile at 513-768-5115 between 9:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. Once instructions have been accepted, they may not be rescinded; however, new instructions may be given the following Valuation Period. Access to these alternate methods of placing transfer requests may be limited or unavailable during periods of peak demand, system upgrading and maintenance, or for other reasons. The Company may withdraw the right to make transfers by telephone or facsimile upon 10 days written notice to affected Contract Owners.
The Company will not be liable for complying with transfer instructions that the Company reasonably believes to be genuine, or for any loss, damage, cost or expense in acting on such instructions. In addition, the Company will not be liable for refusing to comply with transfer instructions that are not in Good Order or that the Company reasonably believes are not genuine, or for any loss, damage, cost or expense for failing to act on such instructions. The Owner or person with the right to control payments will bear the risk of such loss. The Company will employ reasonable procedures to determine that telephone or facsimile instructions are genuine. If the Company does not employ such procedures, the Company may be liable for losses due to unauthorized or fraudulent instructions. These procedures may include, among others, tape recording telephone instructions or requiring use of a unique password or other identifying information.
Automatic Transfer Programs. During the Accumulation Period, the Company offers the automatic transfer services described below. To enroll in one of these programs, you will need to complete the appropriate authorization form, which you can obtain from the Company by calling 1-800-789-6771. There are risks involved in switching between investments available under the Contract.
Currently, the transfer fee does not apply to dollar cost averaging, portfolio rebalancing, or interest sweep transfers, and transfers under these programs will not count toward the 12 transfers permitted under the Contract without a transfer fee charge.
Service |
Description |
Minimum Account and Transfer Requirements |
Limitations/Notes | |||
Dollar Cost Averaging Note Dollar cost averaging requires regular investments regardless of fluctuating price levels and does not guarantee profits or prevent losses in a declining market. You should consider your financial ability to continue dollar cost averaging transfers through periods of changing price levels. |
Automatic transfers from the money market Subaccount to any other Subaccount(s), or from the Fixed Accumulation Account option (where available) to any Subaccount(s), on a monthly or quarterly basis. | Source of funds must be at least $10,000. Minimum transfer per month is $500. When balance of source of funds falls below $500, entire balance will be allocated according to dollar cost averaging instructions. | Dollar cost averaging transfers may not be made to any of the Fixed Account options. The dollar cost averaging transfers will take place on the last Valuation Date of each calendar month or quarter as requested by the Owner. | |||
Portfolio Rebalancing Note Portfolio rebalancing does not guarantee profits or prevent losses in a declining market. | Automatically transfer amounts between the Subaccounts and the Fixed Accumulation Account option (where available) to maintain the percentage allocations selected by the Owner. | Minimum Account Value of $10,000. | Transfers will take place on the last Valuation Date of each calendar quarter. Portfolio rebalancing will not be available if the dollar cost averaging program or an interest sweep from the Fixed Accumulation Account option is being utilized. | |||
Interest Sweep | Automatic transfers of the income from any Fixed Account option(s) to any Subaccount(s). | Balance of each Fixed Account option selected must be at least $5,000. Maximum transfer from each Fixed Account option selected is 20% of such Fixed Account options value per year. Amounts transferred under the interest sweep program will reduce the 20% maximum transfer amount otherwise allowed. | Interest sweep transfers will take place on the last Valuation Date of each calendar quarter. Interest sweep is not available from the Seven-Year Guarantee Interest Rate Option if the Principal Guarantee Program is selected. |
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Changes in or Termination of Automatic Transfer Programs. The Owner may terminate any of the automatic transfer programs at any time but must give the Company at least 30 days notice to change any automatic transfer instructions that are already in place. Termination and change instructions will be accepted by telephone at 1-800-789-6771, by U.S. or overnight mail, or by facsimile at 513-768-5115. The Company may terminate, suspend or modify any aspect of the automatic transfer programs described above without prior notice to Owners, as permitted by applicable law. Any such termination, suspension or modification will not affect automatic transfer programs already in place.
The Company may also impose an annual fee or increase the current annual fee, as applicable, for any of the foregoing automatic transfer programs in such amount(s) as the Company may then determine to be reasonable for participation in the program. The maximum amount of the annual fee that would be imposed for participating in each automatic transfer program is $30.
Restrictions on Transfers Relate to Active Trading Strategies. Neither the Contracts described in this prospectus nor the underlying Portfolios are designed to support active trading strategies that involve frequent movement between or among Subaccounts (sometimes referred to as market-timing or short-term trading). An Owner who intends to use an active trading strategy should consult his/her registered representative and request information on variable annuity contracts that offer underlying Portfolios designed specifically to support active trading strategies.
We have implemented several processes and/or restrictions aimed at eliminating the negative impact of active trading strategies. Transfer restrictions may vary by state.
Appendix B to this prospectus contains more information about the processes and restrictions.
An Owner may take a withdrawal or surrender a Contract during the Accumulation Period. A contingent deferred sales charge (CDSC) may apply to a withdrawal or a surrender.
Unless you instruct us otherwise, any CDSC that applies to a withdrawal will be deducted from the amount remaining in your account after you receive the amount you requested. In other words, the amount of the withdrawal will be grossed-up to cover the charge. For example, if the CDSC rate is 4%, you request $100, and no waiver applies, you receive $100, the charge is $4.17, and the total withdrawal from your account is $104.17.
Restrictions and Charges on Withdrawals and Surrenders. The restrictions and charges on withdrawals and surrenders are set out in the table below.
Minimum amount of withdrawal | $500 | |
Minimum remaining Surrender Value after withdrawal | $500 | |
Contract maintenance fee on surrender | $30 (no CDSC applies to fee) | |
Contingent deferred sales charge | Up to 7% of Purchase Payments | |
Tax penalty for early withdrawal | When applicable, 10% of amount distributed before age 59 1/2 (25% for certain SIMPLE IRAs) | |
Amount available for withdrawal or surrender (valued as of end of Valuation Period in which request for surrender or withdrawal is received by the Company) |
Tax-Qualified Contract: Account Value, subject to tax law or employer plan restrictions on withdrawals or surrenders
Non-Tax-Qualified Contract: Account Value, subject to employer plan restrictions on withdrawals | |
Order of withdrawal for purposes of CDSC (order may be different for tax purposes) |
First from accumulated earnings (no CDSC applies); and
Then from Purchase Payments in the order in which we receive them (CDSC may apply) |
A surrender will terminate the Contract. Withdrawals are taken proportionally from all Subaccounts and Fixed Account options in which the Contract is invested on the date the Company receives the request unless the Owner requests that the withdrawal be from a specific investment option.
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A withdrawal or surrender is effective on the Valuation Date during which the Company receives the request at its administrative office and will be processed at the next Accumulation Unit Value calculated after the Company receives the request in Good Order at its administrative office. Withdrawals or surrenders received before 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time will be processed using that Valuation Dates price. Withdrawals or surrenders received at or after 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time will be processed using the following Valuation Dates price. Payment may be delayed if it includes an amount paid to the Company by a check that has not yet cleared. Processing and payment from a Fixed Account option may be delayed for up to six months after receipt of the request as allowed by state law. If the Company delays processing and payment, it will comply with the applicable state law. Payment from the Subaccounts may be delayed during any period the New York Stock Exchange is closed or trading is restricted, or when the SEC either: (1) determines that there is an emergency which prevents valuation or disposal of securities held in the Separate Account; or (2) permits a delay in payment for the protection of security holders.
Free Withdrawal Privilege. During the first contract year, the Company will waive the CDSC on an amount equal to not more than 10% of all Purchase Payments received. During the second and succeeding contract years, the Company will waive the CDSC on an amount equal to not more than the greater of: (1) accumulated earnings (Account Value in excess of Purchase Payments); or (2) 10% of the Account Value as of the last Contract anniversary.
If the free withdrawal privilege is not exercised during a contract year, it does not carry over to the next contract year. The free withdrawal privilege is not available under the group Contracts.
Long-Term Care Waiver Rider. If the Long-Term Care Waiver Rider is available in your state, it is automatically provided with your Contract. If a Contract is modified by the Long-Term Care Waiver Rider, a surrender or withdrawal may be made free of any CDSC if the Owner has been confined in a qualifying licensed hospital or long-term care facility for at least 90 days beginning on or after the first Contract anniversary. There is no charge for this rider.
During the Accumulation Period, an Owner may elect to automatically withdraw money from the Contract. The Account Value must be at least $10,000 in order to make a systematic withdrawal election. For systematic withdrawals, the minimum monthly withdrawal amount is $100. Systematic withdrawals will be subject to the CDSC to the extent the amount withdrawn exceeds the free withdrawal privilege. The Owner may begin or discontinue systematic withdrawals at any time by request to the Company, but at least 30 days notice must be given to change any systematic withdrawal instructions that are currently in place. The Company reserves the right to discontinue offering systematic withdrawals at any time. Currently, the Company does not charge a fee for systematic withdrawal services. However, the Company reserves the right to impose an annual fee in such amount as the Company may then determine to be reasonable for participation in the systematic withdrawal program. If imposed, the fee will not exceed $30 annually.
Before electing a systematic withdrawal program, you should consult with a financial advisor. Systematic withdrawal is similar to annuitization but will result in different taxation of payments and a potentially different amount of total payments over the life of the Contract than if annuitization were elected.
If loans are available under a Contract, loan provisions are described in the loan endorsement to the Contract. The Company may make loans to Owners of certain tax-qualified Contracts.
Loan Costs. If loans are available under your Contract and you borrow money under the loan provisions, we will charge interest on the loan. The maximum interest rate we charge is 8%. Any such loans will be secured with an interest in the Contract, and the collateral for the loan will be moved to the Fixed Accumulation Account option. The collateral will earn a fixed rate of interest applicable to loan collateral, which will be equal to or greater than the minimum required under the law of the state when and where the Contract is issued. Generally, we require the collateral amount to be 110% of the outstanding loan balance. The restrictions that otherwise apply to the Fixed Accumulation Account do not apply to transfers of collateral amounts to the Fixed Accumulation Account or to such amounts no longer required to collateralize the loan.
The difference between the interest rate we charge on a loan and the interest rate we credit to the collateral amount is called the loan interest spread.
| Because the maximum interest rate we charge on a loan is 8% and the minimum interest rate we credit to the collateral amount in the Fixed Accumulation Account is 1%, the maximum loan interest spread is 7%. |
| Because we are currently charging 6% interest on loans and we are crediting 3% interest on collateral, the current loan interest spread is 3%. |
| A plan administrator or employer retirement plan may require us to charge an interest rate on loans that is higher than 8%. In this case, the maximum loan interest spread will be higher than 7% and the current loan interest spread will be higher than 3%. |
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Any unpaid interest will be added to the loan. As a result, it will be compounded and be part of the loan.
Impact of Loans. If loans are available under your Contract and you borrow money under the loan provisions, you will not be able to surrender or annuitize your Contract until all such loans are paid in full. Loans may also limit the amount of money that you can withdraw from your Contract. If you default in repaying a loan under your Contract, we may pay off the loan by effectively reducing your Account Value by an amount equal to the balance of the loan.
If we receive money from you while a loan is outstanding under your Contract, we will treat the money as a Purchase Payment unless you notify us that the money is a loan payment.
Loan amounts and repayment requirements are subject to provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, and default on a loan will result in a taxable event. You should consult a tax advisor prior to exercising loan privileges.
A loan, whether or not repaid, will have a permanent effect on the Account Value of a Contract because the collateral cannot be allocated to the Subaccounts or Fixed Account guarantee periods. The longer the loan is outstanding, the greater the effect is likely to be. The effect could be favorable or unfavorable. If the investment results are greater than the rate being credited on collateral while the loan is outstanding, the Account Value will not increase as rapidly as it would have increased if no loan were outstanding. If investment results are below that rate, the Account Value will be higher than it would have been if no loan had been outstanding.
The Death Benefit Amount will be reduced by the amount of any outstanding loans.
Annuity Commencement Date. You may designate the date that annuity payments will begin and may change the date up to 30 days before annuity payments are scheduled to begin. The Annuity Commencement Date generally must be no later than the Contract anniversary following your 85th birthday or five years after the Contracts effective date, whichever is later. It can be later only if we agree. You will not be able to withdraw any Contract value amounts after the annuity commencement date. However, if you choose the Income for a Fixed Period settlement option, commuted values may be taken no sooner than five (5) years after the Annuity Commencement Date.
Annuity Benefit Amount. The amount applied to a settlement option will be the Account Value as of the end of the Valuation Period immediately preceding the first day of the Benefit Payment Period.
Form of Annuity Benefit Payments. The Owner may select any form of settlement option that is currently available. The standard forms of settlement options are described in the Settlement Options section of this prospectus.
If the Owner has not previously made an election as to the form of settlement option, the Company will contact the Owner to ascertain the form of settlement option to be paid. If the Owner does not select a settlement option, such as a specific fixed dollar benefit payment, a variable dollar benefit payment, or a combination of a variable and fixed dollar benefit payment, the Company will apply the Account Value (or Surrender Value) to payments for the life of the Annuitant with 10 years of payments assured, as described in the Settlement Options section of this prospectus. For Contracts issued after May 1, 2004, in states where the Company has received regulatory approval, these payments will be a combination of variable and fixed dollar payments. For all other Contracts, these payments will be fixed dollar payments.
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BENEFITS AVAILABLE UNDER THE CONTRACT
The following table summarizes the information about the benefits available under the contract.
Name of Benefit |
Purpose |
Standard or Optional |
Maximum Fee |
Current Charges |
Brief Description of Restrictions/ Limitations | |||||
Dollar Cost Averaging | Allows owner to set up monthly or quarterly automatic transfers to Subaccounts | Standard | No charge | N/A | Transfers cannot be made to Fixed Account option Subject to minimum account value and minimum transfer amount | |||||
Portfolio Rebalancing | Allows owner to automatically transfer amounts between the Subaccounts and the Fixed Accumulation Account | Standard | No charge | N/A | Subject to minimum Account Value | |||||
Interest Sweep | Allows owner to automatically transfer income from a Fixed Account to a Subaccount | Standard | No charge | N/A | Subject to minimum Fixed Account Balance and maximum transfer amount | |||||
Systematic Withdrawal | Allows Owner to automatically withdraw money from Contract | Standard | No charge | N/A | Only available during the Accumulation Period Subject to minimum Account Value and minimum withdrawals | |||||
Death Benefit Version 1 | Pays a Death Benefit Amount if the Owner dies during the Accumulation Period | Standard | No charge | N/A | withdrawals may result in a reduction of the Death Benefit that is greater than the amount of the withdrawal | |||||
Death Benefit Version 2 |
Pays a Death Benefit Amount if the Owner dies during the Accumulation Period | Standard | No charge | N/A | Withdrawals may result in a reduction of the Death Benefit that is greater than the amount of the withdrawal | |||||
Death Benefit Version 2E with Enhanced Death Benefit (Issue Age over 65 and under 79)(1) |
The optional Enhanced Death Benefit Amount will be based on greatest of: 1) Account Value on the Death Benefit Valuation date 2) Enhanced Minimum Death Benefit or 3) Enhanced Historic High Value |
Optional | 1.65% of the average value of Owners interest in Subaccounts | 1.65% of the average value of Owners interest in Subaccounts | Withdrawals may result in a reduction of the Death Benefit that is greater than the amount of the withdrawal | |||||
Death Benefit Version 2E with Enhanced Death Benefit (Issue Age 65 or younger)(1) |
The optional Enhanced Death Benefit Amount will be based on greatest of: 1) Account Value on the Death Benefit Valuation date 2) Enhanced Minimum Death Benefit or 3) Enhanced Historic High Value |
Optional | 1.50% of the average value of Owners interest in Subaccounts | 1.50% of the average value of Owners interest in Subaccounts | Withdrawals may result in a reduction of the Death Benefit that is greater than the amount of the withdrawal | |||||
Death Benefit Version 3 |
Pays a Death Benefit Amount if the Owner dies during the Accumulation Period | Standard | No charge | N/A | Withdrawals may result in a reduction of the Death Benefit that is greater than the amount of the withdrawal |
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Guaranteed Lifetime Withdrawal Benefit Rider(1) |
Provides a lifetime withdrawal benefit up to a certain amount each year | Optional | 1.20% (of Benefit Base Amount) | 0.55% (of Benefit Base Amount) |
Only available with Contracts issued before June 1, 2009 You may not have this benefit and another withdrawal benefit rider in effect at the same time | |||||
Guaranteed Lifetime Withdrawal Benefit Rider with Spousal Continuation Charge(1) |
Provides a lifetime withdrawal benefit up to a certain amount each year | Optional | 1.20% (of Benefit Base Amount) | 0.70% (of Benefit Base Amount) |
Only available with Contracts issued before June 1, 2009 You may not have this benefit and another withdrawal benefit rider in effect at the same time | |||||
Guaranteed Minimum Withdrawal Benefit Rider(1) |
Provides a minimum withdrawal benefit up to a certain amount each year | Optional | 1.00% (of Benefit Base Amount) | 0.40% (of Benefit Base Amount) | Only available with Contracts issued before June 1, 2009 You may not have this benefit and another withdrawal benefit rider in effect at the same time | |||||
Long Term Care Waiver Rider |
Surrender or withdrawal may be made without a CDSC if Owner confined to qualifying licensed hospital or long-term care facility for at least 90 days | Standard | No charge | N/A | Only available in certain states |
(1) | NO LONGER AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE |
Dollar Cost Averaging. Automatic transfers from the money market Subaccount to any other Subaccount(s), or from the Fixed Accumulation Account option (where available) to any Subaccount(s), on a monthly or quarterly basis.
Portfolio Rebalancing. Automatically transfers amounts between the Subaccounts and the Fixed Accumulation Account option to maintain the percentage allocations selected by the Owner.
Interest Sweep. Automatic transfers of the income from any Fixed Account option(s) to any Subaccount(s).
Systematic Withdrawal. During the Accumulation Period, an owner may elect to automatically withdraw money from the Contract.
A death benefit will be paid under a Contract if the Owner dies during the Accumulation Period. If a surviving spouse (or civil union partner/domestic partner in applicable states) becomes a Successor Owner of the Contract, the death benefit will be paid on the death of the Successor Owner if he or she dies during the Accumulation Period.
A withdrawal from the Contract may result in a reduction of the Death Benefit that is greater than the amount of the withdrawal because the Death Benefit will be reduced in the same proportion that the withdrawal reduces the Account Value.
The calculation of the Death Benefit Amount depends on the form of individual Contract that you received, or the form of the master group Contract that was issued. The different forms contain provisions that affect the way the Death Benefit Amount is calculated.
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The charts in the sections below are intended to help you identify the version of the Death Benefit that applies to your Contract. If you have questions about which version of the Death Benefit applies, contact us at P.O. Box 5423, Cincinnati, Ohio 45201-5423, or call us at 1-800-789-6771.
Individual Contracts. If you own an individual Spirit Contract, you can determine whether Version 1, Version 2 or Version 3 applies to your Contract by matching your contract and endorsement form numbers to the form numbers in the chart below.
Form Numbers for Individual Contracts |
Issue Dates | |
Death Benefit Version 1 |
||
A801-BD(Q Rev. 3/97)-3 with no death benefit endorsement A801-BD(NQ Rev. 3/97)-3 with no death benefit endorsement |
Applies to all individual contracts issued before November 11, 2000, and to contracts in certain states after that date | |
Death Benefit Version 2 and Version 2E A801-BD(Q Rev. 3/97)-3 with 2000 Death Benefit Endorsement (E1802100NW) A801-BD(NQ Rev. 3/97)-3 with 2000 Death Benefit Endorsement (E1802100NW)
Note: Death Benefit Version 2E will apply to your Contract only if you selected the optional enhanced death benefit when you purchased your Contract. |
Applies to individual contracts issued in certain states after November 11, 2000 |
Form Numbers for Individual Contracts |
Issue Dates | |
Death Benefit Version 3 A801-BD(Q Rev. 3/97)-3 with 2003 Death Benefit Endorsement (E1807503NW) A801-BD(NQ Rev. 3/97)-3 with 2003 Death Benefit Endorsement (E1807503NW) P1809003NW P1809103NW |
Applies to most individual contracts issued on or after June 1, 2003 |
Group Contracts. If you are the owner of a master group Spirit Contract, you can determine whether Version 1 or Version 3 applies to your group Contract by matching your master group contract and endorsement form numbers to the form numbers in the chart below.
If you are a participant under a master group Spirit Contract, the version of the Death Benefit that applies to the master group Contract also applies to your certificate. If you have questions about which version of the Death Benefit applies, you may contact the owner of the master group Contract, or you may contact us at P.O. Box 5423, Cincinnati, Ohio 45201-5423 or call us at 1-800-789-6771.
Note: If a certificate was issued to a participant on or after June 1, 2003, the date on which the certificate was issued does not determine which version of the Death Benefit applies.
Form Numbers for Master Group Contracts |
Issue Dates | |
Death Benefit Version 1 G801-BD(97)-3 with no death benefit endorsement G801-BD(04)-3 with no death benefit endorsement |
Applies to all master group Contracts issued before June 1, 2003, and to certain master group Contracts issued after that date, and to all certificates issued to participants under those particular master group Contracts | |
Death Benefit Version 3 G801-BD(97)-3 with 2003 Death Benefit Endorsement (E2007803NW) G801-BD(97)-3 with 2003 Death Benefit Endorsement (E2008003NW) P20086003NW |
Applies to certain master group Contracts issued on or after June 1, 2003, and all certificates issued to participants under those particular master group Contracts |
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Death Benefit Amount (Version 1)
Scenario A: If you die before age 80 and before the Annuity Commencement Date, the death benefit will be based on the largest of the following three amounts:
1) | The Account Value on the Death Benefit Valuation Date; |
2) | The total Purchase Payment(s), with interest at three percent (3%) per year compounded annually, less any withdrawals and any contingent deferred sales charges that applied to those amounts; or |
3) | The largest Account Value on any Contract anniversary after the fourth Contract anniversary and prior to the Death Benefit Valuation Date, less any withdrawals after such Account Value was determined and any contingent deferred sales charges that applied to those amounts. |
Scenario B: If you die after age 80 and before the Annuity Commencement Date, the death benefit will be based on the largest of the following three amounts:
1) | The Account Value on the Death Benefit Valuation Date; |
2) | The total Purchase Payment(s), with interest at three percent (3%) per year compounded annually through the Contract anniversary prior to your 80th birthday, less any withdrawals and any contingent deferred sales charges that applied to those amounts; or |
3) | The largest Account Value on any Contract anniversary after the fourth Contract anniversary and prior to your 80th birthday, less any withdrawals after such Account Value was determined and any contingent deferred sales charges that applied to those amounts. |
Scenario C: If your Contract was issued to you after age 80 and you die before the Annuity Commencement Date, the death benefit will be based on the greater of:
1) | The Account Value on the Death Benefit Valuation Date; or |
2) | The total Purchase Payment(s), less any withdrawals and any contingent deferred sales charges that applied to those amounts. |
The Death Benefit Amount will be reduced by any premium tax or other tax that is applicable. It will also be reduced by any outstanding loans.
The Death Benefit Amount will be allocated among the Subaccounts and the Fixed Account options. This allocation will occur as of the Death Benefit Valuation Date. It will be made in the same proportion as the value of each option bears to the total Account Value immediately before that date.
Unless transferred by the Beneficiary, the portion of the Death Benefit Amount allocated to the Subaccounts will remain in those Subaccounts until the Death Benefit Commencement Date.
The Death Benefit Amount under this Contract will be finally determined using the Account Value on the Death Benefit Commencement Date. If the Death Benefit Commencement Date is later than the Death Benefit Valuation Date, the Death Benefit amount may be lower than the amount calculated on the Death Benefit Valuation Date.
Example of Determination of Death Benefit Amount for Version 1Scenario A. This example is intended to help you understand how a withdrawal impacts the Death Benefit amount and how the Version 1 Death Benefit amount is calculated.
This example assumes:
| your total Purchase Payments equal $100,000 and your Account Value is $90,000, |
| the largest Account Value is $140,000, |
| you withdraw $10,000 from the Contract, and you are left with an Account Value of $80,000, and |
| the Death Benefit Commencement Date is not after the Death Benefit Valuation Date. |
It also assumes that, for purposes of calculating the Death Benefit Amount, total Purchase Payments will be increased by interest in the amount of $42,576, which represents interest at an annual effective rate of 3% for 15 years.
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Step One: Calculate the Purchase Payment amount, increased by interest and reduced for withdrawals.
Purchase Payments |
$ | 100,000 | ||
Plus interest |
+ 42,576 | |||
|
|
|||
Purchase Payments increased by interest |
142,576 | |||
Less reduction for withdrawals |
10,000 | |||
|
|
|||
Purchase Payments increased by interest and reduced for withdrawals |
$ | 132,576 |
Step Two: Calculate the largest Account Value amount, reduced for withdrawals.
Largest Account Value |
$ | 140,000 | ||
Less reduction for withdrawals |
10,000 | |||
|
|
|||
Largest Account Value reduced for withdrawals |
$ | 130,000 |
Step Three: Determine the Death Benefit amount.
Immediately after the withdrawal, the applicable amounts are:
Account Value |
$ | 80,000 | ||
reduced Purchase Payments, increased by interest |
$ | 132,576 | ||
reduced largest Account Value |
$ | 130,000 |
Immediately after the withdrawal, the reduced Purchase Payments plus interest of $132,576 is greater than the reduced largest Account Value of $130,000 and the Account Value of $80,000, so the Death Benefit amount would be $132,576.
Death Benefit Amount (Version 2)
The Death Benefit will be based on the greatest of:
1) | the Account Value on the Death Benefit Valuation Date; or |
2) | the Minimum Death Benefit; or |
3) | the Historic High Value; |
The reduction for a withdrawal will be the same percentage as the percentage reduction in the Account Value. A withdrawal from the Contract may result in a reduction of the Death Benefit that is greater than the amount of the withdrawal. The Death Benefit Amount will be reduced by any premium tax or other tax that is applicable. It will also be reduced by any outstanding loans.
The Death Benefit Amount will be allocated among the Subaccounts and the Fixed Account options. This allocation will occur as of the Death Benefit Valuation Date. It will be made in the same proportion as the value of each option bears to the total Account Value immediately before that date.
Unless transferred by the Beneficiary, the portion of the Death Benefit Amount allocated to the Subaccounts will remain in those Subaccounts until the Death Benefit Commencement Date.
The Death Benefit Amount under this Contract will be finally determined using the Account Value on the Death Benefit Commencement Date. If the Death Benefit Commencement Date is later than the Death Benefit Valuation Date, the Death Benefit amount may be lower than the amount calculated on the Death Benefit Valuation Date.
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Minimum Death Benefit. The Minimum Death Benefit is equal to total Purchase Payments, reduced proportionally for withdrawals, and increased by interest, if any. This reduction will be in the same proportion that the Account Value was reduced on the date of the withdrawal.
| If the Owner dies before Age 80, interest compounds daily, at an effective annual interest rate of 3%, to the Death Benefit Valuation Date. |
| If the Owner dies on or after his 80th birthday, interest compounds daily, at an effective annual interest rate of 3%, to the Contract anniversary prior to the 80th birthday. |
| No interest will be added if the Owner was Age 80 before this Contract was issued. |
Historic High Value. The Historic High Value is equal to the High Value, reduced proportionally for withdrawals taken after the High Value was reached. This reduction will be in the same proportion that the Account Value was reduced on the date of the withdrawal.
High Value. The High Value is the largest Account Value on the fifth or any subsequent Contract anniversary, but before the Death Benefit Valuation Date and prior to Age 80. If this Contract was issued after the Owners 75th birthday, there is no High Value. This means there is no Historic High Value.
Example of Determination of Death Benefit Amount for Version 2. This example is intended to help you understand how a withdrawal impacts the Death Benefit amount and how the Version 2 Death Benefit amount is calculated.
This example assumes:
| your total Purchase Payments equal $100,000 and your Account Value is $90,000, |
| the High Value is $140,000, |
| you withdraw $10,000 from the Contract, and you are left with an Account Value of $80,000; and |
| the Death Benefit Commencement Date is not after the Death Benefit Valuation Date. |
It also assumes that, for purposes of calculating the Death Benefit Amount, total Purchase Payments will be increased by interest in the amount of $42,576, which represents interest at an annual effective rate of 3% for 15 years.
Step One: Calculate the proportional reduction in the Purchase Payment amount.
1 - | $80.000 | Account Value immediately after withdrawal | = 11.1111% | Percentage | ||||
$90,000 | Account Value immediately before withdrawal | Reduction |
$100000 | Purchase | x11.1111% | Percentage | = $11,111 | Proportional | |||||
Payments | Reduction | Reduction |
Step Two: Calculate the Minimum Death Benefit (reduced Purchase Payment amount, increased by interest).
Purchase Payments |
$ | 100,000 | ||
Less proportional reduction for withdrawals |
11,111 | |||
|
|
|||
Purchase Payments reduced for withdrawals |
88,889 | |||
Plus interest |
+ 42,576 | |||
|
|
|||
Minimum Death Benefit |
$ | 131,465 |
Step Three: Calculate the proportional reduction in the High Value.
1 - | $80,000 | Account Value immediately after withdrawal | = 11.1111% | Percentage | ||||
$90,000 | Account Value immediately before withdrawal | Reduction |
$140,000 | High | x11.1111% | Percentage | =$15,556 | Proportional | |||||
Value | Reduction | Reduction |
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Step Four: Calculate the Historic High Value amount, which is the same as the reduced High Value amount.
High Value |
$ | 140,000 | ||
Less proportional reduction for withdrawals |
15,556 | |||
|
|
|||
Historic High Value |
$ | 124,444 |
Step Five: Determine the Death Benefit amount.
Immediately after the withdrawal, the applicable amounts are:
Account Value |
$ | 80,000 | ||
Minimum Death Benefit |
$ | 131,465 | ||
Historic High Value |
$ | 124,444 |
Immediately after the withdrawal, the Minimum Death Benefit of $131,465 is greater than the Historic High Value of $124,444 and the Account Value of $80,000, so the Death Benefit amount would be $131,465.
Death Benefit Amount (Version 2E)
Death Benefit Amount (Version 2E) applies to certain individual contracts that were purchased in a certain time period in Minnesota and a certain time period in other states. See Appendix C for information about Death Benefit Amount (Version 2E).
Death Benefit Amount (Version 3)
The Death Benefit will be based on the greatest of:
1) | the Account Value on the Death Benefit Valuation Date; or |
2) | the total of all your Purchase Payments, reduced proportionally for partial surrenders; or |
3) | the Historic High Value. |
The reduction for a withdrawal will be the same percentage as the percentage reduction in the Account Value. A withdrawal from the Contract may result in a reduction of the Death Benefit that is greater than the amount of the withdrawal. The Death Benefit Amount will be reduced by any premium tax or other tax that is applicable. It will also be reduced by any outstanding loans.
The Death Benefit Amount will be allocated among the Subaccounts and Fixed Account options. This allocation will occur as of the Death Benefit Valuation Date. It will be made in the same proportion as the value of each option bears to the total account value immediately before that date.
Unless transferred by the Beneficiary, the portion of the Death Benefit Amount allocated to the Subaccounts will remain in those Subaccounts until the Death Benefit Commencement Date.
The Death Benefit Amount under this Contract will be finally determined using the Account Value on the Death Benefit Commencement Date. If the Death Benefit Commencement Date is later than the Death Benefit Valuation Date, the Death Benefit amount may be lower than the amount calculated on the Death Benefit Valuation Date.
Historic High Value. The Historic High Value is equal to the lesser of (1) 200% of the total Purchase Payments, reduced proportionally for withdrawals; and (2) the High Value, reduced proportionally for withdrawals taken after the High Value was reached.
High Value. The High Value is the largest Account Value on the fifth or any subsequent Contract anniversary, but before the Death Benefit Valuation Date and prior to Age 65.
| If the Contract was issued after the Owners 60th birthday, there is no High Value. |
| If the Death Benefit Valuation Date is before the fifth Contract anniversary, then there is no High Value. |
| If there is no High Value then there is no Historic High Value. |
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Example of Determination of Death Benefit Amount for Version 3. This example is intended to help you understand how a withdrawal impacts the Death Benefit amount and how the Version 3 Death Benefit amount is calculated.
This example assumes:
| your total Purchase Payments equal $100,000 and your Account Value is $90,000, |
| the High Value is $140,000, |
| you withdraw $10,000 from the Contract, and you are left with an Account Value of $80,000, and |
| the Death Benefit Commencement Date is not after the Death Benefit Valuation Date. |
Step One: Calculate the proportional reduction in the Purchase Payments.
1 - | $80.000 | Account Value immediately after withdrawal | = 11.1111% | Percentage | ||||
$90,000 | Account Value immediately before withdrawal | Reduction |
$100,000 | Purchase | x11.1111% | Percentage | = $ 11,111 | Proportional | |||||
Payment | Reduction | Reduction |
Step Two: Calculate the reduced Purchase Payment amount.
Purchase Payments |
$ | 100,000 | ||
Less proportional reduction for withdrawals |
11,111 | |||
|
|
|||
Purchase Payments reduced for withdrawals |
$ | 88,889 |
Step Three: Calculate the proportional reduction in the High Value.
1 - | $80.000 | Account Value immediately after withdrawal | = 11.1111% | Percentage | ||||
$90,000 | Account Value immediately before withdrawal | Reduction |
$140,000 | High | x11.1111% | Percentage | = $15,556 | Proportional | |||||
Value | Reduction | Reduction |
Step Four: Calculate the reduced High Value amount.
High Value |
$ | 140,000 | ||
Less proportional reduction for withdrawals |
15,556 | |||
|
|
|||
High Value reduced for withdrawals |
$ | 124,444 |
Step Five: Calculate the proportional reduction in the 200% Purchase Payment amount.
1 - | $80.000 | Account Value immediately after withdrawal | = 11.1111% | Percentage | ||||
$90,000 | Account Value immediately before withdrawal | Reduction |
$200,000 | 200% Purchase | x11.1111% | Percentage Reduction |
= $22,222 | Proportional | |||||
Payment |
Reduction |
Step Six: Calculate the reduced 200% Purchase Payment amount.
200% Purchase Payments |
$ | 200,000 | ||
Less proportional reduction for withdrawals |
22,222 | |||
|
|
|||
200% Purchase Payments reduced for withdrawals |
$ | 177,778 |
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Step Seven: Determine the Death Benefit amount.
Immediately after the withdrawal, the applicable amounts are:
Account Value |
$ | 80,000 | ||
reduced Purchase Payments amount |
$ | 88,889 | ||
reduced High Value amount |
$ | 124,444 | ||
reduced 200% Purchase Payments amount |
$ | 177,778 |
First, determine the Historic High Value by comparing the reduced High Value amount and the reduced 200% Purchase Payment amount. Immediately after the withdrawal, the reduced High Value of $124,444 is less than the reduced 200% Purchase Payments of $177,778. As a result, the Historic High Value is the reduced High Value of $124,444.
Next, compare the Account Value, the reduced Purchase Payment amount, and the Historic High Value amount. Immediately after the withdrawal, the Historic High Value of $124,444 is greater than both the reduced Purchase Payments of $88,889 and the Account Value of $80,000, so the Death Benefit amount would be $124,444.
For all Contracts, an Owner may elect the form of payment of the death benefit at any time before his or her death. The form of payment may be a lump sum, or any available form of settlement option. The standard forms of settlement options are described in the Settlement Options section of this prospectus.
If the Owner does not make an election as to the form of death benefit, the Beneficiary may make an election within one year after the Owners death. If no election as to the form of settlement option is made, the Company will apply the death benefit to a fixed dollar benefit with monthly payments for a fixed period of four years.
The first day of the Benefit Payment Period in which a death benefit is paid may not be more than one year after the Owners death. The day a death benefit is paid in a lump sum may not be more than five years after the Owners date of death.
Death Benefit payments shall be made to the Beneficiary as payee. In lieu of that, after the death of the Owner, a Beneficiary which is a non-natural person may elect to have Death Benefit payments made to a payee to whom the Beneficiary is obligated to make corresponding payments of a death benefit. Any such election by a non-natural person as Beneficiary shall be by Written Request and may be made or changed at any time.
The Beneficiary will be the person on whose life any Death Benefit payments under a settlement option are based. However, if the Beneficiary is a non-natural person, then any payments under a life option will be based on the life of a person to whom the Beneficiary is obligated, who must be designated by the Beneficiary by Written Request before the Death Benefit Commencement Date.
In any event, if the Beneficiary is a non-natural person, any Death Benefit amounts remaining payable on the death of the payee will be paid to any contingent payee designated by the Beneficiary by Written Request, or if none is surviving at the time payment is to be made, then to the Beneficiary.
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The Riders were only available with contracts issued before June 1, 2009. If you have not previously activated one of the Riders, you cannot activate any of them now because we are no longer issuing the Riders.
The chart below provides a simple comparison of the general characteristics of the basic Riders.
Guaranteed Lifetime Withdrawal Benefit Lifetime GRIP |
Guaranteed Minimum Withdrawal Benefit PayPlan | |||
What benefit does this Rider provide? | This Rider provides a lifetime withdrawal Benefit, up to a certain amount each Benefit Year, even after the Contract value is zero. | This Rider provides a minimum withdrawal Benefit, up to a certain amount each Benefit Year, even after the Contract value is zero. | ||
When do Benefit Payments begin? | We will make Benefit payments upon your Written Request. The Insured must be at least 55 years old on the Benefit Start Date to receive a Benefit under the Rider. | We will make Benefit payments upon your Written Request. | ||
How much are the Benefit Payments? | The annual Benefit amount is a percentage of the Benefit Base Amount on the payment date. The percentage is based on the Insureds age on Benefit Start Date as follows: | The annual Benefit amount is 5% of the Benefit Base Amount on the payment date. | ||
4% if the Insured is under age 60
5% if the Insured is age 60 or older |
||||
When do Benefit Payments end? | Generally, all rights to take Benefit payments end when the Insured dies. | Your right to take Benefit payments will continue until the total Benefit payments equal the Benefit Base Amount. This is not a fixed period. | ||
How much does the Rider cost? | The current charge for the Lifetime GRIP Rider for each contract year is 0.55% of the Benefit Base Amount. | The current charge for the PayPlan Rider for each contract year is 0.40% of the Benefit Base Amount. |
Rider Terms |
Definitions | |
Benefit | A guaranteed withdrawal benefit that is available under the Benefits section of the Rider. | |
Benefit Base Amount | The amount on which Rider charges and Benefit payments are based. | |
Benefit Start Date | The first day that a Benefit under the Rider is to be paid. | |
Benefit Year | A 12-month period beginning on the Benefit Start Date or on an anniversary of the Benefit Start Date. | |
Excess Withdrawal | (1) A withdrawal from the Contract after the Rider Effective Date and before the Benefit Start Date or (2) a withdrawal from the Contract on or after the Benefit Start Date to the extent that the withdrawal exceeds the Benefit amount that is available on the date of payment. A withdrawal to pay Rider charges is never considered an Excess Withdrawal. | |
Designated Subaccount | Each Subaccount that we designate from time to time to hold Contract values on which Benefits may be based. | |
Insured | The person whose lifetime is used to measure the Benefits under the Rider. The Insured is set out on the Rider specifications page. The Insured cannot be changed after the issue date of the Rider as shown on the Rider specifications page. | |
Rider Anniversary | The date in each year that is the annual anniversary of the Rider Effective Date. | |
Rider Effective Date | The Contract Effective Date or Contract Anniversary on which the Rider is activated. | |
Rider Year | Each 12-month period that begins on the Rider Effective Date or a Rider Anniversary. | |
Written Request | Information provided to us or a request made to use that is (1) complete and satisfactory to us and (2) on our form or in a manner satisfactory to us and (3) received by us at our administrative office, which is located at 301 E. 4th Street, Cincinnati OH 45202. |
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If you previously activated a Rider, certain restrictions on investment options and withdrawals apply. These restrictions are designed to minimize the possibility that your Account Value will be reduced to zero before your death and, as a result, the possibility that we will be required to make Benefit payments under the Rider from our general account. Unless your Account Value is reduced to zero, Benefit payments are made from your Account Value. If your Account Value is reduced to zero, then Benefits payments are made from our general account. Any Benefit payments under the Rider that we make from our general account are subject to our financial strength and claims-paying ability.
To maximize your potential to receive Benefit payments under the Rider, you should not take any Excess Withdrawals. Due to the long-term nature of an annuity contract, there is a possibility that you may need to take withdrawals, in excess of the Benefit payments under the Rider, to meet your living expenses. Excess Withdrawals will reduce, and could eliminate, Benefit payments under the Rider and may increase the Rider charges.
If you receive Benefit payments under the Rider, there is a possibility that the total Benefit payments under the Rider will be less than the Rider charges that you paid. We will not refund the Rider charges that you pay even if you choose never to take any Benefit payments under the Rider, you never receive any Benefit payments under the Rider, or all Benefit payments under the Rider are made from your Account Value.
Certain qualified contracts may have restrictions that limit the benefit of the Rider.
Before a Riders Effective Date, you must transfer your Account Value to one or more Designated Subaccount(s) that you select. The required transfers must be made by Written Request. If you do not make the required transfers, we will reject your request to activate a Rider. The Designated Subaccounts are listed below.
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio | Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio | |
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio | Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio |
We reserve the right to change the Designated Subaccounts. If you have activated the Rider and it is in effect, any such change will not require a transfer of existing funds; however, such a change would prevent future allocations and transfers to a Subaccount that is no longer a designated Subaccount. We will send you a written notice of any change in the Designated Subaccounts. Additional information about the Designated Subaccounts is located in Appendix A of the Contract prospectus.
The Designated Subaccounts are generally designed to provide consistent returns by minimizing risk. In minimizing risk, the Designated Subaccounts may also limit the potential for investment return. Consult your registered representative or other financial professional to assist you in determining whether the Designated Subaccounts provide investment options that are suited to your financial needs and risk tolerance.
Following the Rider Effective Date, you may reallocate your Account Value among the Designated Subaccounts in accordance with the Transfer provisions of the Contract.
Impact of the Rider on the Contract
Following the Rider Effective Date, we may decline to accept Purchase Payments to the Contract in excess of $50,000 per contract year. Before or after the Rider Effective Date, we may decline to accept any additional Purchase Payments to the Contract if we are no longer issuing annuity contracts with the Rider unless you decline or terminate the Rider. In this case, we will notify you that you must decline or terminate the Rider before we will accept any additional Purchase Payments to the Contract. If the Contract allows loans, all rights under the Rider will terminate if you fail to pay off all loans by the Benefit Start Date, and no new loans may be taken after the Benefit Start Date.
Impact on Transfers. If you activated a Rider, transfers will be limited to certain designated Subaccounts. The timing restrictions on transfers to and from the Fixed Accumulation Account do not apply to transfer made in connection with activating the Rider.
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Impact on Withdrawals. Benefit payments under a Rider are exempt from the withdrawal limits. You can request a Benefit payment in an amount of $500 or less. A Benefit payment can be made that would reduce the Surrender Value of your Contract to less than $500. We will not terminate your Contract if Benefit payments under a Rider reduce the Surrender Value below $500. If you activated the Rider, then withdrawals may adversely affect the benefits under the Rider.
Annuity Benefit. If you activated a Rider, applicable Rider charges will reduce the Annuity Benefit amount.
Death Benefit. If you activated a Rider, applicable Rider charges will reduce the Death Benefit amount.
As a general rule, you must transfer your Account Value to one or more Designated Subaccounts before the Rider Effective Date. We will make an exception with respect to collateral for Contract loans outstanding before the Benefit Start Date. The following table describes the special transfer rules applicable to collateral for Contract loans.
Time/Period |
Transfer Rule | |
At the time of activation | You are not required to transfer the portion of your Fixed Account value that is then needed as collateral for a Contract loan. | |
From time to time after activation and before the Benefit Start Date | We may require you to transfer the portion of your Fixed Account value that is no longer needed as collateral for a Contract loan. You must make this transfer within 30 days of our written notice to you of this requirement, or all rights under the Rider will terminate. | |
On or before the Benefit Start Date | You must pay off the Contract loan and transfer the portion of your Fixed Account value that is no longer needed as collateral. If you do not pay off the Contract loan and make the required transfer, all rights under the Rider will terminate. |
After you activate a Rider, a loan payment will be allocated proportionally to the Designated Subaccounts to which you have allocated your Account Value as of the date the loan payment is made.
All rights under a Rider will terminate at the time indicated if any of the following events occurs:
| upon your Written Request to decline or terminate the Rider; |
| at any time that the Insured transfers or assigns an ownership interest in the Contract; |
| if you or a joint owner of the Contract is not a human being, at any time that the Insured is no longer named as an Annuitant under the Contract; |
| upon a failure to transfer funds to a Designated Subaccount before the Rider Effective Date; |
| upon a transfer of funds within the Contract after the Rider Effective Date to an investment option that is not a Designated Subaccount, except to the limited extent required for collateral for a loan; |
| upon an Excess Withdrawal from the Contract that reduces the Benefit Base Amount below $1,250; |
| upon the surrender or annuitization of the Contract; |
| upon a death that would give rise to a Death Benefit under the Contract, unless the Spouse is the sole Beneficiary and elects to become the successor owner of the Contract; |
| upon the death of the Insured before the Benefit Start Date; or |
| upon the complete payment of all Benefits under the Rider. |
GUARANTEED LIFETIME WITHDRAWAL BENEFIT
If you activated the Guaranteed Lifetime Withdrawal Benefit Rider (GLWB Rider), it will provide a lifetime withdrawal Benefit, up to a certain amount each Benefit Year, even after the Contract value is zero. The insured must be at least 55 years old on the Benefit Start Date to receive a Benefit under the GLWB Rider.
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In exchange for the ability to receive Benefits for life, we will assess an annual charge not to exceed 1.20% of the current Benefit Base Amount. The Rider charge offsets expenses that we incur in administering the Rider and compensates us for assuming the mortality and expense risks under the Rider. Currently, the charge is 0.55% of the current Benefit Base Amount. After the Rider is activated, the charge for your Rider will not change except under the circumstances described in Reset Opportunities below.
We will assess the Rider charge on each Rider Anniversary. We will also assess a prorated charge upon surrender of the Contract or termination of the Rider. We will take the Rider charge by withdrawing amounts proportionally from each Designated Subaccount (as discussed below) to which you have allocated your Account Value at the time the charge is taken.
Benefit Base Amount before the Benefit Start Date
The amount of the Benefit payments that will be available to you under the GLWB Rider depends on the Benefit Base Amount. On or before the Benefit Start Date, the Benefit Base Amount will equal the greater of your Rollup Base Amount or your Reset Base Amount, if any.
Your Rollup Base Amount starts with your Account Value as of the Rider Effective Date. To this we add the amount of any Purchase Payments made since the Rider Effective Date. At the end of each of the first five Rider Years, as long as you have not taken an Excess Withdrawal, we also add a simple interest credit. Each interest credit is calculated as 5% of the Account Value on the Rider Effective Date, plus Purchase Payments received since the Rider Effective Date, and minus the Fixed Account value, if any, at the end of the Rider Year. There is no compounding. The interest credit for a Purchase Payment received during the Rider Year will be prorated. No further interest credit will be made after there has been a withdrawal from the Contract after the Rider Effective Date other than to pay Rider charges. If an Excess Withdrawal is taken, the Rollup Base Amount will be reduced by the same percentage as the percentage reduction in your Account Value.
Rollup Base Amount = | Account Value on Rider Effective Date + Purchase Payments received since the Rider Effective Date + Interest Proportional reductions for Excess Withdrawals | |
Rollup Interest Credit = | (Account Value on Rider Effective Date + Purchase Payments received since the Rider Effective Date Fixed Account value, if any at the end of the Rider Year) x 0.05 |
The Reset Base Amount starts with the Account Value of the Contract on the most recent Rider Anniversary for which you elect to reset, as described under Reset Opportunities below. If an Excess Withdrawal is taken, the Reset Base Amount is reduced by the same percentage as the percentage reduction in your Account Value.
Examples of Benefit Base Amount Calculation
These examples are intended to help you understand how the Base Benefit Amount is calculated. They assume that:
| you make the Purchase Payments shown, |
| gains, losses, and charges cause your Account Value to vary as shown, |
| you take no withdrawals except as shown, and |
| you elect to reset on each Rider Anniversary on which your Account Value has increased over the prior year. |
The Benefit Base Amount is used to calculate Benefit payments under the GLWB Rider. It is not a cash value, surrender value, or death benefit. It is not available for annuitization or withdrawal. It is not a minimum or guaranteed value for any Subaccount or any Contract value. To calculate the Benefit Base Amount in the example, compare the Reset Base Amount (column 4) and the Rollup Base Amount (column 6) on each Rider Anniversary. The Benefit Base Amount is the greater of these two amounts.
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You must pay off your loan before the benefits under the GLWB Rider begin .
Example 1
Assume: | Then: | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Rider Anniversary |
Purchase Payment or Withdrawal |
Account Value | Reset Base Amount |
Rollup Interest Credits |
Rollup Base Amount |
Benefit Base Amount |
||||||||||||||||||
0 |
$ | 100,000 | $ | 100,000 | $ | 100,000 | $ | 100,000 | ||||||||||||||||
1 |
106,000 | $ | 106,000 | $ | 5,000 | 105,000 | 106,000 | |||||||||||||||||
2 |
50,000 | 159,000 | 159,000 | 5,000 | 160,000 | 160,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
3 |
168,000 | 168,000 | 7,500 | 167,500 | 168,000 | |||||||||||||||||||
4 |
180,000 | 180,000 | 7,500 | 175,000 | 180,000 | |||||||||||||||||||
5 |
175,000 | 180,000 | 7,500 | 182,500 | 182,500 | |||||||||||||||||||
6 |
181,000 | 181,000 | 182,500 | 182,500 | ||||||||||||||||||||
7 |
186,000 | 186,000 | 182,500 | 186,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||
8 |
184,000 | 186,000 | 182,500 | 186,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||
9 |
190,000 | 190,000 | 182,500 | 190,000 |
This table shows how the Rollup Base Amount and the Rollup Interest Credits in Example 1 were calculated. The calculations are based on the Rollup Formulas set out above.
Rider Anniversary |
Rollup Base Amount Calculation | Credit Calculation | ||||||
0 |
$ | 100,000 | ||||||
1 |
$ | 100,000 + $5,000 = $105,000 | 0.05 x $ | 100,000 = $5,000 | ||||
2 |
$ | 105,000 + $50,000 + $5,000 = $160,000 | 0.05 x $ | 100,000 = $5,000 | ||||
3 |
$ | 160,000 + $7,500 = $167,500 | 0.05 x $ | 150,000 = $7,500 | ||||
4 |
$ | 167,500 + $7,500 = $175,000 | 0.05 x $ | 150,000 = $7,500 | ||||
5 |
$ | 175,000 + $7,500 = $182,500 | 0.05 x $ | 150,000 = $7,500 |
Example 2
Assume: | Then: | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Rider Anniversary |
Purchase Payment or Withdrawal |
Account Value | Reset Base Amount |
Rollup Interest Credits |
Rollup Base Amount |
Benefit Base Amount |
||||||||||||||||||
0 |
$ | 100,000 | $ | 100,000 | $ | 100,000 | $ | 100,000 | ||||||||||||||||
1 |
106,000 | $ | 106,000 | $ | 5,000 | 105,000 | 106,000 | |||||||||||||||||
2 |
109,000 | 108,000 | 5,000 | 110,000 | 110,000 | |||||||||||||||||||
3 |
-23,000 | 92,000 | 86,400 | 88,000 | 88,000 | |||||||||||||||||||
4 |
98,400 | 98,400 | 88,000 | 98,400 | ||||||||||||||||||||
5 |
95,733 | 98,400 | 88,000 | 98,400 | ||||||||||||||||||||
6 |
97,333 | 98,400 | 88,000 | 98,400 | ||||||||||||||||||||
7 |
100,000 | 100,000 | 88,000 | 100,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||
8 |
98,933 | 100,000 | 88,000 | 100,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||
9 |
100,533 | 100,533 | 88,000 | 100,533 |
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This table shows how the Rollup Base Amount and the Rollup Interest Credits in Example 2 were calculated. The calculations are based on the Rollup Formulas set out above.
Rider |
Rollup Base Amount Calculation |
Credit Calculation | ||||
0 | $100,000 | |||||
1 | $100,000 + $5,000 = $105,000 | 0.05 x $ | 100,000 = $5,000 | |||
2 | $105,000 + $5,000 = $110,000 | 0.05 x $ | 100,000 = $5,000 | |||
3 | $110,000 - $22,000 = $88,000 | None due to withdrawal | ||||
4 | $88,000 | None due to withdrawal | ||||
5 | $88,000 | None due to withdrawal |
Because a withdrawal is taken, the Rollup Base Amount is reduced by the same percentage as the percentage reduction in the Account Value.
Percentage Reduction |
1.00- ($92,000 / $92,000 + $23,000) = 1.00 0.80 = 20% | |
Rollup Base Amount Reduction |
$110,000 x 0.20 = $22,000 | |
New Rollup Base Amount |
$110,000 - $22,000 = $88,000 |
Additional Information about the Benefit Base Amount Examples. The Account Values assumed in these examples are for illustration purposes only and are not intended to predict the performance of any particular Subaccounts or Fixed Account options.
When a reset is elected, the Reset Base Amount prevents the Benefit Base Amount from falling when the Account Value falls due to investment losses. In these examples, on the 8th Rider Anniversary, the Reset Base Amount prevents a drop in the Benefit Base Amount even though the Account Value has fallen. It also prevents a drop in the Benefit Base Amount on the 5th Rider Anniversary but, in the first example, the Rollup Base Amount gave an even better result.
The Rollup Base Amount ensures that the Benefit Base Amount will grow by a minimum factor over the first five years. In the first example, on the 2nd, 5th, and 6th Rider Anniversaries, the Rollup Base Amount has grown by more than the cumulative growth in the Account Value and results in a Benefit Base Amount that is greater than the Account Value. In the second example, the Rollup Base Amount was beneficial on the 2nd Rider Anniversary, but Rollup Amounts stopped because of the withdrawal on the 3rd Rider Anniversary.
See the paragraphs labeled Rollup Base Amount and Reset Base Amount for a description of the manner in which we determine these amounts.
Any time after the Rider Effective Date, you may begin taking the lifetime withdrawal Benefit if the Insured is at least 55 years old. On the Benefit Start Date, the Benefit Base Amount is set and will not change unless you take an Excess Withdrawal. Unless a Spousal Benefit is in effect, the Benefit Percentage is determined based on the age of the Insured (who is typically you) on the Benefit Start Date as set out below.
Age of Insured on Benefit Start Date |
Benefit Percentage | |||
At least age 55 but under age 60 |
4.0 | % | ||
Age 60 or older |
5.0 | % |
On the Benefit Start Date and each anniversary of the Benefit Start Date, the Benefit Base Amount will be multiplied by the Benefit Percentage to determine the Benefit amount for the following Benefit Year. Generally, the Benefit amount is the maximum amount that can be withdrawn from the Contract before the next anniversary of the Benefit Start Date without reducing the Benefit Base Amount. The ability to take a withdrawal Benefit will continue until the earlier of your death, annuitization, or any other event that terminates the GLWB Rider.
All withdrawals from your Contract, including Benefit payments under the GLWB Rider, may result in the receipt of taxable income under federal and state law, and, if made prior to age 59 1/2, may be subject to a 10% federal penalty tax.
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At a minimum, the Benefit amount at any point during a Benefit Year will never be less than the Internal Revenue Code required minimum distribution for the calendar year that ends with or within the Benefit Year. For this purpose, we will compute the required minimum distribution based on the values of the Contract without considering any other annuity or tax-qualified account. The required minimum distribution will be reduced by all prior withdrawals or Benefit payments from the Contract made in the applicable calendar year. In calculating the required minimum distribution for this purpose, we may choose to disregard changes in the federal tax law that are made after the issue date of the GLWB Rider shown on the GLWB Rider specifications page if such changes would increase the required minimum distribution. We will notify you if we make this choice. If we choose to disregard changes in federal tax law that would increase the required minimum distribution, then you will need to satisfy this increase either from another annuity or tax-qualified account or by taking an Excess Withdrawal from the Contract.
Although lifetime withdrawals up to the Benefit amount do not reduce the Benefit Base Amount, they do reduce Contract values, the Death Benefit, and the amount available for annuitization. We will make lifetime withdrawals proportionally from the Designated Subaccounts as of the date the Benefit payment is made.
Purchase Payments that we receive after the Benefit Start Date will not increase the Benefit Base Amount. Excess Withdrawals taken after the Benefit Start Date will cause an adjustment in the Benefit Base Amount. The Benefit Base Amount is reduced by the same percentage as the percentage reduction in your Account Value due to the Excess Withdrawal. An Excess Withdrawal that reduces the Benefit Base Amount below $1,250 will result in termination of the Rider.
Example of Impact of Excess Withdrawal on Benefits
This example is intended to help you understand how an Excess Withdrawal impacts the lifetime withdrawal Benefit.
| Assume that, on your Benefit Start Date, your Benefit Base Amount is $125,000, your Benefit Percentage is 5%, and the required minimum distribution rules do not require a greater Benefit. These assumptions produce a lifetime withdrawal Benefit of $6,250 ($125,000 x 5% = $6,250) per Benefit Year. Now assume that you have not previously taken an Excess Withdrawal, and you have not taken your Benefit for the current Benefit Year. |
| Then, when your Account Value is $115,000, you withdraw $20,000 from the Contract, leaving you with an Account Value of $95,000. |
Step One: Calculate the Excess Withdrawal.
Total withdrawals for the Benefit Year |
$ | 20,000 | ||
Benefit amount for the Benefit Year |
6,250 | |||
|
|
|||
Excess Withdrawal |
$ | 13,750 |
Step Two: Calculate the Account Value immediately before the Excess Withdrawal.
Account Value before withdrawal |
$ | 115,000 | ||
Benefit amount for the Benefit Year |
6,250 | |||
|
|
|||
Account Value before Excess Withdrawal |
$ | 108,750 |
Step Three: Calculate the proportional reduction for the Excess Withdrawal.
1 - |
$95,000 | Account Value immediately after the $20,000 withdrawal |
= 12.6437% | Percentage Reduction | ||||
|
||||||||
$108,750 | Account Value immediately before the Excess Withdrawal |
$125,000 |
Base Benefit amount |
x12.6437% | Percentage Reduction |
=$15,805 | Proportional Reduction |
Step Four: Calculate the reduced Base Benefit Amount.
Base Benefit Amount |
$ | 125,000 | ||
Less proportional reduction for Excess Withdrawals |
15,805 | |||
|
|
|||
Base Benefit Amount reduced for Excess Withdrawals |
$ | 109,195 |
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Step Five: Determine the new lifetime withdrawal Benefit.
Base Benefit Amount after reduction |
$ | 109,195 | ||
Benefit Percentage |
x5 | % | ||
|
|
|||
New lifetime withdrawal Benefit amount |
$ | 5,460 |
Impact of Rider Benefit Payments and Charges
Withdrawals made from the Contract to pay Benefits or to pay charges for the GLWB Rider will be subject to all of the terms and conditions of the Contract, except as explained below:
| the amount need not meet the minimum amount for a withdrawal that is otherwise required; |
| the amount withdrawn may reduce your Account Value below the minimum amount that is otherwise required; |
| we will not terminate the Contract if the amount withdrawn reduces your Account Value below the minimum amount that is otherwise required; and |
| the amount withdrawn may completely exhaust your Account Value. |
Also note that, after you activate the GLWB Rider, withdrawals under a systematic withdrawal program may be Excess Withdrawals. You should consider the advisability of maintaining a systematic withdrawal program after you activate the GLWB Rider.
On each Rider Anniversary before the Benefit Start Date and on the Benefit Start Date, you will have the opportunity to reset the Reset Base Amount equal to your Account Value as of that Rider Anniversary or the Benefit Start Date, whichever is applicable. You may not reset the Reset Base Amount after the Benefit Start Date. If you elect to reset the Reset Base Amount and the then current charge for this GLWB Rider is higher than the charge that we are then assessing for your GLWB Rider, the reset will trigger an increase in the GLWB Rider charge. The increase in the GLWB Rider charge will be effective for the next Rider Year. To make a reset election, you must send us a Written Request and we must receive the Written Request before the Benefit Start Date and no later than 30 days after the reset date itself.
Generally, it would be to your advantage to elect a reset on (1) any Rider Anniversary when your Account Value is higher than the Reset Base Amount on that Rider Anniversary, and (2) on the Benefit Start Date if your Account Value on the Benefit Start Date is higher than the Reset Base Amount on that date. However, if you elect a reset, we may increase the GLWB Rider charges to the level that applies to new Contracts at that time.
At any time before the Benefit Start Date, you may choose to automatically reset the Reset Base Amount equal to your Account Value, if higher, on each Rider Anniversary. An automatic reset election must be made by Written Request and will take effect on the next Rider Anniversary. If an automatic reset triggers an increase in the GLWB Rider charge, we will send you a notice of the new Rider charge and provide you with the opportunity to opt-out of the reset that triggered the increase. To make an opt-out election, you must send us a Written Request and we must receive the Written Request no later than 30 days from the date of the notice. An opt-out election will end your participation in the automatic reset program. You may voluntarily terminate your participation in the automatic reset program at any time by Written Request.
If you do not elect a reset by Written Request on an applicable Contract Anniversary or request automatic resets, we will not reset the Reset Base Amount even if your Account Value is higher than the Reset Base Amount on the Contract Anniversary.
Spousal Benefit Terms |
Definitions | |
Spousal Benefit | A Benefit available after the death of the Insured for the remaining life of the Spouse. | |
Spouse | The person who is the spouse of the Insured as of the Rider Effective Date. A spouse will cease to be considered the Spouse if the marriage of the Insured and Spouse is terminated by divorce, dissolution, annulment, or for other cause apart from the death of the Insured. A new spouse cannot be substituted after the Rider Effective Date. |
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The Spousal Benefit allows a surviving Spouse to continue to receive, for the duration of his/her lifetime, a withdrawal Benefit provided the following 4 conditions are satisfied:
| you added the Spousal Benefit at the time that you activated the Rider; |
| the Spouse as of the Rider Effective Date remains the Spouse of the Insured through the death of the Insured; |
| no Death Benefit becomes payable under the Contract; and |
| the Spouse is the sole Beneficiary and elects to become the successor owner of the Contract. |
The Spouses right to a withdrawal Benefit will continue until his/her death or the termination of the GLWB Rider, whichever is first.
If the Spousal Benefit is in effect, the Benefit Percentage is determined based on the age of the Insured or the age of the Spouse, whichever is less, on the Benefit Start Date as set out below.
Age of Younger of Insured or Spouse on Benefit Start Date |
Benefit Percentage | |||
At least age 55 but under age 60 |
4.0 | % | ||
Age 60 or older |
5.0 | % |
Currently, the additional annual charge for the Spousal Benefit is 0.15% of the Benefit Base Amount. After the GLWB Rider including the Spousal Benefit is activated, the annual GLWB Rider charge rate will never exceed 1.20% of the Benefit Base Amount.
If during the life of the Insured the marriage terminates due to divorce, dissolution or annulment, or death of the Spouse, the Spousal Benefit will end. We will stop the associated GLWB Rider charge when we receive evidence of the termination of the marriage that is satisfactory to us. Once the Spousal Benefit has ended, it may not be re-elected or added to cover a subsequent spouse.
GUARANTEED MINIMUM WITHDRAWAL BENEFIT
We offer a Guaranteed Minimum Withdrawal Benefit through a rider (the GMWB Rider). If you activated the GMWB Rider, it will provide a minimum withdrawal Benefit, up to a certain amount each Benefit Year, even after the Account Value is zero.
In exchange for the ability to receive minimum withdrawal Benefits, we will assess an annual charge not to exceed 1% of the current Benefit Base Amount. The GMWB Rider charge offsets expenses that we incur in administering the GMWB Rider and compensates us for assuming the mortality and expense risks under the GMWB Rider. Currently, the charge is 0.40% of the current Benefit Base Amount. After the GMWB Rider is activated, the charge for your GMWB Rider will not change except under the circumstances described in Reset Opportunities below.
We will assess the GMWB Rider charge on each Rider Anniversary. We will also assess a prorated charge upon surrender of the Contract or termination of the GMWB Rider. We will take the GMWB Rider charge by withdrawing amounts proportionally from each Designated Subaccount (as discussed below) to which you have allocated your Account Value at the time the charge is taken.
The amount of the Benefit payments that will be available to you under the GMWB Rider depends on the Benefit Base Amount. The Benefit Base Amount is used to calculate Benefit payments under the GMWB Rider. It is not a cash value, surrender value, or death benefit. It is not available for annuitization or withdrawal. It is not a minimum or guaranteed value for any Subaccount or any Contract value.
Unless you elect to reset, the Base Benefit Amount is equal to the Account Value on the Rider Effective Date, less adjustments for any Excess Withdrawals since the Rider Effective Date. On or after the most recent Rider Anniversary for which you elect to reset, as described under Reset Opportunities below, the Benefit Base Amount will be equal to your Account Value as of that Rider Anniversary, less adjustments for any Excess Withdrawals since that Rider Anniversary.
If you do not elect a reset by Written Request on an applicable Contract Anniversary or request automatic resets, we will not reset the Benefit Base Amount even if your Account Value is higher than the Benefit Base Amount on the Contract Anniversary.
No reset may be elected after the Benefit Start Date. The Benefit Base Amount is reduced by the same percentage as the percentage reduction in your Account Value due to the Excess Withdrawal.
You must pay off your loan before the benefits under the GMWB Rider begin..
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Any time after the Rider Effective Date, you may begin taking the minimum withdrawal Benefit. The Benefit amount that may be withdrawn during each Benefit Year is equal to 5% of the current Benefit Base Amount.
Although withdrawals up to the Benefit amount do not reduce the Benefit Base Amount, they do reduce the total Benefits that remain to be paid under the GMWB Rider. They also reduce Contract values, the Death Benefit, and the amount available for annuitization. We will make withdrawals proportionally from the Designated Subaccounts as of the date the Benefit payment is made.
All withdrawals from your Contract, including Benefit payments under the GMWB Rider, may result in the receipt of taxable income under federal and state law, and, if made prior to age 59 1/2, may be subject to a 10% federal penalty tax.
At a minimum, the Benefit amount at any point during a Benefit Year will never be less than the Internal Revenue Code required minimum distribution for the calendar year that ends with or within the Benefit Year. For this purpose, we will compute the required minimum distribution based on the values of the Contract without considering any other annuity or tax-qualified account. The required minimum distribution will be reduced by all prior withdrawals or Benefit payments from the Contract made in the applicable calendar year. In calculating the required minimum distribution for this purpose, we may choose to disregard changes in the federal tax law that are made after the issue date of the GMWB Rider shown on the GMWB Rider specifications page if such changes would increase the required minimum distribution. We will notify you if we make this choice. If we choose to disregard changes in federal tax law that would increase the required minimum distribution, then you will need to satisfy this increase either from another annuity or tax-qualified account or by taking an Excess Withdrawal from the Contract.
Purchase Payments that we receive after the Benefit Start Date will not increase the Benefit Base Amount. An Excess Withdrawal that reduces the Benefit Base Amount below $1,250 will result in termination of the GMWB Rider.
Your right to take a withdrawal Benefit will continue until the total Benefit payments equal the current Benefit Base Amount. This is not a fixed period. The right to take a withdrawal Benefit will end before the total Benefit payments equal the current Benefit Base Amount if you annuitize the Contract, a death benefit becomes payable under the Contract, or any other event occurs that terminates the GMWB Rider.
Your right to take a withdrawal Benefit will last for 20 years if all of the following conditions are met: (1) each year you take a withdrawal Benefit exactly equal to 5% of the Benefit Base Amount, (2) you do not take a withdrawal Benefit of more than 5% of the Benefit Base Amount because of a required minimum distribution, (3) you take no Excess Withdrawals on or after the Benefit Start Date, and (4) the GMWB Rider does not terminate. If in any year you take a withdrawal Benefit of less than 5% of the Benefit Base Amount, your right to take a withdrawal Benefit may last for more than 20 years. If you take a withdrawal Benefit of more than 5% of the Benefit Base Amount because of a required minimum distribution, or if you take an Excess Withdrawal on or after the Benefit Start Date, your right to take a withdrawal Benefit may last for fewer than 20 years.
Example of Impact of Excess Withdrawal on Benefits
This example is intended to help you understand how an Excess Withdrawal impacts the minimum withdrawal Benefit.
| Assume that, on your Benefit Start Date, your Benefit Base Amount is $125,000, your Benefit Percentage is 5%, and the required minimum distribution rules do not require a greater Benefit. These assumptions produce a minimum withdrawal Benefit of $6,250 ($125,000 x 5% = $6,250) per Benefit Year. |
| Now assume that, in the first and second Benefit Years, you withdraw the $6,250 Benefit and, in the third Benefit year when your current Account Value is $115,000, you withdraw $20,000 from the Contract, leaving you with an Account Value of $95,000. |
Step One: Calculate the Excess Withdrawal.
Total withdrawals for the Benefit Year |
$ | 20,000 | ||
Benefit amount for the Benefit Year |
6,250 | |||
|
|
|||
Excess Withdrawal |
$ | 13,750 |
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Step Two: Calculate the Account Value immediately before the Excess Withdrawal.
Account Value before withdrawal |
$ | 115,000 | ||
Benefit amount for the Benefit Year |
6,250 | |||
|
|
|||
Account Value before Excess Withdrawal |
$ | 108,750 |
Step Three: Calculate the proportional reduction for the Excess Withdrawal.
1 - |
$95,000 | Account Value immediately after the $20,000 withdrawal |
= 12.6437% | Percentage Reduction | ||||
|
||||||||
$108,750 | Account Value immediately before the Excess Withdrawal |
$125,000 |
Base Benefit amount |
x12.6437% | Percentage Reduction |
=$15,805 | Proportional Reduction |
Step Four: Calculate the reduced Base Benefit Amount.
Base Benefit Amount |
$ | 125,000 | ||
Less proportional reduction for Excess Withdrawals |
15,805 | |||
|
|
|||
Base Benefit Amount reduced for Excess Withdrawals |
$ | 109,195 |
Step Five: Determine the new minimum withdrawal Benefit and Benefits remaining.
Base Benefit Amount after reduction |
$ | 109,195 | ||
Benefit Percentage |
x5 | % | ||
|
|
|||
New lifetime withdrawal Benefit amount |
$ | 5,460 |
Base Benefit Amount after reduction |
$ | 109,195 | ||
Less Benefits for first three Benefit Years |
18,750 | |||
|
|
|||
Benefits remaining |
$ | 90,445 |
An Excess Withdrawal that reduces the Benefit Base Amount below $1,250 will result in termination of the GMWB Rider. Also note that, after you activate the GMWB Rider, withdrawals under a systematic withdrawal program may be Excess Withdrawals. You should consider the advisability of maintaining a systematic withdrawal program after you activate the GMWB Rider.
Impact of Rider Benefit Payments and Charges
Withdrawals made from the Contract to pay Benefits or to pay charges for the GMWB Rider will be subject to all of the terms and conditions of the Contract, except as explained below:
| the amount need not meet the minimum amount for a withdrawal that is otherwise required; |
| the amount withdrawn may reduce your Account Value below the minimum amount that is otherwise required; |
| we will not terminate the Contract if the amount withdrawn reduces your Account Value below the minimum amount that is otherwise required; and |
| the amount withdrawn may completely exhaust your Account Value. |
On each Rider Anniversary before the Benefit Start Date and on the Benefit Start Date, you will have the opportunity to reset the Reset Base Amount equal to your Account Value as of that Rider Anniversary or the Benefit Start Date, whichever is applicable. You may not reset the Reset Base Amount after the Benefit Start Date. If you elect to reset the Benefit Base Amount and the then current charge for this GMWB Rider is higher than the charge that we are then assessing for your GMWB Rider, the reset will trigger an increase in the GMWB Rider charge. The increase in the GMWB Rider charge will be effective for the next Rider Year. To make a reset election, you must send us a Written Request and we must receive the Written Request before the Benefit Start Date and no later than 30 days after the reset date itself.
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Generally, it would be to your advantage to elect a reset on (1) any Rider Anniversary when your Account Value is higher than the Reset Base Amount on that Rider Anniversary, and (2) on the Benefit Start Date if your Account Value on the Benefit Start Date is higher than the Reset Base Amount on that date. However, if you elect a reset, we may increase the GMWB Rider charges to the level that applies to new Contracts at that time.
At any time before the Benefit Start Date, you may choose to automatically reset the Reset Base Amount equal to your Account Value, if higher, on each Rider Anniversary. An automatic reset election must be made by Written Request and will take effect on the next Rider Anniversary. If an automatic reset triggers an increase in the GMWB Rider charge, we will send you a notice of the new Rider charge and provide you with the opportunity to opt-out of the reset that triggered the increase. To make an opt-out election, you must send us a Written Request and we must receive the Written Request no later than 30 days from the date of the notice. An opt-out election will end your participation in the automatic reset program. You may voluntarily terminate your participation in the automatic reset program at any time by Written Request.
Additional Information about Written Requests
Written Requests must be received by us at our administrative office. The address of our administrative office is 191 Rosa Parks Street, Cincinnati OH 45202. A Written Request may, at our discretion, be made by telephone or electronic means.
We will treat a Written Request as a standing order. It may be modified or revoked only by a subsequent Written Request, when permitted by the terms of the Contract. A Written Request is subject to (1) any payment that we make before we acknowledge the Written Request and (2) any other action that we take before we acknowledge the Written Request.
When a Contract is annuitized, or when a death benefit is applied to a settlement option, the Company promises to pay a stream of benefit payments for the duration of the settlement option selected. Upon annuitization, the Account Value is no longer available to the Owner. Benefit payments may be calculated and paid: (1) as a fixed dollar benefit; (2) as a variable dollar benefit; or (3) as a combination of both. Only the amount of fixed dollar benefit payments is guaranteed by the Company. The Owner (or Payee) bears the risk that any variable dollar benefit payment may be less than the initial variable dollar benefit payment, or that it may decline to zero, if Benefit Unit Values for that payment decrease sufficiently. Transfers between a variable dollar benefit and a fixed dollar benefit are not permitted, but transfers of Benefit Units among Subaccounts are permitted once each 12 months after a variable dollar benefit has been paid for at least 12 months. The formulas for transferring Benefit Units among Subaccounts during the Benefit Payment Period are set forth in the Statement of Additional Information.
Lump Sum Payments of Death Benefits Prior to January 1, 2012. Prior to January 1, 2012, if the beneficiary was an individual and the lump sum payment option was selected, we may have paid the death benefit by establishing an interest-bearing draft account for the beneficiary in the amount of the death benefit. This account was called the Great American Benefit Choice Account. We sent the beneficiary a personalized checkbook for this account.
If the beneficiary has not closed this account, then the beneficiary may still withdraw all or part of the money in this account at any time by writing a draft against the account. The servicing bank will process the draft by drawing funds from our general account.
The Great American Benefit Choice Account earns interest, which is compounded daily and credited monthly. We set the interest rate for this account. We review the rate periodically and we may change it at any time. We may make a profit on the money held in this account.
The Great American Benefit Choice Account is part of our general account. It is not a bank account, and it is not insured by the FDIC, NCUSIF, or any government agency. As part of our general account, it is subject to the claims of our creditors.
The Company will make periodic payments in any form of settlement option that is acceptable to it at the time of an election. The standard forms of settlement options are described below. More than one settlement option may be elected if the requirements for each settlement option elected are satisfied.
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Payments under any settlement option may be in monthly, quarterly, semiannual or annual payment intervals. If the amount of any regular payment under the form of settlement option elected would be less than $50, an alternative form of settlement option will have to be elected. The Company, in its discretion, may require benefit payments to be made by direct deposit or wire transfer to the account of a designated Payee.
The Company may modify minimum amounts, payment intervals and other terms and conditions at any time without prior notice to Owners. If the Company changes the minimum amounts, the Company may change any current or future payment amounts and/or payment intervals to conform with the change. Once payment begins under a settlement option that is contingent on the life of a specified person or persons, the settlement option may not be changed. Commuted values, if available, may be taken no sooner than five years after the applicable Commencement Date. Commuted values are not available for any option based on life expectancy.
The dollar amount of benefit payments will vary with the frequency of the payment interval and the duration of the payments. Generally, each payment in a stream of payments will be smaller as the frequency of payments increases, or as the length of the payment period increases, because more payments will be paid. For life contingent settlement options, each payment in the stream of payments will generally be smaller as the life expectancy of the Annuitant or Beneficiary increases because more payments are expected to be paid.
For life contingent settlement options, the death of the Annuitant may result in only a single payment being made. If death occurs before the first payment and no payments would be due, we will agree to cancel the annuitization and pay a death benefit. For fixed period settlement options, the periodic payments will continue for the entire fixed period even if the Annuitant dies during the payment period.
Option |
Description | |
Income for a Fixed Period | The Company will make periodic payments for a fixed period of 5 to 30 years. (Payment intervals of 1 to 4 years are available for death benefit settlement options only.) | |
Life Annuity with Payments for a Fixed Period | The Company will make periodic payments for a fixed period, or until the death of the person on whose life benefit payments are based if he or she lives longer than the fixed period. | |
Joint and One-Half Survivor Annuity | The Company will make periodic payments until the death of the primary person on whose life benefit payments are based; thereafter, the Company will make one-half of the periodic payment until the death of the secondary person on whose life benefit payments are based. | |
Life Annuity | The Company will make periodic payments until the death of the person on whose life the benefit payments are based. |
For Contracts issued after May 1, 2004, in states where the Company has received regulatory approval, the Company generally guarantees minimum benefit payment factors based on annuity 2000 mortality tables for blended lives (60% female/40% male) with interest at 1% per year, compounded annually.
For all other Contracts, the Company guarantees minimum fixed dollar benefit payment factors based on 1983 annuity mortality tables for individuals or groups, as applicable, with interest at 3% per year, compounded annually.
The minimum monthly payments per $1,000 of value for the Companys standard settlement options are set forth in tables in the Contracts. Upon request, the Company will provide information about minimum monthly payments for ages or fixed periods not shown in the settlement option tables.
FORMS OF BENEFIT PAYMENTS UNDER SETTLEMENT OPTIONS
Fixed Dollar Payments. Fixed dollar benefit payments are determined by multiplying the amount applied to the fixed dollar benefit (expressed in thousands of dollars and after deduction of any fees and charges, loans, or applicable premium taxes) by the amount of the payment per $1,000 of value that the Company is currently paying for settlement options of that type. The amount of the payment per $1,000 of value will never be less than the guaranteed minimum amount. Fixed dollar benefit payments will remain level for the duration of the Benefit Payment Period.
Variable Dollar Payments. The variable dollar base benefit payment is the amount it would be if it were a fixed dollar benefit payment calculated at the Companys minimum guaranteed settlement option factors.
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The amount of each variable dollar benefit payment will reflect the investment performance of the Subaccount(s) selected and may vary from payment to payment. For example, because the base benefit payment includes a fixed rate of interest, benefit payments will be less than the base payment if the net investment performance of the applicable Subaccount(s) is less than the fixed rate of interest.
Benefit payments will be more than the base payment if the net investment performance of the applicable Subaccount(s) is more than the fixed rate of interest.
The amount of each benefit payment is the sum of the payment due for each Subaccount selected, less a pro rata portion of the contract maintenance fee, as described below. The payment due for a Subaccount equals the shares for that Subaccount, which are the Benefit Units, times their value, which is generally the Benefit Unit Value for that Subaccount as of the end of the fifth Valuation Period preceding the due date of the payment.
The deduction for the contract maintenance fee is equal to the amount of the annual fee divided by the number of benefit payments to be made over a 12-month period.
The number of Benefit Units for each Subaccount selected is determined by allocating the amount of the variable dollar base benefit payment among the Subaccount(s) selected in the percentages indicated by the Owner (or payee). The dollar amount allocated to a Subaccount is divided by the Benefit Unit Value for that Subaccount as of the first day of the Benefit Payment Period. The result is the number of Benefit Units that the Company will pay for that Subaccount at each payment interval. The number of Benefit Units for each Subaccount remains fixed during the Benefit Payment Period, except as a result of any transfers among Subaccounts or as provided under the settlement option elected. An explanation of how Benefit Unit Values are calculated is included in the Statement of Additional Information.
Considerations in Selecting a Settlement Option and Payment Forms. Periodic payments under a settlement option are affected by various factors, including the length of the payment period, the life expectancy of the person on whose life benefit payments are based, the frequency of the payment interval (monthly, quarterly, semi-annual or annual), and the payment form selected (fixed dollar or variable dollar).
| Generally, the longer the period over which payments are made or the more frequently the payments are made, the smaller the amount of each payment because more payments will be made. |
| For life contingent settlement options, the longer the life expectancy of the Annuitant or Beneficiary, the smaller the amount of each payment because more payments are expected to be paid. |
| Fixed dollar payments will remain level for the duration of the payment period. |
| The actual amount of each variable dollar payment may vary from payment to payment regardless of the duration of the payment period. The actual amount of each variable dollar payment will reflect the investment performance of the Subaccount(s) selected. The daily investment factor and the assumed interest rate also affect the amount by which variable dollar payments increase or decrease. |
Additional information about the net investment factor and the assumed interest rate is included in the Statement of Additional Information.
Each Contract is an agreement between the Company and the Owner. Values, benefits and charges are calculated separately for each Contract. In the case of a group Contract, the agreement is between the group Owner and the Company. An individual participant under a group Contract will receive a certificate of participation, which is evidence of the participants interest in the group Contract. A certificate of participation is not a Contract. Values, benefits and charges are calculated separately for each certificate issued under a Contract. The description of Contract provisions in this prospectus applies to the interests of certificate Owners, except where otherwise noted.
Because the Company is subject to the insurance laws and regulations of all the jurisdictions where it is licensed to operate, the availability of certain Contract rights and provisions in a given state may depend on that states approval of the Contracts. Where required by state law or regulation, the Contracts will be modified accordingly. To obtain an explanation of the state modifications that apply to your Contract or certificate, contact us at P.O. Box 5423, Cincinnati, OH 45201-5423, or call us at 1-800-789-6771.
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Right to Cancel. The Owner of an individual Contract may cancel it before midnight of the 20th day following the date the Owner receives the Contract. For a valid cancellation, the Contract must be returned to the Company, and written notice of cancellation must be given to the Company, or to the agent who sold the Contract, by that deadline. If mailed, the return of the Contract or the notice is effective on the date it is postmarked, with the proper address and with postage paid. If the Owner cancels the Contract, the Contract will be void and the Company will refund the Purchase Payment(s) paid for it, plus or minus any investment gains or losses under the Contract as of the end of the Valuation Period during which the returned Contract is received at the Companys administrative office. When required by state or federal law, the Company will return the Purchase Payments without any investment gain or loss, during all or part of the right to cancel period. When required by state or federal law, the Company will return the Purchase Payments in full, without deducting any fees or charges, during the right to cancel period. When required by state law, the right to cancel period may be longer than 20 days. When required by state law, the right to cancel may apply to group Contracts. During the right to cancel period specified on the first page of the Contract, the Company reserves the right to allocate all Purchase Payments to either the Fixed Accumulation Account or a money market Subaccount, at our discretion. If we exercise this right, we will allocate the Account Value as of the end of the right to cancel period to the Fixed Account options and/or to the Subaccounts in the percentages that the Owner instructed.
Termination. The Company reserves the right to terminate any Contract at any time during the Accumulation Period if the Surrender Value is less than $500. In that case, the Contract will be involuntarily surrendered, and the Company will pay the Owner the amount that would be due the Owner on a full surrender. A group Contract may be terminated on 60 days advance notice, in which case participants will be entitled to continue their interests on a deferred, paid-up basis, subject to the Companys involuntary surrender right as described above.
Persons with Rights Under the Contract
Owner. The Owner is the person with authority to exercise rights and receive benefits under the Contract (e.g., make allocations among investment options, elect a settlement option, designate the Annuitant, Beneficiary and Payee). An Owner must ordinarily be a natural person, or a trust or other legal entity holding a contract for the benefit of a natural person. Ownership of a non-tax-qualified Contract may be transferred, but transfer may have adverse tax consequences. Ownership of a tax-qualified Contract may not be transferred. Unless otherwise elected or required by law, a transfer of Ownership will not automatically cancel a designation of an Annuitant or Beneficiary or any settlement options election previously made.
Joint Owners. There may be joint Owners of a non-tax-qualified Contract. Joint Owners may each exercise transfer rights and make Purchase Payment allocations independently. All other rights must be exercised by joint action. A surviving joint Owner who is not the spouse (or civil union partner/domestic partner in applicable states) of a deceased Owner may not become a Successor Owner but will be deemed to be the Beneficiary of the death benefit that becomes payable on the death of the first Owner to die, regardless of any Beneficiary designation.
Successor Owner. The surviving spouse (or civil union partner/domestic partner in applicable states) of a deceased Owner may become a Successor Owner if the surviving spouse (or civil union partner/domestic partner in applicable states) was either the joint Owner or sole surviving Beneficiary under the Contract. In order for a spouse (or civil union partner/domestic partner in applicable states) to become a Successor Owner, the Owner must make an election prior to the Owners death, or the surviving spouse (or civil union partner/domestic partner in applicable states) must make an election within one year of the Owners death.
Prior to May 1, 2004, the Successor Owner provisions of the Contract were available only by endorsement and may not have been available in all states.
As required by federal tax law, the Contract contains rules about the rate at which a death benefit must be paid to a beneficiary who is not your spouse. If the Successor Owner is not your spouse as defined by federal tax law, then after your death the contract values must be distributed in a manner that complies with those rules. For this purpose, a civil union partner/domestic partner is not considered a spouse.
Civil Union Partners, and Domestic Partners. Federal tax law does not recognize a civil union or domestic partnership as a marriage. Although a civil union partner/domestic partner may become a successor owner in applicable states, the favorable tax treatment provided by deferral tax law to a surviving spouse is NOT available to a surviving civil union partner/domestic partner. For information about federal tax laws, please consult a tax advisor.
Step Up in Account Value for Successor Owner. If the surviving spouse (or civil union partner/domestic partner in applicable states) of a deceased Owner becomes a Successor Owner of the Contract, the Account Value may be increased. There is no additional charge associated with this feature. Any such increase will be equal to the amount, if any, that the Account Value would have been increased on the Death Benefit Valuation Date if your spouse (or civil union partner/domestic partner) had elected to take the Death Benefit. An increase will only apply if the Death Benefit would have been based on a return of premium value, a historic value, or any other Death Benefit calculation value that is greater than the Account Value.
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For this purpose, the Death Benefit Valuation Date is the earlier of: (1) the date that we have received at our administrative office both Due Proof of Death and a Written Request to become successor owner of the Contract; or (2) the first anniversary of death. Any such increase shall be effective on the Death Benefit Valuation Date, and shall be allocated proportionally among the Subaccounts and the Fixed Account options based on the value of each such option as of the end of the Valuation Period immediately before that date.
Annuitant. The Annuitant is the person whose life is the measuring life for life contingent annuity benefit payments. The Annuitant must be the same person as the Owner under a tax-qualified Contract. The Owner may designate or change an Annuitant under a non-tax-qualified Contract. Unless otherwise elected or required by law, a change of Annuitant will not automatically cancel a designation of a Beneficiary or any settlement option election previously made.
Beneficiary. The person entitled to receive the death benefit. The Owner may designate or change the Beneficiary, except that a surviving joint Owner will be deemed to be the Beneficiary regardless of any designation. Unless otherwise elected or required by law, a change of Beneficiary will not automatically cancel a designation of any Annuitant or any settlement option election previously made. If no Beneficiary is designated, and there is no surviving joint Owner, the Owners estate will be the Beneficiary. The Beneficiary will be the measuring life for life contingent death benefit payments.
Payee. Under a tax-qualified Contract, the Owner-Annuitant is the Payee of annuity benefits. Under a non-tax-qualified Contract, the Owner may designate the Annuitant or the Owner as the Payee of annuity benefits. Irrevocable naming of a Payee other than the Owner can have adverse tax consequences. The Beneficiary is the Payee of the death benefit.
Assignee. Under a tax-qualified Contract, assignment is not permitted. The Owner of a non-tax-qualified Contract may assign most of his/her rights or benefits under a Contract. Assignment of rights or benefits may have adverse tax consequences.
ABANDONED PROPERTY AND ESCHEATMENT
Every state has unclaimed property laws. These laws generally declare annuity contracts to be abandoned after a period of inactivity of three to five years (1) from the first day of the period during which annuity benefit payments are to be paid; or (2) from the date of death for which a death benefit is due and payable. For example, if the payment of a death benefit has been triggered, but the Beneficiary does not come forward to claim the death benefit in a timely manner, the unclaimed property laws will apply.
If a death benefit, annuity benefit payments, or other Contract proceeds are unclaimed, we will pay them to the abandoned property division or unclaimed property office of the applicable state. (Escheatment is the formal, legal name for this process.) For example, on an unclaimed death benefit, depending on the circumstances, the proceeds are paid (1) to the state where the Beneficiary last resided, as shown on our books and records; (2) to the state where the Owner last resided, as shown on our books and records; or (3) to Ohio, which is our state of domicile. The state will hold the proceeds without interest until a valid claim is made by the person entitled to the proceeds.
If the Contract owner dies and we are unable to locate the beneficiary, or if the Contract requires annuity benefit payments to start and we cannot locate the owner, the Account Value of the Contract will remain in the Subaccount and Fixed Account options until the death benefits or Contract proceeds are claimed or escheated. If escheated, the death benefit amount or Contract proceeds will be finally determined using the Account Value at the end of the Valuation Period that is no more than seven days before date that we make the escheat payment to the state.
To prevent escheatment of the death benefit, annuity benefit payments or other proceeds from your annuity, it is important:
| to update your contact information, such as your address, phone number and email address, if and as it changes; and |
| to update your Beneficiary and other designations, including complete names, complete addresses, phone numbers, and social security numbers, if and as they change. |
Please contact us at P.O. Box 5423, Cincinnati, OH 45201-5423, or call us at 1-800-789-6771, to make such changes.
State unclaimed property laws do not apply to annuity contracts that are held under an employer retirement plan that is subject to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY®
The administrative office of the Company is located at 191 Rosa Parks Street, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202. The Company is a wholly owned subsidiary of MassMutual Ascend Life Insurance Company, which is a wholly owned subsidiary of Glidepath Holdings, Inc., which is in turn a wholly owned subsidiary of Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company.
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The obligations under the Contracts are obligations of the Company. The fixed benefits under this Contract are provided through the Fixed Account. The Fixed Account is part of our general account and its values are not dependent on the investment performance of the Subaccounts that make up the Separate Account. The variable benefits under this Contract are provided through the Separate Account, which is described below.
The Companys general account assets are used to guarantee the payment of applicable annuity and death benefits under the Contracts. As a result, Contract owners must rely on the financial strength and claims-paying ability of the Company for any benefit payments under the Contract. To the extent that we are required to pay benefit amounts in excess of the applicable Contract values, such amounts will come from the Companys general account assets. You should be aware that the Companys general account is exposed to the risks normally associated with a portfolio of fixed-income securities, including interest rate risk, liquidity risk and credit risk. The Companys financial statements in the Statement of Additional Information include a further discussion of investments held by the Companys general account. In addition, the Companys general account is subject to the claims of its creditors.
The Company and MM Ascend Life Investor Services, LLC., the principal underwriter of the Contracts, are involved in various kinds of routine litigation that, in managements judgment, are not of material importance to their assets or the Separate Account. There are no pending legal proceedings against the Separate Account. .
General. The Separate Account is an insurance company separate account under the laws of the State of Ohio. The assets of the Separate Account are owned by the Company, but they are held separately from the other assets of the Company. Under Ohio law, the assets of a separate account are not chargeable with liabilities incurred in any other business operation of the Company. Income, gains and losses incurred on the assets in the Separate Account, whether realized or not, are credited to or charged against the Separate Account, without regard to other income, gains or losses of the Company.
Therefore, the performance of the Separate Account is entirely independent of the investment performance of the Companys general account assets or any other separate account maintained by the Company. The assets of the Separate Account will be held for the
exclusive benefit of Owners of, and the persons entitled to payment under, the Contracts offered by this prospectus and all other contracts issued by the Separate Account. The obligations under the Contracts are obligations of the Company.
Additions, Deletions or Substitutions of Subaccounts. New Subaccounts may be established when, in our sole discretion, marketing, tax, investment or other conditions warrant. Any new Subaccounts will be made available to existing Owners on a basis to be determined by us and that is not discriminatory. We do not guarantee that any of the Subaccounts or any of the Portfolios will always be available for allocation of Purchase Payments or variable dollar benefit payments or for transfers. We may substitute the shares of a different portfolio or a different class of shares for shares held in a Portfolio.
In the event of any addition, merger, combination or substitution, we may make such changes in the Contract as may be necessary or appropriate to reflect such event. Additions, mergers, combinations or substitutions may be due to an investment decision by us, or due to an event not within our control, such as liquidation of a Portfolio or an irreconcilable conflict of interest between the Separate Account and another insurance company that offers the Portfolio. We will obtain approval of additions, mergers, combinations or substitution from the SEC to the extent required by the Investment Company Act of 1940, or other applicable law. We will also notify you before we make a substitution.
To the extent required by law, shares of a Portfolio held in the Separate Account will be voted by the Company at regular and special shareholder meetings of that Portfolio in accordance with instructions received from persons having voting interests in the corresponding Subaccount. During the Accumulation Period, the Company will vote Portfolio shares according to instructions of Owners, unless the Company is permitted to vote shares in its own right.
The number of votes that an Owner may vote will be calculated separately for each Subaccount. The number will be determined by applying the Owners percentage interest, if any, in a particular Subaccount to the total number of votes attributable to that Subaccount.
The Owners percentage interest and the total number of votes will be determined as of the record date established by that Portfolio for voting purposes. Voting instructions will be solicited by written communication in accordance with procedures established by the applicable Portfolio.
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The Company will vote or abstain from voting shares for which it receives no timely instructions and shares it holds as to which Owners have no beneficial interest (including shares held by the Company as reserves for benefit payments*). The Company will vote or abstain from voting such shares in proportion to the voting instructions it receives from Owners of all Contracts participating in the Subaccount. Because the Company will use this proportional method of voting, a small number of Owners may determine the manner in which the Company will vote Portfolio shares for which it solicits voting instructions but receives no timely instructions.
Each person or entity having a voting interest in a Subaccount will receive proxy material, reports and other material relating to the appropriate Portfolio. The Portfolios are not required to hold annual or other regular meetings of shareholders.
* | Neither the Owner nor Payee has any interest in the Separate Account during the Benefit Payment Period. Benefit Units are merely a measure of the amount of the payment the Company is obligated to pay on each payment date. |
MM Ascend Life Investor Services, LLC (MMALIS) is the principal underwriter of the Contracts. Its business address is 191 Rosa Parks Street, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202. MMALIS is a wholly owned subsidiary of MassMutual Ascend Life Insurance Company and, as a result, is an affiliate of the Company.
The Contracts were sold by insurance agents who were also registered representatives of broker-dealers that entered into selling agreements with MMALIS. Broker-dealers are registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and are members of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. All registered representatives who sold the Contracts were appointed by the Company as insurance agents and were authorized under applicable state insurance regulations to sell variable annuity contracts.
The Company paid commissions to MMALIS for promotion and sale of the contracts. MMALIS paid commissions to other broker-dealers for sales made through their registered representatives, and these broker-dealers paid their registered representatives from their own funds. Commissions paid by the Company are calculated as a percentage of the Purchase Payments received for a contract. The maximum percentage is 8.5% of the Purchase Payments received from a contract. Commissions paid by the Company may also be calculated as a percentage of the contract value (sometimes called a trail commission). Trail commissions are not expected to exceed 1% of the contract value on an annual basis.
Commissions paid on the Contracts and payments for other services are not charged directly to you or your Account Value but are charged indirectly through fees and charges imposed under the Contracts. If these fees and charges are not sufficient to cover the commissions and other payments, any deficiency will be made up from our general assets.
The Statement of Additional Information includes more information about the compensation we pay to MMALIS and the additional compensation that MMALIS pays to select selling firms.
This section provides a general description of federal income tax considerations relating to the Contracts. The purchase, holding, and transfer of a Contract may have federal estate and gift tax consequences in addition to income tax consequences. Estate and gift taxation is not discussed in this prospectus or in the Statement of Additional Information. State taxation will vary, depending on the state in which you reside, and is not discussed in this prospectus or in the Statement of Additional Information.
The tax information provided in this prospectus is not intended or written to be used as legal or tax advice. It is written solely to provide general information related to the purchase and holding of the Contracts. You should seek advice on legal or tax questions based on your particular circumstances from an attorney or tax advisor who is not affiliated with the Company.
Internal Revenue Code (IRC) Section 72 governs the taxation of annuities in general. The income earned on a Contract is generally not included in the Owners taxable income until it is withdrawn from the Contract. In other words, a Contract is a tax-deferred investment. In order to qualify for this tax-deferred treatment, the Contracts must meet certain requirements related to investor control and diversification discussed in the Statement of Additional Information. Tax deferral is not available for a Contract when an Owner is a trust, corporation, LLC, partnership, or other entity unless the Owner is a mere agent for a natural person. For a nonqualified deferred compensation plan, this rule means that the employer as Owner of the Contract will generally be taxed currently on any increase in the Surrender Value, although the plan itself may provide a tax deferral to the participating employee.
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Tax-Qualified Retirement Plans
Annuities may also qualify for tax-deferred treatment, or serve as a funding vehicle, under tax-qualified retirement plans that are governed by other IRC provisions. These provisions include IRC Section 401 (pension, profit sharing, and 401(k) plans), IRC Section 403(b) (tax-sheltered annuities), IRC Sections 408 and 408A (individual retirement annuities), and IRC Section 457(b) (governmental deferred compensation plans). Tax-deferral is generally also available under these tax-qualified retirement plans through the use of a trust or custodial account without the use of an annuity.
The tax law rules governing tax-qualified retirement plans and the treatment of amounts held and distributed under such plans are complex. If the Contract is to be used in connection with a tax-qualified retirement plan, including an individual retirement annuity (IRA) under a Simplified Employee Pension (SEP) Plan, you should seek competent legal and tax advice regarding the suitability of the Contract for your particular situation. Following is a brief description of the types of tax-qualified retirement plans for which the Contracts are available.
Contributions to a tax-qualified Contract are typically made with pre-tax dollars, while contributions to other Contracts are typically made with after-tax dollars, though there are exceptions in either case. Tax-qualified Contracts may also be subject to restrictions on withdrawals that do not apply to other Contracts. These restrictions may be imposed to meet the requirements of the IRC or of an employer plan.
Individual Retirement Annuities. IRC Sections 219 and 408 permit certain individuals or their employers to contribute to an individual retirement arrangement known as an Individual Retirement Annuity or IRA. Under applicable limitations, an individual may claim a tax deduction for certain contributions to an IRA. Contributions made to an IRA for an employee under a Simplified Employee Pension (SEP) Plan or Savings Incentive Match Plan for Employees (SIMPLE) established by an employer are not includable in the gross income of the employee until distributed from the IRA. Distributions from an IRA are taxable to the extent that they represent contributions for which a tax deduction was claimed, contributions made under a SEP plan or SIMPLE, or income earned within the IRA.
Roth IRAs. IRC Section 408A permits certain individuals to contribute to a Roth IRA. Contributions to a Roth IRA are not tax deductible. Tax-free distributions of contributions may be made at any time. Distributions of earnings are tax-free following the five-year period beginning with the first year for which a Roth IRA contribution was made if the Owner has attained age 591/2, become disabled, or died, or for qualified first-time homebuyer expenses.
Tax-Sheltered Annuities. IRC Section 403(b) permits public schools and charitable, religious, educational, and scientific organizations described in IRC Section 501(c)(3) to establish tax-sheltered annuity or TSA plans for their employees. TSA contributions and Contract earnings are generally not included in the gross income of the employee until distributed from the TSA. Amounts attributable to contributions made under a salary reduction agreement cannot be distributed until the employee attains age 591/2, severs employment, becomes disabled, incurs a hardship, is eligible for a qualified reservist distribution, or dies. The IRC and the plan may impose additional restrictions on distributions.
Pension, ProfitSharing, and 401(k) Plans. IRC Section 401 permits employers to establish various types of retirement plans for employees and permits self-employed individuals to establish such plans for themselves and their employees. These plans may use annuity contracts to fund plan benefits. Generally, contributions are deductible to the employer in the year made, and contributions and earnings are generally not included in the gross income of the employee until distributed from the plan. The IRC and the plan may
impose restrictions on distributions. Purchasers of a Contract for use with such plans should seek competent advice regarding the suitability of the Contract under the particular plan.
Governmental Eligible Deferred Compensation Plans. State and local government employers may purchase annuity contracts to fund eligible deferred compensation plans for their employees, as described in IRC Section 457(b). Contributions and earnings are generally not included in the gross income of the employee until the employee receives distributions from the plan. Amounts cannot be distributed until the employee attains age 701/2, severs employment, becomes disabled, incurs an unforeseeable emergency, or dies. The plan may impose additional restrictions on distributions.
Roth TSAs, Roth 401(k)s, and Roth 457(b)s. IRC Section 402A permits TSA plans, 401(k) plans, and governmental 457(b) plans to allow participating employees to designate some part or all of their future elective contributions as Roth contributions. Roth contributions to a TSA plan, 401(k) plan, or governmental 457(b) plan are included in the employees taxable income as earned. Amounts attributable to Roth TSA, Roth 401(k), or Roth 457(b) contributions must be held in a separate account from amounts attributable to traditional pre-tax TSA, 401(k), or 457(b) contributions. Distributions from a Roth TSA, Roth 401(k), or Roth 457(b) account are considered to come proportionally from contributions and earnings. Distributions attributable to Roth account contributions are tax-free. Distributions attributable to Roth account earnings are tax-free following the five-year period beginning with the first year for which Roth contributions are made to the plan if the employee has attained age 591/2, become disabled, or died. A Roth TSA, Roth 401(k), or Roth 457(b) account is subject to the same distribution restrictions that apply to amounts attributable to traditional pre-tax TSA, 401(k), or 457(b) contributions made under a salary reduction agreement. The plan may impose additional restrictions on distributions.
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Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Plans
Employers may invest in annuity contracts in connection with unfunded deferred compensation plans for their employees. Such plans may include eligible deferred compensation plans of non-governmental tax-exempt employers, as described in IRC Section 457(b); deferred compensation plans of both governmental and nongovernmental tax-exempt employers that are taxed under IRC Section 457(f) and subject to Section 409A; and nonqualified deferred compensation plans of for-profit employers subject to Section 409A. In most cases, these plans are designed so that amounts credited under the plan will not be includable in the employees gross income until paid under the plan. In these situations, the Contracts are not plan assets and are subject to the claims of the employers general creditors. Whether or not made from the Contract, plan benefit payments are subject to restrictions imposed by the IRC and the plan.
The following chart summarizes the basic income tax rules governing tax-qualified retirement plans, nonqualified deferred compensation plans, and other non-tax-qualified Contracts.
Tax-Qualified Contracts and Plans |
Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Plans |
Other Non-Tax-Qualified Contracts | ||||
Plan Types | IRC §408 (IRA, SEP, SIMPLE IRA) IRC §408A (Roth IRA) IRC §403(b) (Tax Sheltered Annuity) IRC §401 (Pension, ProfitSharing, 401(k)) Governmental IRC §457(b) IRC §402A (Roth TSA, Roth 401(k), or Roth 457(b)) |
IRC §409A Nongovernmental IRC §457(b) IRC §457(f) |
IRC §72 only | |||
Who May Purchase a Contract | Eligible employee, employer, or employer plan. | Employer on behalf of eligible employee. Employer generally loses tax-deferred status of Contract itself. | Anyone. Non-natural person will generally lose tax-deferred status. | |||
Contribution Limits | Contributions are limited by the IRC and/or plan requirements | None | ||||
Distribution Restrictions | Distributions from Contract and/or plan may be restricted to meet IRC and/or plan requirements. | None. | ||||
Taxation of Withdrawals, Surrenders, and Lump Sum Death Benefit | Generally, 100% of distributions must be included in taxable income. However, the portion that represents any after-tax investment is not taxable. Distributions from Roth IRA are deemed to come first from after-tax contributions. Distributions from other plans are generally deemed to come from taxable income and after-tax investment (if any) on a pro-rata basis. Distributions from §408A Roth IRA or §402A Roth TSA, Roth 401(k), or Roth 457(b) are completely tax free if certain requirements are met.
For tax purposes, all IRAs and SEP IRAs of an owner are treated as a single IRA, and all Roth IRAs of an owner are treated as a single Roth IRA. |
Generally, distributions must be included in taxable income until all accumulated earnings are paid out. Thereafter, distributions are tax-free return of the original investment.
However, distributions are tax-free until any investment made before August 14, 1982 is returned.
For tax purposes, all non-tax-qualified annuity contracts issued to the same owner by the same insurer in the same calendar year are treated as one contract. |
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Tax-Qualified Contracts and Plans |
Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Plans |
Other Non-Tax-Qualified Contracts | ||||
Taxation of Annuitization Payments (annuity benefit or death benefit) | For fixed dollar benefit payments, a percentage of each payment is tax free equal to the ratio of after-tax investment (if any) to the total expected payments, and the balance is included in taxable income. For variable dollar benefit payments, a specific dollar amount of each payment is tax free, as predetermined by a pro rata formula, rather than a percentage of each payment. In either case, once the after-tax investment has been recovered, the full amount of each benefit payment is included in taxable income. Distributions from a Roth IRA, Roth TSA, Roth 401(k), or Roth 457(b) are completely tax free if certain requirements are met. | |||||
Possible Penalty Taxes for Distributions Before Age 591/2 | Taxable portion of payments made before age 591/2 may be subject to 10% penalty tax (or 25% for a SIMPLE IRA during the first two years of participation). Penalty taxes do not apply to payments after the participants death, or to §457 plans. Other exceptions may apply. | None. | Taxable portion of payments made before age 591/2 may be subject to a 10% penalty tax. Penalty taxes do not apply to payments after the Owners death. Other exceptions may apply. | |||
Assignment/ Transfer of Contract |
Assignment and transfer of Ownership generally not permitted. | Generally, deferred earnings taxable to transferor upon transfer or assignment. Gift tax consequences are not discussed herein. | ||||
Federal Income Tax Withholding | Eligible rollover distributions from §401, §403(b), and governmental §457(b) plans are subject to 20% mandatory withholding on taxable portion unless direct rollover. For other payments, Payee may generally elect to have taxes withheld or not. | Generally subject to wage withholding. | Generally, Payee may elect to have taxes withheld or not. |
Rollovers, Transfers, and Exchanges
Amounts from a tax-qualified Contract may be rolled over, transferred, or exchanged into another tax-qualified account or retirement plan as permitted by the IRC and plan(s). Amounts may be rolled over, transferred, or exchanged into a tax-qualified Contract from another tax-qualified account or retirement plan as permitted by the IRC and plan(s). In most cases, such a rollover, transfer, or exchange is not taxable, unless the rollover of pre-tax amounts is made into a Roth IRA, a Roth TSA, Roth 401(k), or Roth 457(b). Rollovers, transfers, and exchanges are not subject to normal contribution limits. The IRC or plan may require that rollovers be held in a separate Contract from other plan funds.
Amounts from a non-tax-qualified Contract may be transferred to another non-tax-qualified annuity or to a qualified long-term care policy as a tax-free exchange under IRC Section 1035. Amounts from another non-tax-qualified annuity or from a life insurance or endowment policy may be transferred to a non-tax-qualified Contract as a tax-free exchange under IRC Section 1035.
The Contracts are subject to the required distribution rules of federal tax law. These rules vary based on the tax qualification of the Contract or the plan under which it is issued.
During the life of the Owner or plan participant:
| For a tax-qualified Contract, required minimum distributions must generally start by April 1 following the year the participant attains age 73 (age 75 if born after December 31, 1959, or age 72 if born after June 30, 1949, but before January 1, 1951, or age 70 1/2 if born on or before June 30, 1949). However, a participant in a TSA, a pension, profit-Sharing, or 401(k) plan, or a governmental 457(b) plan may delay the start of required minimum distributions from the plan until April 1 following the year that the plan participant retires from the employer as long as he or she is not a 5% owner of the employer. No required minimum distributions are required during the life of the Owner or plan participant from a Roth IRA, or a designated Roth 401(k) account, Roth 403(b) account, or governmental Roth 457(b) account. |
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| For a Roth IRA or a designated Roth 401(k) account, Roth 403(b) account, or governmental Roth 457(b) account, there are no required distributions during the owners life. |
| For a nonqualified deferred compensation plan, required distributions are determined by the terms of the plan and the deferral elections of the plan participant. |
| For a Contract that is not tax-qualified, there are no required distributions during the Owner or plan participants life. |
After the death of the Owner or plan participant:
| For a tax-qualified Contract, required minimum distributions vary depending on the type of beneficiary and whether the Owner died before or after the date that required minimum distributions must start. Some beneficiaries may take payments over life or life expectancy, others must receive all benefits within five or ten years after death, and others must take payments over life or life expectancy for nine years with a final payment in the tenth year after death. |
| For a nonqualified deferred compensation plan, required distributions are determined by the terms of the plan and the deferral elections of the plan participant. |
| For a Contract that is not tax-qualified, if payments have begun under a settlement option, then after death any remaining payments must be made at least as rapidly as those made or required before death. Otherwise, the death benefit must be paid out in full within five years of death or must be paid out in substantially equal payments beginning within one year of death over the life or a period not exceeding the life expectancy of the designated beneficiary. |
| For a traditional IRA, a Roth IRA, or a Contract that is not tax-qualified, a beneficiary who is a surviving spouse as defined by federal tax law may elect out of these requirements and apply the required distribution rules as if the Contract were his or her own. |
Life expectancies for required distributions are calculated based on standard life expectancy tables adopted under federal tax law.
DELIVERY OF DOCUMENTS TO CONTRACT OWNERS
Reports and Confirmations. At least once each contract year, we will mail reports of the Contracts Account Value and any other information required by law to you. We will not send these reports after the Commencement Date or a full surrender of the Contract, whichever is first.
We will confirm receipt of any Purchase Payments made after the initial Purchase Payment in quarterly statements of account activity.
Householding Revocation of Consent. Owners at a shared address who have consented to receive only one copy of each prospectus, annual report, or other required document per household (householding) may revoke their consent at any time, and may receive separate documents, by contacting the Company at 1-800-789-6771 or www.massmutualascend.com.
Owners who are currently receiving multiple copies of required documents may contact the Company at 1-800-789-6771 or www.massmutualascend.com for additional information about householding.
Electronic Delivery of Required Documents. Owners who wish to receive prospectuses, SAIs, annual reports, and other required documents only in electronic form must give their consent. Consent may be revoked at any time. Please contact the Company at 1-800-789-6771 or visit our website at www.massmutualascend.com for additional information about electronic delivery of documents.
The financial statements and reports of the independent registered public accounting firm of the Company and of the Separate Account are included in the Statement of Additional Information.
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APPENDIX A: INVESTMENT OPTIONS AVAILABLE UNDER THE CONTRACT
Variable Options
The following is a list of Portfolios available under the Contract. More information about the Portfolios is available in the prospectuses for the Portfolios, which may be amended from time to time and can be found online at www.massmutualascend.com/variable-compliance. You can also request this information at no cost by calling 1-800-789-6771 or by sending an e-mail request to varannsrvteam@mmascend.com. Depending on the optional benefits you choose, you may not be able to invest in certain Portfolios.
The current expenses and performance information below reflects fees and expenses of the Portfolios, but do not reflect the other fees and expenses that your Contract may charge. Expenses would be higher and performance would be lower if these other charges were included. Each Portfolios past performance is not necessarily an indication of future performance.
Average Annual Total Returns (as of 12/31/24) | ||||||||||
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE |
PORTFOLIO and ADVISOR/SUBADVISOR |
CURRENT EXPENSES |
1 year |
5 year |
10 Year | |||||
Seeks capital appreciation |
Invesco V.I. Discovery Large Cap FundSeries I # Invesco Advisers, Inc. |
.80% | 34.16% | 16.05% | 13.25% | |||||
Seeks capital appreciation |
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth FundSeries I Invesco Advisers, Inc. |
.85% | 24.23% | 10.21% | 11.57% | |||||
Capital appreciation and current income |
Invesco V.I. Equity and Income FundSeries I Invesco Advisers, Inc. |
.57% | 12.12% | 8.38% | 7.36% | |||||
Seeks capital appreciation |
Invesco V.I. Main Street FundSeries I # Invesco Advisers, Inc. |
.80% | 23.65% | 12.08% | 11.24% | |||||
Long-term capital appreciation |
Invesco V.I. American Value FundSeries I Invesco Advisers, Inc. |
.89% | 30.41% | 13.69% | 9.12% | |||||
Seeks capital growth and income |
Invesco V.I. Comstock FundSeries I Invesco Advisers, Inc. |
.76% | 15.18% | 11.59% | 9.49% | |||||
Long-term growth of capital |
Invesco V.I. Core Equity FundSeries I Invesco Advisers, Inc. |
.80% | 25.60% | 12.35% | 9.42% | |||||
Provide reasonable current income and long-term growth of income and capital |
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend FundSeries I Invesco Advisers, Inc. |
.68% | 13.22% | 7.64% | 7.83% | |||||
Long-term growth of capital |
Invesco V.I. Health Care FundSeries I Invesco Advisers, Inc. |
.99% | 4.17% | 3.64% | 5.40% | |||||
Total return comprised of current income and capital appreciation |
Invesco V.I. High Yield FundSeries I Invesco Advisers, Inc. |
.89% | 7.73% | 2.97% | 3.81% | |||||
Long-term growth of capital |
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity FundSeries I Invesco Advisers, Inc. |
.95% | 18.09% | 10.89% | 8.09% | |||||
Capital appreciation and some current income |
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation PortfolioClass II ALPS Advisers, Inc. Sub-Advisor: Morningstar Investment Management LLC |
.86% | 10.17% | 5.53% | 5.54% | |||||
Current income and preservation of capital |
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation PortfolioClass II # ALPS Advisers, Inc. Sub-Advisor: Morningstar Investment Management LLC |
.84% | 5.29% | 2.01% | 2.76% | |||||
Capital appreciation |
Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation PortfolioClass II | .87% | 12.67% | 7.32% | 7.00% |
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Average Annual Total Returns (as of 12/31/24) | ||||||||||
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE |
PORTFOLIO and ADVISOR/SUBADVISOR |
CURRENT EXPENSES |
1 year |
5 year |
10 Year | |||||
ALPS Advisers, Inc. Sub-Advisor: Morningstar Investment Management LLC |
||||||||||
Current income and capital appreciation |
Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation PortfolioClass II # | .85% | 7.97% | 3.81% | 4.13% | |||||
ALPS Advisers, Inc. Sub-Advisor: Morningstar Investment Management LLC |
||||||||||
Seeks capital growth | LVIP American Century Capital Appreciation Fund Std. Class II # Lincoln Financial Investments Corporation Sub-adviser: American Century Investment Management, Inc. |
.79% | 24.98% | 11.42% | 10.96% | |||||
Long-term capital growth | LVIP American Century Large Company Value Fund Std. Class II # Lincoln Financial Investments Corporation Sub-adviser: American Century Investment Management, Inc. |
.70% | 10.72% | 7.46% | 7.53% | |||||
Long-term capital growth | LVIP American Century Mid Cap Value FundStd. Class II # Lincoln Financial Investments Corporation Sub-adviser: American Century Investment Management, Inc. |
.86% | 8.73% | 7.29% | 8.03% | |||||
Long-term capital growth | LVIP American Century Ultra® FundStd. Class II # Lincoln Financial Investments Corporation Sub-adviser: American Century Investment Management, Inc. |
.75% | 28.80% | 18.20% | 16.46% | |||||
Seeks results greater than the total return of the S&P MidCap 400 index |
MidCap Stock PortfolioService Shares # BNY Mellon Investment Adviser, Inc. Sub-adviser: Newton Investment Management North America, LLC |
1.05% | 12.33% | 9.00% | 7.22% | |||||
Seeks capital appreciation | Technology Growth PortfolioInitial Shares BNY Mellon Investment Adviser, Inc. Sub-adviser: Newton Investment Management North America, LLC |
.90% | 25.74% | 15.58% | 15.08% | |||||
Match the total return of the S&P 500 index |
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc.- Initial Shares BNY Mellon Investment Adviser, Inc. |
.27% | 24.67% | 14.21% | 12.81% | |||||
Long-term capital appreciation | BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc.Initial Shares BNY Mellon Investment Adviser, Inc. Sub-Advisor: Newton Investment Management Limited |
.67% | 24.89% | 13.46% | 11.52% | |||||
Seeks long-term capital growth consistent with the preservation of capital |
Appreciation PortfolioInitial Shares BNY Mellon Investment Adviser, Inc. Sub-Adviser: Fayez Sarofim & Co. |
.85% | 12.81% | 11.95% | 11.56% | |||||
Seeks as a high a level of current income as is consistent with the preservation of capital and maintenance of liquidity |
Government Money Market Portfolio # BNY Mellon Investment Adviser, Inc. Subadviser: Dreyfus |
.36% | 4.76% | 2.15% | 1.40% |
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Average Annual Total Returns (as of 12/31/24) | ||||||||||
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE |
PORTFOLIO and ADVISOR/SUBADVISOR |
CURRENT EXPENSES |
1 year |
5 year |
10 Year | |||||
Seeks long-term capital growth, current income and growth of income consistent with reasonable investment risk |
Growth and Income PortfolioInitial Shares # BNY Mellon Investment Adviser, Inc. Sub-adviser: Newton Investment Management North America, LLC |
.70% | 22.73% | 15.70% | 13.07% | |||||
Seeks capital growth | Opportunistic Small Cap PortfolioInitial Shares # BNY Mellon Investment Adviser, Inc. Sub-adviser: Newton Investment Management North America, LLC |
.74% | 4.62% | 5.89% | 6.47% | |||||
Seeks to replicate the performance of the Russell 2000 Index |
DWS Small Cap Index VIPClass A # DWS Investment Management Americas, Inc. Sub-adviser: Northern Trust Investments, Inc. |
.38% | 11.15% | 7.09% | 7.53% | |||||
Seeks long-term capital growth | Templeton Foreign VIP Fund -Class 2 # Templeton Investment Counsel, LLC |
1.06% | -0.79% | 2.86% | 2.64% | |||||
Seeks long-term capital growth, consistent with preservation of capital and balanced by current income |
Janus Henderson Balanced PortfolioInstitutional Shares Janus Henderson Investors US LLC |
.62% | 15.43% | 8.33% | 8.66% | |||||
Seeks long-term capital growth | Janus Henderson Enterprise PortfolioInstitutional Shares Janus Henderson Investors US LLC |
.72% | 15.61% | 9.88% | 12.40% | |||||
Seeks long-term growth of capital | Janus Henderson Forty PortfolioInstitutional Shares Janus Henderson Investors US LLC |
.58% | 28.47% | 15.40% | 15.65% | |||||
Seeks long-term growth of capital | Janus Henderson Overseas PortfolioInstitutional Shares Janus Henderson Investors US LLC |
.88% | 5.84% | 7.21% | 5.55% | |||||
Seeks long-term growth of capital | Janus Henderson Research PortfolioInstitutional Shares Janus Henderson Investors US LLC |
.67% | 35.31% | 16.79% | 14.53% | |||||
Seeks long-term capital growth | Discovery PortfolioClass I # Morgan Stanley Investment Management, Inc. |
0.95% | 41.83% | 11.21% | 12.13% | |||||
Seeks maximum real return, consistent with preservation of real capital and prudent investment management |
PIMCO Real Return PortfolioAdministrative Class Pacific Investment Management Company LLC |
1.07% | 2.13% | 1.93% | 2.16% | |||||
Seeks maximum total return, consistent with preservation of capital and prudent investment management |
PIMCO Total Return PortfolioAdministrative Class Pacific Investment Management Company LLC |
0.79% | 2.53% | -0.03% | 1.53% |
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Average Annual Total Returns (as of 12/31/24) |
||||||||||||||||||
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE |
PORTFOLIO and ADVISOR/SUBADVISOR |
CURRENT EXPENSES |
1 year |
5 year |
10 Year |
|||||||||||||
Seeks to realize a high long-term total rate of return |
Wilshire Global Allocation Fund Wilshire Advisors LLC |
1.30 | % | 10.97 | % | 5.86 | % | 5.91 | % | |||||||||
High long-term total return through growth and current income |
Calamos Growth and Income Portfolio (closed)* Calamos Advisers, LLC |
1.26 | % | 21.08 | % | 11.84 | % | 10.06 | % | |||||||||
Seeks long-term growth of capital |
Davis Equity Portfolio (closed)* Davis Selected Advisers, L.P. Sub-Advisor: Davis Selected Advisers-NY, Inc. (an affiliate of Davis Selected Advisors, L.P.) |
0.72 | % | 18.05 | % | 10.48 | % | 10.02 | % | |||||||||
Seeks long-term growth of capital |
Janus Henderson Global Research Portfolio Institutional (closed)* Janus Henderson Investors US LLC |
0.72 | % | 23.58 | % | 12.35 | % | 10.55 | % |
# | Certain Portfolios and their investment advisers have entered into temporary expense reimbursements and/or fee waivers, which are reflected in the Current Expenses. Please see the Portfolios prospectuses for additional information about these arrangements. |
If you previously activated the guaranteed minimum withdrawal benefit rider or the guaranteed lifetime withdrawal benefit rider, you can only allocate your Account Value among the following Portfolios:
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio | Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio | |
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio | Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio |
* | Each Closed Subaccount is an additional investment option available only to Contract Owners who held Accumulation Units in the Subaccount on the cutoff date set out below. Each Closed Subaccount will become unavailable to you once you no longer have money in that Closed Subaccount. |
CLOSED PORTFOLIO |
CUTOFF DATE | |
Calamos Growth and Income Portfolio | April 30, 2012 | |
Davis Value Portfolio | April 30, 2015 | |
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio | November 30, 2004 |
Fixed Options
The following is a list of Fixed Options currently available under the Contract. We may change the features of the Fixed Options listed below, offer new Fixed Options, and terminate existing Fixed Options. We will provide you with written notice before doing so. Please see the section titled THE FIXED ACCOUNTS in this prospectus for more information.
Name |
Term |
Minimum Guaranteed Interest Rate* | ||||
Fixed Accumulation Account Option |
n/a |
1 | % | |||
Fixed Account Option Three-Year Guarantee Period |
3 Year |
1 | % | |||
Fixed Account Option Five-Year Guarantee Period |
5 Year |
1 | % | |||
Fixed Account Option Seven-Year Guarantee Period |
7 Year |
1 | % |
* | The minimum guaranteed interest rate may vary by Contract but will never be less than 1%. Please review your Contract specifications for information specific to your Contract. |
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APPENDIX B: TRANSFER RESTRICTIONS
Restrictions on Transfers; Disruptive Trading, Market Timing and Frequent Transfers. We discourage (and will take action to deter) short-term trading in the Contracts because the frequent movement between or among Subaccounts may negatively impact other Contract Owners, Annuitants and Beneficiaries. Short-term trading can result in: (1) the dilution of Accumulation Unit Values or Portfolio net asset values; (2) Portfolio advisors taking actions that negatively impact performance such as keeping a larger portion of the Portfolio assets in cash or liquidating investments prematurely in order to support redemption requests; and (3) increased administrative costs due to frequent purchases and redemptions To help protect Contract Owners, Annuitants and Beneficiaries from the negative impact of these practices, we have implemented several processes and/or restrictions aimed at eliminating the negative impact of active trading strategies. There is no guarantee that we will be able to detect harmful trading practices, or, if it is detected, to prevent recurrences.
U.S. Mail Restrictions on Persons Engaged in Harmful Trading Practices. We monitor transfer activity in order to identify those who may be engaged in harmful trading practices and we produce and examine transaction reports. Generally, a Contract may appear on these reports if the Contract Owner (or a third party acting on their behalf) engages in a certain number of transfer events in a given period. A transfer event is any transfer, or combination of transfers, occurring on a given trading day (Valuation Date). For example, multiple transfers by a Contract Owner involving 10 underlying Portfolios in one day count as one transfer event. A single transfer occurring on a given trading day and involving only 2 underlying Portfolios (or one underlying Portfolio if the transfer is made to or from the Fixed Account options) will also count as one transfer event. A transfer event would not include a transfer made pursuant to one of the automatic transfer programs such as dollar cost averaging, portfolio rebalancing and interest sweep.
As a result of this monitoring process, we may restrict the method of communication by which transfer requests will be accepted. In general, we will adhere to the following guidelines.
Trading Behavior |
Our Response | |
6 or more transfer events in one quarter of a contract year |
We will mail a letter to the Contract Owner notifying the Contract Owner that:
we have identified the Contract Owner as a person engaging in harmful trading practices; and
if the Contract Owners transfer events exceed 12 in one contract year, we will automatically require the Contract Owner to submit transfer requests via regular first-class U.S. mail and we will not accept transfer requests from the Contract Owner that are sent by other means such as electronic means or overnight, priority or courier delivery.
| |
More than 12 transfer events in one contract year |
We will automatically require the Contract Owner to submit transfer requests via regular first-class U.S. mail and we will not accept transfer requests from the Contract Owner that are sent by any other means. |
On each Contract anniversary, we will start the monitoring anew, so that each Contract starts with zero transfer events the first day of each new contract year. See, however, the Other Restrictions provision below.
U.S Mail Restrictions on Managers of Multiple Contracts. Some investment advisors/representatives manage the assets of multiple Contracts pursuant to trading authority granted or conveyed by multiple Contract Owners. We generally will require these multi-contract advisors to submit all transfers requests via regular first-class U.S. mail.
The Company may permit a manager of multiple contracts to submit transfer requests other than by mail upon written request if contracts are managed independently rather than in the aggregate. The manager of multiple contracts must provide the Company with sufficient information regarding the management methodology to support the representation that aggregate transfers will not be an intended or unintended consequence of day to day management decisions. The Company will monitor the contracts associated with the grant of any exception and, in the event a pattern of aggregate transactions emerges, again require transfer request via U.S. mail.
Other Restrictions. We reserve the right to refuse or limit transfer requests, or take any other action we deem necessary, in order to protect Contract Owners, Annuitants, and Beneficiaries from the negative investment results that may result from short-term trading or other harmful investment practices employed by some Contract Owners (or third parties acting on their behalf). In particular, trading strategies designed to avoid or take advantage of our monitoring procedures (and other measures aimed at curbing harmful trading practices) that are nevertheless determined by us to constitute harmful trading practices, may be restricted. We will consider the following factors:
| the dollar amount involved in the transfer event |
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| the total assets of the Portfolio involved in the transfer event |
| the number of transfer events completed in the current quarter of the contract year |
| whether the transfer event is part of a pattern of transfer events designed to take advantage of short-term market fluctuations or market efficiencies |
In addition, the Portfolios reserve the right, in their sole discretion and without prior notice, to reject, restrict or refuse purchase orders received from insurance company separate accounts that the Portfolios determine not to be in the best interest of their shareholders. We will apply such rejections, restrictions or refusals by the Portfolios uniformly and without exception.
The restrictions discussed above are designed to prevent harmful trading practices. Despite such transfer restrictions, there is a risk that such harmful trading practices could still occur. If we determine our goal of curtailing harmful trading practices is not being fulfilled, we may amend or replace the procedures described above without prior notice. We will consider waiving the procedures described above for unanticipated financial emergencies; for example, if extent economic conditions arise such that the impact of short-term trading is benign or a positive, the Company may allow it.
Information Sharing. As required by Rule 22c-2 under the Investment Company Act of 1940, we have entered into information sharing agreements with Portfolio companies. Under the terms of these agreements, we are required, if requested by a Portfolio company:
| To provide Contract owner information and information about transactions in the Portfolio shares during a specified period; and |
| To prohibit or restrict further purchases or exchanges by a Contract owner if the Portfolio company identifies the Contract owner as a person who has engaged in trading that violated the Portfolio companys frequent trading policies. |
Group Contracts. In the case of a group contract, the transfer restrictions will apply to participants who have an interest in the group contract. For example, if a participant engages in more than 12 transfer events in one Contract year, we will automatically require the participant to submit transfer requests via regular first-class U.S. mail and we will not accept transfer requests from the participant that are sent by any other means.
APPENDIX C: DEATH BENEFIT AMOUNT (VERSION 2E)
This Appendix C provides information you should know regarding the Death Benefit Amount if one of the scenarios described below applies to your Contract.
Scenario E-1
| Your state of residence was Minnesota when you purchased your Contract; |
| you purchased an individual Contract before August 7, 2003 but after the 2000 Death Benefit Endorsement was approved in Minnesota; and |
| you elected the optional Enhanced Death Benefit Amount before the Contract was issued. |
Scenario E-2
| Your state of residence was any state other than Minnesota when you purchased your Contract; |
| you purchased an individual Contract before the 2003 Death Benefit Endorsement was approved in your state of residence but after the 2000 Death Benefit Endorsement was approved in your state; and |
| you elected the optional Enhanced Death Benefit Amount before the Contract was issued. |
In this Appendix C, we refer to the Contracts described in Scenarios E-1 and E-2 as Optional Death Benefit Contracts.
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CHARGES AND DEDUCTIONS
For Optional Death Benefit Contracts, the following information replaces the Mortality and Expense Risk Charge information contained in the body of the prospectus.
If you elected the optional Enhanced Death Benefit Amount, there is an additional charge for this benefit. This additional charge is included in the mortality and expense risk charge described below. This benefit and the associated additional charge cannot be discontinued after the Contract is issued.
Mortality and Expense Risk Charge |
Purpose of Charge: Compensation for bearing certain mortality and expense risks under the Contract. Mortality risks arise from the Companys obligation to pay benefit payments during the Benefit Payment Period and to pay the death benefit. The expense risk assumed by the Company is the risk that the Companys actual expenses in administering the Contracts and the Separate Account will exceed the amount recovered through the contract maintenance fees, transfer fees and administration charges.
This Mortality and Expense Risk Charge includes an additional charge for the Optional Enhanced Death Benefit Amount.
| |
Amount of Charge |
For Optional Death Benefit Contracts issued to an Owner age 65 or younger, a daily charge equal to 0.003724% of the daily Net Asset Value for each Subaccount, which corresponds to an effective annual rate of 1.35%.
For Optional Death Benefit Contracts issued to an Owner over age 65 but under age 79, a daily charge equal to 0.004141% of the daily Net Asset Value for each Subaccount, which corresponds to an effective annual rate of 1.50%.
| |
When Assessed |
During the Accumulation Period, and during the Benefit Payment Period if a variable dollar benefit is elected, the charge is deducted from amounts invested in the Subaccounts.
| |
Waivers |
None. |
DEATH BENEFIT
For Optional Death Benefit Contracts, the following information replaces the Death Benefit Amount information contained in the body of the prospectus.
Optional Enhanced Death Benefit Amount (Version 2E)
The optional Enhanced Death Benefit Amount will be based on the greatest of:
1) | the Account Value on the Death Benefit Valuation Date; |
2) | the Enhanced Minimum Death Benefit; or |
3) | the Enhanced Historic High Value. |
A withdrawal from the Contract may result in a reduction in the Death Benefit that is greater than the amount of the withdrawal. The Death Benefit Amount will be reduced by any applicable premium tax or other tax not previously deducted. It will also be reduced by any outstanding loans.
The death benefit will be allocated among the Subaccounts and Fixed Accounts options. This allocation will occur as of the Death Benefit Valuation Date. It will be made in the same proportion as the value of each option bears to the total Account Value immediately before that date.
Unless transferred by the Beneficiary, the portion of the Death Benefit Amount allocated to the Subaccounts will remain in those Subaccounts until the Death Benefit Commencement Date.
The Death Benefit Amount under this Contract will be finally determined using the Account Value on the Death Benefit Commencement Date. If the Death Benefit Commencement Date is later than the Death Benefit Valuation Date, the Death Benefit amount may be lower than the amount calculated on the Death Benefit Valuation Date.
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Enhanced Minimum Death Benefit. The Enhanced Minimum Death Benefit is equal to total Purchase Payments, reduced proportionally for partial surrenders, and increased by interest. This reduction will be in the same proportion that the Account Value was reduced on the date of the partial surrender.
| If the Owner dies before age 80, interest compounds daily, at an effective annual interest rate of 5%, to the Death Benefit Valuation Date. |
| If the Owner dies on or after his or her 80th birthday, interest compounds daily, at an effective annual interest rate of 5%, to the Contract anniversary prior to his or her 80th birthday. |
Enhanced Historic High Value. The Enhanced Historic High Value is equal to the Enhanced High Value, reduced proportionally for withdrawals taken after that Enhanced High Value was reached. This reduction will be in the same proportion that the Account Value was reduced on the date of withdrawal. The Enhanced High Value is the largest Account Value on any Contract anniversary before the Death Benefit Valuation Date and prior to age 80.
Example of Determination of Optional Enhanced Death Benefit Amount for Version 2E. This example is intended to help you understand how a withdrawal impacts the optional Enhanced Death Benefit Amount and how the optional Enhanced Death Benefit Amount is calculated.
This example assumes:
| your total Purchase Payments equal $100,000 and your Account Value is $90,000, |
| the Enhanced High Value is $140,000, |
| you withdraw $10,000 from the Contract, and you are left with an Account Value of $80,000; and |
| the Death Benefit Commencement Date is not after the Death Benefit Valuation Date. |
It also assumes that, for purposes of calculating the optional Enhanced Death Benefit Amount, total Purchase Payments will be increased by interest in the amount of $107,893, which represents interest at an annual effective rate of 5% for 10 years.
Step One: Calculate the proportional reduction in the Purchase Payment amount.
1 |
$80,000 | Account Value immediately after withdrawal |
= 11.1111% | Percentage Reduction | ||||
$90,000 | Account Value immediately before withdrawal |
$100,000 | Purchase Payments |
x11.1111% | Percentage Reduction |
= $11,111 | Proportional Reduction |
Step Two: Calculate the Enhanced Minimum Death Benefit (reduced Purchase Payment amount, increased by interest).
Purchase Payments |
$ | 100,000 | ||
Less proportional reduction for withdrawals |
11,111 | |||
Purchase Payments reduced for withdrawals |
88,889 | |||
Plus interest |
+ 107,893 | |||
Minimum Death Benefit |
$ | 196,782 |
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Step Three: Calculate the proportional reduction in the Enhanced High Value.
1 |
$80,000 | Account Value immediately after withdrawal | = 11.1111% | Percentage Reduction | ||||
$90,000 | Account Value immediately before withdrawal |
$140,000 | Enhanced High Value |
x11.1111% | Percentage Reduction |
= $15,556 | Proportional Reduction |
Step Four: Calculate the Enhanced Historic High Value amount, which is the same as the reduced High Value amount.
Enhanced High Value |
$ | 140,000 | ||
Less proportional reduction for withdrawals |
15,556 | |||
Enhanced Historic High Value |
$ | 124,444 |
Step Five: Determine the Death Benefit amount.
Immediately after the withdrawal, the applicable amounts are:
Account Value |
$ | 80,000 | ||
Enhanced Minimum Death Benefit |
$ | 196,782 | ||
Enhanced Historic High Value |
$ | 124,444 |
Immediately after the withdrawal, the Enhanced Minimum Death Benefit of $196,782 is greater than the Enhanced Historic High Value of $124,444 and the Account Value of $80,000, so the Death Benefit amount would be $196,782.
The statement of additional information (SAI) dated May 1, 2025 includes additional information. The SAI is incorporated by reference. The SAI is available, without charge, upon request. For a free copy of the SAI, or to request other information about the Contract or make other inquiries, call us at 1-800-789-6771 or visit us at our website www.massmutualascend.com to request a copy.
Reports and other information about the Company are available on the SECs website at https://www.sec.gov/, and copies of this information may be obtained, upon payment of a duplicating fee, by electronic request at the following email address: publicinfo@sec.gov.
EDGAR contract identifier C000029685
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ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY®
ANNUITY INVESTORS® VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
INDIVIDUAL AND GROUP FLEXIBLE PREMIUM DEFERRED VARIABLE ANNUITIES
The Commodore Spirit®
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION DATED MAY 1, 2025
This Statement of Additional Information supplements the current prospectus for The Commodore Spirit variable annuity contract (the Contract) offered by Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company® through Annuity Investors® Variable Account B (Separate Account). This statement of additional information is not a prospectus and should be read only in conjunction with the Prospectus for the Contract dated May 1, 2025. Terms used in the current prospectus for the Contract are incorporated in this Statement of Additional Information and have the same meaning as in the Prospectus.
A copy of a Contract prospectus dated May 1, 2025, as supplemented from time to time, may be obtained without charge by writing to Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company, P.O. Box 5423, Cincinnati, Ohio 45201-5423. You may also call us at 1-800-789-6771 or visit us at our website www.massmutualascend.com/variablecompliance to request a copy.
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ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
General Information and History
Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company® (the Company, we, us, or our) is a stock life insurance company incorporated under the laws of the State of Ohio in 1981. We are principally engaged in the sale of fixed and variable annuity contracts.
We are a wholly owned subsidiary of MassMutual Ascend Life Insurance Company® (MMALIC), which is a wholly owned subsidiary of Glidepath Holdings, Inc. which is in turn a wholly owned subsidiary of Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company (MassMutual).
MMALIC is a stock life insurance company principally engaged in the sale of fixed and variable annuity contracts. Glidepath is a financial services holding company. MassMutual is a mutual life insurance company. MassMutual and its domestic life insurance subsidiaries provide individual and group life insurance, disability insurance, individual and group annuities and guaranteed insurance contracts to individual and institutional customers in all 50 states in the U.S., the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico.
Annuity Investors Variable Account B (the Separate Account) was established by the Company on December 19, 1996, as an insurance company separate account under the laws of the State of Ohio pursuant to resolution of the Companys Board of Directors. The Separate Account is registered with the SEC as a unit investment trust.
On May 28, 2021, American Financial Group, Inc. sold its annuity business consisting of MMALIC (formerly known as Great American Life Insurance Company) and its two insurance subsidiaries, Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company and Manhattan National Life Insurance Company, as well as a broker-dealer affiliate, MM Ascend Life Investor Services, LLC (formerly known as Great American Advisors, Inc), and insurance distributor, AAG Insurance Agency, Inc. to MassMutual.
We are subject to the insurance laws and regulations of all the jurisdictions where we are licensed to operate. The availability of certain Contract rights and provisions depends on state approval and/or filing and review processes in each jurisdiction. Where required by law or regulation, or to meet the requirements for inclusion as an investment option in certain retirement programs, the Contract will be modified accordingly.
NON-PRINCIPAL RISKS OF INVESTING IN THE CONTRACT
If you choose a variable investment option under your Contract, you are investing in a Subaccount, not directly in the corresponding Portfolio. Dividends and capital gains distributed by the Portfolios are not distributed to Contract owners. These dividends and capital gains are distributed to the Separate Account, reinvested in the Separate Account, and reflected in Accumulation Unit Values.
The Portfolios are available only through insurance company separate accounts and certain qualified retirement arrangements. Though a Portfolio may have a name and/or investment objectives that are similar to those of a publicly available mutual fund, and/or may be managed by the same investment advisor that manages a publicly available mutual fund, the performance of the Portfolio is entirely independent of the performance of any publicly available mutual fund. Neither the Company nor the Portfolios make any representations or assurances that the investment performance of any Portfolio will be the same or similar to the investment performance of any publicly available mutual fund.
We select the Portfolios offered through the Contract. We may consider various factors in portfolio selection, including, but not limited to, asset class coverage, the strength of the reputation and tenure of the investment advisor and any sub-advisor, brand recognition, performance, and the capability and qualification of each investment firm. We may also consider whether the portfolio, its investment adviser or one of its service providers will make payments to us in connection with certain administrative, marketing, and support services.
Safekeeping of Separate Account Assets
We hold title to assets of the Separate Account. The Separate Account assets are segregated from our general account assets. Records are maintained of all purchases and redemptions of Portfolio shares held by each of the Subaccounts. We hold title to assets invested in the Fixed Account options together with our other general account assets.
3
Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
The financial statements of the sub-accounts comprising Annuity Investors Variable Account B (the Separate Account) as of December 31, 2024, the related statements of operations for the year or period then ended and changes in net assets for each of the years or periods in the two-year period then ended, and the related notes including the financial highlights in Note 7 for each of the years or periods in the four-year period then ended and the financial statements of Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company as of December 31, 2024 and 2023 and for each of the three years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022, have been included herein in reliance upon the report of KPMG LLP, independent registered public accounting firm, appearing elsewhere herein, and upon the authority of said firm as experts in accounting and auditing.
The KPMG LLP report dated April 9, 2025 of Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company includes explanatory language that states that the financial statements are prepared by Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company using statutory accounting practices prescribed or permitted by the Ohio Department of Insurance, which is a basis of accounting other than U.S. generally accepted accounting principles. Accordingly, the KPMG LLP audit report states that the financial statements are not presented fairly in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles and further states that those statements are presented fairly, in all material respects, in accordance with statutory accounting practices prescribed or permitted by the Ohio Department of Insurance.
The KPMG LLP report dated April 9, 2025 of Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company includes an emphasis of matter paragraph that states that Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company elected to apply a prescribed practice promulgated under Ohio Administrative Code Section 3901-1-67 (OAC 3901-1-67) to its derivative instruments hedging indexed products and indexed annuity reserve liabilities. The opinion was not modified with respect to this matter.
The offering of the Contract to new purchasers has been suspended. Existing Contract owners may make additional purchase payments, however. Although we do not anticipate any further offering of the Contract, we reserve the right to resume offering the Contract.
Underwriting Commissions Paid to MMALIS
MM Ascend Life Investor Services, LLC (MMALIS), 191 Rosa Parks Street, Cincinnati, OH 45202, is the principal underwriter for all variable annuity contracts issued by Variable Account A, Variable Account B and Variable Account C of the Company (the AILIC VA Products). MMALIS is a wholly owned subsidiary of MMALIC and as a result, is an affiliate of the Company.
Aggregate dollar amounts of underwriting commissions paid to MMALIS totaled $1,782,636 in 2024, $1,824,431 in 2023, and $2.1 million in 2022, which MMALIS subsequently paid to selling firms in its distribution network. MMALIS did not retain any underwriting commissions in the last three fiscal years.
MMALIS Expenses Paid by MMALIC
MMALIC, an affiliate of the Company, pays for some of MMALISs operating and other expenses, including overhead, legal, and accounting fees.
Payments from the Portfolios and/or Their Service Providers
The Company and/or its affiliates may directly or indirectly receive payments from the Portfolios and/or their service providers (investment advisers, administrators and/or distributors) in connection with certain administrative, marketing and other services provided by the Company and/or its affiliates and expenses incurred by the Company and/or its affiliates. A Portfolio may also compensate the Company or MMALIS for the costs that it incurs in providing these services. For example, each business day, the Company aggregates all purchase, redemption, and transfer requests from Contract owners with respect to a Portfolio and submits one request to the applicable Portfolio. As a result, the Portfolio does not incur the expenses related to processing individual requests from Contract owners.
The Company and/or its affiliates generally receive three types of payments: Rule 12b-1 fees, support fees and other payments. The Company and its affiliates may use the proceeds from these payments for any corporate purpose, including payment of expenses related to promoting, issuing, distributing and administering the AILIC VA Products, marketing the underlying Portfolios, and administering the Separate Account. MMALIS also maintains the distribution network that supports the sale of the Company variable annuity products that invest in the Portfolios. The Company and its affiliates may profit from these payments.
Rule 12b-1 Fees. The Company and/or MMALIS receive some or all of the 12b-1 fees from the Portfolios that charge a 12b-1 fee. These fees are calculated as a percentage of the average daily net assets of the Portfolios attributable to the AILIC VA Products. These percentages currently range from 0.00% to 0.25%. Payments made under a Portfolios Rule 12b-1 plan are generally deducted from the Portfolios assets.
4
Administrative, Marketing, Sub-Transfer and Support Service Fees (Support Fees). The Company and/or MMALIS may receive compensation from some of the service providers of the Portfolios for administrative and other services that the Company performs relating to separate account operations that might otherwise have been provided by the Portfolios. Generally, the amount of this compensation is based on a percentage of the average assets of the particular Portfolios attributable to the AILIC VA Products. These percentages currently range from 0.00% to 0.25% and may be significant. Some service providers may pay more in Support Fees than others. The amount of Support Fees received by the Company and/or MMALIS may be significant.
Other Payments. The Company and/or MMALIS also may directly or indirectly receive additional amounts or different percentages of assets from some of the service providers of the Portfolios with regard to the AILIC VA Products. These payments may be derived, in whole or in part, from the advisory fees deducted from assets of the Portfolios. Owners of AILIC VA Products and participants in group AILIC VA Products, through their indirect investment in the Portfolios, bear a portion of the costs of these advisory fees. Certain investment advisers or their affiliates may provide the Company and/or MMALIS with wholesaling services to assist us in the distribution of the AILIC VA Products, may pay the Company and/or MMALIS amounts to participate in sales meetings, may reimburse sales costs, and may provide the Company and/or MMALIS with occasional gifts, meals, tickets or other compensation or reimbursement. The amount of such other payments received by the Company and/or MMALIS may be significant and may provide the investment adviser or other affiliates of the applicable Portfolio with increased access to the Company and MMALIS.
BENEFIT UNIT TRANSFER FORMULAS
Transfers of a Contract owners Benefit Units between Subaccounts during the Benefit Payment Period are implemented according to the following formulas.
BU1 (trans) | = | The number of Benefit Units to be transferred from a given Subaccount | ||
UNIT1 -BU1 (trans) | = | The number of the Contract Owners Benefit Units remaining in such Subaccount (after the transfer) | ||
BU2 (trans) | = | The number of Benefit Units transferred to the new Subaccount | ||
UNIT2 + BU2 (trans) | = | The number of the Contract Owners Benefit Units in the new Subaccount (after the transfer) |
Where:
| BU1 (trans) is the number of the Contract Owners Benefit Units transferred from a given Subaccount. |
| BU2 (trans) is the number of the Contract Owners Benefit Units transferred into the new Subaccount. |
BU2 (trans) = BU1 (trans) * BUV1 / BUV2.
| BUV1 is the Benefit Unit Value of the Subaccount from which the transfer is being made as of the end of the Valuation Period in which the transfer request was received. |
| BUV2 is the Benefit Unit Value of the Subaccount to which the transfer is being made as of the end of the Valuation Period in which the transfer request was received. |
| UNIT1 is the number of the Contract owners Benefit Units in the Subaccount from which the transfer is being made, before the transfer. |
| UNIT2 is the number of the Contract owners Benefit Units in the Subaccount to which the transfer is being made, before the transfer. |
Subsequent variable dollar benefit payments will be based on the number of the Contract Owners Benefit Units in each Subaccount (after the transfer) as of the next variable dollar benefit payments due date.
The following financial terms explain how the variable portion of the Contract is valued. Read these terms in conjunction with the Definitions section of the Prospectus.
Accumulation Unit Value: The initial Accumulation Unit Value for each Subaccount other than the money market Subaccount was set at $10. The initial Accumulation Unit Value for the money market Subaccount was set at $1. The initial Accumulation Unit Value for a Subaccount was established at the inception date of the Separate Account, or on the date the Subaccount was established, if later. The Company establishes distinct Accumulation Unit Values for versions of the Contract with different Separate Account fee structures, as described in the Expense Tables.
5
After the initial Accumulation Unit Value is established, the Accumulation Unit Value for a Subaccount at the end of each Valuation Period is the Accumulation Unit Value at the end of the previous Valuation Period multiplied by the Net Investment Factor for that Subaccount for the current Valuation Period.
A Net Investment Factor of 1 produces no change in the Accumulation Unit Value for that Valuation Period. A Net Investment Factor of more than 1 or less than 1 produces an increase or a decrease, respectively, in the Accumulation Unit Value for that Valuation Period. The Accumulation Unit Value will vary to reflect the investment experience of the applicable Portfolios.
Benefit Unit Value: The initial Benefit Unit Value for a Subaccount will be set equal to the Accumulation Unit Value for that Subaccount at the end of the first Valuation Period in which a variable dollar benefit is established by the Company. The Company will establish distinct Benefit Unit Values for versions of the Contract with different Separate Account fee structures, as described in the Expense Tables.
The Benefit Unit Value at the end of each Valuation Period after the first is the Benefit Unit Value at the end of the previous Valuation Period multiplied by the Net Investment Factor for that Subaccount for the current Valuation Period, and multiplied by a daily investment factor for each day in the Valuation Period. The daily investment factor reduces the previous Benefit Unit Value by the daily amount of the assumed interest rate (3% per year, compounded annually) which is already incorporated in the calculation of variable dollar benefit payments.
Net Investment Factor: The Net Investment Factor for any Subaccount for any Valuation Period is determined by dividing NAV2 by NAV1 and subtracting a factor representing the mortality and expense risk charge and the administration charge (as well as the charges for any optional riders or endorsements) deducted from the Subaccount during that Valuation Period, where:
| NAV1 is equal to the Net Asset Value for the Portfolio for the preceding Valuation Period; and |
| NAV2 is equal to the Net Asset Value for the Portfolio for the current Valuation Period plus the per share amount of any dividend or net capital gain distributions made by the Portfolio during the current Valuation Period, and plus or minus a per share charge or credit if the Company adjusts its tax reserves due to investment operations of the Subaccount or changes in tax law. |
In other words, the Net Investment Factor represents the percentage change in the total value of assets invested by the Separate Account in a Portfolio. That percentage is then applied to Accumulation Unit Values and Benefit Unit Values as described in the discussion of those terms in this section of the prospectus.
The following discussion supplements the discussion of federal tax matters in the prospectus for the Contract. The tax information provided in this Statement of Additional Information is not intended or written to be used as legal or tax advice. It is written solely to provide general information related to the sale and holding of the Contract. You should seek advice on legal or tax questions based on your particular circumstances from an attorney or tax advisor who is not affiliated with the Company.
Taxation of Separate Account Income / Investor Control
The Company is taxed as a life insurance company under Part I of Subchapter L of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC). Since the Separate Account is not an entity separate from the Company, and its operations form a part of the Company, it will not be taxed separately as a Regulated Investment Company under Subchapter M of the IRC. Investment income and realized capital gains are automatically applied to increase reserves under the Contract. Under existing federal income tax law, the Company believes that it will not be taxed on the Separate Account investment income and realized net capital gains to the extent that such income and gains are applied to increase the reserves under the Contract.
Accordingly, the Company does not anticipate that it will incur any federal income tax liability attributable to the Separate Account and, therefore, the Company does not intend to make provisions for any such taxes. However, if changes in the federal tax laws or interpretations thereof result in the Company being taxed on income or gains attributable to the Separate Account, then the Company may impose a charge against the Separate Account (with respect to some or all Contracts) to reflect such taxes.
6
In certain circumstances, owners of variable annuity contracts that do not qualify for tax-deferred treatment, or serve as a funding vehicle, under a tax-qualified retirement plan may be considered the owners, for federal income tax purposes, of the assets of the separate accounts used to support their contracts. In those circumstances, income and gains from the separate account assets would be included in the owners gross income. The Internal Revenue Service has stated in published rulings that a non-tax-qualified variable contract owner will be considered the owner of separate account assets if the owner possesses incidents of ownership in those assets, such as the ability to exercise investment control over the assets.
In Revenue Ruling 2003-91, the Internal Revenue Service provided guidance on the subject of investor control. This Revenue Ruling describes a safe harbor under which the owners of non-tax-qualified variable annuity contracts will not be considered the owners of the assets of the separate accounts used to support the contracts. The analysis section of the ruling states in part:
[The Contract owner] may not select or direct a particular investment to be made by either the Separate Account or the Sub-accounts. [The Contract owner] may not sell, purchase, or exchange assets held in the Separate Account or the Sub-accounts. All investment decisions concerning the Separate Account or the Sub-accounts are made by [the Insurance Company] or [the Sub-account Investment] Advisor in their sole and absolute discretion.
The investment strategies of the Sub-accounts currently available are sufficiently broad to prevent the [Contract owner] from making particular investment decisions through investment in a Sub-account. Only [the Insurance Company] may add or substitute Sub-accounts or investment strategies in the future. No arrangement, plan, contract, or agreement exists between [the Contract owner] and [the Insurance Company] or between [the Contract owner] and [the Sub-Account Investment] Advisor regarding the specific investments or investment objective of the Sub-accounts. In addition, [the Contract owner] may not communicate directly or indirectly with [the Sub-account Investment] Advisor or with any of [the Insurance Companys] investment officers concerning the selection, quality, or rate of return of any specific investment or group of investments held by Separate Account or in a Sub-account.
Investment in the Sub-accounts is available solely through the purchase of a Contract, thus, Sub-accounts are not publicly available. The ability to allocate premiums and transfer funds among Sub-accounts alone does not indicate that [the Contract owner] has control over either Separate Account or Sub-account assets sufficient to be treated as the owner of those assets for federal income tax purposes.
The ownership rights under the Contract are intended to be within this safe harbor rule and are similar to, but different in certain respects from, those described by the Internal Revenue Service in other rulings in which it was determined that contract owners were not owners of separate account assets. For example, the owner of a Contract has more investment options than what was contemplated in the rulings. For a Contract that is not tax-qualified, these differences could result in an owner being treated as the owner of a pro rata portion of the assets of the Separate Account and/or Fixed Account. In addition, the Company does not know what additional standards may be set forth, if any, in future regulations or rulings that the Treasury Department might issue. The Company therefore reserves the right to modify the Contract as necessary to attempt to prevent an owner from being considered the owner of a pro rata share of the assets of the Separate Account.
Tax Deferral on Non-Tax-Qualified Contracts / Diversification
IRC Section 817(h) requires that with respect to Contracts that do not qualify for tax-deferred treatment, or serve as a funding vehicle, under a tax-qualified retirement plan, the investments of the Portfolios be adequately diversified in accordance with Treasury regulations in order for the Contract to qualify as an annuity contract under federal tax law. The Separate Account, through the Portfolios, intends to comply with the diversification requirements prescribed by the Treasury in Reg. Sec. 1.817-5, which affect how the Portfolios assets may be invested. Failure of a Portfolio to meet the diversification requirements could result in loss of tax deferred status to owners of Contracts that are not tax-qualified.
The financial statements of the Separate Account at December 31, 2024 and for the periods indicated in the financial statements, and the Companys financial statements at December 31, 2024 and 2023, and for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2024, are included herein. Our financial statements should be considered only as bearing on our ability to meet our obligations under the Contract. They should not be considered as bearing on the investment performance of the assets held in the Separate Account.
7
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
Financial Statements
Year Ended December 31, 2024
with Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Year Ended December 31, 2024
Contents
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm |
1 | |||||
Audited Financial Statements |
||||||
Statements of Assets and Liabilities as of December 31, 2024 |
5 | |||||
Statements of Operations For the Year Ended December 31, 2024 |
8 | |||||
Statements of Changes in Net Assets For the Year Ended December 31, 2024 |
9 | |||||
Statements of Changes in Net Assets For the Year Ended December 31, 2023 |
10 | |||||
Notes to Financial Statements |
11 |
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KPMG LLP Suite 500 191 West Nationwide Blvd. Columbus, OH 43215-2568 |
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
To the Board of Directors of Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company and Contract Holders of Annuity Investors Variable Account B:
Opinion on the Financial Statements
We have audited the accompanying statements of assets and liabilities of the sub-accounts listed in the Appendix that comprise Annuity Investors Variable Account B (the Separate Account) , as of December 31, 2024, the related statements of operations for the year or period listed in the Appendix and changes in net assets for each of the years or periods listed in the Appendix, and the related notes including the financial highlights in Note 7 for each of the years in the four-year period then ended (collectively, the financial statements). In our opinion, the financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the sub-accounts as of December 31, 2024, the results of their operations for the year or period listed in the Appendix, the changes in their net assets for each of the years or periods listed in the Appendix, and the related notes including the financial highlights in Note 7 for each of the years or periods in the four-year period then ended, in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles. The financial highlights in Note 7 for the year or period ended December 31, 2020 were audited by other independent registered public accountants whose report, dated April 26, 2021, expressed an unqualified opinion on those financial highlights.
Basis for Opinion
These financial statements are the responsibility of the Separate Accounts management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (PCAOB) and are required to be independent with respect to the Separate Account in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.
We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud. Our audits included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Such procedures also included confirmation of securities owned as of December 31, 2024, by correspondence with the underlying mutual funds. Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the financial statements. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
/s/ KPMG LLP |
We have served as the Separate Accounts auditor since 2021.
Columbus, Ohio
April 9, 2025
KPMG LLP, a Delaware limited liability partnership and a member firm of
the KPMG global organization of independent member firms affiliated with
KPMG International Limited, a private English company limited by guarantee.
Appendix
Statement of assets and liabilities as of December 31, 2024, the related statement of operations for the year then ended, and the statements of changes in net assets for each of the years in the two-year period then ended.
AIM Variable Insurance Funds (Invesco Variable Insurance Funds)
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares
ALPS Variable Investment Trust
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II
Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II
Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II
BNY Mellon Investment Portfolios
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc.-Initial Shares
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc.-Initial Shares
BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares
Government Money Market Portfolio
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares
Calamos® Advisors Trust
2
Calamos® Growth and Income Portfolio
Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc.
Davis Equity Portfolio (1)
Deutsche DWS Investments VIT Funds
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A
Franklin Templeton Variable Insurance Products Trust
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2
Janus Aspen Series
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Service Shares
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares
Lincoln Variable Insurance Products Trust
LVIP American Century Capital Appreciation Fund-Standard Class II (1)
LVIP American Century Large Company Value Fund- Standard Class II (1)
LVIP American Century Mid Cap Value Fund- Standard Class II (1)
LVIP American Century Ultra® Fund- Standard Class II (1)
Morgan Stanley Variable Insurance Fund, Inc.
Discovery Portfolio-Class I
PIMCO Variable Insurance Trust
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class
Wilshire Variable Insurance Trust
Wilshire Global Allocation Fund
3
Statement of operations for the period from January 1, 2024 to April 26, 2024 (liquidation) and the statements of changes in net assets for the period from January 1, 2024 to April 26, 2024 (liquidation) and the year ended December 31, 2023.
AIM Variable Insurance Funds (Invesco Variable Insurance Funds)
Invesco V.I. Conservative Balanced Fund-Series I Shares
Statement of assets and liabilities as of December 31, 2024, and the related statements of operations and changes in net assets for the period from April 26, 2024 (commencement of operations) to December 31, 2024.
AIM Variable Insurance Funds (Invesco Variable Insurance Funds)
Invesco V.I. Equity and Income Fund-Series I Shares
Statement of operations for the period from January 1, 2024 to December 4, 2024 (liquidation) and the statements of changes in net assets for the period from January 1, 2024 to December 4, 2024 (liquidation) and the year ended December 31, 2023.
Morgan Stanley Variable Insurance Fund, Inc.
U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I
Statement of changes in net assets for the period from January 1, 2023 to July 28, 2023 (liquidation).
Morgan Stanley Variable Insurance Fund, Inc.
Core Plus Fixed Income Portfolio-Class I
Statement of changes in net assets for the period from January 1, 2023 to April 17, 2023 (liquidation).
The Timothy Plan
Timothy Plan Conservative Growth Portfolio Variable Series
Timothy Plan Strategic Growth Portfolio Variable Series
(1) See Note 1 to the financial statements for the former name of the sub-account.
4
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
STATEMENTS OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
As of December 31, 2024
Shares | Cost | Fair Value |
||||||||||
Assets: |
||||||||||||
Investments in portfolio shares, at fair value (Note 2): |
||||||||||||
AIM Variable Insurance Funds (Invesco Variable Insurance Funds): |
||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares |
359,867.004 | $ | 5,319,723 | $ | 6,355,251 | |||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares |
30,388.886 | 1,441,264 | 1,919,058 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares |
223,152.320 | 3,887,479 | 4,623,716 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
105,373.279 | 3,136,945 | 3,542,650 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares |
90,253.842 | 6,413,948 | 7,042,507 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares |
34,589.573 | 880,950 | 895,178 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Equity and Income Fund-Series I Shares |
45,360.183 | 781,903 | 791,989 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares |
82,000.782 | 2,297,720 | 2,213,201 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares |
124,370.259 | 616,492 | 593,246 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares |
93,259.725 | 1,896,668 | 1,903,431 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
72,725.469 | 1,252,526 | 1,408,692 | |||||||||
ALPS Variable Investment Trust: |
||||||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
43,323.857 | 449,373 | 483,061 | |||||||||
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
19,657.810 | 211,362 | 200,510 | |||||||||
Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
109,978.580 | 1,196,304 | 1,358,235 | |||||||||
Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
45,489.087 | 476,195 | 470,357 | |||||||||
BNY Mellon Investment Portfolios: |
||||||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares |
35,758.439 | 619,480 | 730,902 | |||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares |
492,431.932 | 11,994,177 | 17,343,453 | |||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc.-Initial Shares |
616,051.207 | 33,233,983 | 49,136,244 | |||||||||
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc.-Initial Shares |
117,935.932 | 4,413,503 | 6,546,624 | |||||||||
BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund: |
||||||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares |
195,495.324 | 7,064,592 | 7,133,624 | |||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio |
7,407,217.760 | 7,407,217 | 7,407,218 | |||||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares |
97,833.218 | 2,938,517 | 3,666,789 | |||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares |
87,983.791 | 3,826,568 | 3,832,574 | |||||||||
Calamos® Advisors Trust: |
||||||||||||
Calamos® Growth and Income Portfolio |
25,999.155 | 440,706 | 603,440 | |||||||||
Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||
Davis Equity Portfolio |
74,604.176 | 504,648 | 433,450 | |||||||||
Deutsche DWS Investments VIT Funds: |
||||||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A |
163,895.381 | 2,132,833 | 2,379,761 | |||||||||
Franklin Templeton Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 |
57,488.561 | 720,027 | 791,043 | |||||||||
Janus Aspen Series: |
||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
447,028.352 | 16,000,286 | 22,896,792 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
196,967.433 | 14,013,467 | 16,580,719 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
273,947.554 | 11,420,736 | 15,719,111 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
128,453.244 | 5,878,180 | 9,325,706 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
181,664.495 | 5,320,232 | 7,978,705 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
252,502.816 | 9,010,804 | 14,998,667 | |||||||||
Lincoln Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Capital Appreciation Fund-Standard Class II |
332,292.903 | 4,655,299 | 5,571,223 | |||||||||
LVIP American Century Large Company Value Fund-Standard Class II |
94,889.420 | 1,544,210 | 1,785,060 | |||||||||
LVIP American Century Mid Cap Value Fund-Standard Class II |
228,301.896 | 4,462,856 | 4,487,730 | |||||||||
LVIP American Century Ultra® Fund-Standard Class II |
211,695.034 | 4,515,315 | 6,425,156 | |||||||||
Morgan Stanley Variable Insurance Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I |
127,678.367 | 514,385 | 831,186 | |||||||||
PIMCO Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
62,265.468 | 723,922 | 716,676 | |||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
248,178.933 | 2,600,780 | 2,243,538 | |||||||||
Wilshire Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||
Wilshire Global Allocation Fund |
17,474.569 | 317,921 | 326,425 |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
5
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
STATEMENTS OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES (CONTINUED)
As of December 31, 2024
Units | Unit Value | Fair Value |
||||||||||
Net assets attributable to variable annuity contract holders (Note 2): |
||||||||||||
AIM Variable Insurance Funds (Invesco Variable Insurance Funds): |
||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
76,513.534 | $ | 80.841853 | $ | 6,185,496 | |||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
348.289 | 87.841968 | 30,594 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
1,519.920 | 91.558148 | 139,161 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares - 1.50% series contract |
93.084 | 49.858571 | 4,640 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
36,086.327 | 50.886047 | 1,836,291 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
1,021.840 | 54.092392 | 55,274 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
409.810 | 55.764346 | 22,853 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares - 1.50% series contract |
220.448 | 32.065689 | 7,070 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
134,339.473 | 32.514148 | 4,367,933 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
1,756.546 | 33.895688 | 59,539 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
5,466.556 | 34.605776 | 189,174 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
100,667.555 | 34.845122 | 3,507,774 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
118.378 | 36.883021 | 4,366 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
804.121 | 37.942332 | 30,510 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
435,703.648 | 15.778348 | 6,874,684 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
6,324.926 | 16.004329 | 101,226 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
4,131.835 | 16.118116 | 66,597 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
30,590.758 | 28.381899 | 868,224 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
846.201 | 29.587831 | 25,037 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
63.465 | 30.207706 | 1,917 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Equity and Income Fund Series I - 1.40% series contract |
59,465.306 | 10.658060 | 633,785 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Equity and Income Fund Series I - 0.95% series contract |
14,797.364 | 10.691362 | 158,204 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
66,023.893 | 33.370403 | 2,203,243 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
132.300 | 35.854280 | 4,744 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
140.300 | 37.160863 | 5,214 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
23,759.105 | 22.536631 | 535,450 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
1,855.724 | 23.999736 | 44,537 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
535.424 | 24.763664 | 13,259 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
38,372.024 | 45.038280 | 1,728,210 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
2,187.986 | 47.875959 | 104,752 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
1,427.772 | 49.356000 | 70,469 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
35,297.749 | 38.038648 | 1,342,678 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 1.25% series contract |
52.047 | 39.220544 | 2,041 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
467.918 | 40.436004 | 18,921 | |||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
1,080.736 | 41.686113 | 45,052 | |||||||||
ALPS Variable Investment Trust: |
||||||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 1.40% series contract |
23,953.392 | 17.723799 | 424,545 | |||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 1.10% series contract |
85.110 | 18.702938 | 1,592 | |||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 0.95% series contract |
2,963.135 | 19.210764 | 56,924 | |||||||||
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 1.40% series contract |
15,568.987 | 12.878787 | 200,510 | |||||||||
Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 1.40% series contract |
58,741.007 | 19.898491 | 1,168,857 | |||||||||
Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 0.95% series contract |
8,780.554 | 21.567891 | 189,378 | |||||||||
Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 1.40% series contract |
26,348.336 | 15.204387 | 400,610 | |||||||||
Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 0.95% series contract |
4,232.214 | 16.479989 | 69,747 | |||||||||
BNY Mellon Investment Portfolios: |
||||||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares - 1.40% series contract |
22,348.856 | 27.056151 | 604,674 | |||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares - 1.10% series contract |
1,966.497 | 28.550991 | 56,145 | |||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares - 0.95% series contract |
2,389.771 | 29.326247 | 70,083 | |||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.50% series contract |
72.002 | 69.172835 | 4,980 | |||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.40% series contract |
244,673.237 | 70.598030 | 17,273,449 | |||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.10% series contract |
141.507 | 75.046463 | 10,620 | |||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares - 0.95% series contract |
703.201 | 77.366148 | 54,404 | |||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc.-Initial Shares - 1.50% series contract |
3.035 | 64.770680 | 196 | |||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc.-Initial Shares - 1.40% series contract |
730,107.846 | 66.590152 | 48,617,992 | |||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc.-Initial Shares - 1.25% series contract |
180.876 | 55.214022 | 9,987 | |||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc.-Initial Shares - 1.10% series contract |
3,990.155 | 72.354975 | 288,708 | |||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc.-Initial Shares - 0.95% series contract |
2,908.714 | 75.415018 | 219,361 | |||||||||
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc.-Initial Shares- 1.40% series contract |
131,453.526 | 48.989073 | 6,439,787 | |||||||||
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc.-Initial Shares- 1.10% series contract |
2,007.056 | 53.230826 | 106,837 |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
6
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
STATEMENTS OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES (CONTINUED)
As of December 31, 2024
Units | Unit Value | Fair Value |
||||||||||
Net assets attributable to variable annuity contract holders (Note 2) (continued): |
||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund: |
||||||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.40% series contract |
120,918.248 | $ | 58.478064 | $ | 7,071,064 | |||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.10% series contract |
338.737 | 63.540792 | 21,524 | |||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares - 0.95% series contract |
619.620 | 66.227171 | 41,036 | |||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio - 1.40% series contract |
6,245,221.714 | 1.140910 | 7,125,236 | |||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio - 1.25% series contract |
953.953 | 1.149586 | 1,097 | |||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio - 1.10% series contract |
129,896.034 | 1.226654 | 159,337 | |||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio - 0.95% series contract |
95,729.932 | 1.269694 | 121,548 | |||||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.40% series contract |
63,066.914 | 57.827023 | 3,646,972 | |||||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.10% series contract |
263.158 | 62.833583 | 16,535 | |||||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares - 0.95% series contract |
50.114 | 65.490695 | 3,282 | |||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.50% series contract |
131.331 | 30.553742 | 4,012 | |||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.40% series contract |
121,828.763 | 31.411400 | 3,826,812 | |||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.10% series contract |
47.068 | 34.131719 | 1,607 | |||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares - 0.95% series contract |
4.014 | 35.575856 | 143 | |||||||||
Calamos® Advisors Trust: |
||||||||||||
Calamos® Growth and Income Portfolio - 1.40% series contract |
17,993.703 | 30.024729 | 540,256 | |||||||||
Calamos® Growth and Income Portfolio - 0.95% series contract |
1,941.550 | 32.543319 | 63,184 | |||||||||
Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||
Davis Equity Portfolio - 1.40% series contract |
13,860.139 | 27.513783 | 381,344 | |||||||||
Davis Equity Portfolio - 1.10% series contract |
1,264.031 | 29.033902 | 36,700 | |||||||||
Davis Equity Portfolio - 0.95% series contract |
516.582 | 29.822266 | 15,406 | |||||||||
Deutsche DWS Investments VIT Funds: |
||||||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A - 1.40% series contract |
50,618.316 | 46.322687 | 2,344,777 | |||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A - 1.10% series contract |
265.110 | 50.066355 | 13,273 | |||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A - 0.95% series contract |
417.166 | 52.045113 | 21,711 | |||||||||
Franklin Templeton Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 - 1.40% series contract |
59,570.909 | 10.877480 | 647,981 | |||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 - 1.10% series contract |
5,849.280 | 11.478602 | 67,142 | |||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 - 0.95% series contract |
6,439.153 | 11.790322 | 75,920 | |||||||||
Janus Aspen Series: |
||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.40% series contract |
323,882.372 | 69.845525 | 22,621,734 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.10% series contract |
1,546.934 | 75.892115 | 117,400 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 0.95% series contract |
1,993.121 | 79.100988 | 157,658 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.40% series contract |
169,683.444 | 95.390510 | 16,186,191 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.25% series contract |
43.911 | 77.688928 | 3,411 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.10% series contract |
3,120.883 | 103.651168 | 323,483 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 0.95% series contract |
626.043 | 108.033467 | 67,634 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.50% series contract |
264.355 | 72.858561 | 19,261 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.40% series contract |
208,819.831 | 74.776583 | 15,614,833 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.10% series contract |
654.867 | 80.818981 | 52,926 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 0.95% series contract |
381.975 | 84.013163 | 32,091 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.40% series contract |
215,346.817 | 43.029493 | 9,266,265 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.10% series contract |
1,257.397 | 46.755601 | 58,790 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 0.95% series contract |
13.356 | 48.732285 | 651 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.40% series contract |
196,287.961 | 39.322778 | 7,718,588 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.25% series contract |
28.242 | 32.885245 | 929 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.10% series contract |
3,321.132 | 42.728106 | 141,906 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 0.95% series contract |
2,633.475 | 44.535163 | 117,282 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.50% series contract |
91.301 | 70.002516 | 6,392 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.40% series contract |
205,456.941 | 71.968172 | 14,786,360 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.10% series contract |
2,629.155 | 78.199417 | 205,598 | |||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 0.95% series contract |
3.891 | 81.507406 | 317 | |||||||||
Lincoln Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Capital Appreciation Fund-Standard Class II - 1.50% series contract |
40.236 | 26.227623 | 1,055 | |||||||||
LVIP American Century Capital Appreciation Fund-Standard Class II - 1.40% series contract |
207,991.769 | 26.513822 | 5,514,657 | |||||||||
LVIP American Century Capital Appreciation Fund-Standard Class II - 1.10% series contract |
1,680.664 | 27.390343 | 46,034 | |||||||||
LVIP American Century Capital Appreciation Fund-Standard Class II - 0.95% series contract |
340.431 | 27.837723 | 9,477 | |||||||||
LVIP American Century Large Company Value Fund-Standard Class II - 1.40% series contract |
57,179.416 | 28.820986 | 1,647,967 | |||||||||
LVIP American Century Large Company Value Fund-Standard Class II - 1.10% series contract |
2,485.844 | 30.637136 | 76,159 | |||||||||
LVIP American Century Large Company Value Fund-Standard Class II - 0.95% series contract |
1,929.230 | 31.584360 | 60,934 | |||||||||
LVIP American Century Mid Cap Value Fund-Standard Class II - 1.40% series contract |
94,473.327 | 44.829228 | 4,235,166 | |||||||||
LVIP American Century Mid Cap Value Fund-Standard Class II - 1.10% series contract |
2,117.834 | 47.654112 | 100,923 | |||||||||
LVIP American Century Mid Cap Value Fund-Standard Class II - 0.95% series contract |
3,086.706 | 49.126966 | 151,641 | |||||||||
LVIP American Century Ultra® Fund-Standard Class II - 1.50% series contract |
96.302 | 66.829407 | 6,437 | |||||||||
LVIP American Century Ultra® Fund-Standard Class II - 1.40% series contract |
90,405.513 | 68.206034 | 6,166,201 | |||||||||
LVIP American Century Ultra® Fund-Standard Class II - 1.10% series contract |
2,582.008 | 72.503387 | 187,204 | |||||||||
LVIP American Century Ultra® Fund-Standard Class II - 0.95% series contract |
873.840 | 74.744122 | 65,314 | |||||||||
Morgan Stanley Variable Insurance Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I - 1.50% series contract |
71.526 | 42.922877 | 3,071 | |||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I - 1.40% series contract |
18,439.953 | 43.700139 | 805,828 | |||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I - 1.10% series contract |
44.090 | 46.114764 | 2,033 | |||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I - 0.95% series contract |
427.605 | 47.366980 | 20,254 | |||||||||
PIMCO Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 1.40% series contract |
46,038.725 | 14.596978 | 672,027 | |||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 1.10% series contract |
582.413 | 15.516779 | 9,037 | |||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 0.95% series contract |
2,226.244 | 15.996501 | 35,612 | |||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 1.40% series contract |
124,405.980 | 15.362728 | 1,911,215 | |||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 1.10% series contract |
9,999.374 | 16.330800 | 163,298 | |||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 0.95% series contract |
10,039.689 | 16.835633 | 169,025 | |||||||||
Wilshire Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||
Wilshire Global Allocation Fund - 1.40% series contract |
22,777.817 | 13.678591 | 311,569 | |||||||||
Wilshire Global Allocation Fund - 1.10% series contract |
1,066.210 | 13.933938 | 14,856 |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
7
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
For the Year Ended December 31, 2024
Dividends from Investments in Portfolio Shares |
Mortality and Expense Risk Fee (Note 3) |
Net Investment Income (Loss) |
Net Realized Gain (Loss) on Sale of Investments in Portfolio Shares |
Realized Gain Distributions |
Net Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) of Investments in Portfolio Shares |
Net Gain (Loss) on Investments in Portfolio Shares |
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets from Operations |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
AIM Variable Insurance Funds (Invesco Variable Insurance Funds): |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares |
$ | 58,066 | $ | 83,104 | $ | (25,038 | ) | $ | (12,101 | ) | $ | 134,623 | $ | 1,365,910 | $ | 1,488,432 | $ | 1,463,394 | ||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares |
0 | 25,279 | (25,279 | ) | 7,841 | 0 | 515,033 | 522,874 | 497,595 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares |
79,941 | 66,401 | 13,540 | 60,500 | 323,196 | 208,446 | 592,142 | 605,682 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Conservative Balanced Fund-Series I Shares (*) |
20,377 | 3,297 | 17,080 | (21,487 | ) | 0 | 19,968 | (1,519 | ) | 15,561 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
23,571 | 48,340 | (24,769 | ) | (39,276 | ) | 283,078 | 504,711 | 748,513 | 723,744 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares |
0 | 99,396 | (99,396 | ) | 498 | 0 | 1,524,162 | 1,524,660 | 1,425,264 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares |
16,982 | 13,276 | 3,706 | 30,207 | 36,145 | 36,010 | 102,362 | 106,068 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Equity and Income Fund-Series I Shares (**) |
13,953 | 7,117 | 6,836 | 1,368 | 29,943 | 10,085 | 41,396 | 48,232 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares |
0 | 34,878 | (34,878 | ) | 38,366 | 0 | 76,863 | 115,229 | 80,351 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares |
35,278 | 9,122 | 26,156 | (21,166 | ) | 0 | 34,527 | 13,361 | 39,517 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares |
0 | 26,304 | (26,304 | ) | (115,426 | ) | 183,632 | 334,174 | 402,380 | 376,076 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
1,747 | 19,329 | (17,582 | ) | (14,826 | ) | 61,793 | 178,537 | 225,504 | 207,922 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
ALPS Variable Investment Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
8,539 | 7,713 | 826 | (90 | ) | 4,577 | 44,816 | 49,303 | 50,129 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
4,543 | 3,346 | 1,197 | (5,401 | ) | 0 | 14,484 | 9,083 | 10,280 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
19,768 | 19,591 | 177 | 18,245 | 27,203 | 114,620 | 160,068 | 160,245 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
10,373 | 6,674 | 3,700 | (4,569 | ) | 3,008 | 28,457 | 26,896 | 30,596 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Investment Portfolios: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares |
4,596 | 10,175 | (5,579 | ) | 9,949 | 10,889 | 61,162 | 82,000 | 76,421 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares |
0 | 236,389 | (236,389 | ) | 677,595 | 0 | 3,046,492 | 3,724,087 | 3,487,698 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc.-Initial Shares |
553,414 | 675,868 | (122,453 | ) | 3,036,675 | 3,012,148 | 3,806,009 | 9,854,832 | 9,732,379 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc.-Initial Shares |
35,060 | 91,762 | (56,702 | ) | 270,140 | 41,738 | 1,066,847 | 1,378,725 | 1,322,023 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares |
30,326 | 102,109 | (71,783 | ) | (67,577 | ) | 520,998 | 373,322 | 826,743 | 754,960 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio |
204,520 | 78,765 | 125,755 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 125,755 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares |
18,692 | 49,125 | (30,433 | ) | 48,279 | 172,397 | 459,123 | 679,799 | 649,366 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares |
27,038 | 55,569 | (28,531 | ) | (93,869 | ) | 0 | 243,846 | 149,977 | 121,446 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Calamos® Advisors Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Calamos® Growth and Income Portfolio |
2,407 | 8,627 | (6,220 | ) | 41,818 | 9,977 | 67,114 | 118,909 | 112,689 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Davis Equity Portfolio |
4,708 | 6,471 | (1,763 | ) | (11,572 | ) | 87,693 | (834 | ) | 75,287 | 73,524 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Deutsche DWS Investments VIT Funds: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A |
29,372 | 34,078 | (4,706 | ) | 8,058 | 68,842 | 139,122 | 216,022 | 211,316 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Franklin Templeton Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 |
22,112 | 12,513 | 9,599 | 25,218 | 0 | (48,878 | ) | (23,660 | ) | (14,061 | ) | |||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Aspen Series: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
476,255 | 331,483 | 144,772 | 1,390,484 | 0 | 1,492,285 | 2,882,769 | 3,027,541 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
121,558 | 233,435 | (111,876 | ) | 525,359 | 651,717 | 1,091,000 | 2,268,076 | 2,156,200 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
16,553 | 217,256 | (200,703 | ) | 868,841 | 864,008 | 2,022,326 | 3,755,175 | 3,554,472 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
69,099 | 130,646 | (61,547 | ) | 732,149 | 294,606 | 823,802 | 1,850,557 | 1,789,010 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
114,338 | 119,356 | (5,018 | ) | 315,734 | 0 | 65,831 | 381,565 | 376,547 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
4,470 | 208,851 | (204,380 | ) | 1,017,984 | 425,215 | 2,920,325 | 4,363,524 | 4,159,144 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Lincoln Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Capital Appreciation Fund-Standard Class II |
0 | 73,714 | (73,714 | ) | 12,464 | 318,478 | 818,947 | 1,149,889 | 1,076,175 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Large Company Value Fund-Standard Class II |
48,033 | 26,844 | 21,189 | 105,162 | 35,458 | 13,344 | 153,964 | 175,153 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Mid Cap Value Fund-Standard Class II |
114,846 | 65,058 | 49,788 | (44,343 | ) | 218,894 | 102,966 | 277,517 | 327,305 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Ultra® Fund-Standard Class II |
0 | 85,352 | (85,352 | ) | 232,177 | 500,386 | 788,901 | 1,521,464 | 1,436,112 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Morgan Stanley Variable Insurance Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I |
0 | 10,343 | (10,343 | ) | (724,886 | ) | 0 | 981,297 | 256,411 | 246,068 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I (***) |
95,962 | 47,071 | 48,891 | (458,678 | ) | 0 | 884,153 | 425,475 | 474,366 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
20,605 | 10,987 | 9,619 | (24,839 | ) | 0 | 21,607 | (3,232 | ) | 6,387 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
97,193 | 32,919 | 64,274 | (61,346 | ) | 0 | 26,758 | (34,588 | ) | 29,686 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Wilshire Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Wilshire Global Allocation Fund |
5,943 | 4,667 | 1,276 | (4,087 | ) | 0 | 32,405 | 28,318 | 29,594 |
(*) | For the period January 1, 2024 through the merger date of April 26, 2024. |
(**) | For the period of merger date April 26, 2024 through December 31, 2024. |
(***) | For the period January 1, 2024 through the liquidation date of December 4, 2024. |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
8
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
For the Year Ended December 31, 2024
Changes From Operations | Changes From Principal Transactions | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net Investment Income (Loss) |
Net Realized Gain (Loss) on Sale of Investments in Portfolio Shares |
Realized Gain Distributions |
Net Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) of Investments in Portfolio Shares |
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets from Operations |
Contract Purchase Payments |
Contract Redemptions |
Net Transfers To (From) Subaccounts and Fixed Accounts |
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets From Principal Transactions |
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets |
Net Assets Beginning of Period |
Net Assets End of Period |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
AIM Variable Insurance Funds (Invesco Variable Insurance Funds): |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares |
$ | (25,038 | ) | $ | (12,101 | ) | $ | 134,623 | $ | 1,365,910 | $ | 1,463,394 | $ | 54,303 | $ |
513,317 |
|
$ | (24,667 | ) | $ | (483,682 | ) | $ | 979,712 | $ | 5,375,539 | $ | 6,355,251 | |||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares |
(25,279 | ) | 7,841 | 0 | 515,033 | 497,595 | 23,282 | 194,244 | (53,191 | ) | (224,153 | ) | 273,442 | 1,645,616 | 1,919,058 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares |
13,540 | 60,500 | 323,196 | 208,446 | 605,682 | 32,902 | 543,461 | (227,221 | ) | (737,779 | ) | (132,097 | ) | 4,755,813 | 4,623,716 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Conservative Balanced Fund-Series I Shares (*) |
17,080 | (21,487 | ) | 0 | 19,968 | 15,561 | 1,835 | 21,542 | (751,255 | ) | (770,961 | ) | (755,400 | ) | 755,401 | 0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
(24,769 | ) | (39,276 | ) | 283,078 | 504,711 | 723,744 | 18,732 | 428,316 | (12,519 | ) | (422,103 | ) | 301,641 | 3,241,009 | 3,542,650 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares |
(99,396 | ) | 498 | 0 | 1,524,162 | 1,425,264 | 56,858 | 1,138,606 | (15,733 | ) | (1,097,481 | ) | 327,783 | 6,714,724 | 7,042,507 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares |
3,706 | 30,207 | 36,145 | 36,010 | 106,068 | 14,737 | 161,448 | (74,923 | ) | (221,635 | ) | (115,567 | ) | 1,010,745 | 895,178 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Equity and Income Fund-Series I Shares (**) |
6,836 | 1,368 | 29,943 | 10,085 | 48,232 | 5,683 | 42,905 | 780,980 | 743,757 | 791,989 | 0 | 791,989 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares |
(34,878 | ) | 38,366 | 0 | 76,863 | 80,351 | 32,365 | 233,971 | (2,445 | ) | (204,051 | ) | (123,700 | ) | 2,336,901 | 2,213,201 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares |
26,156 | (21,166 | ) | 0 | 34,527 | 39,517 | 13,316 | 159,469 | 7,798 | (138,356 | ) | (98,839 | ) | 692,085 | 593,246 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares |
(26,304 | ) | (115,426 | ) | 183,632 | 334,174 | 376,076 | 17,147 | 236,856 | (35,790 | ) | (255,498 | ) | 120,578 | 1,782,853 | 1,903,431 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
(17,582 | ) | (14,826 | ) | 61,793 | 178,537 | 207,922 | 20,929 | 185,182 | 8,585 | (155,667 | ) | 52,255 | 1,356,437 | 1,408,692 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
ALPS Variable Investment Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
826 | (90 | ) | 4,577 | 44,816 | 50,129 | 12,850 | 155,067 | (4,628 | ) | (146,845 | ) | (96,716 | ) | 579,777 | 483,061 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
1,197 | (5,401 | ) | 0 | 14,484 | 10,280 | 7,256 | 89,419 | 1,075 | (81,088 | ) | (70,808 | ) | 271,318 | 200,510 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
177 | 18,245 | 27,203 | 114,620 | 160,245 | 29,240 | 276,302 | 57,763 | (189,298 | ) | (29,053 | ) | 1,387,288 | 1,358,235 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
3,700 | (4,569 | ) | 3,008 | 28,457 | 30,596 | 4,073 | 61,457 | (304 | ) | (57,688 | ) | (27,092 | ) | 497,449 | 470,357 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Investment Portfolios: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares |
(5,579 | ) | 9,949 | 10,889 | 61,162 | 76,421 | 13,150 | 74,886 | 838 | (60,898 | ) | 15,523 | 715,379 | 730,902 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares |
(236,389 | ) | 677,595 | 0 | 3,046,492 | 3,487,698 | 86,805 | 1,195,898 | 140,183 | (968,910 | ) | 2,518,788 | 14,824,665 | 17,343,453 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc.-Initial Shares |
(122,453 | ) | 3,036,675 | 3,012,148 | 3,806,009 | 9,732,379 | 310,297 | 5,144,043 | 213,121 | (4,620,625 | ) | 5,111,754 | 44,024,490 | 49,136,244 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc.-Initial Shares |
(56,702 | ) | 270,140 | 41,738 | 1,066,847 | 1,322,023 | 24,526 | 739,485 | (17,701 | ) | (732,660 | ) | 589,363 | 5,957,261 | 6,546,624 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares |
(71,783 | ) | (67,577 | ) | 520,998 | 373,322 | 754,960 | 57,692 | 751,663 | 108,528 | (585,444 | ) | 169,516 | 6,964,108 | 7,133,624 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio |
125,755 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 125,755 | 68,239 | 603,310 | 3,609,941 | 3,074,870 | 3,200,625 | 4,206,593 | 7,407,218 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares |
(30,433 | ) | 48,279 | 172,397 | 459,123 | 649,366 | 21,961 | 220,545 | 68,968 | (129,616 | ) | 519,750 | 3,147,039 | 3,666,789 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares |
(28,531 | ) | (93,869 | ) | 0 | 243,846 | 121,446 | 29,839 | 364,386 | 21,183 | (313,364 | ) | (191,918 | ) | 4,024,492 | 3,832,574 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Calamos® Advisors Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Calamos® Growth and Income Portfolio |
(6,220 | ) | 41,818 | 9,977 | 67,114 | 112,689 | 4,603 | 134,055 | (6,569 | ) | (136,021 | ) | (23,332 | ) | 626,772 | 603,440 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Davis Equity Portfolio |
(1,763 | ) | (11,572 | ) | 87,693 | (834 | ) | 73,524 | 6,306 | 96,976 | (16,059 | ) | (106,729 | ) | (33,205 | ) | 466,655 | 433,450 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Deutsche DWS Investments VIT Funds: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A |
(4,706 | ) | 8,058 | 68,842 | 139,122 | 211,316 | 35,291 | 386,881 | (30,289 | ) | (381,879 | ) | (170,563 | ) | 2,550,324 | 2,379,761 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Franklin Templeton Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 |
9,599 | 25,218 | 0 | (48,878 | ) | (14,061 | ) | 21,055 | 146,308 | (137,546 | ) | (262,799 | ) | (276,860 | ) | 1,067,903 | 791,043 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Aspen Series: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
144,772 | 1,390,484 | 0 | 1,492,285 | 3,027,541 | 185,320 | 3,426,809 | 148,996 | (3,092,492 | ) | (64,951 | ) | 22,961,743 | 22,896,792 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
(111,876 | ) | 525,359 | 651,717 | 1,091,000 | 2,156,200 | 107,646 | 1,758,264 | 52,247 | (1,598,371 | ) | 557,829 | 16,022,890 | 16,580,719 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
(200,703 | ) | 868,841 | 864,008 | 2,022,326 | 3,554,472 | 50,754 | 1,808,227 | 21,787 | (1,735,686 | ) | 1,818,786 | 13,900,325 | 15,719,111 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
(61,547 | ) | 732,149 | 294,606 | 823,802 | 1,789,010 | 80,294 | 996,368 | (28,388 | ) | (944,461 | ) | 844,549 | 8,481,157 | 9,325,706 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
(5,018 | ) | 315,734 | 0 | 65,831 | 376,547 | 119,800 | 770,629 | 27,644 | (623,185 | ) | (246,638 | ) | 8,225,343 | 7,978,705 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
(204,380 | ) | 1,017,984 | 425,215 | 2,920,325 | 4,159,144 | 69,585 | 2,247,290 | 71,800 | (2,105,905 | ) | 2,053,239 | 12,945,428 | 14,998,667 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lincoln Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Capital Appreciation Fund-Standard Class II |
(73,714 | ) | 12,464 | 318,478 | 818,947 | 1,076,175 | 54,164 | 433,903 | 28,827 | (350,912 | ) | 725,263 | 4,845,960 | 5,571,223 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Large Company Value Fund-Standard Class II |
21,189 | 105,162 | 35,458 | 13,344 | 175,153 | 34,711 | 427,914 | (20,975 | ) | (414,178 | ) | (239,025 | ) | 2,024,084 | 1,785,059 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Mid Cap Value Fund-Standard Class II |
49,788 | (44,343 | ) | 218,894 | 102,966 | 327,305 | 48,338 | 621,184 | (21,124 | ) | (593,970 | ) | (266,665 | ) | 4,754,396 | 4,487,731 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Ultra® Fund-Standard Class II |
(85,352 | ) | 232,177 | 500,386 | 788,901 | 1,436,112 | 33,738 | 602,119 | (8,332 | ) | (576,713 | ) | 859,399 | 5,565,757 | 6,425,156 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Morgan Stanley Variable Insurance Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I |
(10,343 | ) | (724,886 | ) | 0 | 981,297 | 246,068 | 8,293 | 158,183 | (85,523 | ) | (235,413 | ) | 10,655 | 820,531 | 831,186 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I (***) |
48,891 | (458,678 | ) | 0 | 884,153 | 474,366 | 38,319 | 391,917 | (3,827,031 | ) | (4,180,629 | ) | (3,706,263 | ) | 3,706,262 | 0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
9,619 | (24,839 | ) | 0 | 21,607 | 6,387 | 17,234 | 134,007 | 8,669 | (108,105 | ) | (101,718 | ) | 818,394 | 716,676 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
64,274 | (61,346 | ) | 0 | 26,758 | 29,686 | 37,667 | 333,846 | 14,850 | (281,329 | ) | (251,643 | ) | 2,495,181 | 2,243,538 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Wilshire Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Wilshire Global Allocation Fund |
1,276 | (4,087 | ) | 0 | 32,405 | 29,594 | 5,070 | 64,762 | 18 | (59,674 | ) | (30,080 | ) | 356,505 | 326,425 |
(*) | For the period January 1, 2024 through the merger date of April 26, 2024. |
(**) | For the period of merger date April 26, 2024 through December 31, 2024. |
(***) | For the period January 1, 2024 through the liquidation date of December 4, 2024. |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
9
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
For the Year Ended December 31, 2023
Changes From Operations | Changes From Principal Transactions | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net Investment Income (Loss) |
Net Realized Gain (Loss) on Sale of Investments in Portfolio Shares |
Realized Gain Distributions |
Net Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) of Investments in Portfolio Shares |
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets from Operations |
Contract Purchase Payments |
Contract Redemptions |
Net Transfers To (From) Subaccounts and Fixed Accounts |
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets From Principal Transactions |
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets |
Net Assets Beginning of Period |
Net Assets End of Period |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
AIM Variable Insurance Funds (Invesco Variable Insurance Funds): |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares |
$ | (38,939 | ) | $ | (122,528 | ) | $ | 1,053,954 | $ | (229,852 | ) | $ | 662,635 | $ | 52,752 | $ | 692,493 | $ | (26,100 | ) | $ | (665,840 | ) | $ | (3,205 | ) $ | 5,378,744 | $ | 5,375,539 | |||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares |
(21,342 | ) | (64,087 | ) | 0 | 528,141 | 442,712 | 24,754 | 264,805 | (21,580 | ) | (261,631 | ) | 181,081 | 1,464,535 | 1,645,616 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares |
18,310 | 53,826 | 509,734 | (111,870 | ) | 470,000 | 34,244 | 454,852 | (145,441 | ) | (566,048 | ) | (96,048 | ) | 4,851,861 | 4,755,813 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Conservative Balanced Fund-Series I Shares |
4,147 | 970 | 0 | 73,466 | 78,583 | 4,722 | 81,244 | (457 | ) | (76,980 | ) | 1,603 | 753,798 | 755,401 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
(21,464 | ) | (102,692 | ) | 74,734 | 671,877 | 622,455 | 20,966 | 354,754 | (68,468 | ) | (402,257 | ) | 220,198 | 3,020,811 | 3,241,009 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares |
(91,525 | ) | (177,935 | ) | 0 | 983,617 | 714,157 | 67,707 | 619,361 | (31,473 | ) | (583,127 | ) | 131,030 | 6,583,694 | 6,714,724 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares |
5,360 | (9,721 | ) | 81,521 | (4,222 | ) | 72,938 | 18,171 | 168,362 | (61,095 | ) | (211,287 | ) | (138,349 | ) | 1,149,094 | 1,010,745 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares |
(34,473 | ) | 12,264 | 0 | 58,938 | 36,729 | 52,348 | 479,441 | (13,694 | ) | (440,787 | ) | (404,058 | ) | 2,740,959 | 2,336,901 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares |
26,063 | (17,548 | ) | 0 | 47,224 | 55,739 | 15,462 | 76,533 | 38,589 | (22,482 | ) | 33,257 | 658,828 | 692,085 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares |
(9,977 | ) | (178,738 | ) | 114,432 | 415,882 | 341,599 | 17,299 | 217,757 | (47,928 | ) | (248,385 | ) | 93,214 | 1,689,639 | 1,782,853 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
(19,718 | ) | (65,783 | ) | 23,871 | 266,407 | 204,777 | 19,983 | 411,979 | (29,042 | ) | (421,037 | ) | (216,260 | ) | 1,572,697 | 1,356,437 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
ALPS Variable Investment Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
3,445 | (2,978 | ) | 12,793 | 46,653 | 59,913 | 15,517 | 30,670 | (74 | ) | (15,228 | ) | 44,685 | 535,092 | 579,777 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
2,459 | (3,140 | ) | 3,016 | 14,225 | 16,560 | 12,947 | 26,364 | 773 | (12,644 | ) | 3,916 | 267,402 | 271,318 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
6,306 | (1,550 | ) | 30,704 | 136,790 | 172,250 | 26,654 | 75,036 | (1,608 | ) | (49,989 | ) | 122,261 | 1,265,027 | 1,387,288 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
3,617 | (8,529 | ) | 4,718 | 43,003 | 42,809 | 6,224 | 42,767 | (300 | ) | (36,843 | ) | 5,966 | 491,483 | 497,449 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
American Century Variable Portfolios, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Capital Appreciation Fund-Class I |
(70,041 | ) | (77,782 | ) | 7,453 | 988,845 | 848,475 | 83,353 | 967,778 | (131,878 | ) | (1,016,303 | ) | (167,828 | ) | 5,013,788 | 4,845,960 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Large Company Value Fund-Class I |
25,315 | 50,570 | 58,420 | (91,454 | ) | 42,851 | 38,934 | 198,738 | (59,518 | ) | (219,321 | ) | (176,470 | ) | 2,200,554 | 2,024,084 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Mid Cap Value Fund-Class I |
44,649 | 33,581 | 553,994 | (419,864 | ) | 212,360 | 48,824 | 690,662 | (45,367 | ) | (687,205 | ) | (474,845 | ) | 5,229,241 | 4,754,396 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Ultra® Fund-Class I |
(72,249 | ) | 161,870 | 372,950 | 1,315,922 | 1,778,493 | 43,161 | 707,707 | (130,308 | ) | (794,854 | ) | 983,639 | 4,582,118 | 5,565,757 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Investment Portfolios: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares |
(5,507 | ) | (11,242 | ) | 22,475 | 99,418 | 105,144 | 15,698 | 95,906 | 7,685 | (72,523 | ) | 32,621 | 682,758 | 715,379 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares |
(181,899 | ) | 396,173 | 0 | 5,518,201 | 5,732,475 | 118,102 | 1,508,587 | (100,441 | ) | (1,490,926 | ) | 4,241,549 | 10,583,116 | 14,824,665 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc.-Initial Shares |
4,088 | 3,188,548 | 1,586,740 | 4,364,657 | 9,144,033 | 339,139 | 5,452,947 | (180,802 | ) | (5,294,611 | ) | 3,849,422 | 40,175,068 | 44,024,490 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc.-Initial Shares |
(37,637 | ) | 43,030 | 743,238 | 453,639 | 1,202,270 | 54,356 | 1,286,509 | (5,584 | ) | (1,237,737 | ) | (35,467 | ) | 5,992,728 | 5,957,261 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares |
(45,848 | ) | (114,446 | ) | 566,750 | 765,080 | 1,171,536 | 55,069 | 614,152 | (13,916 | ) | (572,999 | ) | 598,537 | 6,365,571 | 6,964,108 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio |
83,987 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 83,987 | 28,320 | 679,594 | 3,089,498 | 2,438,224 | 2,522,211 | 1,684,382 | 4,206,593 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares |
(23,335 | ) | 69,901 | 334,687 | 300,505 | 681,758 | 16,880 | 587,584 | 116,337 | (454,368 | ) | 227,390 | 2,919,649 | 3,147,039 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares |
(42,787 | ) | (24,488 | ) | 90,577 | 279,030 | 302,332 | 37,914 | 488,948 | 18,021 | (433,013 | ) | (130,681 | ) | 4,155,173 | 4,024,492 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Calamos® Advisors Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Calamos® Growth and Income Portfolio |
(5,292 | ) | 45,835 | 20,363 | 56,355 | 117,261 | 6,652 | 208,571 | (3,077 | ) | (204,997 | ) | (87,736 | ) | 714,508 | 626,772 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Davis Value Portfolio |
(429 | ) | (10,649 | ) | 45,252 | 84,995 | 119,169 | 9,179 | 70,919 | (11,501 | ) | (73,241 | ) | 45,928 | 420,727 | 466,655 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Deutsche DWS Investments VIT Funds: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A |
(6,789 | ) | (251,774 | ) | 63,406 | 578,973 | 383,816 | 43,145 | 479,639 | 2,040 | (434,454 | ) | (50,638 | ) | 2,600,962 | 2,550,324 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Franklin Templeton Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 |
25,140 | (443 | ) | 0 | 193,221 | 217,918 | 29,623 | 401,684 | (49,542 | ) | (421,604 | ) | (203,686 | ) | 1,271,589 | 1,067,903 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Aspen Series: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
158,080 | 2,258,703 | 0 | 668,435 | 3,085,218 | 210,723 | 4,760,102 | (225,021 | ) | (4,774,399 | ) | (1,689,181 | ) | 24,650,924 | 22,961,743 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
(197,794 | ) | 422,695 | 1,093,577 | 1,058,609 | 2,377,087 | 112,809 | 2,056,298 | 10,340 | (1,933,149 | ) | 443,938 | 15,578,952 | 16,022,890 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
(155,780 | ) | 312,742 | 0 | 3,929,560 | 4,086,522 | 87,139 | 1,525,061 | (27,925 | ) | (1,465,847 | ) | 2,620,675 | 11,279,650 | 13,900,325 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
(39,571 | ) | 481,550 | 232,181 | 1,130,479 | 1,804,639 | 86,062 | 1,023,702 | (101,830 | ) | (1,039,469 | ) | 765,170 | 7,715,987 | 8,481,157 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
8,986 | 181,191 | 0 | 566,350 | 756,527 | 137,020 | 1,296,916 | 29,935 | (1,129,960 | ) | (373,433 | ) | 8,598,776 | 8,225,343 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
(148,352 | ) | 237,959 | 0 | 3,927,609 | 4,017,216 | 70,449 | 1,271,978 | (2,843 | ) | (1,204,371 | ) | 2,812,845 | 10,132,583 | 12,945,428 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Morgan Stanley Variable Insurance Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Core Plus Fixed Income Portfolio-Class I (*) |
69,792 | (560,580 | ) | 0 | 529,259 | 38,471 | 21,296 | 142,087 | (1,924,709 | ) | (2,045,502 | ) | (2,007,031 | ) | 2,007,031 | 0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I |
(10,021 | ) | (750,089 | ) | 0 | 1,024,348 | 264,238 | 12,238 | 61,554 | (66,296 | ) | (115,612 | ) | 148,626 | 671,905 | 820,531 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I |
30,493 | (132,530 | ) | 0 | 544,257 | 442,220 | 52,604 | 562,975 | (25,280 | ) | (535,651 | ) | (93,431 | ) | 3,799,693 | 3,706,262 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
14,464 | (39,474 | ) | 0 | 51,359 | 26,349 | 27,423 | 165,866 | 68,432 | (70,011 | ) | (43,662 | ) | 862,056 | 818,394 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
59,673 | (167,505 | ) | 0 | 212,169 | 104,337 | 57,302 | 647,237 | 150,867 | (439,068 | ) | (334,731 | ) | 2,829,912 | 2,495,181 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The Timothy Plan: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Timothy Plan Conservative Growth Portfolio Variable Series (**) |
37,396 | (99,987 | ) | 8,413 | 59,669 | 5,491 | 568 | 6,361 | (435,180 | ) | (440,972 | ) | (435,481 | ) | 435,481 | 0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Timothy Plan Strategic Growth Portfolio Variable Series (**) |
45,180 | (111,490 | ) | 54,962 | 17,128 | 5,780 | 167 | 3,112 | (463,247 | ) | (466,193 | ) | (460,413 | ) | 460,413 | 0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Wilshire Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Wilshire Global Allocation Fund |
(156 | ) | (1,672 | ) | 11,858 | 36,251 | 46,281 | 5,355 | 8,306 | 34 | (2,918 | ) | 43,363 | 313,142 | 356,505 |
(*) | For the period January 1, 2023 through the liquidation date of July 28, 2023. |
(**) | For the period January 1, 2023 through the liquidation date of April 17, 2023. |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
10
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
December 31, 2024
(1) ORGANIZATION
Annuity Investors Variable Account B (the Account) is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, as a unit investment trust and follows accounting and reporting guidance under Financial Accounting Standards Board Accounting Standards Codification Topic 946, Financial Services Investment Companies. The Account was established on December 19, 1996 and commenced operations on July 15, 1997 as a segregated investment account for individual and group variable annuity contracts, which are registered under the Securities Act of 1933. The operations of the Account are included in the operations of Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company (the Company) pursuant to the provisions of the Ohio Insurance Code. As of May 28, 2021, the Company is a direct wholly-owned subsidiary of MassMutual Ascend Life Insurance Company, which is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Glidepath Holdings, Inc., a financial services holding company wholly-owned by Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company (MassMutual). Prior to that date, the Company was a direct wholly-owned subsidiary of Great American Financial Resources, Inc., a financial services holding company wholly-owned by American Financial Group, Inc. The Company is licensed in 48 states and the District of Columbia.
Under applicable insurance law, the assets and liabilities of the Account are clearly identified and distinguished from the Companys other assets and liabilities. The portion of the Accounts assets applicable to the variable annuity contracts is not chargeable with liabilities arising out of any other business the Company may conduct.
At December 31, 2024 and for the two year period then ended, the following investment options or funds, each representing a sub-account of the Account, were available (unless otherwise noted):
AIM Variable Insurance Funds (Invesco Variable Insurance Funds):
| Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares |
| Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares |
| Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares |
| Invesco V.I. Conservative Balanced Fund-Series I Shares |
| Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
| Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares |
| Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares |
| Invesco V.I Equity and Income Fund-Series I Shares |
| Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares |
| Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares |
| Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares |
| Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
ALPS Variable Investment Trust:
| Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
| Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
| Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
| Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
BNY Mellon Investment Portfolios:
| MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares |
| Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares |
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc. Initial Shares
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc. Initial Shares BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund:
| Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares |
| Government Money Market Portfolio |
| Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares |
| Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares |
11
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - CONTINUED
(1) ORGANIZATION - Continued
Calamos® Advisors Trust:
| Calamos® Growth and Income Portfolio |
Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc.:
| Davis Equity Portfolio |
Deutsche DWS Investments VIT Funds:
| DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A |
Franklin Templeton Variable Insurance Products Trust:
| Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 |
Janus Aspen Series:
| Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
| Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
| Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
| Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
| Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
| Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
Lincoln Variable Insurance Products Trust:
| LVIP American Century Capital Appreciation Fund-Standard Class II |
| LVIP American Century Large Company Value Fund-Standard Class II |
| LVIP American Century Mid Cap Value Fund-Standard Class II |
| LVIP American Century Ultra® Fund-Standard Class II |
Morgan Stanley Variable Insurance Fund, Inc.:
| Discovery Portfolio-Class I |
| U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I |
PIMCO Variable Insurance Trust:
| PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class Shares |
| PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class Shares |
Wilshire Variable Insurance Trust:
| Wilshire Global Allocation Fund |
The Morgan Stanley U.S. Real Estate Portfolio was liquidated on December 4, 2024. If variable annuity contract owners had money allocated to the Morgan Stanley U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I Sub-Account on December 5, 2024, the money was transferred to the sub-account for the BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund, Government Money Market Portfolio.
Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc.: Effective June 30, 2024, Davis Value Portfolio was renamed Davis Equity Portfolio.
AIM Variable Insurance Funds (Invesco Variable Insurance Funds): Effective on or about April 26, 2024, Invesco V.I. Conservative Balanced Fund was merged into Invesco V.I. Equity and Income Fund.
American Century Variable Portfolios: Effective on or about April 26, 2024, each fund of American Century Variable Portfolios, Inc., was reorganized into a substantially similar series and class of Lincoln Variable Insurance Products Trust as listed below. Class I shares reorganized into Standard Class II shares.
| American Century VP Capital Appreciation Fund reorganized into LVIP American Century Capital Appreciation Fund |
| American Century VP Large Company Value Fund reorganized into LVIP American Century Large Company Value Fund |
| American Century VP Mid Cap Value Fund reorganized into LVIP American Century Mid Cap Value Fund |
| American Century VP Ultra® Fund reorganized into LVIP American Century Ultra® Fund |
12
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - CONTINUED
(1) ORGANIZATION - Continued
The Morgan Stanley Core Plus Fixed Income Portfolio was liquidated on July 28, 2023. If variable annuity contract owners had money allocated to the Morgan Stanley Core Plus Fixed Income Portfolio-Class I Sub-Account on July 28, 2023, the money was transferred to the sub-account for the BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund, Government Money Market Portfolio.
The Timothy Plan Strategic Growth Portfolio Variable Series was liquidated on April 17, 2023. If variable annuity contract owners had money allocated to The Timothy Plan Strategic Growth Portfolio Variable Series Sub-Account on April 17, 2023, the money was transferred to the sub-account for the BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund, Government Money Market Portfolio.
The Timothy Plan Conservative Growth Portfolio Variable Series was liquidated on April 17, 2023. If variable annuity contract owners had money allocated to The Timothy Plan Conservative Growth Portfolio Variable Series Sub-Account on April 17, 2023, the money was transferred to the sub-account for the BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund, Government Money Market Portfolio.
(2) SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
Basis of Presentation
The preparation of financial statements in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts reported in the financial statements and accompanying notes. Changes in circumstances could cause actual results to differ materially from those estimates.
Fair Value Measurements
Accounting standards for measuring fair value are based on inputs used in estimating fair value. The three levels of the hierarchy are as follows:
Level 1 Quoted prices for identical assets or liabilities in active markets (markets in which transactions occur with sufficient frequency and volume to provide pricing information on an ongoing basis).
Level 2 Quoted prices for similar instruments in active markets; quoted prices for identical or similar assets or liabilities in inactive markets (markets in which there are few transactions, the prices are not current, price quotations vary substantially over time or among market makers, or in which little information is released publicly); and valuations based on other significant inputs that are observable in active markets.
Level 3 Valuations derived from market valuation techniques generally consistent with those used to estimate the fair values of Level 2 financial instruments in which one or more significant inputs are unobservable. The unobservable inputs may include managements own assumptions about the assumptions market participants would use based on the best information available in the circumstances. The investments of the Sub-Accounts are measured at fair value. All the investments are categorized as Level 1 as of December 31, 2024.
Investments
Investments are stated at fair value as determined by the closing net asset values of the respective portfolios. Net asset value is quoted by the fund company and is derived using the fair value of the underlying investments. Investment transactions are accounted for on the trade date (the date the order to buy or sell is executed). Income from dividends is recorded on the ex-dividend date. The cost of investments sold is determined on a first-in, first-out basis. The Sub-Accounts do not hold any investments that are restricted to resale.
Net investment income (loss), net realized gains (losses) and unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments are allocated to the contracts on each valuation date based on each contracts pro rata share of the assets of the Account as of the beginning of the valuation date.
13
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - CONTINUED
(2) SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES - Continued
Federal Income Taxes
No provision for federal income taxes has been made in the accompanying financial statements as the operations of the Account are included in the total operations of the Company, which is treated as a life insurance company for federal income tax purposes under Subchapter L of the Internal Revenue Code. Net investment income (loss) and realized gains (losses) will be retained in the Account and will not be taxable until received by the contract owner or beneficiary in the form of annuity payments or other distributions.
Net Assets Attributable to Variable Annuity Contract Holders
The variable annuity contract reserves at the insurance company are comprised of net contract purchase payments less redemptions and benefits. These reserves are adjusted daily for the net investment income (loss), net realized gain (loss) and unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments.
Single Reportable Segment
The Separate Account derives revenues from variable annuity products. The Company has identified the President as the chief operating decision maker (CODM) for overseeing the products and the performance of the underlying funds to evaluate the results of the business and make operational decisions. The Separate Accounts products constitute as a single operating segment and therefore, a single reportable segment. Separate Accounts are structured with a limited purpose by design and their sole purpose, which records and reports the invested funds and activities and performance chosen by contract/policy holders. Investment performance of funds may vary based on the underlying funds investment objectives specified in the fund prospectuses. The accounting policies used to measure the profit and loss of the segment are the same as those described in the summary of significant accounting policies herein.
(3) DEDUCTIONS AND EXPENSES
Although periodic annuitization payments to contract owners vary according to the investment performance of the sub-accounts, such payments are not affected by mortality or expense experience because the Company assumes the mortality and expense risks under the contracts.
The mortality risk assumed by the Company results from the life annuity payment option in the contracts, in which the Company agrees to make annuity payments regardless of how long a particular annuitant or other payee lives. The annuity payments are determined in accordance with annuity purchase rate provisions established at the time the contracts are issued. Based on the actuarial determination of expected mortality, the Company is required to fund any deficiency in the annuity payment reserves from its general account assets.
The expense risk assumed by the Company is the risk that the deductions for sales and administrative expenses may prove insufficient to cover the actual sales and administrative expenses.
Under each contract, the Company deducts a fee from the Account each day for assuming the mortality and expense risks. These fees are equal on an annual basis to a percentage of the daily value of the total investments of the Account. In connection with certain contracts in which the Company incurs reduced sales and servicing expenses, such as contracts offered to active employees of the Company or any of its subsidiaries and/or affiliates, the Company may offer enhanced contracts.
14
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED
(3) DEDUCTIONS AND EXPENSES- Continued
The following schedule lists aggregate mortality and expense risk fees deducted by contract type for the year ended December 31, 2024:
1.50% Series Contracts |
$ | 815 | ||||
1.40% Series Contracts |
3,372,969 | |||||
1.25% Series Contracts |
206 | |||||
1.10% Series Contracts |
31,568 | |||||
0.95% Series Contracts |
27,040 | |||||
|
|
|||||
$3,432,598 | ||||||
|
|
The Company may deduct a percentage of purchase payments surrendered to cover sales expenses. The percentage ranges from 0% to a maximum of 8.0% depending on the product and based upon the number of years the purchase payment has been held.
In addition, the Company may deduct units from contracts annually and upon full surrender to cover an administrative fee ranging from $30 to $40 per contract. These fees totaled $79,629 for the year ended December 31, 2024.
(4) OTHER
Other Transactions with Affiliates
MM Ascend Life Investors Services, LLC (MMALIS), an affiliate of the Account, is the principal underwriter and performs all variable annuity sales functions on behalf of the Company. All commissions and amounts paid to MMALIS for acting as underwriter are paid by the Company.
Pursuant to an administrative services agreement between MassMutual, the Company, and affiliates of the Company, MassMutual provides administrative and support services to the Company and the Account.
Subsequent Events
Management has evaluated the impact of subsequent events on the Account through the date the financial statements were issued and has determined that there were no subsequent events requiring recognition or disclosure in the financial statements.
15
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - CONTINUED
(5) PURCHASES AND SALES OF INVESTMENT IN PORTFOLIO SHARES
The aggregate cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of investments in all portfolio shares for the year or period ended December 31, 2024, are as follows:
Cost of Purchases |
Proceeds from Sales |
|||||||
AIM Variable Insurance Funds (Invesco Variable Insurance Funds): |
||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares |
$ | 216,676 | $ | 590,773 | ||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares |
27,965 | 277,397 | ||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares |
416,548 | 817,591 | ||||||
Invesco V.I. Conservative Balanced Fund-Series I Shares |
45,409 | 799,290 | ||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
310,773 | 474,567 | ||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares |
59,352 | 1,256,229 | ||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares |
75,833 | 257,617 | ||||||
Invesco V.I. Equity and Income Fund-Series I Shares |
841,270 | 60,734 | ||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares |
21,003 | 259,932 | ||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares |
50,135 | 162,335 | ||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares |
201,385 | 299,555 | ||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
84,383 | 195,839 | ||||||
ALPS Variable Investment Trust: |
||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
22,910 | 164,352 | ||||||
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
12,341 | 92,232 | ||||||
Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
127,469 | 289,387 | ||||||
Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
17,269 | 68,249 | ||||||
BNY Mellon Investment Portfolios: |
||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares |
30,032 | 85,620 | ||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares |
209,536 | 1,414,835 | ||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc.-Initial Shares |
3,868,254 | 5,599,184 | ||||||
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc.-Initial Shares |
77,768 | 825,392 | ||||||
BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund: |
||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares |
727,209 | 863,438 | ||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio |
4,053,365 | 852,740 | ||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares |
261,120 | 248,772 | ||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares |
67,169 | 409,064 | ||||||
Calamos® Advisors Trust: |
||||||||
Calamos® Growth and Income Portfolio |
14,963 | 147,227 | ||||||
Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||
Davis Equity Portfolio |
96,631 | 117,430 | ||||||
Deutsche DWS Investments VIT Funds: |
||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A |
120,224 | 437,967 | ||||||
Franklin Templeton Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 |
50,007 | 303,207 | ||||||
Janus Aspen Series: |
||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
818,612 | 3,766,332 | ||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
950,607 | 2,009,137 | ||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
984,182 | 2,056,563 | ||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
391,840 | 1,103,242 | ||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
248,455 | 876,658 | ||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
520,984 | 2,406,054 | ||||||
Lincoln Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||
LVIP American Century Capital Appreciation Fund-Standard Class II |
389,864 | 496,013 | ||||||
LVIP American Century Large Company Value Fund-Standard Class II |
109,560 | 467,091 | ||||||
LVIP American Century Mid Cap Value Fund-Standard Class II |
370,180 | 695,468 | ||||||
LVIP American Century Ultra® Fund-Standard Class II |
530,989 | 692,668 | ||||||
Morgan Stanley Variable Insurance Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I |
20,183 | 265,939 | ||||||
U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I |
127,436 | 4,259,174 | ||||||
PIMCO Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
39,078 | 137,564 | ||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
140,127 | 357,182 | ||||||
Wilshire Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||
Wilshire Global Allocation Fund |
10,020 | 68,418 |
16
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - CONTINUED
(6) CHANGES IN UNITS OUTSTANDING
Units Outstanding 1/1/2024 |
Units Purchased | Units Redeemed |
Units Outstanding 12/31/2024 |
|||||||||||||
AIM Variable Insurance Funds (Invesco Variable Insurance Funds): |
||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
83,391.919 | 738.111 | 7,616.496 | 76,513.534 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
348.781 | 0.000 | 0.492 | 348.289 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
1,528.936 | 0.000 | 9.016 | 1,519.920 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares - 1.50% series contract |
93.204 | 0.000 | 0.120 | 93.084 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
41,157.015 | 747.486 | 5,818.174 | 36,086.327 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
1,018.574 | 3.266 | 0.000 | 1,021.840 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
409.810 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 409.810 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares - 1.50% series contract |
229.824 | 0.000 | 9.376 | 220.448 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
156,848.648 | 998.646 | 23,507.821 | 134,339.473 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
3,102.161 | 15.312 | 1,360.927 | 1,756.546 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
5,466.556 | 0.000 | -0.000 | 5,466.556 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Conservative Balanced Fund - Series I - 1.40% series contract |
39,108.079 | 1,601.589 | 40,709.668 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Conservative Balanced Fund - Series I - 0.95% series contract |
8,548.331 | 0.000 | 8,548.331 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
113,952.989 | 440.341 | 13,725.775 | 100,667.555 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
314.552 | 0.000 | 196.174 | 118.378 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
827.310 | 0.486 | 23.675 | 804.121 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
507,693.016 | 5,519.338 | 77,508.706 | 435,703.648 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
9,230.935 | 56.771 | 2,962.780 | 6,324.926 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
4,131.835 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 4,131.835 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
38,805.831 | 1,065.675 | 9,280.748 | 30,590.758 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
843.387 | 2.814 | 0.000 | 846.201 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
63.465 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 63.465 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Equity and Income Fund Series I - 1.40% series contract |
0.000 | 64,814.494 | 5,349.188 | 59,465.306 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Equity and Income Fund Series I - 0.95% series contract |
0.000 | 14,836.219 | 38.854 | 14,797.365 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
71,620.157 | 921.390 | 6,517.654 | 66,023.893 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
133.067 | 0.000 | 0.767 | 132.300 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
140.300 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 140.300 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
30,003.866 | 912.669 | 7,157.430 | 23,759.105 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
1,855.724 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 1,855.724 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
586.713 | 0.000 | 51.289 | 535.424 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
43,278.543 | 563.973 | 5,470.492 | 38,372.024 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
3,225.886 | 3.694 | 1,041.594 | 2,187.986 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
1,427.772 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 1,427.772 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
39,745.049 | 823.266 | 5,270.566 | 35,297.749 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 1.25% series contract |
52.047 | 0.000 | -0.000 | 52.047 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
467.918 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 467.918 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
1,120.082 | 0.000 | 39.346 | 1,080.736 | ||||||||||||
ALPS Variable Investment Trust: |
||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 1.40% series contract |
32,242.007 | 698.694 | 8,987.309 | 23,953.392 | ||||||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 1.10% series contract |
86.712 | 0.000 | 1.602 | 85.110 | ||||||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 0.95% series contract |
2,963.135 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 2,963.135 | ||||||||||||
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 1.40% series contract |
17,821.382 | 640.560 | 2,892.955 | 15,568.987 | ||||||||||||
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 0.95% series contract |
3,751.549 | 0.000 | 3,751.549 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 1.40% series contract |
62,737.961 | 4,626.950 | 8,623.904 | 58,741.007 | ||||||||||||
Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 0.95% series contract |
13,630.159 | 0.000 | 4,849.605 | 8,780.554 | ||||||||||||
Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 1.40% series contract |
29,939.180 | 274.932 | 3,865.776 | 26,348.336 | ||||||||||||
Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 0.95% series contract |
4,528.284 | 0.000 | 296.070 | 4,232.214 | ||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Investment Portfolios: |
||||||||||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares - 1.40% series contract |
24,507.981 | 736.135 | 2,895.260 | 22,348.856 | ||||||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares - 1.10% series contract |
1,966.497 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 1,966.497 | ||||||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares - 0.95% series contract |
2,507.328 | 0.000 | 117.557 | 2,389.771 | ||||||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.50% series contract |
72.179 | 0.000 | 0.177 | 72.002 | ||||||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.40% series contract |
259,150.787 | 3,864.330 | 18,341.880 | 244,673.237 | ||||||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.10% series contract |
142.050 | 0.000 | 0.543 | 141.507 | ||||||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares - 0.95% series contract |
862.432 | 0.000 | 159.231 | 703.201 | ||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc. Initial Shares - 1.50% series contract |
3.126 | 0.000 | 0.091 | 3.035 | ||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc. Initial Shares - 1.40% series contract |
803,129.753 | 7,082.439 | 80,104.346 | 730,107.846 | ||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc. Initial Shares - 1.25% series contract |
180.876 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 180.876 | ||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc. Initial Shares - 1.10% series contract |
5,488.447 | 0.000 | 1,498.292 | 3,990.155 | ||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc. Initial Shares - 0.95% series contract |
2,940.906 | 0.000 | 32.192 | 2,908.714 | ||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc. Initial Shares- 1.40% series contract |
147,552.701 | 352.074 | 16,451.249 | 131,453.526 | ||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc. Initial Shares- 1.10% series contract |
2,007.056 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 2,007.056 | ||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund: |
||||||||||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.40% series contract |
131,336.172 | 3,544.993 | 13,962.917 | 120,918.248 | ||||||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.10% series contract |
377.605 | 0.000 | 38.868 | 338.737 | ||||||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares - 0.95% series contract |
619.738 | 12.493 | 12.611 | 619.620 | ||||||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio - 1.40% series contract |
3,637,465.898 | 3,282,171.568 | 674,415.752 | 6,245,221.714 | ||||||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio - 1.25% series contract |
0.000 | 953.953 | 0.000 | 953.953 | ||||||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio - 1.10% series contract |
79,667.618 | 80,948.436 | 30,720.020 | 129,896.034 | ||||||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio - 0.95% series contract |
64,266.727 | 33,466.689 | 2,003.484 | 95,729.932 | ||||||||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.40% series contract |
65,501.743 | 1,514.671 | 3,949.500 | 63,066.914 | ||||||||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.10% series contract |
266.866 | 0.000 | 3.708 | 263.158 | ||||||||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares - 0.95% series contract |
50.114 | 0.000 | -0.000 | 50.114 | ||||||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.50% series contract |
136.918 | 0.000 | 5.587 | 131.331 | ||||||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.40% series contract |
131,902.590 | 1,842.542 | 11,916.369 | 121,828.763 | ||||||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.10% series contract |
97.507 | 0.000 | 50.439 | 47.068 | ||||||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares - 0.95% series contract |
4.014 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 4.014 |
17
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - CONTINUED
(6) CHANGES IN UNITS OUTSTANDING - Continued
Units Outstanding 1/1/2024 |
Units Purchased |
Units Redeemed |
Units Outstanding 12/31/2024 |
|||||||||||||
Calamos® Advisors Trust: |
||||||||||||||||
Calamos® Growth and Income Portfolio - 1.40% series contract |
22,232.501 | 157.958 | 4,396.756 | 17,993.703 | ||||||||||||
Calamos® Growth and Income Portfolio - 0.95% series contract |
2,490.477 | 18.968 | 567.895 | 1,941.550 | ||||||||||||
Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||
Davis Equity Portfolio - 1.40% series contract |
17,853.290 | 250.859 | 4,244.010 | 13,860.139 | ||||||||||||
Davis Equity Portfolio - 1.10% series contract |
1,264.031 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 1,264.031 | ||||||||||||
Davis Equity Portfolio - 0.95% series contract |
516.582 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 516.582 | ||||||||||||
Deutsche DWS Investments VIT Funds: |
||||||||||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A - 1.40% series contract |
59,547.041 | 863.849 | 9,792.574 | 50,618.316 | ||||||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A - 1.10% series contract |
265.110 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 265.110 | ||||||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A - 0.95% series contract |
445.957 | 0.000 | 28.791 | 417.166 | ||||||||||||
Franklin Templeton Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 - 1.40% series contract |
81,393.459 | 3,148.386 | 24,970.936 | 59,570.909 | ||||||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 - 1.10% series contract |
6,382.830 | 0.000 | 533.550 | 5,849.280 | ||||||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 - 0.95% series contract |
7,150.356 | 25.222 | 736.425 | 6,439.153 | ||||||||||||
Janus Aspen Series: |
||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.40% series contract |
368,648.517 | 6,319.718 | 51,085.863 | 323,882.372 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.10% series contract |
1,550.657 | 0.000 | 3.723 | 1,546.934 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 0.95% series contract |
3,355.292 | 5.877 | 1,368.048 | 1,993.121 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.40% series contract |
187,034.789 | 2,546.867 | 19,898.212 | 169,683.444 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.25% series contract |
43.911 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 43.911 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.10% series contract |
3,243.155 | 16.478 | 138.750 | 3,120.883 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 0.95% series contract |
765.494 | 0.000 | 139.451 | 626.043 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.50% series contract |
273.096 | 0.000 | 8.741 | 264.355 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.40% series contract |
234,042.415 | 2,058.005 | 27,280.589 | 208,819.831 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.10% series contract |
655.234 | 0.000 | 0.367 | 654.867 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 0.95% series contract |
381.975 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 381.975 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.40% series contract |
238,201.711 | 1,485.208 | 24,340.102 | 215,346.817 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.10% series contract |
1,779.704 | 0.000 | 522.307 | 1,257.397 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 0.95% series contract |
13.356 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 13.356 | ||||||||||||
Janus Aspen Series: |
||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.40% series contract |
210,655.236 | 4,656.409 | 19,023.684 | 196,287.961 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.25% series contract |
28.242 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 28.242 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.10% series contract |
4,180.080 | 81.294 | 940.242 | 3,321.132 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 0.95% series contract |
2,706.387 | 10.120 | 83.032 | 2,633.475 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.50% series contract |
91.604 | 0.000 | 0.303 | 91.301 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.40% series contract |
237,019.223 | 2,209.759 | 33,772.041 | 205,456.941 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.10% series contract |
2,629.155 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 2,629.155 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 0.95% series contract |
3.891 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 3.891 | ||||||||||||
Morgan Stanley Variable Insurance Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I - 1.50% series contract |
71.618 | 0.000 | 0.092 | 71.526 | ||||||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I - 1.40% series contract |
25,572.878 | 730.648 | 7,863.573 | 18,439.953 | ||||||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I - 1.10% series contract |
44.090 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 44.090 | ||||||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I - 0.95% series contract |
524.097 | 11.928 | 108.420 | 427.605 | ||||||||||||
Morgan Stanley VIF U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I - 1.40% series contract |
73,891.377 | 1,026.788 | 74,918.166 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Morgan Stanley VIF U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I - 1.25% series contract |
20.187 | 0.000 | 20.187 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Morgan Stanley VIF U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I - 1.10% series contract |
1,817.848 | 24.188 | 1,842.035 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Morgan Stanley VIF U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I - 0.95% series contract |
708.436 | 3.331 | 711.767 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Lincoln Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Capital Appreciation Fund-Standard Class II - 1.50% series contract |
40.623 | 0.000 | 0.387 | 40.236 | ||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Capital Appreciation Fund-Standard Class II - 1.40% series contract |
222,690.296 | 3,998.887 | 18,697.414 | 207,991.769 | ||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Capital Appreciation Fund-Standard Class II - 1.10% series contract |
1,684.369 | 0.000 | 3.705 | 1,680.664 | ||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Capital Appreciation Fund-Standard Class II - 0.95% series contract |
706.392 | 0.001 | 365.962 | 340.431 | ||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Large Company Value Fund-Standard Class II - 1.40% series contract |
71,750.771 | 1,454.129 | 16,025.484 | 57,179.416 | ||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Large Company Value Fund-Standard Class II - 1.10% series contract |
2,485.844 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 2,485.844 | ||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Large Company Value Fund-Standard Class II - 0.95% series contract |
2,087.720 | 0.000 | 158.490 | 1,929.230 | ||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Mid Cap Value Fund-Standard Class II - 1.40% series contract |
107,848.142 | 1,358.807 | 14,733.622 | 94,473.327 | ||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Mid Cap Value Fund-Standard Class II - 1.10% series contract |
2,121.750 | 0.000 | 3.916 | 2,117.834 | ||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Mid Cap Value Fund-Standard Class II - 0.95% series contract |
3,289.319 | 43.509 | 246.122 | 3,086.706 | ||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Ultra® Fund-Standard Class II - 1.50% series contract |
96.659 | 0.000 | 0.357 | 96.302 | ||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Ultra® Fund-Standard Class II - 1.40% series contract |
99,763.161 | 866.178 | 10,223.826 | 90,405.513 | ||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Ultra® Fund-Standard Class II - 1.10% series contract |
2,584.463 | 0.000 | 2.455 | 2,582.008 | ||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Ultra® Fund-Standard Class II - 0.95% series contract |
935.422 | 0.000 | 61.582 | 873.840 | ||||||||||||
PIMCO Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 1.40% series contract |
53,070.363 | 1,561.557 | 8,593.195 | 46,038.725 | ||||||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 1.10% series contract |
583.425 | 0.000 | 1.012 | 582.413 | ||||||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 0.95% series contract |
2,535.597 | 26.477 | 335.830 | 2,226.244 | ||||||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 1.40% series contract |
140,783.810 | 3,180.749 | 19,558.579 | 124,405.980 | ||||||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 1.10% series contract |
11,419.846 | 426.527 | 1,846.999 | 9,999.374 | ||||||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 0.95% series contract |
10,359.911 | 274.265 | 594.487 | 10,039.689 | ||||||||||||
Wilshire Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||
Wilshire Global Allocation Fund - 1.40% series contract |
27,431.139 | 358.490 | 5,011.812 | 22,777.817 | ||||||||||||
Wilshire Global Allocation Fund - 1.10% series contract |
1,066.210 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 1,066.210 |
18
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - CONTINUED
(6) CHANGES IN UNITS OUTSTANDING
Units Outstanding 1/1/2023 |
Units Purchased |
Units Redeemed |
Units Outstanding 12/31/2023 |
|||||||||||||
AIM Variable Insurance Funds (Invesco Variable Insurance Funds): |
||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
94,999.199 | 939.057 | 12,546.337 | 83,391.919 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares - 1.25% series contract |
490.435 | 0.000 | 490.435 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
349.368 | 0.000 | 0.587 | 348.781 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
1,528.936 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 1,528.936 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares - 1.50% series contract |
93.366 | 0.000 | 0.162 | 93.204 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
48,764.874 | 612.901 | 8,220.760 | 41,157.015 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares - 1.25% series contract |
271.989 | 0.000 | 271.989 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
1,013.040 | 5.534 | -0.000 | 1,018.574 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
561.692 | 2.334 | 154.216 | 409.810 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares - 1.50% series contract |
239.331 | 0.000 | 9.507 | 229.824 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
177,575.037 | 1,113.528 | 21,839.917 | 156,848.648 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
3,967.731 | 32.754 | 898.324 | 3,102.161 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
5,504.529 | 4.433 | 42.406 | 5,466.556 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Conservative Balanced Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
43,972.010 | 700.586 | 5,564.517 | 39,108.079 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Conservative Balanced Fund-Series I Shares - 1.25% series contract |
394.900 | 0.000 | 394.900 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Conservative Balanced Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
8,548.331 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 8,548.331 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
129,349.456 | 503.297 | 15,899.764 | 113,952.989 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
314.552 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 314.552 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
843.177 | 3.207 | 19.074 | 827.310 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
555,594.537 | 5,206.267 | 53,107.788 | 507,693.016 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares - 1.25% series contract |
116.152 | 0.000 | 116.152 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
9,445.269 | 123.595 | 337.929 | 9,230.935 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
4,903.999 | 6.814 | 778.978 | 4,131.835 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
47,653.540 | 3,391.621 | 12,239.330 | 38,805.831 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
839.429 | 3.958 | -0.000 | 843.387 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
63.465 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 63.465 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
84,859.504 | 1,589.718 | 14,829.065 | 71,620.157 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares - 1.25% series contract |
436.033 | 0.000 | 436.033 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
133.979 | 0.000 | 0.912 | 133.067 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
213.267 | 0.000 | 72.967 | 140.300 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
30,981.024 | 3,064.109 | 4,041.267 | 30,003.866 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
1,855.724 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 1,855.724 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
721.257 | 4.726 | 139.270 | 586.713 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
49,709.654 | 454.992 | 6,886.103 | 43,278.543 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares - 1.25% series contract |
42.880 | 0.000 | 42.880 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
3,808.536 | 11.495 | 594.145 | 3,225.886 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
1,643.785 | 0.000 | 216.013 | 1,427.772 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 1.40% series contract |
53,166.588 | 860.798 | 14,282.337 | 39,745.049 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 1.25% series contract |
98.648 | 0.000 | 46.601 | 52.047 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 1.10% series contract |
467.918 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 467.918 | ||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares - 0.95% series contract |
1,444.220 | 0.000 | 324.138 | 1,120.082 | ||||||||||||
ALPS Variable Investment Trust: |
||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 1.40% series contract |
33,204.312 | 986.294 | 1,948.599 | 32,242.007 | ||||||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 1.10% series contract |
88.571 | 0.000 | 1.859 | 86.712 | ||||||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 0.95% series contract |
2,963.135 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 2,963.135 | ||||||||||||
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 1.40% series contract |
18,889.962 | 1,139.681 | 2,208.261 | 17,821.382 | ||||||||||||
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 0.95% series contract |
3,751.549 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 3,751.549 | ||||||||||||
Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 1.40% series contract |
65,616.831 | 1,534.570 | 4,413.440 | 62,737.961 | ||||||||||||
Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 0.95% series contract |
13,638.016 | 0.000 | 7.857 | 13,630.159 | ||||||||||||
Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 1.40% series contract |
32,463.275 | 435.309 | 2,959.404 | 29,939.180 | ||||||||||||
Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II - 0.95% series contract |
4,709.284 | 0.000 | 181.000 | 4,528.284 | ||||||||||||
American Century Variable Portfolios, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||
VP Capital Appreciation Fund-Class I - 1.50% series contract |
41.127 | 0.000 | 0.504 | 40.623 | ||||||||||||
VP Capital Appreciation Fund-Class I - 1.40% series contract |
272,789.596 | 4,144.888 | 54,244.188 | 222,690.296 | ||||||||||||
VP Capital Appreciation Fund-Class I - 1.25% series contract |
1,512.514 | 0.000 | 1,512.514 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
VP Capital Appreciation Fund-Class I - 1.10% series contract |
1,688.594 | 0.000 | 4.225 | 1,684.369 | ||||||||||||
VP Capital Appreciation Fund-Class I - 0.95% series contract |
1,142.195 | 0.000 | 435.803 | 706.392 | ||||||||||||
VP Large Company Value Fund-Class I - 1.40% series contract |
79,924.659 | 4,054.428 | 12,228.316 | 71,750.771 | ||||||||||||
VP Large Company Value Fund-Class I - 1.10% series contract |
2,485.844 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 2,485.844 | ||||||||||||
VP Large Company Value Fund-Class I - 0.95% series contract |
2,600.048 | 9.930 | 522.258 | 2,087.720 | ||||||||||||
VP Mid Cap Value Fund-Class I - 1.40% series contract |
124,208.649 | 2,444.387 | 18,804.894 | 107,848.142 | ||||||||||||
VP Mid Cap Value Fund-Class I - 1.10% series contract |
2,138.254 | 0.000 | 16.504 | 2,121.750 | ||||||||||||
VP Mid Cap Value Fund-Class I - 0.95% series contract |
4,041.031 | 42.236 | 793.948 | 3,289.319 | ||||||||||||
VP Ultra® Fund-Class I - 1.50% series contract |
97.128 | 0.000 | 0.469 | 96.659 | ||||||||||||
VP Ultra® Fund-Class I - 1.40% series contract |
116,829.567 | 1,850.032 | 18,916.438 | 99,763.161 | ||||||||||||
VP Ultra® Fund-Class I - 1.10% series contract |
2,587.263 | 0.000 | 2.800 | 2,584.463 | ||||||||||||
VP Ultra® Fund-Class I - 0.95% series contract |
971.188 | 0.000 | 35.766 | 935.422 |
19
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - CONTINUED
(6) CHANGES IN UNITS OUTSTANDING - Continued
Units Outstanding 1/1/2023 |
Units Purchased | Units Redeemed |
Units Outstanding 12/31/2023 |
|||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Investment Portfolios: |
||||||||||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares - 1.40% series contract |
27,652.396 | 1,939.596 | 5,084.011 | 24,507.981 | ||||||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares - 1.10% series contract |
1,966.497 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 1,966.497 | ||||||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares - 0.95% series contract |
2,605.376 | 7.596 | 105.644 | 2,507.328 | ||||||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.50% series contract |
72.414 | 0.000 | 0.235 | 72.179 | ||||||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.40% series contract |
290,839.304 | 2,031.713 | 33,720.230 | 259,150.787 | ||||||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.10% series contract |
142.696 | 0.000 | 0.646 | 142.050 | ||||||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares - 0.95% series contract |
980.177 | 0.000 | 117.745 | 862.432 | ||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc. Initial Shares - 1.50% series contract |
3.244 | 0.000 | 0.118 | 3.126 | ||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc. Initial Shares - 1.40% series contract |
909,194.920 | 8,538.554 | 114,603.721 | 803,129.753 | ||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc. Initial Shares - 1.25% series contract |
1,122.316 | 0.000 | 941.440 | 180.876 | ||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc. Initial Shares - 1.10% series contract |
6,448.534 | 1.557 | 961.644 | 5,488.447 | ||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc. Initial Shares - 0.95% series contract |
3,239.347 | 0.000 | 298.441 | 2,940.906 | ||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc. Initial Shares- 1.40% series contract |
180,029.978 | 1,080.515 | 33,557.792 | 147,552.701 | ||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc. Initial Shares- 1.10% series contract |
2,007.056 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 2,007.056 | ||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc. Initial Shares- 0.95% series contract |
1,511.589 | 0.001 | 1,511.590 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund: |
||||||||||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.40% series contract |
143,157.987 | 898.286 | 12,720.101 | 131,336.172 | ||||||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.25% series contract |
107.195 | 0.000 | 107.195 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.10% series contract |
407.986 | 0.000 | 30.381 | 377.605 | ||||||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares - 0.95% series contract |
636.409 | 0.000 | 16.671 | 619.738 | ||||||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio - 1.40% series contract |
1,470,157.133 | 2,700,977.990 | 533,669.225 | 3,637,465.898 | ||||||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio - 1.25% series contract |
0.000 | 291.582 | 291.582 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio - 1.10% series contract |
36,484.847 | 171,634.399 | 128,451.628 | 79,667.618 | ||||||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio - 0.95% series contract |
48,248.276 | 24,676.807 | 8,658.356 | 64,266.727 | ||||||||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.40% series contract |
75,967.070 | 3,118.323 | 13,583.650 | 65,501.743 | ||||||||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.10% series contract |
266.866 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 266.866 | ||||||||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares - 0.95% series contract |
50.114 | 0.000 | -0.000 | 50.114 | ||||||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.50% series contract |
142.581 | 0.000 | 5.663 | 136.918 | ||||||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.40% series contract |
146,604.048 | 2,401.148 | 17,102.606 | 131,902.590 | ||||||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.25% series contract |
61.215 | 0.000 | 61.215 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares - 1.10% series contract |
100.686 | 0.000 | 3.179 | 97.507 | ||||||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares - 0.95% series contract |
96.415 | 0.000 | 92.401 | 4.014 | ||||||||||||
Calamos® Advisors Trust: |
||||||||||||||||
Calamos® Growth and Income Portfolio - 1.40% series contract |
26,639.367 | 294.682 | 4,701.548 | 22,232.501 | ||||||||||||
Calamos® Growth and Income Portfolio - 0.95% series contract |
6,524.557 | 9.616 | 4,043.696 | 2,490.477 | ||||||||||||
Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||
Davis Value Portfolio - 1.40% series contract |
21,107.330 | 403.291 | 3,657.331 | 17,853.290 | ||||||||||||
Davis Value Portfolio - 1.25% series contract |
42.904 | 0.000 | 42.904 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Davis Value Portfolio - 1.10% series contract |
1,264.031 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 1,264.031 | ||||||||||||
Davis Value Portfolio - 0.95% series contract |
743.326 | 0.000 | 226.744 | 516.582 | ||||||||||||
Deutsche DWS Investments VIT Funds: |
||||||||||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A - 1.40% series contract |
69,406.977 | 10,095.480 | 19,955.416 | 59,547.041 | ||||||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A - 1.10% series contract |
265.110 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 265.110 | ||||||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A - 0.95% series contract |
1,028.830 | 2.418 | 585.291 | 445.957 | ||||||||||||
Franklin Templeton Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 - 1.40% series contract |
118,017.067 | 7,896.601 | 44,520.209 | 81,393.459 | ||||||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 - 1.25% series contract |
31.291 | 0.000 | 31.291 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 - 1.10% series contract |
6,382.830 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 6,382.830 | ||||||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 - 0.95% series contract |
10,350.112 | 5.729 | 3,205.485 | 7,150.356 | ||||||||||||
Janus Aspen Series: |
||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.40% series contract |
451,324.161 | 29,829.155 | 112,504.799 | 368,648.517 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.25% series contract |
14.120 | 0.000 | 14.120 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.10% series contract |
1,815.315 | 0.000 | 264.658 | 1,550.657 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 0.95% series contract |
3,362.278 | 0.480 | 7.466 | 3,355.292 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.40% series contract |
212,217.390 | 2,462.709 | 27,645.310 | 187,034.789 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.25% series contract |
43.911 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 43.911 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.10% series contract |
3,243.155 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 3,243.155 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 0.95% series contract |
853.061 | 0.381 | 87.948 | 765.494 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.50% series contract |
282.021 | 0.000 | 8.925 | 273.096 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.40% series contract |
258,935.002 | 4,365.227 | 29,257.814 | 234,042.415 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.25% series contract |
987.999 | 0.000 | 987.999 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.10% series contract |
655.671 | 0.000 | 0.437 | 655.234 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 0.95% series contract |
2,455.108 | 0.000 | 2,073.133 | 381.975 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.40% series contract |
271,089.366 | 1,355.465 | 34,243.120 | 238,201.711 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.10% series contract |
1,863.436 | 0.000 | 83.732 | 1,779.704 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 0.95% series contract |
13.356 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 13.356 |
20
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - CONTINUED
(6) CHANGES IN UNITS OUTSTANDING - Continued
Units Outstanding 1/1/2023 |
Units Purchased |
Units Redeemed |
Units Outstanding 12/31/2023 |
|||||||||||||
Janus Aspen Series: |
||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.40% series contract |
239,679.108 | 6,090.825 | 35,114.697 | 210,655.236 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.25% series contract |
744.929 | 0.000 | 716.687 | 28.242 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.10% series contract |
4,755.881 | 33.943 | 609.744 | 4,180.080 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 0.95% series contract |
3,572.491 | 5.158 | 871.262 | 2,706.387 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.50% series contract |
92.001 | 0.000 | 0.397 | 91.604 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.40% series contract |
262,220.433 | 1,589.024 | 26,790.234 | 237,019.223 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 1.10% series contract |
2,629.155 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 2,629.155 | ||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares - 0.95% series contract |
3.891 | -0.001 | -0.001 | 3.891 | ||||||||||||
Morgan Stanley Variable Insurance Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||
Core Plus Fixed Income Portfolio-Class I - 1.40% series contract |
100,700.173 | 4,263.358 | 104,963.531 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Core Plus Fixed Income Portfolio-Class I - 1.25% series contract |
17.326 | 0.000 | 17.326 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Core Plus Fixed Income Portfolio-Class I - 1.10% series contract |
3,875.205 | 131.535 | 4,006.740 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Core Plus Fixed Income Portfolio-Class I - 0.95% series contract |
1,684.843 | 16.927 | 1,701.770 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I - 1.50% series contract |
71.743 | 0.000 | 0.125 | 71.618 | ||||||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I - 1.40% series contract |
29,853.198 | 1,026.330 | 5,306.650 | 25,572.878 | ||||||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I - 1.10% series contract |
44.090 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 44.090 | ||||||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I - 0.95% series contract |
586.334 | 8.221 | 70.458 | 524.097 | ||||||||||||
U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I - 1.40% series contract |
85,776.304 | 1,426.069 | 13,310.996 | 73,891.377 | ||||||||||||
U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I - 1.25% series contract |
61.983 | 0.000 | 41.796 | 20.187 | ||||||||||||
U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I - 1.10% series contract |
1,840.906 | 23.952 | 47.010 | 1,817.848 | ||||||||||||
U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I - 0.95% series contract |
839.139 | 4.929 | 135.632 | 708.436 | ||||||||||||
PIMCO Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 1.40% series contract |
54,743.356 | 38,999.903 | 40,672.896 | 53,070.363 | ||||||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 1.10% series contract |
974.500 | 0.000 | 391.075 | 583.425 | ||||||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 0.95% series contract |
4,619.022 | 30.360 | 2,113.785 | 2,535.597 | ||||||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 1.40% series contract |
164,438.306 | 20,637.495 | 44,291.991 | 140,783.810 | ||||||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 1.25% series contract |
62.902 | 0.000 | 62.902 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 1.10% series contract |
13,416.330 | 408.184 | 2,404.668 | 11,419.846 | ||||||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class - 0.95% series contract |
14,586.774 | 217.189 | 4,444.052 | 10,359.911 | ||||||||||||
The Timothy Plan: |
||||||||||||||||
Timothy Plan Conservative Growth Portfolio Variable Series - 1.40% series contract |
28,045.912 | 101.332 | 28,147.244 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Timothy Plan Strategic Growth Portfolio Variable Series - 1.40% series contract |
28,792.420 | 20.249 | 28,812.669 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||
Wilshire Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||
Wilshire Global Allocation Fund - 1.40% series contract |
27,675.996 | 450.810 | 695.667 | 27,431.139 | ||||||||||||
Wilshire Global Allocation Fund - 1.10% series contract |
1,066.210 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 1,066.210 |
21
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - CONTINUED
(7) UNIT VALUES AND FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
At December 31, 2024 | Periods Ended December 31, 2024 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Subaccount |
Units (000s) |
Unit Value Range |
Net Assets (000s) |
Investment Income Ratio (1) |
Expenses Ratio Range (2) |
Total Return Range (3) |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
AIM Variable Insurance Funds (Invesco Variable Insurance Funds): |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares |
78 | $ | 80.841853 | $ | 91.558148 | $ | 6,355 | 0.99 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 28.57 | % | 29.16 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares |
38 | 49.858571 | 55.764346 | 1,919 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 32.13 | % | 32.88 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares |
142 | 32.065689 | 34.605776 | 4,624 | 1.70 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 13.44 | % | 14.07 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
102 | 34.845122 | 37.942332 | 3,543 | 0.69 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 23.84 | % | 24.41 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares |
446 | 15.778348 | 16.118116 | 7,043 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 22.48 | % | 23.04 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares |
32 | 28.381899 | 30.207706 | 895 | 1.78 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 11.62 | % | 12.13 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Equity and Income Fund-Series I Shares (*) |
74 | 10.658060 | 10.691362 | 792 | 3.52 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 0.00 | % | 0.00 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares |
66 | 33.370403 | 37.160863 | 2,213 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 2.70 | % | 3.17 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares |
26 | 22.536631 | 24.763664 | 593 | 5.49 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 6.21 | % | 6.70 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares |
42 | 45.038280 | 49.356000 | 1,903 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 21.90 | % | 22.46 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
37 | 38.038648 | 41.686113 | 1,409 | 0.13 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 16.42 | % | 16.96 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
ALPS Variable Investment Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
27 | 17.723799 | 19.210764 | 483 | 1.61 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 8.62 | % | 9.12 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
16 | 12.878787 | 12.878787 | 201 | 1.93 | % | 1.40 | % | 1.40 | % | 3.81 | % | 3.81 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
68 | 19.898491 | 21.567891 | 1,358 | 1.44 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 11.08 | % | 11.59 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
31 | 15.204387 | 16.479989 | 470 | 2.14 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 6.44 | % | 6.93 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Investment Portfolios: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares |
27 | 27.056151 | 29.326247 | 731 | 0.64 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 10.75 | % | 11.26 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares |
246 | 69.172835 | 77.366148 | 17,343 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 23.84 | % | 24.54 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc.-Initial Shares |
737 | 64.770680 | 75.415018 | 49,136 | 1.19 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 22.78 | % | 23.47 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc.-Initial Shares |
133 | 48.989073 | 53.230826 | 6,547 | 0.56 | % | 1.10 | % | 1.40 | % | 23.13 | % | 23.50 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares |
122 | 58.478064 | 66.227171 | 7,134 | 0.43 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 11.21 | % | 11.73 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio |
6,471 | 1.140910 | 1.269694 | 7,407 | 3.52 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 2.91 | % | 3.05 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares |
63 | 57.827023 | 65.490695 | 3,667 | 0.55 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 20.99 | % | 21.55 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares |
122 | 30.553742 | 35.575856 | 3,833 | 0.69 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 3.04 | % | 3.62 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Calamos® Advisors Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Calamos® Growth and Income Portfolio |
20 | 30.024729 | 32.543319 | 603 | 0.39 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 19.37 | % | 19.92 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Davis Equity Portfolio |
16 | 27.513783 | 29.822266 | 433 | 1.05 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 16.39 | % | 16.92 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Deutsche DWS Investments VIT Funds: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A |
51 | 46.322687 | 52.045113 | 2,380 | 1.19 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 9.58 | % | 10.09 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Franklin Templeton Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 |
72 | 10.877480 | 11.790322 | 791 | 2.38 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -2.40 | % | -1.95 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Aspen Series: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
327 | 69.845525 | 79.100988 | 22,897 | 2.08 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 13.80 | % | 14.32 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
173 | 95.390510 | 108.033467 | 16,581 | 0.75 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 13.98 | % | 14.50 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
210 | 72.858561 | 84.013163 | 15,719 | 0.11 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 26.53 | % | 27.24 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
217 | 43.029493 | 48.732285 | 9,326 | 0.78 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 21.84 | % | 22.40 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
202 | 39.322778 | 44.535163 | 7,979 | 1.41 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 4.34 | % | 4.82 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
208 | 70.002516 | 81.507406 | 14,999 | 0.03 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 33.27 | % | 34.02 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Lincoln Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Capital Appreciation Fund-Standard Class II |
210 | 26.227623 | 27.837723 | 5,571 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 23.09 | % | 23.78 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Large Company Value Fund-Standard Class II |
62 | 28.820986 | 31.584360 | 1,785 | 2.52 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 9.16 | % | 9.66 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Mid Cap Value Fund-Standard Class II |
100 | 44.829228 | 49.126966 | 4,488 | 2.49 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 7.19 | % | 7.69 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
LVIP American Century Ultra® Fund-Standard Class II |
94 | 66.829407 | 74.744122 | 6,425 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 26.85 | % | 27.56 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morgan Stanley Variable Insurance Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I |
19 | 42.922877 | 47.366980 | 831 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 39.69 | % | 40.47 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
49 | 14.596978 | 15.996501 | 717 | 2.68 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 0.69 | % | 1.16 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
144 | 15.362728 | 16.835633 | 2,244 | 4.10 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 1.09 | % | 1.55 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Wilshire Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Wilshire Global Allocation Fund |
24 | 13.678591 | 13.933938 | 326 | 1.74 | % | 1.10 | % | 1.40 | % | 9.40 | % | 9.74 | % |
(1) | These amounts represent the dividends, excluding distributions of capital gains, received by the subaccount from the underlying mutual fund, divided by the average net assets. These ratios exclude those expenses, such as mortality and expense charges, that result in direct reductions in the unit values. For subaccounts that commenced during the period indicated, average net assets have been calculated from the date operations commenced through the end of the reporting period. The recognition of investment income by the subaccount is affected by the timing of the declaration of dividends by the underlying fund in which the subaccounts invest. |
(2) | These ratios represent the annualized contract expenses of the separate account, consisting primarily of mortality and expense risk charges, for the period indicated. The ratios include only those expenses that result in a direct reduction to unit values. Charges made directly to contract owner accounts through the redemption of units and expenses of the underlying fund are excluded. |
(3) | These amounts represent the total return for the periods indicated, including changes in the value of the underlying fund, and expenses assessed through the reduction of unit values. These ratios do not include any expenses assessed through the redemption of units. The total return is calculated for each period indicated or from the effective date through the end of the reporting period. As the total return is presented as a range of minimum to maximum values, based on the product grouping representing the minimum and maximum expense ratio amounts, some individual contract total returns are not within the ranges presented. |
(*) | Period from April 26, 2024 (commencement of operations) to December 31, 2024. |
22
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - CONTINUED
(7) UNIT VALUES AND FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
At December 31, 2023 | Periods Ended December 31, 2023 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Subaccount |
Units (000s) |
Unit Value Range |
Net Assets (000s) |
Investment Income Ratio (1) |
Expenses Ratio Range (2) |
Total Return Range (3) |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
AIM Variable Insurance Funds (Invesco Variable Insurance Funds): |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares |
85 | $ | 62.876636 | $ | 70.885349 | $ | 5,376 | 0.60 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 13.99 | % | 14.50 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares |
43 | 37.733275 | 41.966585 | 1,646 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 33.35 | % | 34.10 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares |
166 | 28.267698 | 30.336144 | 4,756 | 1.72 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 10.68 | % | 11.29 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Conservative Balanced Fund-Series I Shares |
48 | 15.596774 | 17.013934 | 755 | 1.84 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 11.03 | % | 11.53 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
115 | 28.138244 | 30.498994 | 3,241 | 0.74 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 21.64 | % | 22.20 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares |
521 | 12.882484 | 13.099593 | 6,715 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 11.57 | % | 12.08 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares |
40 | 25.427804 | 26.939588 | 1,011 | 1.83 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 7.52 | % | 8.01 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares |
72 | 32.493874 | 36.018962 | 2,337 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 1.58 | % | 2.05 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares |
32 | 21.219331 | 23.209373 | 692 | 5.24 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 8.64 | % | 9.13 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares |
48 | 36.946733 | 40.303303 | 1,783 | 0.81 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 21.50 | % | 22.05 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
41 | 32.672343 | 35.641194 | 1,356 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 14.95 | % | 15.47 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
ALPS Variable Investment Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
35 | 16.317851 | 17.605828 | 580 | 1.97 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 11.25 | % | 11.75 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
22 | 12.406476 | 13.385724 | 271 | 2.22 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 6.34 | % | 6.82 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
76 | 17.913447 | 19.327362 | 1,387 | 1.79 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 13.66 | % | 14.18 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
34 | 14.284291 | 15.411755 | 497 | 2.05 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 9.05 | % | 9.55 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
American Century Variable Portfolios, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Capital Appreciation Fund-Class I |
225 | 21.307647 | 22.489093 | 4,846 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 18.88 | % | 19.55 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Large Company Value Fund-Class I |
76 | 26.402502 | 28.801443 | 2,024 | 2.54 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 2.43 | % | 2.90 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Mid Cap Value Fund-Class I |
113 | 41.820841 | 45.620209 | 4,754 | 2.24 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 4.65 | % | 5.13 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Ultra® Fund-Class I |
103 | 52.684277 | 58.593970 | 5,566 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 41.36 | % | 42.15 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Investment Portfolios: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares |
29 | 24.430645 | 26.359145 | 715 | 0.55 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 16.34 | % | 16.87 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares |
260 | 55.856836 | 62.123154 | 14,825 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 57.04 | % | 57.91 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc.-Initial Shares |
812 | 52.754605 | 61.080431 | 44,024 | 1.42 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 24.05 | % | 24.74 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc.-Initial Shares |
150 | 39.787520 | 43.100283 | 5,957 | 0.77 | % | 1.10 | % | 1.40 | % | 22.09 | % | 22.46 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares |
132 | 52.581585 | 59.276483 | 6,964 | 0.71 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 19.28 | % | 19.82 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio |
3,781 | 1.108595 | 1.232672 | 4,207 | 4.51 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 2.87 | % | 2.97 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares |
66 | 47.792971 | 53.878926 | 3,147 | 0.65 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 24.92 | % | 25.49 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares |
132 | 29.653660 | 34.334455 | 4,024 | 0.33 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 7.65 | % | 8.25 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Calamos® Advisors Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Calamos® Growth and Income Portfolio |
25 | 25.151850 | 27.136827 | 627 | 0.59 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 18.44 | % | 18.98 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Davis Value Portfolio |
20 | 23.639526 | 25.505580 | 467 | 1.28 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 30.78 | % | 31.37 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Deutsche DWS Investments VIT Funds: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A |
60 | 42.271891 | 47.276298 | 2,550 | 1.15 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 15.13 | % | 15.65 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Franklin Templeton Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 |
95 | 11.144507 | 12.024405 | 1,068 | 3.55 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 19.07 | % | 19.61 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Aspen Series: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
374 | 61.376858 | 69.191652 | 22,962 | 2.06 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 13.80 | % | 14.32 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
191 | 83.693739 | 94.352212 | 16,023 | 0.15 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 16.42 | % | 16.95 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
235 | 57.583774 | 66.028154 | 13,900 | 0.19 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 37.87 | % | 38.64 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
240 | 35.316864 | 39.814290 | 8,481 | 0.92 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 25.01 | % | 25.58 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
218 | 37.686317 | 42.486205 | 8,225 | 1.51 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 9.33 | % | 9.82 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
240 | 52.528284 | 60.819006 | 12,945 | 0.15 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 41.03 | % | 41.82 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morgan Stanley Variable Insurance Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I |
26 | 30.727728 | 33.719479 | 821 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 42.18 | % | 42.98 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I |
76 | 48.334703 | 54.490780 | 3,706 | 2.17 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 12.92 | % | 13.43 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
56 | 14.496496 | 15.813585 | 818 | 3.25 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 2.22 | % | 2.69 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
163 | 15.197169 | 16.577876 | 2,495 | 3.61 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 4.46 | % | 4.94 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Wilshire Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Wilshire Global Allocation Fund |
28 | 12.502821 | 12.697239 | 357 | 1.34 | % | 1.10 | % | 1.40 | % | 14.81 | % | 15.16 | % |
(1) | These amounts represent the dividends, excluding distributions of capital gains, received by the subaccount from the underlying mutual fund, divided by the average net assets. These ratios exclude those expenses, such as mortality and expense charges, that result in direct reductions in the unit values. For subaccounts that commenced during the period indicated, average net assets have been calculated from the date operations commenced through the end of the reporting period. The recognition of investment income by the subaccount is affected by the timing of the declaration of dividends by the underlying fund in which the subaccounts invest. |
(2) | These ratios represent the annualized contract expenses of the separate account, consisting primarily of mortality and expense risk charges, for the period indicated. The ratios include only those expenses that result in a direct reduction to unit values. Charges made directly to contract owner accounts through the redemption of units and expenses of the underlying fund are excluded. |
(3) | These amounts represent the total return for the periods indicated, including changes in the value of the underlying fund, and expenses assessed through the reduction of unit values. These ratios do not include any expenses assessed through the redemption of units. The total return is calculated for each period indicated or from the effective date through the end of the reporting period. As the total return is presented as a range of minimum to maximum values, based on the product grouping representing the minimum and maximum expense ratio amounts, some individual contract total returns are not within the ranges presented. |
23
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - CONTINUED
(7) UNIT VALUES AND FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
At December 31, 2022 | Periods Ended December 31, 2022 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Subaccount |
Units (000s) |
Unit Value Range |
Net Assets (000s) |
Investment Income Ratio (1) |
Expenses Ratio Range (2) |
Total Return Range (3) |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
AIM Variable Insurance Funds (Invesco Variable Insurance Funds): |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares |
97 | $ | 55.161888 | $ | 61.906202 | $ | 5,379 | 0.70 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -3.97 | % | -3.54 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares |
51 | 28.295676 | 31.296096 | 1,465 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | -31.82 | % | -31.44 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares |
187 | 25.540569 | 27.257697 | 4,852 | 1.63 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | -0.39 | % | 0.17 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Conservative Balanced Fund-Series I Shares |
53 | 14.047478 | 15.254429 | 754 | 1.22 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -18.02 | % | -17.64 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
131 | 23.131993 | 24.959187 | 3,021 | 0.86 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -21.66 | % | -21.30 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares |
570 | 11.546339 | 11.687760 | 6,584 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -31.95 | % | -31.64 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares |
49 | 23.648650 | 24.941126 | 1,149 | 1.83 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -3.05 | % | -2.61 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares |
86 | 31.987472 | 35.296933 | 2,741 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -14.53 | % | -14.14 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares |
34 | 19.532085 | 21.267076 | 659 | 3.83 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -10.82 | % | -10.41 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares |
55 | 30.409629 | 33.022086 | 1,690 | 1.35 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -21.25 | % | -20.89 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
55 | 28.423582 | 30.865885 | 1,573 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -21.62 | % | -21.26 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
ALPS Variable Investment Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
36 | 14.668183 | 15.754246 | 535 | 1.73 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -14.10 | % | -13.71 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
23 | 11.667122 | 12.530946 | 267 | 1.34 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -13.05 | % | -12.65 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
79 | 15.760706 | 16.927666 | 1,265 | 1.36 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -14.46 | % | -14.07 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
37 | 13.098784 | 14.068626 | 491 | 1.67 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -13.76 | % | -13.37 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
American Century Variable Portfolios, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Capital Appreciation Fund-Class I |
277 | 17.922925 | 18.812024 | 5,014 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | -29.19 | % | -28.79 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Large Company Value Fund-Class I |
85 | 25.775307 | 27.989824 | 2,201 | 2.02 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -1.65 | % | -1.21 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Mid Cap Value Fund-Class I |
130 | 39.961798 | 43.394699 | 5,229 | 2.19 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -2.57 | % | -2.13 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Ultra® Fund-Class I |
120 | 37.268293 | 41.219507 | 4,582 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | -33.39 | % | -33.02 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Investment Portfolios: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares |
32 | 20.999399 | 22.554400 | 683 | 0.43 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -15.48 | % | -15.10 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares |
292 | 35.568841 | 39.340455 | 10,583 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | -47.19 | % | -46.90 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc.-Initial Shares |
920 | 42.528319 | 48.967711 | 40,175 | 1.27 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | -19.54 | % | -19.09 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc.-Initial Shares |
184 | 32.587961 | 36.571412 | 5,993 | 0.51 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -23.95 | % | -23.60 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares |
144 | 44.082205 | 49.469834 | 6,366 | 0.61 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -19.21 | % | -18.84 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio |
1,555 | 1.077713 | 1.197106 | 1,684 | 1.15 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -0.15 | % | 0.26 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares |
76 | 38.259607 | 42.936272 | 2,920 | 0.72 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -16.01 | % | -15.63 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares |
147 | 27.547032 | 31.718663 | 4,155 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | -17.87 | % | -17.41 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Calamos® Advisors Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Calamos® Growth and Income Portfolio |
33 | 21.235450 | 22.807575 | 715 | 0.64 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -20.20 | % | -19.84 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Davis Value Portfolio |
23 | 18.076030 | 19.414610 | 421 | 1.10 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -21.25 | % | -20.89 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Deutsche DWS Investments VIT Funds: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A |
71 | 36.717468 | 40.878226 | 2,601 | 0.87 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -21.75 | % | -21.39 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Franklin Templeton Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 |
135 | 9.359527 | 10.052747 | 1,272 | 3.09 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -8.90 | % | -8.48 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Aspen Series: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
457 | 53.932573 | 60.524087 | 24,651 | 1.14 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -17.57 | % | -17.19 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
216 | 71.887489 | 80.675308 | 15,579 | 0.19 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -17.12 | % | -16.74 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
263 | 41.766629 | 47.626588 | 11,280 | 0.16 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | -34.55 | % | -34.18 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
273 | 28.251596 | 31.705077 | 7,716 | 0.96 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -20.54 | % | -20.18 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
249 | 34.471528 | 38.685845 | 8,599 | 1.61 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -9.88 | % | -9.47 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
265 | 37.245869 | 42.886020 | 10,133 | 0.14 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | -30.94 | % | -30.56 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morgan Stanley Variable Insurance Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Core Plus Fixed Income Portfolio-Class I |
106 | 18.793689 | 21.090930 | 2,007 | 3.94 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -15.53 | % | -15.14 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I |
31 | 21.611129 | 23.584158 | 672 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | -63.52 | % | -63.32 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I |
89 | 42.805228 | 48.038442 | 3,800 | 1.16 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -28.07 | % | -27.75 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
60 | 14.181160 | 15.399470 | 862 | 6.74 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -13.14 | % | -12.75 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
193 | 14.548337 | 15.798160 | 2,830 | 2.67 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -15.51 | % | -15.12 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
The Timothy Plan: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Timothy Plan Conservative Growth Portfolio Variable Series |
28 | 15.527423 | 15.527423 | 435 | 0.78 | % | 1.40 | % | 1.40 | % | -13.89 | % | -13.89 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Timothy Plan Strategic Growth Portfolio Variable Series |
29 | 15.990763 | 15.990763 | 460 | 0.93 | % | 1.40 | % | 1.40 | % | -14.17 | % | -14.17 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Wilshire Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Wilshire Global Allocation Fund |
29 | 10.889807 | 11.025674 | 313 | 3.16 | % | 1.10 | % | 1.40 | % | -18.97 | % | -18.73 | % |
(1) | These amounts represent the dividends, excluding distributions of capital gains, received by the subaccount from the underlying mutual fund, divided by the average net assets. These ratios exclude those expenses, such as mortality and expense charges, that result in direct reductions in the unit values. For subaccounts that commenced during the period indicated, average net assets have been calculated from the date operations commenced through the end of the reporting period. The recognition of investment income by the subaccount is affected by the timing of the declaration of dividends by the underlying fund in which the subaccounts invest. |
(2) | These ratios represent the annualized contract expenses of the separate account, consisting primarily of mortality and expense risk charges, for the period indicated. The ratios include only those expenses that result in a direct reduction to unit values. Charges made directly to contract owner accounts through the redemption of units and expenses of the underlying fund are excluded. |
(3) | These amounts represent the total return for the periods indicated, including changes in the value of the underlying fund, and expenses assessed through the reduction of unit values. These ratios do not include any expenses assessed through the redemption of units. The total return is calculated for each period indicated or from the effective date through the end of the reporting period. As the total return is presented as a range of minimum to maximum values, based on the product grouping representing the minimum and maximum expense ratio amounts, some individual contract total returns are not within the ranges presented. |
24
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - CONTINUED
(7) UNIT VALUES AND FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
At December 31, 2021 | Periods Ended December 31, 2021 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Subaccount |
Units (000s) |
Unit Value Range |
Net Assets (000s) |
Investment Income Ratio (1) |
Expenses Ratio Range (2) |
Total Return Range (3) |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
AIM Variable Insurance Funds (Invesco Variable Insurance Funds): |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares |
109 | $ | 57.444554 | $ | 64.175442 | $ | 6,289 | 0.45 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 26.16 | % | 26.74 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares |
54 | 41.501754 | 45.647719 | 2,280 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 20.73 | % | 21.41 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares |
208 | 25.640535 | 27.212717 | 5,390 | 1.81 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 31.36 | % | 32.09 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Conservative Balanced Fund-Series I Shares |
62 | 17.134632 | 18.522377 | 1,072 | 1.51 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 9.08 | % | 9.58 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
146 | 29.526635 | 31.714325 | 4,302 | 0.65 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 25.95 | % | 26.53 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares |
635 | 16.966960 | 17.096742 | 10,773 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 17.43 | % | 17.97 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares |
51 | 24.393330 | 25.609842 | 1,253 | 2.09 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 17.23 | % | 17.77 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares |
90 | 37.424317 | 41.108827 | 3,352 | 0.21 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 10.73 | % | 11.23 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares |
44 | 21.901477 | 23.738766 | 967 | 4.68 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 2.92 | % | 3.39 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares |
59 | 38.615183 | 41.742237 | 2,307 | 0.69 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 25.78 | % | 26.36 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
63 | 36.262982 | 39.200102 | 2,283 | 0.18 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 18.72 | % | 19.26 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
ALPS Variable Investment Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
49 | 17.076305 | 18.257430 | 834 | 1.28 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 9.24 | % | 9.74 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
25 | 13.418391 | 14.346478 | 338 | 1.34 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 0.85 | % | 1.31 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
97 | 18.425977 | 19.700463 | 1,811 | 1.07 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 13.28 | % | 13.79 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
38 | 15.189111 | 16.239689 | 576 | 1.38 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 4.98 | % | 5.46 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
American Century Variable Portfolios, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Capital Appreciation Fund-Class I |
306 | 25.310689 | 26.418750 | 7,807 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 9.49 | % | 10.10 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Large Company Value Fund-Class I |
97 | 26.208755 | 28.331466 | 2,561 | 1.49 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 20.01 | % | 20.56 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Mid Cap Value Fund-Class I |
150 | 41.017196 | 44.338759 | 6,164 | 1.18 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 21.48 | % | 22.03 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Ultra® Fund-Class I |
130 | 55.948770 | 61.536995 | 7,417 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 21.31 | % | 21.99 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Investment Portfolios: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares |
37 | 24.845993 | 26.564708 | 937 | 0.47 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 23.80 | % | 24.37 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares |
318 | 67.354634 | 74.082592 | 21,792 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 11.23 | % | 11.86 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc.-Initial Shares |
990 | 52.857336 | 60.523089 | 53,697 | 1.14 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 26.49 | % | 27.19 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc.-Initial Shares |
204 | 42.851082 | 47.870744 | 8,771 | 0.77 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 25.22 | % | 25.79 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares |
173 | 54.564241 | 60.955032 | 9,384 | 0.44 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 25.35 | % | 25.92 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio |
1,854 | 1.079301 | 1.194023 | 2,010 | 0.01 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -1.29 | % | -0.78 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares |
88 | 45.551606 | 50.887610 | 4,001 | 0.48 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 23.87 | % | 24.44 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares |
158 | 33.540192 | 38.405179 | 5,433 | 0.12 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 14.72 | % | 15.36 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Calamos® Advisors Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Calamos® Growth and Income Portfolio |
37 | 26.611253 | 28.451641 | 999 | 0.36 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 19.70 | % | 20.24 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Davis Value Portfolio |
28 | 22.952926 | 24.540758 | 646 | 0.55 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 16.20 | % | 16.73 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Deutsche DWS Investments VIT Funds: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A |
84 | 46.920950 | 52.000745 | 3,924 | 0.87 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 12.90 | % | 13.42 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Franklin Templeton Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 |
164 | 10.273677 | 10.984520 | 1,691 | 2.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 2.70 | % | 3.17 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Aspen Series: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
517 | 65.428890 | 73.092239 | 33,788 | 0.90 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 15.56 | % | 16.08 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
234 | 86.732490 | 96.893191 | 20,353 | 0.32 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 15.20 | % | 15.72 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
295 | 63.813174 | 72.362244 | 19,303 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 21.05 | % | 21.73 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
298 | 35.553685 | 39.718606 | 10,610 | 0.52 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 16.44 | % | 16.97 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
284 | 38.251898 | 42.733453 | 10,862 | 1.16 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 11.99 | % | 12.51 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
285 | 53.933650 | 61.756115 | 15,758 | 0.10 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 18.53 | % | 19.19 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morgan Stanley Variable Insurance Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Core Plus Fixed Income Portfolio-Class I |
130 | 22.248521 | 24.854754 | 2,906 | 3.97 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -1.72 | % | -1.27 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I |
33 | 59.240604 | 64.288999 | 2,005 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | -12.40 | % | -11.91 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I |
95 | 59.513452 | 66.485819 | 5,679 | 2.05 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 37.85 | % | 38.47 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
79 | 16.326741 | 17.648937 | 1,292 | 4.88 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 4.13 | % | 4.61 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
219 | 17.218209 | 18.612541 | 3,803 | 1.78 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -2.65 | % | -2.20 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
The Timothy Plan: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Timothy Plan Conservative Growth Portfolio Variable Series |
31 | 17.677399 | 18.032924 | 558 | 0.72 | % | 1.40 | % | 1.50 | % | 6.31 | % | 6.42 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Timothy Plan Strategic Growth Portfolio Variable Series |
34 | 18.263939 | 18.631120 | 625 | 0.74 | % | 1.40 | % | 1.50 | % | 10.83 | % | 10.94 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Wilshire Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Wilshire Global Allocation Fund |
32 | 13.439982 | 13.566417 | 436 | 1.12 | % | 1.10 | % | 1.40 | % | 10.28 | % | 10.61 | % |
(1) | These amounts represent the dividends, excluding distributions of capital gains, received by the subaccount from the underlying mutual fund, divided by the average net assets. These ratios exclude those expenses, such as mortality and expense charges, that result in direct reductions in the unit values. For subaccounts that commenced during the period indicated, average net assets have been calculated from the date operations commenced through the end of the reporting period. The recognition of investment income by the subaccount is affected by the timing of the declaration of dividends by the underlying fund in which the subaccounts invest. |
(2) | These ratios represent the annualized contract expenses of the separate account, consisting primarily of mortality and expense risk charges, for the period indicated. The ratios include only those expenses that result in a direct reduction to unit values. Charges made directly to contract owner accounts through the redemption of units and expenses of the underlying fund are excluded. |
(3) | These amounts represent the total return for the periods indicated, including changes in the value of the underlying fund, and expenses assessed through the reduction of unit values. These ratios do not include any expenses assessed through the redemption of units. The total return is calculated for each period indicated or from the effective date through the end of the reporting period. As the total return is presented as a range of minimum to maximum values, based on the product grouping representing the minimum and maximum expense ratio amounts, some individual contract total returns are not within the ranges presented. |
25
ANNUITY INVESTORS VARIABLE ACCOUNT B
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - CONTINUED
(7) UNIT VALUES AND FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
At December 31, 2020 | Periods Ended December 31, 2020 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Subaccount |
Units (000s) |
Unit Value Range |
Net Assets (000s) |
Investment Income Ratio (1) |
Expenses Ratio Range (2) |
Total Return Range (3) |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
AIM Variable Insurance Funds (Invesco Variable Insurance Funds): |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco Oppenheimer V.I. Capital Appreciation Fund-Series I Shares |
59 | $ | 34.941573 | $ | 37.599505 | $ | 2,061 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 34.67 | % | 35.29 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
Invesco Oppenheimer V.I. Conservative Balanced Fund-Series I Shares |
67 | 15.707637 | 16.902660 | 1,065 | 2.11 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 13.24 | % | 13.76 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco Oppenheimer V.I. Discovery Mid Cap Growth Fund-Series I Shares (*) |
716 | 14.448404 | 14.492734 | 10,349 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 0.00 | % | 0.00 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco Oppenheimer V.I. Main Street Fund®-Series I Shares |
73 | 30.699501 | 33.034829 | 2,259 | 1.34 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 12.34 | % | 12.86 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. American Value Fund-Series I Shares |
122 | 45.533139 | 50.637323 | 5,568 | 0.77 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -0.30 | % | 0.16 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Comstock Fund-Series I Shares |
247 | 19.519087 | 20.600974 | 4,879 | 2.05 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | -2.34 | % | -1.80 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Core Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
165 | 23.442820 | 25.065379 | 3,863 | 1.25 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 12.25 | % | 12.77 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Diversified Dividend Fund-Series I Shares |
62 | 20.808037 | 21.746513 | 1,296 | 2.76 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -1.26 | % | -0.81 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Health Care Fund-Series I Shares |
93 | 33.798976 | 36.957773 | 3,136 | 0.29 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 12.85 | % | 13.37 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. High Yield Fund-Series I Shares |
49 | 21.279920 | 22.960252 | 1,041 | 5.35 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 1.87 | % | 2.33 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco V.I. Small Cap Equity Fund-Series I Shares |
71 | 30.545858 | 32.869895 | 2,189 | 0.30 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 25.46 | % | 26.03 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
ALPS Variable Investment Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Balanced ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
56 | 15.632089 | 16.637374 | 881 | 1.75 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 7.59 | % | 8.08 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Conservative ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
27 | 13.305826 | 14.161473 | 369 | 1.71 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 5.00 | % | 5.48 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
135 | 16.266374 | 17.312477 | 2,227 | 1.85 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 8.46 | % | 8.96 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morningstar Income and Growth ETF Asset Allocation Portfolio-Class II |
41 | 14.468792 | 15.399236 | 595 | 2.04 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 6.91 | % | 7.40 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
American Century Variable Portfolios, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Capital Appreciation Fund-Class I |
340 | 23.117417 | 23.995406 | 7,922 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 40.31 | % | 41.10 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Large Company Value Fund-Class I |
105 | 21.839096 | 23.500669 | 2,307 | 1.56 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 1.18 | % | 1.64 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Mid Cap Value Fund-Class I |
165 | 33.764588 | 36.333065 | 5,597 | 1.57 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -0.21 | % | 0.25 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
VP Ultra® Fund-Class I |
147 | 46.119352 | 50.444191 | 6,913 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 47.60 | % | 48.43 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Investment Portfolios: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
MidCap Stock Portfolio-Service Shares |
47 | 20.068949 | 21.359765 | 944 | 0.48 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 6.33 | % | 6.82 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Technology Growth Portfolio-Initial Shares |
351 | 60.551778 | 66.230329 | 21,582 | 0.24 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 67.37 | % | 68.31 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund, Inc.-Initial Shares |
1,118 | 41.788789 | 47.583744 | 47,893 | 1.44 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 16.23 | % | 16.88 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Sustainable U.S. Equity Portfolio, Inc.-Initial Shares |
219 | 34.220597 | 38.055631 | 7,507 | 1.05 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 22.40 | % | 22.96 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
BNY Mellon Variable Investment Fund: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Appreciation Portfolio-Initial Shares |
195 | 43.529044 | 48.406481 | 8,456 | 0.75 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 21.95 | % | 22.51 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Government Money Market Portfolio |
2,255 | 1.093430 | 1.203468 | 2,474 | 0.19 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -1.10 | % | -0.62 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Growth and Income Portfolio-Initial Shares |
96 | 36.773126 | 40.894229 | 3,544 | 0.69 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 22.88 | % | 23.45 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Opportunistic Small Cap Portfolio-Initial Shares |
182 | 29.237798 | 33.292847 | 5,446 | 0.56 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 18.09 | % | 18.75 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Calamos® Advisors Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Calamos® Growth and Income Portfolio |
51 | 22.231976 | 23.661527 | 1,153 | 0.45 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 20.71 | % | 21.26 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Davis Value Portfolio |
38 | 19.752528 | 21.023031 | 764 | 0.61 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 10.15 | % | 10.66 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Deutsche DWS Investments VIT Funds: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
DWS Small Cap Index VIP-Class A |
91 | 41.559829 | 45.849925 | 3,771 | 1.03 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 17.75 | % | 18.29 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Franklin Templeton Variable Insurance Products Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Templeton Foreign VIP Fund-Class 2 |
161 | 10.003590 | 10.647149 | 1,624 | 3.11 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -2.55 | % | -2.10 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Aspen Series: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Balanced Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
594 | 56.621270 | 62.965661 | 33,616 | 1.70 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 12.71 | % | 13.22 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Enterprise Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
261 | 75.291243 | 83.729416 | 19,643 | 0.06 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 17.80 | % | 18.34 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Forty Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
323 | 52.714650 | 59.444924 | 17,452 | 0.27 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 37.31 | % | 38.07 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Global Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
329 | 30.534712 | 33.956707 | 10,051 | 0.66 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 18.38 | % | 18.92 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Overseas Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
316 | 34.155244 | 37.983530 | 10,797 | 1.19 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 14.66 | % | 15.19 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Janus Henderson VIT Research Portfolio-Institutional Shares |
329 | 45.502581 | 51.812901 | 15,356 | 0.39 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.50 | % | 30.95 | % | 31.69 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Morgan Stanley Variable Insurance Fund, Inc.: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Core Plus Fixed Income Portfolio-Class I |
156 | 22.637779 | 25.174652 | 3,540 | 2.86 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 6.29 | % | 6.77 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Discovery Portfolio-Class I |
45 | 68.567750 | 72.976940 | 3,106 | 0.00 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 148.77 | % | 149.90 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
U.S. Real Estate Portfolio-Class I |
105 | 43.173937 | 48.013084 | 4,522 | 2.44 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | -18.02 | % | -17.64 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Real Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
90 | 15.679073 | 16.871796 | 1,424 | 1.45 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 10.15 | % | 10.65 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
PIMCO Total Return Portfolio-Administrative Class |
254 | 17.686765 | 19.032133 | 4,526 | 2.09 | % | 0.95 | % | 1.40 | % | 7.14 | % | 7.63 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
The Timothy Plan: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Timothy Plan Conservative Growth Portfolio Variable Series |
37 | 16.628610 | 16.945841 | 619 | 0.68 | % | 1.40 | % | 1.50 | % | 6.61 | % | 6.72 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Timothy Plan Strategic Growth Portfolio Variable Series |
42 | 16.479404 | 16.793671 | 703 | 0.49 | % | 1.40 | % | 1.50 | % | 7.54 | % | 7.65 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Wilshire Variable Insurance Trust: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Wilshire Global Allocation Fund |
42 | 12.187559 | 12.264867 | 517 | 3.24 | % | 1.10 | % | 1.40 | % | 10.35 | % | 10.69 | % |
(1) | These amounts represent the dividends, excluding distributions of capital gains, received by the subaccount from the underlying mutual fund, divided by the average net assets. These ratios exclude those expenses, such as mortality and expense charges, that result in direct reductions in the unit values. For subaccounts that commenced during the period indicated, average net assets have been calculated from the date operations commenced through the end of the reporting period. |
The recognition of investment income by the subaccount is affected by the timing of the declaration of dividends by the underlying fund in which the subaccounts invest.
(2) | These ratios represent the annualized contract expenses of the separate account, consisting primarily of mortality and expense risk charges, for the period indicated. The ratios include only those expenses that result in a direct reduction to unit values. Charges made directly to contract owner accounts through the redemption of units and expenses of the underlying fund are excluded. |
(3) | These amounts represent the total return for the periods indicated, including changes in the value of the underlying fund, and expenses assessed through the reduction of unit values. These ratios do not include any expenses assessed through the redemption of units. The total return is calculated for each period indicated or from the effective date through the end of the reporting period. As the total return is presented as a range of minimum to maximum values, based on the product grouping representing the minimum and maximum expense ratio amounts, some individual contract total returns are not within the ranges presented. |
(*) | Period from April 30, 2020 (commencement of operations) to December 31, 2020. |
26
MassMutualAscend.com
191 Rosa Parks Street
Cincinnati, OH 45202
About us
At MassMutual Ascend, we are committed to going above and beyond so when it comes to our customers financial futures, the impossible feels possible. Its the reason were a leading provider of annuities today, and its the reason well continue rising to the top tomorrow. As a proud subsidiary of MassMutual with more than five decades of experience, we are proud to offer customers a level of strength and stability they can count on for years to come.
© 2025 MassMutual Ascend Life Insurance Company, Cincinnati, OH 45202.
All rights reserved. www.MassMutualAscend.com
5992-ASC 2/25
27
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
Statutory-Basis Financial Statements
As of December 31, 2024 and 2023 and for each of the three years
ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022
with Independent Auditors Report
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
Statutory-Basis Financial Statements
As of December 31, 2024 and 2023 and for each of the three years ended
December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022
1 | ||||
Statutory-Basis Financial Statements |
||||
4 | ||||
5 | ||||
Statements of Changes in Capital and Surplus - Statutory-Basis |
6 | |||
7 | ||||
8 |
![]() |
||
KPMG LLP Suite 3400 312 Walnut Street Cincinnati, OH 45202 |
The Board of Directors
Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company:
Opinions
We have audited the financial statements of Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company (the Company), which comprise the balance sheets statutory-basis as of December 31, 2024 and 2023, and the related statements of operations statutory-basis, statements of changes in capital and surplus statutory-basis, and statements of cash flow statutory-basis for each of the years in the three-year period ended December 31, 2024, and the related notes to the financial statements (collectively, financial statements).
Unmodified Opinion on Statutory Basis of Accounting
In our opinion, the accompanying financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the balance sheets statutory-basis of the Company as of December 31, 2024 and 2023, and the results of its operations and its cash flow for each of the years in the three-year period ended December 31, 2024, in accordance with accounting practices prescribed or permitted by the Ohio Department of Insurance described in Note B.
Adverse Opinion on U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
In our opinion, because of the significance of the matter discussed in the Basis for Adverse Opinion on U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles section of our report, the financial statements do not present fairly, in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles, the financial position of the Company as of December 31, 2024 and 2023, or the results of its operations or its cash flows for each of the years in the three-year period ended December 31, 2024.
Basis for Opinions
We conducted our audits in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States of America (GAAS). Our responsibilities under those standards are further described in the Auditors Responsibilities for the Audit of the Financial Statements section of our report. We are required to be independent of the Company and to meet our other ethical responsibilities, in accordance with the relevant ethical requirements relating to our audits. We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our audit opinions.
Basis for Adverse Opinion on U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
As described in Note B to the financial statements, the financial statements are prepared by the Company using accounting practices prescribed or permitted by the Ohio Department of Insurance, which is a basis of accounting other than U.S. generally accepted accounting principles. Accordingly, the financial statements are not intended to be presented in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles. The effects on the financial statements of the variances between the statutory accounting practices described in Note B and U.S. generally accepted accounting principles, although not reasonably determinable, are presumed to be material and pervasive.
KPMG LLP, a Delaware limited liability partnership and a member firm of the
KPMG global organization of independent member firms affiliated with
KPMG International Limited, a private English company limited by guarantee.
1
Emphasis of Matter
As discussed in Note B to the financial statements, the Company elects to apply a prescribed practice promulgated under Ohio Administrative Code Section 3901-1-67 (OAC 3901-1-67) to its derivative instruments hedging indexed products and indexed annuity reserve liabilities. Our opinions are not modified with respect to this matter.
Responsibilities of Management for the Financial Statements
Management is responsible for the preparation and fair presentation of the financial statements in accordance with accounting practices prescribed or permitted by the Ohio Department of Insurance. Management is also responsible for the design, implementation, and maintenance of internal control relevant to the preparation and fair presentation of financial statements that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error.
In preparing the financial statements, management is required to evaluate whether there are conditions or events, considered in the aggregate, that raise substantial doubt about the Companys ability to continue as a going concern for one year after the date that the financial statements are issued.
Auditors Responsibilities for the Audit of the Financial Statements
Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements as a whole are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and to issue an auditors report that includes our opinion. Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance but is not absolute assurance and therefore is not a guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance with GAAS will always detect a material misstatement when it exists. The risk of not detecting a material misstatement resulting from fraud is higher than for one resulting from error, as fraud may involve collusion, forgery, intentional omissions, misrepresentations, or the override of internal control. Misstatements are considered material if there is a substantial likelihood that, individually or in the aggregate, they would influence the judgment made by a reasonable user based on the financial statements.
In performing an audit in accordance with GAAS, we:
| Exercise professional judgment and maintain professional skepticism throughout the audit. |
| Identify and assess the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements, whether due to fraud or error, and design and perform audit procedures responsive to those risks. Such procedures include examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. |
| Obtain an understanding of internal control relevant to the audit in order to design audit procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Companys internal control. Accordingly, no such opinion is expressed. |
| Evaluate the appropriateness of accounting policies used and the reasonableness of significant accounting estimates made by management, as well as evaluate the overall presentation of the financial statements. |
| Conclude whether, in our judgment, there are conditions or events, considered in the aggregate, that raise substantial doubt about the Companys ability to continue as a going concern for a reasonable period of time. |
We are required to communicate with those charged with governance regarding, among other matters, the planned scope and timing of the audit, significant audit findings, and certain internal control related matters that we identified during the audit.
2
Supplementary Information
Our audits were conducted for the purpose of forming an opinion on the financial statements as a whole. The supplementary information included in the supplemental schedule of selected statutory-basis financial data, supplemental investment disclosures, and supplemental schedule of life and health reinsurance disclosures is presented for purposes of additional analysis and is not a required part of the financial statements but is supplementary information required by the Ohio Department of Insurance. Such information is the responsibility of management and was derived from and relates directly to the underlying accounting and other records used to prepare the financial statements. The information has been subjected to the auditing procedures applied in the audits of the financial statements and certain additional procedures, including comparing and reconciling such information directly to the underlying accounting and other records used to prepare the financial statements or to the financial statements themselves, and other additional procedures in accordance with GAAS. In our opinion, the information is fairly stated in all material respects in relation to the financial statements as a whole.
/s/ KPMG LLP
Cincinnati, Ohio
April 9, 2025
3
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
STATUTORY-BASIS
(Dollars in thousands, except share data)
December 31 | ||||||||
2024 | 2023 | |||||||
ADMITTED ASSETS |
||||||||
Cash and invested assets: |
||||||||
Bonds - at amortized cost (fair value: $1,544,677 and $1,893,187) |
$ | 1,633,733 | $ | 1,997,742 | ||||
Preferred stocks - (cost: $4,000 and $4,000) |
4,210 | 4,181 | ||||||
Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments |
325,496 | 130,811 | ||||||
Policy loans |
42,172 | 43,633 | ||||||
Equity index call options |
15,628 | 20,275 | ||||||
Other invested assets |
7,844 | 7,989 | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||
Total cash and invested assets |
2,029,083 | 2,204,631 | ||||||
Investment income due and accrued |
18,583 | 23,391 | ||||||
Net deferred federal income tax asset |
2,908 | 4,933 | ||||||
Current federal income tax receivable |
1,165 | | ||||||
Admitted disallowed interest maintenance reserve |
11,278 | 11,396 | ||||||
Other admitted assets |
1,280 | 925 | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||
Total general account admitted assets |
2,064,297 | 2,245,276 | ||||||
Separate account assets |
554,327 | 524,809 | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||
Total admitted assets |
$ | 2,618,624 | $ | 2,770,085 | ||||
|
|
|
|
|||||
LIABILITIES, CAPITAL AND SURPLUS |
||||||||
Liabilities: |
||||||||
Annuity reserves |
$ | 1,544,712 | $ | 1,752,011 | ||||
Liability for deposit-type contracts |
11,862 | 14,536 | ||||||
Policy and contract claims |
4,897 | 4,167 | ||||||
Asset valuation reserve |
15,636 | 17,977 | ||||||
Current federal income tax payable |
| 1,199 | ||||||
Commissions and general expenses due and accrued |
2,800 | 3,327 | ||||||
Taxes, licenses and fees due and accrued |
271 | 206 | ||||||
Transfers from separate accounts due and accrued |
(62 | ) | (48 | ) | ||||
Payable for securities |
1,496 | | ||||||
Collateral |
3,363 | 6,149 | ||||||
Equity index call options |
11,482 | 15,291 | ||||||
Other liabilities |
3,341 | 2,954 | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||
Total general account liabilities |
1,599,798 | 1,817,769 | ||||||
Separate account liabilities |
554,327 | 524,809 | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||
Total liabilities |
2,154,125 | 2,342,578 | ||||||
Capital and surplus: |
||||||||
Common stock - $125 par value; 25,000 shares authorized; 20,000 shares issued and outstanding |
2,500 | 2,500 | ||||||
Gross paid-in and contributed surplus |
171,550 | 171,550 | ||||||
Unassigned funds |
279,171 | 242,061 | ||||||
Aggregate write-in for special surplus funds |
11,278 | 11,396 | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||
Total capital and surplus |
464,499 | 427,507 | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||
Total liabilities, capital and surplus |
$ | 2,618,624 | $ | 2,770,085 | ||||
|
|
|
|
See accompanying notes to statutory-basis financial statements.
4
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
STATUTORY-BASIS
(Dollars in thousands)
Year Ended December 31 | ||||||||||||
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||
Premiums and other revenues: |
||||||||||||
Premiums and annuity considerations |
$ | 45,873 | $ | 65,103 | $ | 82,172 | ||||||
Net investment income |
100,954 | 102,481 | 92,554 | |||||||||
Amortization of interest maintenance reserve |
(1,480 | ) | (71 | ) | 1,633 | |||||||
Contract charges - separate accounts |
7,493 | 6,866 | 7,507 | |||||||||
Charges and fees for deposit-type contracts |
170 | 374 | 149 | |||||||||
Other income |
2,807 | 2,842 | 3,034 | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Total premiums and other revenues |
155,817 | 177,595 | 187,049 | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Benefits and expenses: |
||||||||||||
Policyholders benefits |
353,961 | 447,778 | 270,838 | |||||||||
Change in policy and contract reserves |
(207,299 | ) | (275,090 | ) | (79,670 | ) | ||||||
Change in policy and contract claim reserves |
730 | (2,702 | ) | 1,750 | ||||||||
Commission expenses |
5,733 | 6,243 | 7,481 | |||||||||
General insurance expenses |
7,583 | 6,706 | 11,245 | |||||||||
Insurance taxes, licenses and fees |
1,484 | 612 | 950 | |||||||||
Net transfers from separate accounts |
(53,919 | ) | (62,026 | ) | (54,798 | ) | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Total benefits and expenses |
108,273 | 121,521 | 157,796 | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Income from operations before federal income taxes and net realized capital gains (losses) |
47,544 | 56,074 | 29,253 | |||||||||
Federal income tax expense |
(10,260 | ) | (11,846 | ) | (4,222 | ) | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Income from operations before net realized capital gains (losses) |
37,284 | 44,228 | 25,031 | |||||||||
Net realized capital gains (losses): |
||||||||||||
Net realized capital losses before related federal income taxes and transfers to interest maintenance reserve |
(2,998 | ) | (23,088 | ) | (521 | ) | ||||||
Federal income tax benefit on net realized capital losses |
2,255 | 2,445 | 22 | |||||||||
Interest maintenance reserve transfers, net of tax |
1,361 | 16,334 | (441 | ) | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Net realized capital gains (losses) |
618 | (4,309 | ) | (940 | ) | |||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Net income |
$ | 37,902 | $ | 39,919 | $ | 24,091 | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
See accompanying notes to statutory-basis financial statements.
5
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN CAPITAL AND SURPLUS
STATUTORY-BASIS
(Dollars in thousands)
Year Ended December 31 | ||||||||||||
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||
Common stock: |
||||||||||||
Balance at beginning and end of year |
$ | 2,500 | $ | 2,500 | $ | 2,500 | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Gross paid-in and contributed surplus: |
||||||||||||
Balance at beginning and end of year |
$ | 171,550 | $ | 171,550 | $ | 171,550 | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Unassigned funds: |
||||||||||||
Balance at end of prior year |
$ | 242,061 | $ | 210,110 | $ | 196,452 | ||||||
Change in reserve on account of change in valuation basis* |
| | 3,418 | |||||||||
Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle* |
| | (11,112 | ) | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Adjusted beginning balance* |
242,061 | 210,110 | 188,757 | |||||||||
Net income |
37,902 | 39,919 | 24,091 | |||||||||
Change in net unrealized capital gains (losses), net of deferred taxes |
38 | 375 | (603 | ) | ||||||||
Change in net deferred tax asset |
(1,759 | ) | 2,557 | 387 | ||||||||
Change in nonadmitted assets |
428 | 559 | (826 | ) | ||||||||
Change in admitted disallowed interest maintenance reserve |
118 | (11,396 | ) | | ||||||||
Change in asset valuation reserve |
2,341 | (63 | ) | (1,696 | ) | |||||||
Correction of error, net of tax |
(1,958 | ) | | | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Balance at end of year |
$ | 279,171 | $ | 242,061 | $ | 210,110 | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Special surplus funds: |
||||||||||||
Balance at end of prior year |
$ | 11,396 | $ | | $ | | ||||||
Change in admitted disallowed interest maintenance reserve |
(118 | ) | 11,396 | | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Balance at end of year |
$ | 11,278 | $ | 11,396 | $ | | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Total capital and surplus |
$ | 464,499 | $ | 427,507 | $ | 384,160 | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
* | Effective January 1, 2022, the Company elected to apply Ohio Administrative Code 3901-1-67, Alternative Derivative and Reserve Accounting Practices (OAC 3901-1-67) to its derivative instruments hedging fixed-indexed products and fixed-indexed annuity reserve liabilities. At adoption, the decrease in statutory surplus of ($5.5 million) was comprised of $3.4 million in change in reserve on account of change in valuation basis, ($11.1 million) in cumulative effect of change in accounting principle, $1.6 million in change in net deferred income tax and $0.6 million in change in nonadmitted assets. |
See accompanying notes to statutory-basis financial statements.
6
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
STATUTORY-BASIS
(Dollars in thousands)
Year Ended December 31 | ||||||||||||
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||
Operations: |
||||||||||||
Premiums and annuity considerations |
$ | 45,873 | $ | 65,103 | $ | 82,172 | ||||||
Net investment income |
113,658 | 112,328 | 100,589 | |||||||||
Benefits paid |
(351,514 | ) | (444,028 | ) | (266,807 | ) | ||||||
Commissions, expenses and other deductions |
(15,222 | ) | (13,623 | ) | (21,375 | ) | ||||||
Net transfers from separate accounts |
46,413 | 55,111 | 47,291 | |||||||||
Contract charges - separate accounts |
7,493 | 6,866 | 7,507 | |||||||||
Federal income taxes paid |
(10,369 | ) | (8,954 | ) | (5,501 | ) | ||||||
Other |
10,316 | 9,774 | 10,544 | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Net cash used in operations |
(153,352 | ) | (217,423 | ) | (45,580 | ) | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Investing activities: |
||||||||||||
Sales, maturities or repayments of investments, net: |
||||||||||||
Bonds |
367,358 | 452,927 | 297,166 | |||||||||
Other invested assets |
1 | 9,461 | | |||||||||
Purchases of investments: |
||||||||||||
Bonds |
(4,791 | ) | (149,078 | ) | (422,466 | ) | ||||||
Stocks |
| | (4,000 | ) | ||||||||
Other invested assets |
(1 | ) | | | ||||||||
Miscellaneous applications |
(8,485 | ) | (10,191 | ) | (9,657 | ) | ||||||
Net decrease in policy loans |
1,461 | 1,403 | 2,155 | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities |
355,543 | 304,522 | (136,802 | ) | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Financing and miscellaneous activities: |
||||||||||||
Net withdrawals on deposit-type contracts |
(4,951 | ) | (5,203 | ) | (5,584 | ) | ||||||
Other |
(2,555 | ) | 3,591 | 4,055 | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Net cash used in financing and miscellaneous activities |
(7,506 | ) | (1,612 | ) | (1,529 | ) | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Net increase (decrease) in cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments |
194,685 | 85,487 | (183,911 | ) | ||||||||
Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments at beginning of year |
130,811 | 45,324 | 229,235 | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments at end of year |
$ | 325,496 | $ | 130,811 | $ | 45,324 | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Cash flow information for non-cash transactions: |
||||||||||||
Bond conversions and refinancing |
$ | 4,093 | $ | | $ | 12,804 | ||||||
Bonds transferred to other invested assets |
| 350 | |
See accompanying notes to statutory-basis financial statements.
7
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
A. ORGANIZATION AND NATURE OF OPERATIONS
Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company (AILIC or the Company), a stock life insurance company domiciled in the State of Ohio, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of MassMutual Ascend Life Insurance Company (MMALIC). As of May 28, 2021, MMALIC is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Glidepath Holdings, Inc. (Glidepath), a financial services holding company wholly-owned by Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company (MassMutual). Prior to that date, MMALIC, previously known as Great American Life Insurance Company, was a direct wholly-owned subsidiary of Great American Financial Resources, Inc., a financial services holding company wholly-owned by American Financial Group, Inc. AILIC markets individual and group fixed, individual fixed-indexed, and individual and group variable annuities nationwide primarily to the savings and retirement markets. The Company is licensed in forty-eight states and the District of Columbia.
B. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
BASIS OF PRESENTATION
The accompanying financial statements have been prepared in conformity with accounting practices prescribed or permitted by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) and the Ohio Department of Insurance, which vary in some respects from U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). Although the differences to GAAP have not been quantified, they are presumed to be material. The more significant of the differences using these statutory policies versus GAAP are as follows:
(a) | annuity receipts are accounted for as revenues versus liabilities for GAAP, |
(b) | costs incurred in the acquisition of new business such as commissions, underwriting and policy issuance costs, are expensed at the time incurred versus being capitalized for GAAP, |
(c) | reserves established for future policy benefits are calculated using more conservative assumptions for mortality and interest rates than would be used under GAAP. Beginning on January 1, 2022, certain indexed annuity reserves are calculated in accordance with a prescribed practice under the Ohio Administrative Code discussed elsewhere in this footnote, |
(d) | for statutory reporting, an Interest Maintenance Reserve (IMR) is provided, whereby portions of certain realized gains and losses from fixed income investments are deferred and amortized into investment income as prescribed by the NAIC, |
(e) | investments in bonds considered available for sale (as defined by GAAP) are generally recorded at amortized cost versus fair value for GAAP, except those with an NAIC designation of 6, which are stated at the lower of amortized cost or fair value, |
(f) | investments in non-affiliated common stocks are carried at fair value. Redeemable preferred stocks rated RP1 through RP3 are stated at book value. All other redeemable preferred stocks are stated at the lower of book value or fair value. Perpetual preferred stocks are stated at fair value, not to exceed any effective call price. GAAP requires that equity securities are carried at fair value with holding gains and losses reported in realized gains, |
(g) | for statutory reporting, surplus notes are carried at book value. Under GAAP, surplus notes are considered investment in bonds available for sale recorded at fair value, |
(h) | for statutory reporting, an Asset Valuation Reserve (AVR) is provided under a formula prescribed by the NAIC as a valuation allowance for invested assets, which reclassifies a portion of surplus to liabilities, |
(i) | the cost of certain assets designated as nonadmitted assets (principally advance commissions paid to agents, certain investment income due and accrued, deferred tax assets (DTA) in excess of statutory limitations) is charged against surplus, |
(j) | prior to January 1, 2022, the mark to market on equity index call options was included as an unrealized gain/(loss) in unassigned funds versus income for GAAP, |
(k) | the fixed-indexed annuity options are carried at amortized cost versus fair value for GAAP. Prior to January 1, 2022, fixed-indexed annuity options were carried at fair value, |
(l) | the expense allowance associated with statutory reserving practices for investment contracts held in the separate accounts is reported in the general account as a negative liability, |
8
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
B. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
(m) | in accordance with Statement of Statutory Accounting Principle (SSAP) No. 101, Income Taxes, DTAs are limited to: 1) the amount of federal income taxes paid in prior years that can be recovered through loss carrybacks for existing temporary differences that reverse during a timeframe corresponding with Internal Revenue Service (IRS) tax loss carryback provisions, not to exceed three years, including amounts established in accordance with the provision of SSAP No. 5, plus 2) for entities who meet the required realization threshold in SSAP No. 101, the lesser of the remaining gross DTAs expected to be realized within three years of the balance sheet date or 15% of capital and surplus excluding any net DTAs, EDP equipment and operating software and any net positive goodwill, plus 3) the amount of remaining gross DTAs that can be offset against existing gross deferred tax liabilities (DTL). The remaining DTAs are nonadmitted. Deferred taxes do not include amounts for state taxes. Under GAAP, a DTA is recorded for the amount of gross DTAs expected to be realized in future years, and a valuation allowance is established for DTAs not realizable, |
(n) | for statutory reporting, cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investments represent cash balances and investments with initial maturities of one year or less. Under GAAP, cash and cash equivalents include cash balances and investments with initial maturities of three months or less, and negative cash balances are reported as negative assets, |
(o) | changes in deferred taxes are recognized in operations under GAAP versus a change in surplus for statutory reporting, |
(p) | statutory financial statements are prepared using language and groupings substantially the same as the annual statements of the Company filed with the Ohio Department of Insurance, |
(q) | statutory statements of cash flows are presented on the basis prescribed by the NAIC, and |
(r) | statutory financial statements do not include accumulated other comprehensive income. |
INTEREST RATE RISK
Significant changes in interest rates expose the Company to the risk of not earning income or experiencing losses based on the differences between the interest rates earned on investments and the credited interest rates paid on outstanding fixed annuity contracts and life insurance products with account values. Significant changes in interest rates may affect:
| the unrealized gains and losses in the investment portfolio; |
| the book yield of the investment portfolio; and |
| the ability of the Company to maintain appropriate interest rate spreads over the fixed rates guaranteed in life and annuity products. |
CREDIT RISK
Third party debtors may not pay or perform their obligations. These parties may include the issuers of securities, customers, reinsurers, and other financial intermediaries.
PRESCRIBED OR PERMITTED PRACTICES
The Ohio Department of Insurance recognizes only statutory accounting practices prescribed or permitted by the State of Ohio for determining and reporting the financial condition and results of operations of an insurance company, for determining its solvency under the Ohio Insurance Law. The NAICs Accounting Practices and Procedures Manual, (NAIC SAP) has been adopted as a component of prescribed or permitted practices by the State of Ohio. The Company has no prescribed or permitted practices that would result in differences between NAIC SAP and the State of Ohio with the exception of OAC 3901-1-67.
Effective January 1, 2022, the Company elected to apply OAC 3901-1-67 to its derivative instruments hedging fixed-indexed products and fixed-indexed reserve liabilities. Under OAC 3901-1-67, derivative instruments are carried at amortized cost with the initial hedge cost amortized over the term and asset payoffs realized at the end of the term being reported through net investment income. Additionally, the cash surrender value reserves for fixed-indexed products only reflect index interest credits at the end of the crediting term as compared to partial index interest credits accumulating throughout the crediting term through change in policy and contract reserves.
9
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
B. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
If the prescribed or permitted practices were not applied, the Companys risk-based capital would continue to be above regulatory action levels. A reconciliation of the Companys net income between NAIC SAP and prescribed practice is shown below:
Year Ended December 31 | ||||||||||||||||||
Net Income (in thousands ) |
SSAP # |
F/S Page |
State of |
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||||
(1) State basis |
XXX | XXX | XXX | $ | 37,902 | $ | 39,919 | $ | 24,091 | |||||||||
(2) State prescribed practices that increase/(decrease) NAIC SAP OAC 3901-1-67: |
XXX | XXX | XXX | |||||||||||||||
Derivative instruments |
86 | 4 | OH | 557 | 36 | 797 | ||||||||||||
Reserves for fixed indexed annuities |
51 | 4 | OH | (628 | ) | 2,473 | (3,117 | ) | ||||||||||
(3) State permitted practices that increase/(decrease) NAIC SAP |
XXX | XXX | XXX | | | | ||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||
(4) NAIC SAP (1-2-3=4) |
XXX | XXX | XXX | $ | 37,973 | $ | 37,410 | $ | 26,411 | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
A reconciliation of the Companys capital and surplus between the NAIC SAP and prescribed practice is shown below:
Year Ended December 31 | ||||||||||||||||||
Surplus (in thousands) |
SSAP # |
F/S Page |
State of |
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||||
(5) Statutory surplus state basis |
XXX | XXX | XXX | $ | 464,499 | $ | 427,507 | $ | 384,160 | |||||||||
(6) State prescribed practices that increase/(decrease) NAIC SAP OAC 3901-1-67: |
||||||||||||||||||
Derivative instruments |
86 | 2, 4 | OH | (7,162 | ) | (8,924 | ) | (749 | ) | |||||||||
Reserves for fixed indexed annuities |
51 | 3, 4 | OH | 2,146 | 2,774 | 301 | ||||||||||||
Tax impact |
101 | 2, 4 | OH | 1,620 | 1,858 | 661 | ||||||||||||
(7) State permitted practices that increase/(decrease) NAIC SAP |
XXX | XXX | XXX | | | | ||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||
(8) NAIC SAP (5-6-7=8) |
XXX | XXX | XXX | $ | 467,895 | $ | 431,799 | $ | 383,947 | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
Preparation of the statutory-basis financial statements requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect amounts reported in the financial statements and accompanying notes. Such estimates and assumptions could change in the future as more information becomes known, which could impact the amounts reported and disclosed herein.
INVESTMENTS
Investments are generally stated as follows:
a) | bonds with a NAIC rating 1 through 5 are stated at amortized cost using the interest method; all others are stated at the lower of amortized cost or fair value. For residential mortgage-backed securities (MBS), commercial MBS and loan-backed and structured securities (LBASS), the NAIC has retained a third-party investment management firm to assist in the determination of the appropriate NAIC designations and Book Adjusted Carrying Values based on not only the probability of loss, but also the severity of loss. Those residential MBS, commercial MBS and LBASS securities that are not modeled but receive a current year NAIC Credit Rating Provider rating equal to NAIC 1 and 2 are stated at amortized cost and NAIC 3-6 are stated at lower of amortized cost or fair value. Dealer modeled prepayment assumptions are used for mortgage-backed and asset-backed securities at the date of purchase to determine effective yields; significant changes in estimated cash flows from the original purchase assumptions are accounted for on a prospective basis, |
b) | short-term investments are carried at cost, |
c) | redeemable preferred stocks rated RP1 through RP3 are stated at book value. All other redeemable preferred stocks are stated at the lower of book value or fair value. Perpetual preferred stocks are stated at fair value, not to exceed any effective call price, |
d) | common stocks are carried at fair value, |
e) | fixed-indexed annuity options are carried at amortized cost. Prior to January 1, 2022, fixed-indexed annuity options were carried at fair value, |
f) | other invested assets, consisting of surplus notes, are stated at the lower of amortized cost or fair value, |
g) | policy loans are stated at the aggregate unpaid balance. |
10
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
B. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
If it is determined that a decline in fair value of a specific investment is other-than-temporary, an impairment is recognized as a realized capital loss. Investments that are in an unrealized loss position that the Company intends to sell, or does not have the intent and ability to hold until recovery, are written down to fair value. Loan-backed and structured securities (included in bonds) that are in an unrealized loss position that the Company has the intent and ability to hold until recovery, are written down only to the extent the present value of expected future cash flows using the securitys effective yield is lower than the amortized cost. All other bonds that are in an unrealized loss position that the Company has the intent and ability to hold until recovery are written down to fair value if declines are credit-related and not written down for interest-related declines. When a decline in the
value of a specific investment is considered to be other-than-temporary, a provision for impairment is charged to earnings (included in net realized capital losses) and the cost basis of that investment is reduced by the amount of the charge.
The Companys equity index call options are derivative instruments. The Companys derivative instruments do not meet the criteria for hedge accounting and are accounted for at amortized cost. Subsequent to the adoption of OAC 3901-1-67 on January 1, 2022, options related to fixed-indexed annuities are recorded at amortized cost with amortization and expirations recorded in net investment income.
Counterparties to financial instruments expose the Company to credit-related losses in the event of nonperformance, but the Company does not expect any counterparties to fail to meet their obligations and expects any nonperformance to not have a material impact on the Companys financial statements.
Investments having maturities of three months or less when purchased are considered to be cash equivalents for purposes of the statutory-basis financial statements. The carrying values of cash and short-term investments approximate their fair values.
Gains or losses on sales of securities are recognized at the time of disposition with the amount of gain or loss determined on the specific identification basis.
The IMR applies to interest-related realized capital gains and losses (net of tax) and is intended to defer realized gains and losses resulting from changes in the general level of interest rates. Gains and losses deferred from realized capital gains and losses are reported in interest maintenance reserve transfers, net of tax on the Statement of Operations. The IMR is amortized into investment income over the approximate remaining life of the investments sold.
The AVR provides for possible credit-related losses on securities and is calculated according to a specified formula as prescribed by the NAIC for the purpose of stabilizing surplus against fluctuations in the fair value of investment securities. Changes in the required reserve balances are made by direct credits or charges to surplus.
PREMIUMS
Annuity premiums and considerations are recognized as revenue when received.
SEPARATE ACCOUNTS
Separate account assets and liabilities reported in the accompanying statutory-basis balance sheet represent funds that are separately administered for annuity contracts, and for which the contract holder, rather than AILIC, bears the investment risk. Assets of the separate accounts are not chargeable with liabilities incurred in any other business operation of AILIC. Separate account assets are reported at fair value. The operations of the separate accounts are not included in the accompanying statutory-basis financial statements. Fees charged on separate account policyholder account values are included in Contract charges separate accounts in the Statement of Operations.
POLICY BENEFIT RESERVES
Annuity reserves are developed by actuarial methods and are determined based on published tables using statutorily specified interest rates and valuation methods that will provide, in the aggregate, reserves that are greater than or equal to the minimum or guaranteed policy cash values or the amounts required by the Ohio Department of Insurance.
11
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
B. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
Annuity policy and deposit fund reserves are based on principles underlying the Commissioners Annuity Reserve Valuation Method. Valuation interest rates range from 2.00% to 7.00%. Valuation mortality rates are from the 1983 Individual Annuity Mortality table, 1994 Minimum Guaranteed Death Benefit Mortality table, the Annuity 2000 mortality table and the 2012 Individual Annuity Reserving mortality table. Reserves for fixed-indexed annuities are calculated using the market value reserve method as defined in NAIC Actuarial Guideline 35, adjusted in accordance with OAC 3901-1-67. Prior to 2022, reserves for fixed-indexed annuities were calculated using the market value reserve method as defined in NAIC Actuarial Guideline 35.
Tabular interest, tabular less actual reserves released and tabular costs have been determined by formula. Tabular interest on funds not involving life contingencies is calculated as the product of such valuation rate of interest times the mean of the amount of funds subject to such valuation rate of interest held at the beginning and end of the year of valuation.
AILICs variable annuity contracts contain a guaranteed minimum death benefit (GMDB) to be paid if the policyholder dies before the annuity payout period commences. In periods of declining equity markets, the GMDB may exceed the value of the policyholders account. The total reserve for variable annuities, which includes a provision for the GMDB, is determined according to the provisions of NAIC VM-21.
The liability for unreported claims is based on actual, recent Company experience of unreported annuity claim development. This experience is monitored and the liability is adjusted accordingly each quarter.
The Company is required to perform an annual asset adequacy test of reserves, to determine if they are adequate under moderately adverse conditions. The Appointed Actuary oversees the analysis and determines if and how much additional reserves are required. As of December 31, 2024 and 2023 additional reserves were not required.
FEDERAL INCOME TAXES
Beginning in June of 2021, MMALIC and its subsidiaries entered into a separate intercompany tax allocation agreement (the Tax Agreement). The Tax Agreement sets forth the manner in which the total combined federal income is allocated among the subsidiaries. The Tax Agreement provides MMALIC with the enforceable right to recoup federal income taxes paid in prior years in the event of future net capital losses, which it may incur. Further, the Tax Agreement provides MMALIC with the enforceable right to utilize its net losses carried forward as an offset to future net income subject to federal income taxes. Estimated payments are made quarterly during the year. Following year-end, additional settlements are made on the original due date of the return and, when extended, at the time the return is filed.
NEW ACCOUNTING STANDARDS
In June 2022, the NAIC adopted modifications to SSAP No. 25, Affiliates and Other Related Parties and SSAP No. 43, Loan-Backed and Structured Securities, effective December 31, 2022. The modifications clarify application of the existing affiliate definition and incorporate disclosure requirements for all investments that involve related parties, regardless of whether they meet the affiliate definition. The revisions to SSAP No. 43 also included additional clarifications that the investments from any arrangements that results in direct or indirect control, which include but are not limited to control through a servicer, shall be reported as affiliated investments. The modifications did not have a material effect on the Companys financial statements.
In August 2023, the NAIC adopted INT 23-01T, Disallowed IMR (INT 23-01T). INT 23-01T provides optional, limited-term guidance for the assessment of disallowed IMR for up to 10% of adjusted general account capital and surplus. An insurers capital and surplus must first be adjusted to exclude certain soft assets including net positive goodwill, electronic data processing equipment and operating system software, net deferred tax assets and admitted disallowed IMR. An insurer will only be able to admit the negative IMR if the insurers risk-based capital is over 300% authorized control level after adjusting to remove the assets described above.
12
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
B. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
As adopted, negative IMR may be admitted first in the insurers general account and then, if all disallowed IMR in the general account is admitted and the percentage limit is not reached, to the separate account proportionately between insulated and noninsulated accounts. If the insurer can demonstrate historical practice in which acquired gains from derivatives were also reversed to IMR (as liabilities) and amortized, there is no exclusion for derivatives losses. INT 23-01T was adopted by the Company as of September 30, 2023 and will be effective through December 31, 2025. To the extent the Companys IMR balance is a net negative, the effects of INT 23-01T will be reflected in the Companys financial position, results of operations, and financial statement disclosures. The Company has adopted this guidance and the adoption resulted in an admitted disallowed IMR of $11.3 million and $11.4 million at December 31, 2024 and 2023, respectively.
In March 2023, the NAIC adopted modifications to SSAP No. 34, Investment Income Due and Accrued, effective December 31, 2023. The modifications require additional disclosures and data capture related to gross, non-admitted and admitted amounts for interest income due and accrued, deferred interest, and paid-in-kind (PIK) interest.
In August 2023, the NAIC adopted revisions to further clarify the PIK interest disclosure in SSAP No. 34, effective December 31, 2023. The revisions clarify that decreasing amounts to principal balances are first applied to any PIK interest included in the principal balance. The original principal would not be reduced until the PIK interest had been fully eliminated from the balance. The revisions also provide a practical expedient for determining the PIK interest in the cumulative balance by subtracting the original principal/ par value from the current principal/ par value, with the resulting PIK interest not to go less than zero. The modifications did not have a material effect on the Companys impact of PIK in relation to the financial statements.
In December 2023, the NAIC adopted revisions, effective January 1, 2024, to avoid allocating realized gains or losses from bond sales to the IMR when sold before a rating downgrade. Revisions were also made to avoid allocating realized gains or losses from mortgage loan sales when there is a credit loss allowance, where payments are not 90 days past due. Revisions were also made to update guidance on changes in credit ratings used to allocate credit or interest rate related gains or losses, requiring identification of realized losses from acute credit events to be allocated to AVR. The modifications did not have a material effect on the Companys financial statements.
FUTURE ADOPTION OF NEW ACCOUNTING STANDARDS
In August 2023, the NAIC adopted revisions to clarify and incorporate a new bond definition within disclosures SSAP No. 26, Bonds, SSAP No. 43, Asset-Backed Securities, and other related SSAPs, effective January 1, 2025. The revisions were issued in connection with its principle-based bond definition project, the Bond Project.
The Bond Project began in October 2020 through the development of a principle-based bond definition to be used for all securities in determining whether they qualify for reporting on the statutory annual statement Schedule D. Within the new bond definition, bonds are classified as an issuer credit obligation or an asset-backed security. An issuer credit obligation is defined as a bond where repayment is supported by the general creditworthiness of an operating entity, and an asset-backed security is defined as a bond issued by an entity created for the primary purpose of raising capital through debt backed by financial assets. The revisions to SSAP No. 26 reflect the principle-based bond definition, and SSAP No. 43 provides accounting and reporting guidance for investments that qualify as asset-backed securities under the new bond definition. Upon adoption, investments that do not qualify as bonds will not be permitted to be reported as bonds on Schedule D, Part 1 thereafter as there will be no grandfathering for existing investments that do not qualify under the revised SSAPs. The Company is currently assessing the impacts of the adopted SSAP No. 26, SSAP No. 43 and other related SSAPs in relation to the financial statements.
In March 2024, the NAIC adopted revisions to SSAP No. 21, Other Admitted Assets, effective January 1, 2025, clarifying that residuals follow the effective yield approach with a cap and providing an election for the cost recovery method. The modifications are not expected to have a material effect on the Companys financial statements. The Company will elect the effective yield method using the allowable earned yield, capped by the amount of cash distributions received. The Company is assessing the potential impact on the Companys financial statements.
13
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
B. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
Effective January 1, 2025, revisions will be made to short-term investments, which include excluding additional investment types from being reported as cash equivalents or short-term investments regardless of maturity date of the investment at the date of acquisition. Investments will be eliminated from being reported as cash equivalents or short-term investments unless they would qualify under SSAP No. 26, Bonds as an issuer credit obligation. Such investments will then only qualify as a cash equivalent or short-term investment if they have a maturity date within 3-months (cash equivalents) or 12-months (short-term) from the date of acquisition or meet the specifics requirements for money market mutual funds or cash pooling arrangement. The Company is assessing the potential impact on the Companys financial statements.
The NAIC adopted revisions to various SSAPs at the Spring 2024 National Meeting for investments in tax credits and acquired tax credits in response to the comments received, as well as updated annual statement reporting categories for tax credit investment risk-based capital. These revisions are in addition to the previous ones, which include broad criteria to scope in various tax credit programs, including solar programs and state specific programs. Proportional amortization will be the measurement approach as with existing low-income housing tax credits, which means recording amortization of the investment in the partnership through net investment income and use of the tax credits in the appropriate tax line. The adopted revisions will be effective on January 1, 2025. The Company is assessing the potential impact on the Companys financial statements.
SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
Management has evaluated all events occurring after December 31, 2024 through the date the financial statements were available to be issued, and determined there were no subsequent events that required either recognition or disclosure in the financial statements.
C. FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENTS
Fair value is defined as the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. Fair value measurements are based upon observable and unobservable inputs. Observable inputs reflect market data obtained from independent sources, while unobservable inputs reflect the Companys view of market assumptions in the absence of observable market information. The Company utilizes valuation techniques that maximize the use of observable inputs and minimize the use of unobservable inputs. In determining fair value, the Company uses various methods, including market, income and cost approaches.
The Company categorizes its financial instruments into a three-level hierarchy based on the priority of the inputs to the valuation technique. The fair value hierarchy gives the highest priority to quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities (Level 1) and the lowest priority to unobservable inputs (Level 3). If the inputs used to measure fair value fall within different levels of the hierarchy, the category level is based on the lowest priority level input that is significant to the fair value measurement of the instrument in its entirety.
The three levels of the hierarchy are as follows:
Level 1 - Quoted prices for identical assets or liabilities in active markets (markets in which transactions occur with sufficient frequency and volume to provide pricing information on an ongoing basis). AILICs Level 1 financial instruments consist primarily of cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments and publicly traded equity securities for which quoted market prices in active markets are available.
Level 2 - Quoted prices for similar instruments in active markets; quoted prices for identical or similar assets or liabilities in inactive markets (markets in which there are few transactions, the prices are not current, price quotations vary substantially over time or among market makers, or in which little information is released publicly); and valuations based on other significant inputs that are observable in active markets. AILICs Level 2 financial instruments include fixed maturities, separate account assets and liabilities, and equity index call options. Level 2 inputs include benchmark yields, reported trades, corroborated broker/dealer quotes, issuer spreads and benchmark securities. When non-binding broker quotes can be corroborated by comparison to similar securities priced using observable inputs, they are classified as Level 2.
14
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
C. FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENTS (CONTINUED)
Level 3 - Valuations derived from market valuation techniques generally consistent with those used to estimate the fair value of Level 2 financial instruments in which one or more significant inputs are unobservable or when the market for a security exhibits significantly less liquidity relative to markets supporting Level 2 fair value measurements. The unobservable inputs may include managements own assumptions about the assumptions market participants would use based on the best information available in the circumstances. AILICs Level 3 is comprised of financial instruments whose fair value is estimated based on non-binding broker quotes or internally developed using significant inputs not based on, or corroborated by, observable market information.
Management is responsible for the valuation process and uses data from outside sources (including nationally recognized pricing services and broker/dealers) in establishing fair value. Valuation techniques utilized by pricing services and prices obtained from external sources are reviewed by internal investment professionals who are familiar with the securities being priced and the markets in which they trade to ensure the fair value determination is representative of an exit price. To validate the appropriateness of the prices obtained, the investment manager considers widely published indices (as benchmarks), recent trades, changes in interest rates, general economic conditions and the credit quality of the specific issuers. In addition, management communicates directly with the pricing service regarding the methods and assumptions used in pricing, including verifying, on a test basis, the inputs used by the service to value specific securities. See Note D - Investments for fair value of investment securities.
Financial assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis categorized into the three-level fair value hierarchy at December 31, 2024 are summarized below (in thousands):
Description |
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | ||||||||||||
Assets: |
||||||||||||||||
Bonds: |
||||||||||||||||
Industrial and miscellaneous |
$ | | $ | | $ | | $ | | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
Total bonds |
$ | | $ | | $ | | $ | | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
Non-affiliated preferred stock |
$ | 2,210 | $ | | $ | | $ | 2,210 | ||||||||
Separate account assets |
| 554,327 | | 554,327 | ||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
Total assets accounted for at fair value |
$ | 2,210 | $ | 554,327 | $ | | $ | 556,537 | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
Liabilities: |
||||||||||||||||
Separate account liabilities |
$ | | $ | 554,327 | $ | | $ | 554,327 | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
Total liabilities accounted for at fair value |
$ | | $ | 554,327 | $ | | $ | 554,327 | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Financial assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis categorized into the three-level fair value hierarchy at December 31, 2023 are summarized below (in thousands):
Description |
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | ||||||||||||
Assets: |
||||||||||||||||
Bonds: |
||||||||||||||||
Industrial and miscellaneous |
$ | | $ | 14 | $ | | $ | 14 | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
Total bonds |
$ | | $ | 14 | $ | | $ | 14 | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
Non-affiliated preferred stock |
$ | | $ | 2,181 | $ | | $ | 2,181 | ||||||||
Separate account assets |
| 524,809 | | 524,809 | ||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
Total assets accounted for at fair value |
$ | | $ | 526,990 | $ | | $ | 526,990 | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
Liabilities: |
||||||||||||||||
Separate account liabilities |
$ | | $ | 524,809 | $ | | $ | 524,809 | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
Total liabilities accounted for at fair value |
$ | | $ | 524,809 | $ | | $ | 524,809 | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Company did not have any material transfers in or out of Level 3 during the 2024 and 2023 reporting periods.
The Company did not have any assets or liabilities measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis as of December 31, 2024 and 2023.
15
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
C. FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENTS (CONTINUED)
The following table categorizes all the financial assets and liabilities in the financial statements into the three-level fair value hierarchy at December 31, 2024 (in thousands):
Description |
Fair Value |
Carrying Value |
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | |||||||||||||||
Financial assets: |
||||||||||||||||||||
Bonds: |
||||||||||||||||||||
U.S. Government and government agencies |
$ | 992 | $ | 998 | $ | | $ | 992 | $ | | ||||||||||
All other governments |
| | | | | |||||||||||||||
States, territories, and possessions |
24,809 | 26,089 | | 24,809 | | |||||||||||||||
Political subdivisions of states, territories |
16,661 | 17,393 | | 16,661 | | |||||||||||||||
Special revenue |
136,502 | 151,950 | | 136,502 | | |||||||||||||||
Industrial & miscellaneous |
1,365,713 | 1,437,303 | | 1,360,623 | 5,090 | |||||||||||||||
Parent, subs and affiliates |
| | | | | |||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||
Total bonds |
$ | 1,544,677 | $ | 1,633,733 | $ | | $ | 1,539,587 | $ | 5,090 | ||||||||||
Non-affiliated preferred stocks |
4,296 | 4,210 | 4,296 | | | |||||||||||||||
Equity index call options* |
11,307 | 15,628 | 6,534 | 4,773 | | |||||||||||||||
Separate account assets |
554,327 | 554,327 | | 554,327 | | |||||||||||||||
Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments |
325,496 | 325,496 | 325,496 | | | |||||||||||||||
Policy loans |
42,172 | 42,172 | | | 42,172 | |||||||||||||||
Other investments |
5,637 | 7,844 | | 5,637 | | |||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||
Total financial assets |
$ | 2,487,912 | $ | 2,583,410 | $ | 336,326 | $ | 2,104,324 | $ | 47,262 | ||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||
Financial liabilities: |
||||||||||||||||||||
Equity index call options* |
| 11,482 | | | | |||||||||||||||
Separate account liabilities |
554,327 | 554,327 | | 554,327 | | |||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||
Total financial liabilities |
$ | 554,327 | $ | 565,809 | $ | | $ | 554,327 | $ | | ||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* | Effective 1/1/2022, Equity index call options are carried at amortized cost per OAC 3901-1-67. Fair Value of options is reported net in the asset section for disclosure. |
16
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
C. FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENTS (CONTINUED)
The following table categorizes all the financial assets and liabilities in the financial statements into three-level fair value hierarchy at December 31, 2023 (in thousands):
Description |
Fair Value |
Carrying Value |
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | |||||||||||||||
Financial assets: |
||||||||||||||||||||
Bonds: |
||||||||||||||||||||
U.S. Government and government agencies |
$ | 942 | $ | 949 | $ | | $ | 942 | $ | | ||||||||||
All other governments |
999 | 1,000 | | 999 | | |||||||||||||||
States, territories,and possessions |
29,943 | 31,186 | | 29,943 | | |||||||||||||||
Political subdivisions of states, territories |
20,378 | 21,059 | | 20,378 | | |||||||||||||||
Special revenue |
159,844 | 174,837 | | 159,844 | | |||||||||||||||
Industrial & miscellaneous |
1,661,085 | 1,749,036 | | 1,653,774 | 7,311 | |||||||||||||||
Parent, subs and affiliates |
19,996 | 19,675 | | 19,996 | | |||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||
Total bonds |
$ | 1,893,187 | $ | 1,997,742 | $ | | $ | 1,885,876 | $ | 7,311 | ||||||||||
Non-affiliated preferred stocks |
4,253 | 4,181 | 2,072 | 2,181 | | |||||||||||||||
Equity index call options* |
13,907 | 20,275 | 5,442 | 8,465 | | |||||||||||||||
Separate account assets |
524,809 | 524,809 | | 524,809 | | |||||||||||||||
Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments |
130,811 | 130,811 | 130,811 | | | |||||||||||||||
Policy loans |
43,633 | 43,633 | | | 43,633 | |||||||||||||||
Other investments |
5,713 | 7,989 | | 5,713 | | |||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||
Total financial assets |
$ | 2,616,313 | $ | 2,729,440 | $ | 138,325 | $ | 2,427,044 | $ | 50,944 | ||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||
Financial liabilities: |
||||||||||||||||||||
Equity index call options* |
| 15,291 | | | | |||||||||||||||
Separate account liabilities |
524,809 | 524,809 | | 524,809 | | |||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||
Total financial liabilities |
$ | 524,809 | $ | 540,100 | $ | | $ | 524,809 | $ | | ||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* | Effective 1/1/2022, Equity index call options are carried at amortized cost per OAC 3901-1-67. Fair Value of options is reported net in the asset section for disclosure. |
17
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
C. FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENTS (CONTINUED)
FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
The following methods and assumptions were used to estimate the fair values of financial instruments:
Separate Accounts: Separate Account Assets are stated at the net asset values of their respective portfolios.
Bonds: Fair value for investments in publicly traded bonds are obtained from nationally recognized pricing services. Fair values for privately placed investment grade bonds are obtained from broker quotes or determined internally by security analysts of the Companys affiliated investment portfolio manager.
Equity index call options: The fair values for AILICs equity index call options are based on settlement values, quoted market prices of comparable instruments, fees currently charged to enter into similar agreements, taking into account the remaining terms of the agreements and counterparties credit standing (guarantees, loan commitments), or, if there are no relevant comparables, on pricing models or formulas using current assumptions.
Surplus notes: Surplus notes are stated at the lower of amortized cost or fair value. Fair values are based on market prices provided by an outside pricing service.
Policy Loans: The Company states policy loans at the aggregate unpaid balance, which approximates fair value.
Non-affiliated preferred and common stock: Fair values of equity securities are generally based on closing prices obtained from the exchanges on which the securities are traded. For the remainder of these securities, fair values are determined by managements internal investment professionals using data from nationally recognized pricing services as well as non-binding broker quotes.
Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments: Cash and cash equivalents, which are carried at amortized cost, consist of all highly liquid investments purchased with original maturities of three months or less. Short-term investments, which are carried at amortized cost, consist of short-term bonds, money market mutual funds and all highly liquid investments purchased with maturities of greater than three months and less than or equal to 12 months. The carrying value reported in the Statutory Balance Sheet for cash, cash equivalents and short-term investment instruments approximates the fair value.
18
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
D. INVESTMENTS
Bonds at December 31 consisted of the following (in thousands):
2024 | ||||||||||||||||
Carrying | Fair | Gross Unrealized | ||||||||||||||
Value | Value | Gains | Losses | |||||||||||||
U.S. Government and agencies |
$ | 998 | $ | 992 | $ | 1 | $ | 7 | ||||||||
All other governments |
| | | | ||||||||||||
States, territories and possessions |
26,089 | 24,809 | | 1,280 | ||||||||||||
Political subdivisions |
17,393 | 16,661 | 12 | 744 | ||||||||||||
Special revenue |
151,950 | 136,502 | 42 | 15,490 | ||||||||||||
Industrial and miscellaneous |
1,437,303 | 1,365,713 | 7,199 | 78,789 | ||||||||||||
Parent, subsidiaries and affiliates |
| | | | ||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
Total bonds |
$ | 1,633,733 | $ | 1,544,677 | $ | 7,254 | $ | 96,310 | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2023 | ||||||||||||||||
Carrying | Fair | Gross Unrealized | ||||||||||||||
Value | Value | Gains | Losses | |||||||||||||
U.S. Government and agencies |
$ | 949 | $ | 942 | $ | 2 | $ | 9 | ||||||||
All other governments |
1,000 | 999 | | 1 | ||||||||||||
States, territories and possessions |
31,186 | 29,943 | 4 | 1,247 | ||||||||||||
Political subdivisions |
21,059 | 20,378 | 21 | 702 | ||||||||||||
Special revenue |
174,837 | 159,844 | 86 | 15,079 | ||||||||||||
Industrial and miscellaneous |
1,749,036 | 1,661,085 | 6,815 | 94,766 | ||||||||||||
Parent, subsidiaries and affiliates |
19,675 | 19,996 | 321 | | ||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
Total bonds |
$ | 1,997,742 | $ | 1,893,187 | $ | 7,249 | $ | 111,804 | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At December 31, 2024 and 2023 the Company held unrated or less-than-investment grade bonds of $24.7 million and $23.7 million, respectively, with an aggregate fair value of $23.3 million and $21.4 million, respectively. Those holdings amounted to 1.5% and 1.2% of the Companys investments in bonds and approximately 0.9% and 0.8% of the Companys total admitted assets at December 31, 2024 and 2023, respectively. The Company performs periodic evaluations of the relative credit standing of the issuers of these bonds.
19
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
D. INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
Unrealized gains and losses on investments in non-affiliated preferred and common stocks are reported directly in unassigned surplus and do not affect operations. The cost, gross unrealized gains and losses and fair value of those investments are summarized as follows (in thousands):
Fair | Gross Unrealized | |||||||||||||||
Cost | Value | Gains | Losses | |||||||||||||
At December 31, 2024 |
||||||||||||||||
Non-affiliated preferred stocks |
$ | 4,000 | $ | 4,296 | $ | 296 | $ | | ||||||||
Non-affiliated common stocks |
| | | | ||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
Total |
$ | 4,000 | $ | 4,296 | $ | 296 | $ | | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
Fair | Gross Unrealized | |||||||||||||||
Cost | Value | Gains | Losses | |||||||||||||
At December 31, 2023 |
||||||||||||||||
Non-affiliated preferred stocks |
$ | 4,000 | $ | 4,253 | $ | 253 | $ | | ||||||||
Non-affiliated common stocks |
| | | | ||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
Total |
$ | 4,000 | $ | 4,253 | $ | 253 | $ | | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The following tables present gross unrealized losses and fair values on bonds and non-affiliated preferred and common stocks by investment category and length of time that individual securities have been in a continuous unrealized loss position as of December 31 (dollars in thousands):
2024 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Twelve Months or Less | More Than Twelve Months | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Fair Value |
Gross Unrealized Loss |
Number of Issuers |
Fair Value |
Gross Unrealized Loss |
Number of Issuers |
|||||||||||||||||||
U.S. Government and agencies |
$ | 791 | $ | 7 | 1 | $ | | $ | | 0 | ||||||||||||||
All other governments |
| | 0 | | | 0 | ||||||||||||||||||
States, territories and possessions |
4,536 | 69 | 3 | 20,146 | 1,211 | 10 | ||||||||||||||||||
Political subdivisions |
1,959 | 41 | 1 | 8,533 | 703 | 6 | ||||||||||||||||||
Special revenue |
14,816 | 524 | 11 | 113,184 | 14,966 | 55 | ||||||||||||||||||
Industrial and miscellaneous |
179,241 | 1,875 | 75 | 969,922 | 76,914 | 465 | ||||||||||||||||||
Parent, subsidiaries and affiliates |
| | 0 | | | 0 | ||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||
Total bonds |
$ | 201,343 | $ | 2,516 | 91 | $ | 1,111,785 | $ | 93,794 | 536 | ||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2023 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Twelve Months or Less | More Than Twelve Months | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Fair Value |
Gross Unrealized Loss |
Number of Issuers |
Fair Value |
Gross Unrealized Loss |
Number of Issuers |
|||||||||||||||||||
U.S. Government and agencies |
$ | 497 | $ | 3 | 1 | $ | 243 | $ | 6 | 1 | ||||||||||||||
All other governments |
| | 0 | 999 | 1 | 1 | ||||||||||||||||||
States, territories and possessions |
4,048 | 36 | 3 | 23,797 | 1,211 | 11 | ||||||||||||||||||
Political subdivisions |
2,506 | 14 | 2 | 11,077 | 688 | 8 | ||||||||||||||||||
Special revenue |
11,708 | 244 | 10 | 135,346 | 14,835 | 64 | ||||||||||||||||||
Industrial and miscellaneous |
148,348 | 1,619 | 50 | 1,292,592 | 93,166 | 603 | ||||||||||||||||||
Parent, subsidiaries and affiliates |
| | 0 | | | 0 | ||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||
Total bonds |
$ | 167,107 | $ | 1,916 | 66 | $ | 1,464,054 | $ | 109,907 | 688 | ||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
20
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
D. INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
The quality of the bond portfolio is determined by the use of Securities Valuation Office (SVO) ratings and the equivalent rating agency designations. The following sets forth the NAIC class ratings for the bond portfolio as of December 31 (in thousands):
2024 | 2023 | |||||||||||||||||
NAIC |
Equivalent Rating Agency Designation |
Carrying Value |
% of Total |
Carrying Value |
% of Total |
|||||||||||||
1 | Aaa/ Aa / A | $ | 869,963 | 53 | % | $ | 1,129,251 | 57 | % | |||||||||
2 | Baa | 739,106 | 46 | % | 844,836 | 43 | % | |||||||||||
3 | Ba | 16,079 | 1 | % | 9,956 | 0 | % | |||||||||||
4 | B | 3,482 | 0 | % | 9,797 | 0 | % | |||||||||||
5 | Caa and lower | 5,103 | 0 | % | 3,902 | 0 | % | |||||||||||
6 | In or near default | | 0 | % | | 0 | % | |||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||
$ | 1,633,733 | 100 | % | $ | 1,997,742 | 100 | % | |||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
When a decline in the value of a specific investment is considered to be other-than-temporary, a provision for impairment is charged to earnings (accounted for as realized capital loss) and the cost basis of that investment is reduced by the amount of the charge. The determination of whether unrealized losses are other-than-temporary requires judgment based on subjective as well as objective factors. Factors considered and resources used by management include:
(a) | whether the unrealized loss is credit-driven or a result of changes in market interest rates, |
(b) | the extent to which fair value is less than cost basis, |
(c) | cash flow projections received from independent sources, |
(d) | historical operating, balance sheet and cash flow data contained in issuer Securities and Exchange Commission filings and news releases, |
(e) | near-term prospects for improvement in the issuer and/or its industry, |
(f) | third party research and communications with industry specialists, |
(g) | financial models and forecasts, |
(h) | the continuity of dividend payments, maintenance of investment grade ratings and hybrid nature of certain investments, |
(i) | discussions with issuer management, and |
(j) | the ability and intent to hold investment for a period of time sufficient to allow for any anticipated recovery in fair value. Based on its analysis of the factors enumerated above, management believes (i) AILIC will recover its cost basis in the securities with unrealized losses and (ii) that AILIC has the ability and intent to hold securities until they recover in value. Although AILIC has the ability to continue holding its investments with unrealized losses, its intent to hold them may change due to deterioration in the issuers creditworthiness, decisions to lessen exposure to a particular issuer or industry, asset/liability management decisions, market movements, changes in views about appropriate asset allocation or the desire to offset taxable realized gains. Should AILICs ability or intent change with regard to a particular security, a charge for impairment would likely be required. While it is not possible to accurately predict if or when a specific security will become impaired, charges for other-than-temporary impairment (OTTI) could be material to results of operations in future periods. |
Net realized gains (losses) on investments sold and charges for OTTI on investments held were as follows for the years ended December 31 (dollars in thousands):
Year |
Net Realized Gains (Losses) (Net of IMR Transfers and Taxes) |
Charges for |
Total |
Number
of | ||||
2024 |
$ 1,528 | $(910) | $618 | 48 | ||||
2023 |
(2,885) | (1,424) | (4,309) | 51 | ||||
2022 |
449 | (1,389) | (940) | 58 |
21
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
D. INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
The following is a summary of the carrying value and fair value of bonds as of December 31, 2024 and 2023 (in thousands) by contractual maturity. Expected maturities may differ from contractual maturities because issuers may have the right to call or prepay obligations with or without prepayment penalties. Securities with more than one maturity date are included in the table using the final maturity date.
2024 | 2023 | |||||||||||||||
Carrying Value |
Fair Value |
Carrying Value |
Fair Value |
|||||||||||||
Maturity: |
||||||||||||||||
One year or less |
$ | 305,888 | $ | 305,037 | $ | 143,499 | $ | 142,380 | ||||||||
After one year through five years |
586,660 | 574,976 | 816,715 | 799,872 | ||||||||||||
After five years through ten years |
244,190 | 225,571 | 386,284 | 362,648 | ||||||||||||
After ten years |
496,995 | 439,093 | 651,244 | 588,287 | ||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
Total bonds by maturity |
$ | 1,633,733 | $ | 1,544,677 | $ | 1,997,742 | $ | 1,893,187 | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The aggregate amount of investment income generated as a result of prepayment penalties and accelerations fees was $0.0 million, $0.0 million, and $0.1 million during 2024, 2023, and 2022, respectively.
Proceeds from sales of bonds were $9.6 million, $236.6 million, and $28.4 million for 2024, 2023, and 2022, respectively. Gross realized gains of $0.1 million, $0.4 million, and $1.2 million and gross realized losses of $2.2 million, $21.2 million, and $0.3 million were realized on bonds during 2024, 2023, and 2022, respectively. The number of securities disposed of with a callable feature in 2024 and 2023 was 51 and 49, respectively.
AILICs $181.3 million investment in MBS represents approximately 11.1% of the carrying value of its bonds at December 31, 2024. The Companys indirect exposure to subprime mortgage risk as of December 31, 2024 had a total actual cost and book adjusted carrying values of approximately $33.7 million and $33.4 million, respectively, and a total fair value of approximately $28.3 million. AILICs $198.5 million investment in MBS represents approximately 9.9% of the carrying value of its bonds at December 31, 2023. The Companys indirect exposure to subprime mortgage risk as of December 31, 2023 had a total actual cost and book adjusted carrying values of approximately $58.9 million and $59.6 million, respectively, and a total fair value of approximately $53.1 million.
The Company has no aggregate loan-backed securities with an OTTI in which the Company has the intent to sell or the inability or lack of intent to retain the investment in the security for a period of time to recover the amortized cost basis.
The following table shows each loan-backed security with an OTTI recognized in 2024, as the present value of cash flows expected to be collected is less than the amortized cost basis of the security (in whole dollars):
CUSIP |
Amortized Cost Before OTTI |
Present Value of Projected Cash Flows |
OTTI Charge Recognized in Statement of Operations |
Amortized Cost After OTTI |
Fair Value at Time of OTTI |
Date Reported | ||||||||||||||||||
61751DAE4 |
241,030 | 229,954 | 11,076 | 229,954 | 283,143 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
059522AU6 |
248,832 | 247,213 | 1,619 | 247,213 | 244,026 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
07386XAH9 |
579,807 | 539,861 | 39,946 | 539,861 | 460,455 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12566UAN4 |
387,859 | 381,280 | 6,579 | 381,280 | 371,726 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12628LAD2 |
209,767 | 199,654 | 10,114 | 199,654 | 165,049 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12667F4N2 |
255,512 | 252,725 | 2,786 | 252,725 | 243,894 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12667GAC7 |
165,291 | 164,904 | 387 | 164,904 | 159,547 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
32051GT70 |
128,888 | 124,426 | 4,462 | 124,426 | 110,083 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MCY1 |
557,958 | 553,487 | 4,471 | 553,487 | 556,740 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MEC7 |
230,911 | 230,009 | 902 | 230,009 | 210,810 | 3/31/2024 |
22
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
D. INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
CUSIP |
Amortized Cost Before OTTI |
Present Value of Projected Cash Flows |
OTTI Charge Recognized in Statement of Operations |
Amortized Cost After OTTI |
Fair Value at Time of OTTI |
Date Reported | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MEJ2 |
262,985 | 262,833 | 153 | 262,833 | 217,958 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
643528AB8 |
13,726 | 13,458 | 268 | 13,458 | 13,377 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
643529AC4 |
58,654 | 56,883 | 1,771 | 56,883 | 63,730 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
65535VSJ8 |
248,684 | 238,362 | 10,321 | 238,362 | 199,653 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
761118SC3 |
192,829 | 189,370 | 3,460 | 189,370 | 162,839 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
855541AC2 |
77,927 | 76,365 | 1,562 | 76,365 | 69,989 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
86360BAJ7 |
180,921 | 174,811 | 6,110 | 174,811 | 171,399 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
87222EAB4 |
375,856 | 365,792 | 10,064 | 365,792 | 341,345 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
87222EAC2 |
435,100 | 419,591 | 15,509 | 419,591 | 340,485 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
93934NAC9 |
123,701 | 122,840 | 861 | 122,840 | 102,151 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
058931AT3 |
180,563 | 172,384 | 8,179 | 172,384 | 145,967 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12638PAB5 |
224,643 | 212,554 | 12,089 | 212,554 | 161,496 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12669G4K4 |
179,253 | 177,868 | 1,385 | 177,868 | 167,336 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12669GR45 |
174,697 | 173,466 | 1,231 | 173,466 | 156,107 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
2254582Y3 |
214,124 | 211,938 | 2,187 | 211,938 | 189,695 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
225458L55 |
89,966 | 87,661 | 2,305 | 87,661 | 75,828 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
46630WAL4 |
109,610 | 109,695 | (86 | ) | 109,695 | 73,484 | 3/31/2024 | |||||||||||||||||
57643MLZ5 |
29,353 | 28,557 | 795 | 28,557 | 25,218 | 3/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
059522AU6 |
280,594 | 240,692 | 39,902 | 240,692 | 236,911 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
07384YKF2 |
359,169 | 342,380 | 16,790 | 342,380 | 323,442 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
07386XAH9 |
538,219 | 493,906 | 44,313 | 493,906 | 422,237 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12566UAE4 |
122,777 | 121,646 | 1,130 | 121,646 | 107,277 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12566UAN4 |
379,496 | 358,622 | 20,875 | 358,622 | 371,080 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12628LAD2 |
202,827 | 196,546 | 6,280 | 196,546 | 162,548 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12667F4N2 |
246,757 | 245,894 | 863 | 245,894 | 233,319 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12667GAC7 |
160,594 | 160,146 | 448 | 160,146 | 154,783 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12668APC3 |
209,807 | 205,701 | 4,106 | 205,701 | 193,229 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
17307GED6 |
121,616 | 120,110 | 1,506 | 120,110 | 125,729 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
45254NNT0 |
21,584 | 11,633 | 9,951 | 11,633 | 9,381 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MAD9 |
87,786 | 87,364 | 422 | 87,364 | 75,763 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MCY1 |
523,364 | 516,804 | 6,560 | 516,804 | 524,282 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MEJ2 |
257,272 | 257,118 | 155 | 257,118 | 212,581 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
643528AB8 |
13,519 | 13,261 | 258 | 13,261 | 13,308 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
643529AC4 |
57,617 | 55,640 | 1,977 | 55,640 | 60,269 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
65535VSJ8 |
238,517 | 226,668 | 11,849 | 226,668 | 192,222 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
75115DAA3 |
220,600 | 216,121 | 4,479 | 216,121 | 194,348 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
75116FBH1 |
774,773 | 760,619 | 14,154 | 760,619 | 644,554 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
761118SC3 |
186,356 | 187,111 | (755 | ) | 187,111 | 161,074 | 6/30/2024 | |||||||||||||||||
855541AC2 |
73,027 | 71,159 | 1,868 | 71,159 | 65,399 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
86360BAJ7 |
219,727 | 171,139 | 48,589 | 171,139 | 166,720 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
87222EAB4 |
368,696 | 357,311 | 11,385 | 357,311 | 339,329 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
87222EAC2 |
427,454 | 412,370 | 15,085 | 412,370 | 336,739 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
058931AT3 |
141,048 | 140,150 | 898 | 140,150 | 122,321 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12544DAG4 |
48,632 | 48,537 | 95 | 48,537 | 40,221 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
1266942H0 |
89,832 | 89,466 | 366 | 89,466 | 74,201 | 6/30/2024 |
23
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
D. INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
CUSIP |
Amortized Cost Before OTTI |
Present Value of Projected Cash Flows |
OTTI Charge Recognized in Statement of Operations |
Amortized Cost After OTTI |
Fair Value at Time of OTTI |
Date Reported | ||||||||||||||||||
126694HP6 |
40,483 | 39,822 | 661 | 39,822 | 38,825 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12669G3S8 |
152,352 | 149,166 | 3,186 | 149,166 | 133,343 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12669G4K4 |
175,544 | 175,340 | 204 | 175,340 | 165,793 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12669GR45 |
187,955 | 170,475 | 17,480 | 170,475 | 161,121 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
2254582Y3 |
209,115 | 209,967 | (852 | ) | 209,967 | 185,880 | 6/30/2024 | |||||||||||||||||
225470VF7 |
200,799 | 189,199 | 11,600 | 189,199 | 171,119 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
46630WAL4 |
107,269 | 107,184 | 86 | 107,184 | 71,750 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
46631NAA7 |
125,987 | 124,898 | 1,089 | 124,898 | 98,142 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
46631NDT3 |
337,752 | 324,816 | 12,937 | 324,816 | 329,220 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
57643MLZ5 |
28,254 | 27,348 | 906 | 27,348 | 25,003 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
61758VAQ0 |
756,509 | 726,670 | 29,839 | 726,670 | 600,661 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
92925VAF7 |
280,196 | 189,421 | 90,774 | 189,421 | 249,718 | 6/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
07384YKF2 |
331,174 | 315,589 | 15,585 | 315,589 | 321,956 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
07386XAH9 |
472,424 | 489,530 | (17,105 | ) | 489,530 | 428,334 | 9/30/2024 | |||||||||||||||||
12628LAD2 |
197,019 | 170,774 | 26,245 | 170,774 | 154,386 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12667F4N2 |
238,961 | 235,064 | 3,896 | 235,064 | 231,368 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
17307GED6 |
119,361 | 118,804 | 557 | 118,804 | 125,395 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
32051GT70 |
118,690 | 104,293 | 14,397 | 104,293 | 100,926 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MAD9 |
85,654 | 81,857 | 3,796 | 81,857 | 73,797 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MEC7 |
222,356 | 207,173 | 15,183 | 207,173 | 200,179 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MEJ2 |
250,607 | 242,216 | 8,390 | 242,216 | 208,768 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
643528AB8 |
13,486 | 11,664 | 1,822 | 11,664 | 12,626 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
643529AC4 |
55,917 | 56,075 | (158 | ) | 56,075 | 58,904 | 9/30/2024 | |||||||||||||||||
65535VSJ8 |
227,951 | 197,297 | 30,654 | 197,297 | 190,845 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
75115DAA3 |
213,452 | 205,608 | 7,844 | 205,608 | 189,803 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
86360BAJ7 |
164,666 | 164,634 | 32 | 164,634 | 161,489 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
87222EAB4 |
358,609 | 350,356 | 8,253 | 350,356 | 338,551 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
87222EAC2 |
418,696 | 394,984 | 23,711 | 394,984 | 335,407 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
058931AT3 |
138,910 | 129,375 | 9,535 | 129,375 | 122,117 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12544DAG4 |
47,876 | 47,200 | 676 | 47,200 | 41,205 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
1266942H0 |
86,959 | 86,184 | 775 | 86,184 | 70,246 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12669G4K4 |
173,331 | 173,337 | (6 | ) | 173,337 | 167,351 | 9/30/2024 | |||||||||||||||||
12669GR45 |
168,534 | 167,949 | 585 | 167,949 | 154,640 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
2254582Y3 |
208,598 | 198,587 | 10,011 | 198,587 | 184,511 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
225470VF7 |
172,814 | 173,169 | (356 | ) | 173,169 | 151,180 | 9/30/2024 | |||||||||||||||||
46630WAB6 |
144,137 | 143,551 | 586 | 143,551 | 119,862 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
46630WAL4 |
103,601 | 99,679 | 3,922 | 99,679 | 68,993 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
46631NAA7 |
123,805 | 112,840 | 10,965 | 112,840 | 97,081 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
57643MLZ5 |
27,095 | 25,886 | 1,209 | 25,886 | 25,061 | 9/30/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
92925VAF7 |
184,124 | 184,132 | (7 | ) | 184,132 | 245,559 | 9/30/2024 | |||||||||||||||||
07386XAH9 |
527,820 | 457,993 | 69,826 | 457,993 | 418,293 | 12/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
225470Q89 |
63,233 | 47,837 | 15,397 | 47,837 | 43,122 | 12/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
32051GT70 |
108,585 | 111,718 | (3,132 | ) | 111,718 | 95,993 | 12/31/2024 | |||||||||||||||||
45254NNT0 |
10,240 | 2,673 | 7,567 | 2,673 | 5,354 | 12/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MAD9 |
79,282 | 80,266 | (984 | ) | 80,266 | 69,309 | 12/31/2024 |
24
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
D. INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
CUSIP |
Amortized Cost Before OTTI |
Present Value of Projected Cash Flows |
OTTI Charge Recognized in Statement of Operations |
Amortized Cost After OTTI |
Fair Value at Time of OTTI |
Date Reported | ||||||||||||||||||
87222EAC2 |
395,996 | 396,716 | (721 | ) | 396,716 | 319,302 | 12/31/2024 | |||||||||||||||||
058931AT3 |
91,107 | 91,100 | 6 | 91,100 | 84,259 | 12/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12638PAB5 |
220,634 | 186,481 | 34,153 | 186,481 | 152,929 | 12/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
1266942H0 |
83,680 | 81,426 | 2,255 | 81,426 | 64,888 | 12/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
126694LC0 |
229,715 | 216,893 | 12,822 | 216,893 | 168,821 | 12/31/2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
12669GR45 |
169,278 | 169,325 | (48 | ) | 169,325 | 147,453 | 12/31/2024 | |||||||||||||||||
2254582Y3 |
197,313 | 197,369 | (57 | ) | 197,369 | 176,894 | 12/31/2024 | |||||||||||||||||
46630WAL4 |
99,089 | 99,128 | (38 | ) | 99,128 | 67,042 | 12/31/2024 | |||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
Total |
$ | 910,006 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
The following table shows each loan-backed security with an OTTI recognized in 2023, as the present value of cash flows expected to be collected is less than the amortized cost basis of the security (in whole dollars):
CUSIP |
Amortized Cost Before OTTI |
Present Value of Projected Cash Flows |
OTTI Charge Recognized in Statement of Operations |
Amortized Cost After OTTI |
Fair Value at Time of OTTI |
Date Reported | ||||||||||||||||||
61751DAE4 |
259,538 | 249,008 | 10,530 | 249,008 | 310,239 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
059522AU6 |
283,671 | 262,829 | 20,842 | 262,829 | 272,104 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
07386XAH9 |
539,771 | 538,985 | 786 | 538,985 | 495,812 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12628LAD2 |
247,700 | 240,964 | 6,736 | 240,964 | 208,557 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12667F4N2 |
284,910 | 281,796 | 3,113 | 281,796 | 281,274 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12668APC3 |
244,384 | 240,821 | 3,563 | 240,821 | 233,915 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
17307GED6 |
135,314 | 133,746 | 1,568 | 133,746 | 139,716 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
32051GT70 |
142,161 | 141,988 | 173 | 141,988 | 127,782 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MAD9 |
103,942 | 102,545 | 1,397 | 102,545 | 91,480 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MEJ2 |
284,660 | 284,158 | 502 | 284,158 | 239,305 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
59020UW43 |
111,771 | 111,792 | (21 | ) | 111,792 | 122,554 | 3/31/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
643528AB8 |
14,649 | 14,369 | 280 | 14,369 | 14,178 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
643529AC4 |
63,266 | 59,538 | 3,728 | 59,538 | 66,326 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
74923HAQ4 |
107,495 | 107,624 | (129 | ) | 107,624 | 96,032 | 3/31/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
75115DAA3 |
244,726 | 241,998 | 2,728 | 241,998 | 228,182 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
761118SC3 |
216,109 | 216,123 | (14 | ) | 216,123 | 185,891 | 3/31/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
761118UG1 |
131,387 | 130,591 | 796 | 130,591 | 111,157 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
76112BNM8 |
856,578 | 856,818 | (240 | ) | 856,818 | 898,416 | 3/31/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
855541AC2 |
91,510 | 91,195 | 315 | 91,195 | 86,634 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
86360BAJ7 |
187,702 | 184,178 | 3,524 | 184,178 | 192,115 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
87222EAB4 |
419,459 | 405,894 | 13,565 | 405,894 | 368,397 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
87222EAC2 |
485,781 | 466,534 | 19,247 | 466,534 | 397,916 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
05949CHM1 |
307,419 | 302,325 | 5,094 | 302,325 | 309,449 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12544DAG4 |
54,392 | 53,050 | 1,342 | 53,050 | 47,002 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12545EAK2 |
77,168 | 74,869 | 2,299 | 74,869 | 67,350 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12638PAB5 |
242,477 | 235,057 | 7,420 | 235,057 | 185,281 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
126694CS5 |
572,520 | 570,389 | 2,131 | 570,389 | 461,794 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
16165MAG3 |
254,083 | 245,091 | 8,992 | 245,091 | 220,502 | 3/31/2023 |
25
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
D. INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
CUSIP |
Amortized Cost Before OTTI |
Present Value of Projected Cash Flows |
OTTI Charge Recognized in Statement of Operations |
Amortized Cost After OTTI |
Fair Value at Time of OTTI |
Date Reported | ||||||||||||||||||
2254582Y3 |
243,376 | 241,692 | 1,684 | 241,692 | 218,122 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
225458L55 |
101,618 | 101,023 | 595 | 101,023 | 94,173 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
225470VF7 |
241,497 | 235,282 | 6,216 | 235,282 | 231,644 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
46630WAB6 |
186,949 | 185,762 | 1,188 | 185,762 | 173,166 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
46630WAL4 |
126,624 | 125,196 | 1,427 | 125,196 | 119,906 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
46631NAA7 |
143,852 | 138,697 | 5,155 | 138,697 | 113,964 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
57643MLZ5 |
40,593 | 40,108 | 485 | 40,108 | 38,571 | 3/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
61751DAE4 |
254,684 | 244,173 | 10,511 | 244,173 | 301,038 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
07386XAH9 |
587,281 | 557,059 | 30,222 | 557,059 | 481,985 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12566UAN4 |
401,769 | 401,945 | (176 | ) | 401,945 | 410,620 | 6/30/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
12628LAD2 |
242,035 | 226,391 | 15,644 | 226,391 | 197,305 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12667F5E1 |
258,647 | 257,840 | 808 | 257,840 | 240,162 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12667GAC7 |
180,684 | 166,753 | 13,931 | 166,753 | 171,366 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12668APC3 |
230,663 | 228,714 | 1,948 | 228,714 | 219,422 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
32051GT70 |
140,295 | 139,482 | 813 | 139,482 | 125,195 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MAD9 |
100,964 | 100,962 | 2 | 100,962 | 88,920 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MEJ2 |
279,525 | 278,401 | 1,124 | 278,401 | 230,457 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
643528AB8 |
14,428 | 14,177 | 251 | 14,177 | 14,210 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
643529AC4 |
61,238 | 57,771 | 3,467 | 57,771 | 65,594 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
65535VSJ8 |
255,863 | 248,159 | 7,704 | 248,159 | 222,055 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
74923HAQ4 |
105,153 | 103,853 | 1,301 | 103,853 | 88,736 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
75116FBH1 |
863,072 | 861,830 | 1,242 | 861,830 | 737,036 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
761118SC3 |
208,893 | 207,116 | 1,778 | 207,116 | 179,000 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
761118UG1 |
126,026 | 125,408 | 617 | 125,408 | 106,207 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
86360BAJ7 |
182,119 | 181,928 | 191 | 181,928 | 185,932 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
87222EAB4 |
407,102 | 395,968 | 11,133 | 395,968 | 357,646 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
87222EAC2 |
472,250 | 453,088 | 19,162 | 453,088 | 390,450 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
05949CHM1 |
301,300 | 300,625 | 675 | 300,625 | 308,314 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12544DAG4 |
52,212 | 52,489 | (276 | ) | 52,489 | 45,910 | 6/30/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
12638PAB5 |
237,413 | 231,688 | 5,725 | 231,688 | 181,375 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12669G3S8 |
166,123 | 165,614 | 509 | 165,614 | 147,995 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
16165MAG3 |
234,334 | 234,427 | (93 | ) | 234,427 | 207,143 | 6/30/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
17025AAH5 |
60,460 | 56,115 | 4,345 | 56,115 | 57,988 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
2254582Y3 |
239,470 | 239,472 | (2 | ) | 239,472 | 214,686 | 6/30/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
225458L55 |
100,886 | 100,187 | 699 | 100,187 | 86,609 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
225470VF7 |
232,112 | 232,126 | (13 | ) | 232,126 | 221,781 | 6/30/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
466247ZP1 |
61,209 | 60,073 | 1,136 | 60,073 | 53,651 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
46630WAL4 |
128,820 | 121,470 | 7,351 | 121,470 | 117,149 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
46631NAA7 |
138,285 | 135,727 | 2,558 | 135,727 | 106,446 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
46631NDT3 |
371,795 | 368,097 | 3,699 | 368,097 | 361,352 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
57643MLZ5 |
38,476 | 37,846 | 630 | 37,846 | 36,227 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
863579XC7 |
275,143 | 269,471 | 5,672 | 269,471 | 279,519 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
86363GAF1 |
163,311 | 152,051 | 11,260 | 152,051 | 154,496 | 6/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
57430U301 |
301,979 | 230,593 | 71,386 | 230,593 | 203,803 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
61751DAE4 |
247,557 | 237,983 | 9,574 | 237,983 | 273,061 | 9/30/2023 |
26
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
D. INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
CUSIP |
Amortized Cost Before OTTI |
Present Value of Projected Cash Flows |
OTTI Charge Recognized in Statement of Operations |
Amortized Cost After OTTI |
Fair Value at Time of OTTI |
Date Reported | ||||||||||||||||||
059522AU6 |
264,346 | 255,856 | 8,490 | 255,856 | 255,403 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
07386XAH9 |
548,744 | 528,226 | 20,518 | 528,226 | 468,039 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12628LAD2 |
228,289 | 221,707 | 6,582 | 221,707 | 184,630 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12667F4N2 |
274,740 | 270,944 | 3,796 | 270,944 | 258,231 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12667F5E1 |
251,153 | 249,765 | 1,387 | 249,765 | 229,841 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12667GAC7 |
176,221 | 176,257 | (36 | ) | 176,257 | 165,072 | 9/30/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
12668APC3 |
221,360 | 221,714 | (355 | ) | 221,714 | 211,544 | 9/30/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
17307GED6 |
132,850 | 131,595 | 1,255 | 131,595 | 135,753 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
32051GT70 |
137,038 | 136,120 | 918 | 136,120 | 120,302 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MAD9 |
97,406 | 95,481 | 1,925 | 95,481 | 83,787 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MEC7 |
243,066 | 240,387 | 2,679 | 240,387 | 215,376 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MEJ2 |
274,309 | 273,560 | 749 | 273,560 | 222,021 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
643528AB8 |
14,153 | 14,185 | (32 | ) | 14,185 | 13,463 | 9/30/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
643529AC4 |
59,333 | 57,871 | 1,462 | 57,871 | 63,308 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
65535VSJ8 |
250,069 | 245,704 | 4,364 | 245,704 | 213,573 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
74923HAQ4 |
101,952 | 102,078 | (125 | ) | 102,078 | 85,852 | 9/30/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
75115DAA3 |
235,935 | 232,081 | 3,854 | 232,081 | 228,082 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
761118SC3 |
202,737 | 203,963 | (1,227 | ) | 203,963 | 173,490 | 9/30/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
761118UG1 |
121,699 | 121,887 | (188 | ) | 121,887 | 102,174 | 9/30/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
86360BAJ7 |
178,518 | 177,937 | 581 | 177,937 | 181,862 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
87222EAB4 |
397,136 | 378,770 | 18,367 | 378,770 | 347,503 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
87222EAC2 |
458,714 | 437,546 | 21,169 | 437,546 | 367,741 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
05949CHM1 |
266,430 | 264,376 | 2,053 | 264,376 | 276,241 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12638PAB5 |
234,051 | 227,587 | 6,465 | 227,587 | 172,609 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12669G4K4 |
188,971 | 188,934 | 37 | 188,934 | 174,054 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12669GR45 |
191,729 | 183,096 | 8,633 | 183,096 | 165,717 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
17025AAH5 |
52,563 | 54,951 | (2,388 | ) | 54,951 | 55,496 | 9/30/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
225458L55 |
93,214 | 92,536 | 678 | 92,536 | 80,144 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
225470VF7 |
229,365 | 220,422 | 8,943 | 220,422 | 214,715 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
46631NDT3 |
358,326 | 358,919 | (593 | ) | 358,919 | 335,400 | 9/30/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
47233DAB7 |
267,824 | 92,093 | 175,731 | 92,093 | 306,628 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
57643MLZ5 |
35,570 | 34,883 | 687 | 34,883 | 32,879 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
863579XC7 |
263,321 | 248,924 | 14,397 | 248,924 | 259,484 | 9/30/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
61751DAE4 |
243,413 | 236,367 | 7,046 | 236,367 | 283,563 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
059522AU6 |
250,975 | 250,977 | (1 | ) | 250,977 | 254,645 | 12/31/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
07386XAH9 |
522,021 | 519,705 | 2,316 | 519,705 | 467,235 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12628LAD2 |
223,774 | 208,784 | 14,990 | 208,784 | 185,521 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12667F4N2 |
261,013 | 259,290 | 1,724 | 259,290 | 255,709 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12667F5E1 |
245,840 | 244,574 | 1,266 | 244,574 | 227,294 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12667GAC7 |
170,078 | 168,113 | 1,965 | 168,113 | 159,577 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
32051GT70 |
132,673 | 131,254 | 1,418 | 131,254 | 114,609 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MCY1 |
589,481 | 565,190 | 24,291 | 565,190 | 574,237 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
46627MEC7 |
235,719 | 234,460 | 1,259 | 234,460 | 217,659 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
643528AB8 |
14,495 | 13,765 | 730 | 13,765 | 13,735 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
643529AC4 |
59,493 | 57,292 | 2,201 | 57,292 | 64,885 | 12/31/2023 |
27
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
D. INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
CUSIP |
Amortized Cost Before OTTI |
Present Value of Projected Cash Flows |
OTTI Charge Recognized in Statement of Operations |
Amortized Cost After OTTI |
Fair Value at Time of OTTI |
Date Reported | ||||||||||||||||||
65535VSJ8 |
244,872 | 245,325 | (453 | ) | 245,325 | 197,001 | 12/31/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
75115DAA3 |
232,774 | 233,488 | (715 | ) | 233,488 | 205,258 | 12/31/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
75116FBH1 |
810,026 | 800,349 | 9,677 | 800,349 | 673,683 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
855541AC2 |
80,386 | 79,805 | 581 | 79,805 | 74,033 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
86360BAJ7 |
186,384 | 176,454 | 9,930 | 176,454 | 184,213 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
87222EAB4 |
418,578 | 412,382 | 6,196 | 412,382 | 347,413 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
87222EAC2 |
441,033 | 428,529 | 12,504 | 428,529 | 347,900 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
05949CHM1 |
266,840 | 262,355 | 4,486 | 262,355 | 265,131 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12544DAG4 |
50,045 | 50,000 | 46 | 50,000 | 41,017 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12638PAB5 |
229,182 | 222,371 | 6,811 | 222,371 | 164,083 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
1266942H0 |
94,329 | 93,960 | 369 | 93,960 | 78,026 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
12669GR45 |
180,999 | 179,667 | 1,332 | 179,667 | 167,656 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
2254582Y3 |
217,087 | 214,895 | 2,191 | 214,895 | 193,216 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
225458L55 |
92,538 | 91,855 | 683 | 91,855 | 76,532 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
46630WAL4 |
113,922 | 112,998 | 924 | 112,998 | 75,676 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
46631NDT3 |
350,422 | 351,594 | (1,172 | ) | 351,594 | 342,185 | 12/31/2023 | |||||||||||||||||
57643MLZ5 |
32,802 | 32,208 | 593 | 32,208 | 29,291 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
86363GAF1 |
144,622 | 143,975 | 647 | 143,975 | 145,708 | 12/31/2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
$ | 808,136 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
Securities (primarily United States Treasury Notes) with a carrying value of approximately $7.3 million and $9.2 million at December 31, 2024 and 2023, respectively, were on deposit as required by the insurance departments of various states.
Net investment income consisted of the following for the years ended December 31 (in thousands):
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||
Investment income: |
||||||||||||
Bonds |
$ | 79,880 | $ | 94,692 | $ | 91,528 | ||||||
Equity securities (non-affiliated) |
323 | 327 | 44 | |||||||||
Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments |
12,844 | 5,564 | 1,612 | |||||||||
Policy loans |
2,548 | 2,741 | 2,837 | |||||||||
Equity index call options |
6,718 | 322 | (2,679 | ) | ||||||||
Other |
177 | 564 | 913 | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Gross investment income |
102,490 | 104,210 | 94,255 | |||||||||
Investment expenses |
(1,300 | ) | (1,481 | ) | (1,668 | ) | ||||||
Interest expense |
(236 | ) | (248 | ) | (33 | ) | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Net investment income |
$ | 100,954 | $ | 102,481 | $ | 92,554 | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
The carrying value of partnerships and limited liability companies was $7.8 million and $8.0 million as of December 31, 2024 and 2023, respectively, comprised entirely of surplus notes.
28
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
E. EQUITY INDEX CALL OPTIONS
AILIC utilizes equity index call options as part of its efforts to economically hedge and manage fluctuations in the fair value of its investment portfolio attributable to changes in general interest rate levels and to manage duration mismatch of assets and liabilities. The equity index call options are purchased in either the over-the-counter market or on the Chicago Board Options Exchange. Those instruments involve elements of credit and market risks in excess of the amounts recognized in the accompanying financial statements at a given point of time. The contract or notional amounts of those instruments reflect the extent of involvement in those financial instruments.
The Company enters derivative transactions through bilateral derivative agreements with counterparties, or through over the counter cleared derivatives with a counterparty and the use of a clearinghouse. To minimize credit risk for bilateral transactions, the Company and its counterparties generally enter into master netting agreements based on agreed upon requirements that outline the framework for how collateral is to be posted in the amount owed under each transaction, subject to certain minimums. For over the counter cleared derivative transactions between the Company and a counterparty, the parties enter into a series of master netting and other agreements that govern, among other things, clearing and collateral requirements. These transactions are cleared through a clearinghouse and each derivative counterparty is only exposed to the default risk of the clearinghouse.
Net collateral pledged by the counterparties was $3.4 million as of December 31, 2024, and $6.1 million as of December 31, 2023. In the event of default, the full market value exposure at risk, net of offsets and collateral, was $11.3 million as of December 31, 2024, and $7.8 million as of December 31, 2023. The exposure net of collateral, defined as net collateral pledged and statement values excluding accrued interest, was $10.8 million as of December 31, 2024, and $11.6 million as of December 31, 2023.
The following table summarizes the carrying values and notional amounts of the Companys derivative financial instruments within the general account:
December 31, 2024 | ||||||||||||||||
Assets | Liabilities | |||||||||||||||
Carrying Value |
Notional Amount |
Carrying Value |
Notional Amount |
|||||||||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||||||||||
Fixed-indexed options* |
$ | 15,628 | $ | 471,270 | $ | 11,482 | $ | 473,844 | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
$ | 15,628 | $ | 471,270 | $ | 11,482 | $ | 473,844 | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* | Beginning January 1, 2022, fixed-indexed options are held at amortized cost under OAC 3901-1-67. Prior to the adoption of OAC 3901-1-67, fixed-indexed options were carried at fair value. The fair value amount related to fixed-indexed options was $11.3 million as of December 31, 2024. |
December 31, 2023 | ||||||||||||||||
Assets | Liabilities | |||||||||||||||
Carrying Value |
Notional Amount |
Carrying Value |
Notional Amount |
|||||||||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||||||||||
Fixed-indexed options* |
$ | 20,275 | $ | 534,704 | $ | 15,291 | $ | 550,782 | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
$ | 20,275 | $ | 534,704 | $ | 15,291 | $ | 550,782 | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* | Beginning January 1, 2022, fixed-indexed options are held at amortized cost under OAC 3901-1-67. Prior to the adoption of OAC 3901-1-67, fixed-indexed options were carried at fair value. The fair value amount related to fixed-indexed options was $13.9 million as of December 31, 2023. |
Fixed-indexed options are carried at amortized cost with amortization and expirations recorded in net investment income. The company recorded gains on expirations of $16.1 million and amortization of $9.4 million in 2024. The company recorded gains on expirations of $9.9 million and amortization of $9.6 million in 2023.
29
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
F. FEDERAL INCOME TAXES
On August 16th, 2022, the Inflation Reduction Act was signed into law and includes certain corporate income tax provisions. Potential impacts to the Company include the imposition of a corporate alternative minimum tax (CAMT). The CAMT imposes a 15% minimum tax on adjusted financial statement income on applicable corporations that have an average adjusted financial statement income over $1 billion in the prior three-year period. The United States Treasury Department and the Internal Revenue Service released proposed regulations on September 12, 2024. As of the reporting date, the Company is not an applicable corporation and therefore not liable for CAMT in 2024.
The components of the net deferred tax assets at December 31 are as follows (in thousands):
2024 | 2023 | Change | ||||||||||
DTAs resulting in book/tax differences in: |
||||||||||||
Ordinary: |
||||||||||||
Deferred acquisition costs |
$ | 119 | $ | 139 | $ | (20 | ) | |||||
Investment items |
1,806 | 1,874 | (68 | ) | ||||||||
Reserves |
1,557 | 1,649 | (92 | ) | ||||||||
Nonadmitted assets |
94 | 238 | (144 | ) | ||||||||
Other |
717 | 692 | 25 | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Total ordinary DTAs |
4,293 | 4,592 | (299 | ) | ||||||||
Capital: |
||||||||||||
Investment items |
1,042 | 899 | 143 | |||||||||
Net capital loss carry-forward |
| 1,769 | (1,769 | ) | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Total capital DTAs |
1,042 | 2,668 | (1,626 | ) | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Total DTAs |
5,335 | 7,260 | (1,925 | ) | ||||||||
Deferred tax assets nonadmitted |
(257 | ) | | (257 | ) | |||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Admitted DTAs |
5,078 | 7,260 | (2,182 | ) | ||||||||
DTLs resulting in book/tax differences in: |
||||||||||||
Ordinary: |
||||||||||||
Reserve transition adjustment |
319 | 637 | (318 | ) | ||||||||
Investment items |
1,787 | 1,625 | 162 | |||||||||
Other |
21 | 31 | (10 | ) | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Total ordinary DTLs |
2,127 | 2,293 | (166 | ) | ||||||||
Capital: |
||||||||||||
Unrealized gains |
43 | 34 | 9 | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Total capital DTLs |
43 | 34 | 9 | |||||||||
Total DTLs |
2,170 | 2,327 | (157 | ) | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Total net deferred admitted tax assets |
$ | 2,908 | $ | 4,933 | $ | (2,025 | ) | |||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Change in deferred tax assets nonadmitted |
$ | (257 | ) | $ | 762 | |||||||
|
|
|
|
30
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
F. FEDERAL INCOME TAXES (CONTINUED)
The results of the admissibility calculations at December 31 are as follows (in thousands):
2024 | 2023 | Change | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ordinary | Capital | Total | Ordinary | Capital | Total | Ordinary | Capital | Total | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
a. |
Federal income taxes paid in prior years recoverable through loss carrybacks | $ | | $ | 270 | $ | 270 | $ | | $ | | $ | | $ | | $ | 270 | $ | 270 | |||||||||||||||||||
b. |
Adjusted gross deferred tax assets expected to be realized (excluding the amount of deferred tax assets from (a) above) after application of the threshold limitation. (The lesser of (b)1 and (b)2 below) | 3,360 | 471 | 3,831 | 4,120 | 2,668 | 6,788 | (760) | (2,197) | (2,957) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1. Adjusted gross deferred tax assets expected to be realized following the balance sheet date |
3,360 | 471 | 3,831 | 4,120 | 2,668 | 6,788 | (760) | (2,197) | (2,957) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2. Adjusted gross deferred tax assets allowed per limitation threshold |
XXX | XXX | 67,798 | XXX | XXX | 61,736 | XXX | XXX | 6,062 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
c. |
Adjusted gross deferred tax assets (excluding the amount of deferred tax assets from (a) and (b) above) offset by gross deferred tax liabilities | 933 | 44 | 977 | 472 | | 472 | 461 | 44 | 505 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
d. |
Deferred tax assets admitted as the result of application of SSAP No. 101 | $ | 4,293 | $ | 785 | $ | 5,078 | $ | 4,592 | $ | 2,668 | $ | 7,260 | $ | (299) | $ | (1,883) | $ | (2,182) | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The other admissibility criteria for the Company are as follows (dollars in thousands):
2024 | 2023 | |||||||
a. Ratio percentage used to determine recovery period and threshold limitation amount |
2875% | 2407% | ||||||
b. Amount of adjusted capital and surplus used to determine recovery period and threshold limitation in the table above |
$ | 451,985 | $ | 411,576 |
The impact of the Companys tax planning strategies, which do not include the use of reinsurance, on the adjusted gross DTAs and net admitted adjusted gross DTAs by tax character is as follows:
2024 |
2023 |
Change | ||||||||||||
Ordinary |
Capital |
Ordinary |
Capital |
Ordinary |
Capital | |||||||||
a. |
Adjusted gross DTAs (% of total adjusted gross DTAs) |
0.0% | 0.0% | 0.0% | 0.0% | 0.0% | 0.0% | |||||||
b. |
Net admitted adjusted gross DTAs (% of total net admitted adjusted gross DTAs) |
0.0% | 100.0% | 0.0% | 100.0% | 0.0% | 0.0% |
31
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
F. FEDERAL INCOME TAXES (CONTINUED)
The provision for incurred taxes on operating earnings and capital gains for the years ended December 31 are as follows (in thousands):
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||
Current federal income tax expense on operations |
$ | 10,260 | $ | 11,846 | $ | 4,222 | ||||||
Federal income tax benefit on net realized capital gains (losses) |
(2,255) | (2,445) | (22) | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Total federal income tax expense |
$ | 8,005 | $ | 9,401 | $ | 4,200 | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Net DTA(L) |
$ | (2,025) | $ | 3,220 | $ | 512 | ||||||
Less: Items not recorded in the change in net deferred tax asset: |
||||||||||||
Tax-effect of unrealized gains (losses) |
9 | 99 | (160) | |||||||||
Tax-effect of changes in nonadmitted DTA |
257 | (762) | 35 | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Change in net deferred tax asset |
$ | (1,759) | $ | 2,557 | $ | 387 | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Companys income tax expense and change in DTA/DTL for the year ended December 31 differs from the amount obtained by applying the federal statutory rate of 21% to income from operations before federal income taxes for the following reasons (in thousands):
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||
Provision computed at federal statutory rate |
$ | 9,355 | $ | 6,927 | $ | 6,034 | ||||||
OAC 3901-1-67 adoption |
| | (1,616 | ) | ||||||||
Investment items |
248 | (49 | ) | (384 | ) | |||||||
Nonadmitted assets |
144 | (42 | ) | (166 | ) | |||||||
Other |
17 | 8 | (55 | ) | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Total statutory income tax expense |
$ | 9,764 | $ | 6,844 | 3,813 | |||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Federal and foreign income tax expense |
$ | 8,005 | $ | 9,401 | $ | 4,200 | ||||||
Change in net deferred income taxes |
1,759 | (2,557 | ) | (387 | ) | |||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Total statutory income tax expense |
$ | 9,764 | $ | 6,844 | $ | 3,813 | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
As of December 31, 2024, and 2023, the Company does not have any operating loss carryforwards available to offset future net income subject to federal Income taxes. As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, the Company has $0.0 million and $8.4 million capital loss carryforward, respectively.
The following are income taxes incurred in the current and prior years that will be available for recoupment in the event of future net losses (in thousands):
Year |
Operations | Realized Gains | Total | |||||||||
2024 |
$ | | $ | | $ | | ||||||
2023 |
| | | |||||||||
2022 |
| 270 | 270 |
32
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
F. FEDERAL INCOME TAXES (CONTINUED)
As of December 31, 2024, AILICs consolidated federal income tax returns for the 2021 through 2024 tax years remain subject to examination by the IRS. The Company does not have any uncertain tax positions.
The consolidated federal income tax returns include the following entities:
AAG Insurance Agency, LLC
Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company
MM Ascend Life Investor Services, LLC
MassMutual Ascend Life Insurance Company
Manhattan National Holding, LLC
Manhattan National Life Insurance Company
The Company has determined that it is more likely than not that gross DTAs will be recoverable through future taxable income and that a valuation allowance is not necessary.
G. RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
Certain administrative, management, accounting, actuarial, data processing, collection and investment services are provided under agreements between AILIC and affiliates at charges not unfavorable to AILIC or the insurance affiliates. The net amount paid to affiliates was $8.0 million, $7.0 million, and $11.6 million in 2024, 2023, and 2022, respectively, included in general insurance expenses in the Statement of Operations.
The Company has an agreement with Barings, LLC, an affiliate, which provides investment advisory services to the Company. AILIC expensed investment management charges of $1.3 million, $1.5 million, $1.7 million in 2024, 2023, and 2022, respectively, included in net investment income in the Statement of Operations.
For 2024, the Company contributed to the retirement plans of Glidepath. The plans are for the benefit of eligible employees of Glidepath providing services to MMALIC and affiliates. Glidepath sponsored a funded qualified defined contribution 401(k) thrift savings plan and unfunded nonqualified deferred compensation thrift savings plan for its employees and retirees. The Companys total matching thrift savings contributions included in general insurance expenses were $0.2 million, $0.2 million and $0.3 million in 2024, 2023 and 2022, respectively. As of the close of business on December 31, 2024, the Company transitioned to a MassMutual employee qualified defined contribution plan and unfunded nonqualified deferred compensation thrift savings plan.
AILIC has an agreement with MM Ascend Life Investor Services, LLC (MMALIS, formerly known as Great American Advisors, Inc.), a wholly-owned subsidiary of MMALIC, whereby MMALIS is the principal underwriter and distributor of AILICs variable contracts. AILIC pays MMALIS for acting as underwriter under a distribution agreement. AILIC paid $1.8 million in 2024, $1.8 million in 2023, and $2.1 million in 2022 to MMALIS, 100% of which was paid to other broker/dealers as commissions. MMALIS exited the retail brokerage business on August 3, 2010 after MMALIC announced a definitive agreement with Lincoln Investment Planning, Inc., an independent broker dealer.
33
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
H. ANNUITY RESERVES AND DEPOSIT-TYPE FUNDS
At December 31, 2024 AILICs annuity (individual and group) reserves and deposit-type funds that are subject to discretionary withdrawal (with adjustment), subject to discretionary withdrawal (without adjustment), and not subject to discretionary withdrawal are summarized as follows (in thousands):
A. | Individual Annuities: |
General Account |
Separate Account with Guarantees |
Separate Account Nonguaranteed |
Total | % of Total |
||||||||||||||||||
1. |
Subject to discretionary withdrawal: | |||||||||||||||||||||
a. With market value adjustment |
$ | 38,167 | $ | | $ | | $ | 38,167 | 2.0% | |||||||||||||
b. At book value less current surrender charge of 5% or more |
89,095 | | | 89,095 | 4.5% | |||||||||||||||||
c. At fair value |
| | 464,101 | 464,101 | 23.5% | |||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||
d. Total with market value adjustment or at fair value (total of a through c) |
127,262 | | 464,101 | 591,363 | 30.0% | |||||||||||||||||
e. At book value without adjustment (minimal or no charge or adjustment) |
1,347,785 | | | 1,347,785 | 68.3% | |||||||||||||||||
2. |
Not subject to discretionary withdrawal | 33,742 | | | 33,742 | 1.7% | ||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||
3. |
Total (gross: direct + assumed) | 1,508,789 | | 464,101 | 1,972,890 | 100.0% | ||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
4. |
Reinsurance ceded | | | | | |||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||
5. |
Total (net) (3) - (4) | 1,508,789 | | 464,101 | 1,972,890 | |||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||
6. |
Amount included in A(1)b above that will move to A(1)e in the year after the statement date | $ | 13,968 | $ | | $ | | $ | 13,968 | |||||||||||||
B. Group Annuities: |
||||||||||||||||||||||
General Account |
Separate Account with Guarantees |
Separate Account Nonguaranteed |
Total | % of Total |
||||||||||||||||||
1. |
Subject to discretionary withdrawal: | |||||||||||||||||||||
a. With market value adjustment |
$ | | $ | | $ | | $ | | 0.0% | |||||||||||||
b. At book value less current surrender charge of 5% or more |
247 | | | 247 | 0.2% | |||||||||||||||||
c. At fair value |
| | 90,164 | 90,164 | 71.5% | |||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||
d. Total with market value adjustment or at fair value (total of a through c) |
247 | | 90,164 | 90,411 | 71.7% | |||||||||||||||||
e. At book value without adjustment (minimal or no charge or adjustment) |
35,676 | | | 35,676 | 28.3% | |||||||||||||||||
2. |
Not subject to discretionary withdrawal | | | | | 0.0% | ||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||
3. |
Total (gross: direct + assumed) | 35,923 | | 90,164 | 126,087 | 100.0% | ||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
4. |
Reinsurance ceded | | | | | |||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||
5. |
Total (net) (3) - (4) | 35,923 | | 90,164 | 126,087 | |||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||
6. |
Amount included in A(1)b above that will move to A(1)e in the year after the statement date | $ | | $ | | $ | | $ | |
34
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
H. ANNUITY RESERVES AND DEPOSIT-TYPE FUNDS (CONTINUED)
C. | Deposit-Type Funds |
(no life contingencies):
General Account |
Separate Account with Guarantees |
Separate |
Total | % of Total |
||||||||||||||||
1. | Subject to discretionary withdrawal: | |||||||||||||||||||
a. With market value adjustment |
$ | | $ | | $ | $ | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||
b. At book value less current surrender charge of 5% or more |
| | | | 0.0 | % | ||||||||||||||
c. At fair value |
| | | | 0.0 | % | ||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
d. Total with market value adjustment or at fair value (total of a through c) |
| | | | 0.0 | % | ||||||||||||||
e. At book value without adjustment (minimal or no charge or adjustment) |
| | | | 0.0 | % | ||||||||||||||
2. | Not subject to discretionary withdrawal | 11,862 | | | 11,862 | 100.0 | % | |||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
3. | Total (gross: direct + assumed) | 11,862 | | | 11,862 | 100.0 | % | |||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||
4. | Reinsurance ceded | | | | | |||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||
5. | Total (net) (3) - (4) | 11,862 | | | 11,862 | |||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||
6. | Amount included in A(1)b above that will move to A(1)e in the year after the statement date | $ | | $ | | $ | $ | | ||||||||||||
D. | Reconciliation to total annuity reserves and deposit-type funds: |
| ||||||||||||||||||
Net annuity reserves |
$ | 1,544,712 | ||||||||||||||||||
Deposit-type funds |
11,862 | |||||||||||||||||||
Commissioners Annuity Reserve Valuation Method adjustment |
|
(62 | ) | |||||||||||||||||
Separate Account nonguaranteed liabilities |
554,327 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Total |
$ | 2,110,839 | ||||||||||||||||||
|
|
35
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
H. ANNUITY RESERVES AND DEPOSIT-TYPE FUNDS (CONTINUED)
At December 31, 2023, AILICs annuity reserves and deposit-type funds that are subject to discretionary withdrawal (with adjustment), subject to discretionary withdrawal (without adjustment), and not subject to discretionary withdrawal are summarized as follows (in thousands):
A. | Individual Annuities: |
General Account |
Separate Account with Guarantees |
Separate Account Nonguaranteed |
Total | % of Total | ||||||||||||||||||
1. | Subject to discretionary withdrawal: | |||||||||||||||||||||
a. With market value adjustment |
$ | 47,044 | $ | | $ | | $ | 47,044 | 2.2 | % | ||||||||||||
b. At book value less current surrender charge of 5% or more |
125,459 | | | 125,459 | 5.9 | % | ||||||||||||||||
c. At fair value |
| | 439,828 | 439,828 | 20.5 | % | ||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||
d. Total with market value adjustment or at fair value (total of a through c) |
172,504 | | 439,828 | 612,331 | 28.6 | % | ||||||||||||||||
e. At book value without adjustment (minimal or no charge or adjustment) |
1,500,239 | | | 1,500,239 | 70.0 | % | ||||||||||||||||
2. | Not subject to discretionary withdrawal | 30,813 | | | 30,813 | 1.4 | % | |||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||
3. | Total (gross: direct + assumed) | 1,703,556 | | 439,828 | 2,143,383 | 100.0 | % | |||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
4. | Reinsurance ceded | | | | | |||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||
5. | Total (net) (3) - (4) | 1,703,556 | | 439,828 | 2,143,383 | |||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||
6. | Amount included in A(1)b above that will move to A(1)e in the year after the statement date | $ | 32,803 | $ | | $ | | $ | 32,803 | |||||||||||||
B. | Group Annuities: | |||||||||||||||||||||
General Account |
Separate Account with Guarantees |
Separate Account Nonguaranteed |
Total | % of Total | ||||||||||||||||||
1. | Subject to discretionary withdrawal: | |||||||||||||||||||||
a. With market value adjustment |
$ | | $ | | $ | | $ | | 0.0 | % | ||||||||||||
b. At book value less current surrender charge of 5% or more |
282 | | | 282 | 0.2 | % | ||||||||||||||||
c. At fair value |
| | 84,933 | 84,933 | 63.7 | % | ||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||
d. Total with market value adjustment or at fair value (total of a through c) |
282 | | 84,933 | 85,215 | 63.9 | % | ||||||||||||||||
e. At book value without adjustment (minimal or no charge or adjustment) |
48,173 | | | 48,173 | 36.1 | % | ||||||||||||||||
2. | Not subject to discretionary withdrawal | | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||
3. | Total (gross: direct + assumed) | 48,455 | | 84,933 | 133,388 | 100.0 | % | |||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
4. | Reinsurance ceded | | | | | |||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||
5. | Total (net) (3) - (4) | 48,455 | | 84,933 | 133,388 | |||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||
6. | Amount included in A(1)b above that will move to A(1)e in the year after the statement date | $ | | $ | | $ | | $ | |
36
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
H. ANNUITY RESERVES AND DEPOSIT-TYPE FUNDS (CONTINUED)
C. | Deposit-Type Funds |
(no life contingencies):
General Account |
Separate Account with Guarantees |
Separate Account Nonguaranteed |
Total | % of Total | ||||||||||||||||||
1. | Subject to discretionary withdrawal: | |||||||||||||||||||||
a. With market value adjustment |
$ | | $ | | $ | | $ | | 0.0 | % | ||||||||||||
b. At book value less current surrender charge of 5% or more |
| | | | 0.0 | % | ||||||||||||||||
c. At fair value |
| | | | 0.0 | % | ||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||
d. Total with market value adjustment or at fair value (total of a through c) |
| | | | 0.0 | % | ||||||||||||||||
e. At book value without adjustment (minimal or no charge or adjustment) |
| | | | 0.0 | % | ||||||||||||||||
2. | Not subject to discretionary withdrawal |
14,536 | | | 14,536 | 100.0 | % | |||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||
3. | Total (gross: direct + assumed) | 14,536 | | | 14,536 | 100.0 | % | |||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
4. | Reinsurance ceded | | | | | |||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||
5. | Total (net) (3) - (4) |
14,536 | | | 14,536 | |||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||
6. | Amount included in A(1)b above that will move to A(1)e in the year after the statement date | $ | | $ | | $ | | $ | | |||||||||||||
D. Reconciliation to total annuity reserves and deposit-type funds: |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Net annuity reserves |
$ | 1,752,011 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Deposit-type funds |
14,536 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Commissioners Annuity Reserve Valuation Method adjustment |
|
(49 | ) | |||||||||||||||||||
Separate Account nonguaranteed liabilities |
524,809 | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Total |
$ | 2,291,307 | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
I. | SEPARATE ACCOUNTS |
The Company utilizes separate accounts to record and account for assets and liabilities for individual and group variable annuities. The separate accounts are registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, as a unit investment trust. In accordance with the State of Ohio procedures for approving items within the separate accounts, the separate accounts classification of the individual and group variable annuities are supported by Section 3907.15 of the Ohio Revised Code.
In accordance with the products and transactions recorded within the separate accounts, all assets are considered legally insulated from the general account and are not chargeable with liabilities incurred in any other business operation of the Company. As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, the Companys separate account statement included legally insulated variable annuity assets of $554.3 million and $524.8 million, respectively. The separate accounts are treated the same for GAAP reporting requirements.
In accordance with the products and transactions recorded within the separate accounts, some separate account liabilities are guaranteed by the general account. To compensate the general account for the risk taken, the separate account has paid risk charges of $0.3 million for each year ended December 31, 2024, 2023, and 2022, for guaranteed withdrawal benefits for variable annuity contracts.
As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, the general account of the Company had a maximum guarantee for separate account liabilities of $8.8 million and 13.8, respectively, for the guaranteed minimum death benefit of the variable annuity contracts. The total separate account guarantees paid by the general account for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023, and 2022, were $0.1 million, $0.3 million, and $0.1 million, respectively.
37
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
I. SEPARATE ACCOUNTS (CONTINUED)
Net transfers from the Separate Accounts for the years ended December 31 are summarized as follows (in thousands):
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||
Transfers to Separate Accounts - deposit-type funds |
$ | 7,806 | $ | 8,778 | $ | 10,073 | ||||||
Transfers from Separate Accounts - withdrawals and other transfers, net |
(61,739 | ) | (70,851 | ) | (64,871 | ) | ||||||
Transfers from Separate Accounts - contingent deferred sales charges |
14 | 47 | | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Net transfers from Separate Accounts |
$ | (53,919 | ) | $ | (62.026 | ) | $ | (54.798 | ) | |||
|
|
|
|
|
|
All Separate Account reserves are non-guaranteed and subject to discretionary withdrawal at fair value. Investments in the Separate Accounts at December 31 consisted of the following (in thousands):
2024 | ||||||||||||||||
Gross Unrealized | ||||||||||||||||
Cost | Fair Value |
Gains | Losses | |||||||||||||
Separate Account A |
$ | 72,653 | $ | 91,749 | $ | 19,489 | $ | 393 | ||||||||
Separate Account B |
186,533 | 243,693 | 57,720 | 560 | ||||||||||||
Separate Account C |
194,030 | 218,885 | 29,520 | 4,665 | ||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
Total Separate Accounts |
$ | 453,216 | $ | 554,327 | $ | 106,729 | $ | 5,618 | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2023 | ||||||||||||||||
Gross Unrealized | ||||||||||||||||
Cost | Fair Value |
Gains | Losses | |||||||||||||
Separate Account A |
$ | 75,168 | $ | 86,127 | $ | 12,673 | $ | 1,714 | ||||||||
Separate Account B |
198,053 | 228,903 | 35,570 | 4,720 | ||||||||||||
Separate Account C |
204,386 | 209,779 | 15,996 | 10,603 | ||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||
Total Separate Accounts |
$ | 477,607 | $ | 524,809 | $ | 64,239 | $ | 17,037 | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Separate Account holdings are made up of a diverse portfolio of managed mutual funds with investment objectives of growth, growth and income, capital appreciation, total and real return with preservation of capital.
J. CAPITAL AND SURPLUS
The portion of the Companys unassigned funds represented or reduced by each item below is as follows at December 31 (in thousands):
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||
Unrealized gains and losses |
$ | 210 | $ | 162 | $ | (311 | ) | |||||
Nonadmitted asset values |
$ | (703 | ) | $ | (1,132 | ) | $ | 940 | ||||
Separate account business |
$ | 62 | $ | 48 | $ | | ||||||
Asset valuation reserve |
$ | (15,636 | ) | $ | (17,977 | ) | $ | (17,914 | ) |
38
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTES TO STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
J. CAPITAL AND SURPLUS (CONTINUED)
Life/health insurance companies are subject to certain Risk-Based Capital (RBC) requirements as specified by the NAIC. Under those requirements, the amount of capital and surplus maintained by a life/health insurance company is to be determined based on the various risk factors related to it. At December 31, 2024 and 2023, AILIC exceeds the RBC requirement.
The maximum amount of dividends which can be paid to stockholders by life insurance companies domiciled in the State of Ohio without prior approval of the Insurance Commissioner is the greater of 10% of surplus as regards policyholders or net income as of the preceding December 31, but only to the extent of earned surplus as of the preceding December 31. The maximum amount of dividends payable in 2025 without prior approval is $46.2 million, based on surplus as of the preceding December 31. At December 31, 2024, surplus as regards policyholders was $462.0 million, earned surplus was $279.2 million, and 2024 net income was $37.9 million.
The Company did not pay an ordinary dividend to its parent in 2024, 2023, and 2022.
39
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
NOTE TO SUPPLEMENTAL SCHEDULE OF SELECETED STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL DATA
AND SUPPLEMENTAL INVESTMENT DISCLOSURES
DECEMBER 31, 2024
Basis of Presentation
The accompanying supplemental schedules and interrogatories present selected statutory-basis financial data as of December 31, 2024 and for the year then ended for purposes of complying with the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) Annual Statement Instructions and the NAICs Accounting Practices and Procedures Manual and agrees to or is included in the amounts reported in the Companys 2024 Statutory Annual Statement as filed with the Ohio Department of Insurance. Captions not presented were not applicable to the Company.
40
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
SUPPLEMENTAL SCHEDULE OF SELECTED STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL DATA
DECEMBER 31, 2024
(Dollars in thousands)
Investment income earned: |
||||
U.S. Government bonds |
$ | 88 | ||
Bonds exempt from U.S. tax |
| |||
Other bonds (unaffiliated) |
78,941 | |||
Bonds of Affiliates |
851 | |||
Preferred stocks (unaffiliated) |
323 | |||
Common stocks (unaffiliated) |
| |||
Policy loans |
2,548 | |||
Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments |
12,844 | |||
Derivative instruments |
6,718 | |||
Other invested assets |
177 | |||
Other |
| |||
|
|
|||
Gross investment income |
$ | 102,490 | ||
|
|
|||
Bonds (including short-term investments and cash equivalents) by expected maturity - statement value |
||||
Due within one year or less |
$ | 715,369 | ||
Over 1 year through 5 years |
792,486 | |||
Over 5 years through 10 years |
252,305 | |||
Over 10 years through 20 years |
142,245 | |||
Over 20 years |
52,354 | |||
|
|
|||
Total by expected maturity |
$ | 1,954,759 | ||
|
|
|||
Bonds (including short-term investments and cash equivalents) by NAIC designation - statement value |
||||
NAIC 1 |
$ | 911,907 | ||
NAIC 2 |
1,018,188 | |||
NAIC 3 |
16,079 | |||
NAIC 4 |
3,482 | |||
NAIC 5 |
5,103 | |||
NAIC 6 |
| |||
|
|
|||
Total by NAIC designation |
$ | 1,954,759 | ||
|
|
|||
Total bonds publicly traded |
$ | 1,133,870 | ||
|
|
|||
Total bonds privately placed |
$ | 820,889 | ||
|
|
|||
Preferred stocks - statement value |
$ | 4,210 | ||
|
|
|||
Common stocks - market value |
$ | | ||
|
|
|||
Short-term investments - book value |
$ | 19,774 | ||
|
|
|||
Cash equivalents |
$ | 303,252 | ||
|
|
|||
Equity index call options - amortized cost |
$ | 4,146 | ||
|
|
|||
Cash on deposit |
$ | 2,470 | ||
|
|
|||
|
|
(Continued)
41
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
SUPPLEMENTAL SCHEDULE OF SELECTED STATUTORY-BASIS FINANCIAL DATA
(CONTINUED)
DECEMBER 31, 2024
(Dollars in thousands)
Annuities: |
||||
Ordinary: |
||||
Immediate - amount of income payable |
$ | 4,876 | ||
|
|
|||
Deferred - fully paid account balance |
$ | 126,489 | ||
|
|
|||
Deferred - not fully paid - account balance |
$ | 1,833,818 | ||
|
|
|||
Group: |
||||
Fully paid account balance |
$ | | ||
|
|
|||
Not fully paid - account balance |
$ | 126,075 | ||
|
|
See accompanying independent auditors' report.
42
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
SUPPLEMENTAL INVESTMENT DISCLOSURES
DECEMBER 31, 2024
(Dollars in thousands)
1. | AILICs total admitted assets as reported on page two of its Annual Statement excluding separate accounts assets is $2,064,297 thousand. |
2. | Following are the 10 largest exposures to a single issuer/borrower/investment, by investment category, excluding: (i) U.S. Government, U.S. Government agency securities and those U.S. Government money market funds listed in the appendix to the SVO Practices and Procedures Manual as exempt, (ii) property occupied by AILIC, and (iii) policy loans: |
Issuer |
Amount | Percent of Total Admitted Assets | ||||||
Gilead Sciences Inc |
$ | 27,275 | 1.3 | % | ||||
Enterprise Products Operating LLC |
25,282 | 1.2 | % | |||||
AbbVie Inc |
24,415 | 1.2 | % | |||||
McKesson Corp |
23,181 | 1.1 | % | |||||
Verizon Communications Inc |
20,636 | 1.0 | % | |||||
OReilly Automotive Inc |
16,569 | 0.8 | % | |||||
Cigna Group |
15,985 | 0.8 | % | |||||
Bacardi Ltd |
15,951 | 0.8 | % | |||||
Paramount Global |
14,476 | 0.7 | % | |||||
Amgen Inc |
14,308 | 0.7 | % |
3. | AILICs total admitted assets held in bonds (including short-term investments and cash equivalents) and preferred stocks by NAIC rating are as follows: |
Bonds |
||||||||
NAIC Rating |
Amount | Percentage of Total Admitted Assets |
||||||
NAIC-1 |
$ | 911,907 | 44.2 | % | ||||
NAIC-2 |
1,018,188 | 49.3 | % | |||||
NAIC-3 |
16,079 | 0.8 | % | |||||
NAIC-4 |
3,482 | 0.2 | % | |||||
NAIC-5 |
5,103 | 0.2 | % | |||||
NAIC-6 |
| 0.0 | % | |||||
|
|
|
|
|||||
Total |
$ | 1,954,759 | 94.7 | % | ||||
|
|
|
|
Preferred Stocks |
||||||||
NAIC Rating |
Amount | Percentage of Total Admitted Assets |
||||||
P/RP-1 |
$ | | 0.0 | % | ||||
P/RP-2 |
4,210 | 0.2 | % | |||||
P/RP-3 |
| 0.0 | % | |||||
P/RP-4 |
| 0.0 | % | |||||
P/RP-5 |
| 0.0 | % | |||||
P/RP-6 |
| 0.0 | % | |||||
|
|
|
|
|||||
Total |
$ | 4,210 | 0.2 | % | ||||
|
|
|
|
4. | Assets held in foreign investments: |
Amount | Percent of Total Admitted Assets | |||||||
Total admitted assets held in foreign investments |
$ | 208,470 | 10.1 | % | ||||
Foreign-currency-denominated investments |
| 0.0 | % | |||||
Insurance liabilities denominated in that same foreign currency |
| 0.0 | % |
(Continued)
43
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
SUPPLEMENTAL INVESTMENT DISCLOSURES (CONTINUED)
DECEMBER 31, 2024
(Dollar in thousands)
5. | Aggregate foreign investment exposure categorized by NAIC sovereign rating: |
Amount | Percent of Total Admitted Assets | |||||||
Countries rated NAIC-1 |
$ | 203,478 | 9.9 | % | ||||
Countries rated NAIC-2 |
3,993 | 0.2 | % | |||||
Countries rated NAIC-3 or below |
999 | 0.0 | % |
6. | Largest foreign investment exposures to a single country, categorized by the countrys NAIC sovereign rating: |
Amount | Percent of Total Admitted Assets | |||||||
Countries rated NAIC-1: |
||||||||
United Kingdom |
$ | 42,544 | 2.1 | % | ||||
Australia |
13,921 | 0.7 | % | |||||
Countries rated NAIC-2 |
||||||||
Mexico |
$ | 2,000 | 0.1 | % | ||||
Italy |
1,993 | 0.1 | % | |||||
Countries rated NAIC-3 or below |
||||||||
Liberia |
$ | 999 | 0.0 | % |
7. | The Company has $208,470 thousand of unhedged foreign currency exposure. |
8. | Aggregate unhedged foreign currency exposure categorized by NAIC sovereign rating: |
Amount | Percent of Total Admitted Assets | |||||||
Countries rated NAIC-1 |
$ | 203,478 | 9.9 | % | ||||
Countries rated NAIC-2 |
3,993 | 0.2 | % | |||||
Countries rated NAIC-3 or below |
999 | 0.0 | % |
9. | Largest unhedged foreign currency exposures by country, categorized by the countrys NAIC sovereign designation: |
Amount | Percent of Total Admitted Assets | |||||||
Countries rated NAIC-1: |
||||||||
United Kingdom |
$ | 42,544 | 2.1 | % | ||||
Australia |
13,921 | 0.7 | % | |||||
Countries rated NAIC-2 |
||||||||
Mexico |
$ | 2,000 | 0.1 | % | ||||
Italy |
1,993 | 0.1 | % | |||||
Countries rated NAIC-3 or below |
||||||||
Liberia |
$ | 999 | 0.0 | % |
(Continued)
44
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
SUPPLEMENTAL INVESTMENT DISCLOSURES (CONTINUED)
DECEMBER 31, 2024
(Dollars in thousands)
10. | Ten largest non-sovereign (i.e. non-governmental) foreign issues: |
Issuer |
NAIC Rating |
Amount | Percent of Total Admitted Assets | |||||||||
Bacardi Ltd |
2 | $ | 15,951 | 0.8 | % | |||||||
Bell Telephone Co of Canada or Bell Canada |
2 | 10,967 | 0.5 | % | ||||||||
UBS Group AG |
1 | 10,002 | 0.5 | % | ||||||||
Lloyds Banking Group PLC |
1 | 9,988 | 0.5 | % | ||||||||
Canadian Pacific Railway Co |
2 | 9,982 | 0.5 | % | ||||||||
TELUS Corp |
2 | 9,866 | 0.5 | % | ||||||||
NatWest Group PLC |
1 | 8,032 | 0.4 | % | ||||||||
National Australia Bank Ltd |
1 | 4,999 | 0.2 | % | ||||||||
Nationwide Building Society |
1 | 4,999 | 0.2 | % | ||||||||
Toronto-Dominion Bank |
1 | 4,473 | 0.2 | % |
11. | Assets held in Canadian Investments: |
Amount | Percent of Total Admitted Assets | |||||||
Total admitted assets held in Canadian investments |
$ | 65,527 | 3.2 | % | ||||
Canadian-currency-denominated investments |
| 0.0 | % | |||||
Canadian-denominated insurance liabilities |
| 0.0 | % | |||||
Unhedged Canadian currency exposure |
| 0.0 | % |
12. | Investments with contractual sales restrictions are less than 2.5% of the Companys total admitted assets. |
13. | Assets held in equity interests are less than 2.5% of the Companys total admitted assets. |
14. | Assets held in nonaffiliated, privately placed equities are less than 2.5% of the Companys total admitted assets. |
15. | Assets held in general partnership interests, excluding limited partnership interests and LLC investments, are less than 2.5% of the Companys total admitted assets. |
16. | The Company does not have any assets held in mortgage loans reported in Schedule B. |
17. | The Company does not have any assets held in mortgage loans reported in Schedule B. |
18. | The assets held in real estate are less than 2.5% of the Companys total admitted assets. |
19. | Investments in mezzanine real estate loans are less than 2.5% of the Companys total admitted assets. |
20. | The Company does not have any admitted assets subject to securities lending, repurchase agreements, reverse repurchase agreements, dollar repurchase agreements, or dollar reverse repurchase agreements. |
21. | The Company owns $4,146 thousand in hedging options. |
22. | The Company does not have any collars, swaps, or forwards. |
23. | The Company does not have any futures contracts. |
45
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
SUPPLEMENTAL INVESTMENT DISCLOSURES (CONTINUED)
DECEMBER 31, 2024
(Dollars in thousands)
Gross Investment Holdings* | Admitted Assets as Reported in the Annual Statement | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment Categories |
Amount | Percentage of Column 1 Line 13 |
Amount | Securities Lending Reinvested Collateral Amount |
Total (Col 3 +4) Amount |
Percentage of Column 5 Line 13 |
||||||||||||||||||||||
1. |
Long-Term Bonds: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1.01 | U.S. Governments | 998 | 0.0 | % | $ | 998 | $ | | $ | 998 | 0.0 | % | ||||||||||||||||
1.02 | All Other Governments | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
1.03 | U.S. States, Territories and Possessions etc., Guaranteed | 26,091 | 1.3 | % | 26,091 | | 26,091 | 1.3 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
1.04 | U.S. Political Subdivisions of States, Territories and Possessions, Guaranteed | 17,394 | 0.9 | % | 17,394 | | 17,394 | 0.9 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
1.05 | U.S. Special Revenue and Special Assessment Obligations, etc., Non-Guaranteed | 151,967 | 7.5 | % | 151,967 | | 151,967 | 7.5 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
1.06 | Industrial and Miscellaneous | 1,407,634 | 69.3 | % | 1,407,634 | | 1,407,634 | 69.3 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
1.07 | Hybrid Securities | 29,649 | 1.5 | % | 29,649 | | 29,649 | 1.5 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
1.08 | Parent, Subsidiaries and Affiliates | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
1.09 | SVO Identified Funds | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
1.10 | Unaffiliated Bank Loans | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
1.11 | Total Long-Term Bonds | 1,633,733 | 80.5 | % | 1,633,733 | | 1,633,733 | 80.5 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
2. |
Preferred Stocks: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2.01 | Industrial and Misc. (Unaffiliated) | 4,210 | 0.2 | % | 4,210 | | 4,210 | 0.2 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
2.02 | Parent, Subsidiaries and Affiliates | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
2.03 | Total Preferred Stock | 4,210 | 0.2 | % | 4,210 | | 4,210 | 0.2 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
3. |
Common Stocks: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3.01 | Industrial and Miscellaneous Publicly Traded (Unaffiliated) | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
3.02 | Industrial and Miscellaneous Other (Unaffiliated) | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
3.03 | Parent, Subsidiaries and Affiliates Publicly Traded | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
3.04 | Parent, Subsidiaries and Affiliates Other | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
3.05 | Mutual Funds | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
3.06 | Unit Investment Trusts | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
3.07 | Closed-End Funds. | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
3.08 | Total Common Stocks | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
4. |
Mortgage Loans: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4.01 | Farm Mortgages | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
4.02 | Residential Mortgages | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
4.03 | Commercial Mortgages | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
4.04 | Mezzanine Real Estate Loans | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
4.05 | Total Mortgage Loans | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
5. |
Real estate: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
5.01 | Properties Occupied by Company | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
5.02 | Properties Held for Production of Income | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
5.03 | Properties Held for Sale | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
5.04 | Total Real Estate | | 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
6. |
Cash, Cash Equivalents, and Short-Term Investments: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
6.01 | Cash | 2,470 | 0.1 | % | 2,470 | | 2,470 | 0.1 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
6.02 | Cash Equivalents | 303,252 | 14.9 | % | 303,252 | | 303,252 | 14.9 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
6.03 | Short-Term Investments | 19,774 | 1.0 | % | 19,774 | | 19,774 | 1.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
6.04 | Total Cash, Cash Equivalents, and Short-Term Investments | 325,496 | 16.0 | % | 325,496 | | 325,496 | 16.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||
7. Contract Loans |
42,172 | 2.1 | % | 42,172 | | 42,172 | 2.1 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||
8. Derivatives |
15,628 | 0.8 | % | 15,628 | | 15,628 | 0.8 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||
9. Other Invested Assets |
7,844 | 0.4 | % | 7,844 | | 7,844 | 0.4 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||
10. Receivables for Securities |
| 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||
11. Securities Lending |
| 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||
12. Other Invested Assets |
| 0.0 | % | | | | 0.0 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
13. Total Invested Assets |
2,029,083 | 100.0 | % | 2,029,083 | | 2,029,083 | 100.0 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* | Gross investment holdings as valued in compliance with NAIC SAP. |
See accompanying independent auditors report.
46
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
SUPPLEMENTAL SCHEDULE OF LIFE AND HEALTH REINSURANCE DISCLOSURES
FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2024
The following information regarding reinsurance contracts is presented to satisfy the disclosure requirements in SSAP No. 61, Life, Deposit-Type and Accident and Health Reinsurance, which apply to reinsurance contracts entered into, renewed or amended on or after January 1, 1996.
1. | Has Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company reinsured any risk with any other entity under a reinsurance contract (or multiple contracts with the same reinsurer or its affiliates) that is subject to Appendix A-791, Life and Health Reinsurance Agreements, and includes a provision that limits the reinsurers assumption of significant risks identified in Appendix A-791? |
Examples of risk-limiting features include provisions such as a deductible, a loss ratio corridor, a loss cap, an aggregate limit or other provisions that result in similar effects.
Yes ☐ No ☒
If yes, indicate the number of reinsurance contracts to which such provisions apply: __________
If yes, indicate if deposit accounting was applied for all contracts subject to Appendix A-791 that limit significant risks.
Yes ☐ No ☐ N/A ☒
2. | Has Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company reinsured any risk with any other entity under a reinsurance contract (or multiple contracts with the same reinsurer or its affiliates) that is not subject to Appendix A-791, for which reinsurance accounting was applied and includes a provision that limits the reinsurers assumption of risk? |
Examples of risk-limiting features include provisions such as a deductible, a loss ratio corridor, a loss cap, an aggregate limit or other provisions that result in similar effects.
Yes ☐ No ☒
If yes, indicate the number of reinsurance contracts to which such provisions apply: __________
If yes, indicate whether the reinsurance credit was reduced for the risk-limiting features.
Yes ☐ No ☐ N/A ☒
3. | Does Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company have any reinsurance contracts (other than reinsurance contracts with a federal or state facility) that contain one or more of the following features which may result in delays in payment in form or in fact: |
(a) | Provisions that permit the reporting of losses to be made less frequently than quarterly; |
(b) | Provisions that permit settlements to be made less frequently than quarterly; |
(c) | Provisions that permit payments due from the reinsurer to not be made in cash within ninety (90) days of the settlement date (unless there is no activity during the period); or |
(d) | The existence of payment schedules, accumulating retentions from multiple years, or any features inherently designed to delay timing of the reimbursement to the ceding entity. |
Yes ☐ No ☒
(Continued)
47
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
SUPPLEMENTAL SCHEDULE OF LIFE AND HEALTH REINSURANCE DISCLOSURES (CONTINUED)
FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2024
4. | Has Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company reflected reinsurance accounting credit for any contracts that are not subject to Appendix A-791 and not yearly renewable term reinsurance, which meet the risk transfer requirements of SSAP No. 61? |
Type of contract: |
Response: |
Identify reinsurance contract(s): |
Has the insured | |||
Assumption reinsurance new for the reporting period |
Yes ☐ No ☒ | N/A | ||||
Non-proportional reinsurance, which does not result in significant surplus relief | Yes ☐ No ☒ | Yes ☐ No ☐ N/A ☒ |
5. | Has Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company ceded any risk, which is not subject to Appendix A-791 and not yearly renewable term reinsurance, under any reinsurance contract (or multiple contracts with the same reinsurer or its affiliates) during the period covered by the financial statements, and either: |
(a) | Accounted for that contract as reinsurance under statutory accounting principles (SAP) and as a deposit under generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP); or |
Yes ☐ No ☒ N/A ☐
(b) | Accounted for that contract as reinsurance under GAAP and as a deposit under SAP? |
Yes ☐ No ☒ N/A ☐
If the answer to item (a) or item (b) is yes, include relevant information regarding GAAP to SAP differences from the accounting policy footnote to the audited statutory-basis financial statements to explain why the contract(s) is treated differently for GAAP and SAP below:
See accompanying independent auditors report.
48
PART C. Other Information
Note: This Part C contains information related to The Commodore Spirit® Variable Contract (File No. 333-19725), and Annuity Investors® Variable Account B.
Item 27. | Exhibits |
(a) |
(b) | Not Applicable. |
(c) | Distribution and Selling Agreements. |
DISTRIBUTION AGREEMENTS
(1) |
(2) |
(i) |
(ii) |
SELLING AGREEMENTS
(3) |
(4) |
(5) |
RELATED AGREEMENTS
(6) |
(d) | Individual and Group Contract Forms, Endorsements and Riders. |
CONTRACTS
(1) |
(2) |
(3) | Form of Group Flexible Premium Deferred Variable Annuity Contract (G801-BD (97)-3). 2A/ |
(4) |
(5) |
(6) |
(7) | Form of Group Flexible Premium Deferred Variable Annuity Contract (P2008603NW). 29/ |
(8) |
LOAN ENDORSEMENTS
(9) | Form of Loan Endorsement to Individual Contract (ELOAN (96)-3). 2A/ |
1
(10) | Form of Loan Endorsement to Group Contract (EGLOAN (95)-3). 2A/ |
(11) | Form of Loan Endorsement to Certificate of Participation under a Group Contract (ECLOAN (95)-3). 2A/ |
(12) | Form of Loan Endorsement to Individual Contract (E1808703NW). 28/ |
(13) | Form of Loan Endorsement to Group Contract (E2008403NW). 28/ |
(14) | Form of Loan Endorsement to Certificate of Participation under a Group Contract (E2008503NW). 28/ |
(15) |
TEXAS OPTIONAL RETIREMENT PROGRAM ENDORSEMENTS
(16) | Form of Texas Optional Retirement Program Endorsement to Individual Contract (ETXORP (5/96)-3). 2A/ |
(17) | Form of Texas Optional Retirement Program Endorsement to Group Contract (EGTXORP (5/96)-3). 2A/ |
(18) |
LONG-TERM CARE WAIVER RIDERS
(19) | Form of Long-Term Care Waiver Raider to Individual Contract (R115 (Rev. 8/95)-3. 1A/ |
(20) | Form of Long-Term Care Waiver Rider to Group Contract (RG115 (Rev. 6/95)-3). 2A/ |
(21) |
DEFERRED COMPENSATION ENDORSEMENTS
(22) | Form of Deferred Compensation Endorsement to Group Contract (EG457 (95)-3). 2A/ |
(23) |
SIMPLE IRA ENDORSEMENTS
(24) | Form of SIMPLE IRA Endorsement to Individual Contract (E408P (Rev. 11/97)-3). 3/ |
(25) | Form of SIMPLE IRA Endorsement to Individual Contract (E408P (97)-3). 39/ |
(26) | Form of SIMPLE Individual Retirement Annuity Endorsement to Group Contract (EG408P (98)-3). 38/ |
(27) |
(28) | Revised Form of SIMPLE IRA Endorsement to Qualified Individual Contract (E6003202NW). 28/ |
ROTH IRA ENDORSEMENTS
(29) | Form of Roth IRA Endorsement to Qualified Individual Contract (EIRAROTH (97)-3). 3/ |
(30) | Form of Roth Individual Retirement Annuity Endorsement to Group Contract (EGIRA (98)-3). 38/ |
(31) |
(32) | Form of Roth IRA Endorsement to Qualified Individual Contract (E6003102NW). 28/ |
EMPLOYER PLAN ENDORSEMENTS
(33) | Form of Employer Plan Endorsement to Individual Contract (EPLAN (96)-3). 3A/ |
(34) | Form of Employer Plan Endorsement to Group Contract (EGPLAN (96)-3). 2A/ |
(35) |
(36) | Revised Form of Employer Plan Endorsement to Group Contract (EPLAN (Rev. 2/98)-3). 3/ |
(37) |
(38) |
2
TAX SHELTERED ANNUITY ENDORSEMENTS
(39) | Form of Tax Sheltered Annuity Endorsement to Individual Contract (ETSA (Rev. 2/98)-3). 3/ |
(40) | Form of Tax Sheltered Annuity Endorsement to Individual Contract (ETSA (96)-3). 2A/ |
(41) | Form of Tax Sheltered Annuity Endorsement to Group Contract (EGTSA (Rev. 2/98)-3). 3/ |
(42) | Form of Tax Sheltered Annuity Endorsement to Group Contract (EGTSA (96)-3). 2A/ |
(43) |
(44) |
(45) | Revised Form of Tax Sheltered Annuity Endorsement to Qualified Individual Contract (E6003302NW). 28/ |
(46) | Revised Form of Tax Sheltered Annuity Endorsement to Group Contract (E6007402NW). 28/ |
(47) | Revised Form of Tax Sheltered Annuity Endorsement to Individual Contract (E6003306NW). 28/ |
(48) |
(49) | Revised Form of Tax Sheltered Annuity Endorsement to Group Contract (E6007405NW). 28/ |
(50) |
(51) | Revised Form of Tax Sheltered Annuity Endorsement to Group Contract (E6007408NW). 28/ |
(52) |
QUALIFIED PENSION, PROFIT SHARING AND ANNUITY PLAN ENDORSEMENTS
(53) |
(54) |
(55) |
(56) |
(57) |
(58) |
(59) |
(60) |
(61) |
(62) |
(63) |
(64) |
3
GOVERNMENTAL SECTION 457 PLAN ENDORSEMENTS
(65) |
(66) | Form of Governmental Section 457 Plan Endorsement to Group Contract (EG457G (98)-3). 3/ |
(67) |
(68) |
(69) | Form of Governmental Section 457 Plan Endorsement to Group Contract (E6007802NW). 28/ |
(70) |
(71) | Form of Governmental Section 457 Plan Endorsement to Group Contract (E6007805NW). 28/ |
(72) |
SUCCESSOR OWNER ENDORSEMENTS
(73) |
(74) | Form of Successor Owner Endorsement to Group Contract (EGSUC (99)-3). 5/ |
(75) |
INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ANNUITY ENDORSEMENTS
(76) | Form of Individual Retirement Annuity Endorsement to Individual Contract (EIRA 996)-3). 2A/ |
(77) | Form of Individual Retirement Annuity Endorsement to Individual Contract (EIRA (Rev. 9/97)-3. 2A/ |
(78) | Form of Individual Retirement Annuity Endorsement to Group Contract (EGIRA (98)-3). 38/ |
(79) |
(80) |
OTHER ENDORSEMENTS
(81) | Form of Unisex Endorsement to Non-Qualified Individual Contract (EASO (USX98)-3). 38/ |
(82) | Form of Settlement Options Endorsement to Individual Contract and Group Contract (E6012104NW). 39/ |
GUARANTEED WITHDRAWAL BENEFIT RIDERS
(83) | Form of Guaranteed Lifetime Withdrawal Benefit Rider for Individual Contract (R1813307NW). 22/ |
(84) | Form of Guaranteed Lifetime Withdrawal Benefit Rider for Group Contract (R2010707NW). 22/ |
(85) |
(86) | Form of Guaranteed Minimum Withdrawal Benefit Rider for Individual Contract (R1813507NW). 22/ |
(87) | Form of Guaranteed Minimum Withdrawal Benefit Rider for Group Contract (R2010907NW). 22/ |
(88) |
INCOME BENEFIT RIDER
(89) | Form of Income Benefit Rider to Qualified Individual Contract. 8/ |
(90) | Form of Income Benefit Rider to Non-Qualified Individual Contract. 8/ |
(91) |
(92) | Form of Income Benefit Rider to Certificate of Participation under a Group Contract. 8/ |
4
DEATH BENEFIT ENDORSEMENTS
(93) | Form of Optional Death Benefit Endorsement to Individual Contract. 9/ |
(94) | Form of Death Benefit Amount Endorsement to Individual Contract. 10/ |
(95) | Form of Death Benefit Amount Endorsement to Group Contract. 10/ |
(96) | Form of Death Benefit Amount Endorsement to Certificate of Participation under a Group Contract. 10/ |
(97) | Form of Death Benefit Amount Endorsement to Group Contract (E2007002NW). 28/ |
(98) |
RMD ENDORSEMENTS
(99) |
(100) |
ACD ENDORSEMENTS
(101) |
(102) |
(103) |
(e) | Applications. |
INDIVIDUAL AND CERTIFICATE APPLICATIONS
(1) |
(2) |
GROUP APPLICATIONS
(3) | Form of Application for Group Flexible Premium Deferred Annuity Contract. 2A/ |
(4) | Revised Form of Application for Group Flexible Premium Deferred Annuity Contract. 4/ |
(f) | Organizational Documents. |
ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
(1) |
CODE OF REGULATIONS
(2) | Code of Regulations of Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company®. 1/ |
(g) | Not Applicable. |
(h) | Participation Agreements. |
AIM VARIABLE INSURANCE FUNDS (INVESCO VARIABLE INSURANCE FUNDS)
(1) |
(a) |
(b) |
(c) |
5
(d) |
(2) |
(3) |
(4) |
(a) |
AMERICAN CENTURY
(5) | [reserved] |
(6) |
(a) |
(7) |
CALAMOS ADVISORS TRUST
(8) |
(i) | Calamos Advisors Trust: Amendment dated as of May 1, 2008 to Participation Agreement. 24/ |
(9) |
(10) |
DAVIS VARIABLE ACCOUNT FUND
(11) |
(a) | Davis Variable Account Fund: Addendum dated as of May 1, 2008 to Participation Agreement. 24/ |
BNY MELLON VARIABLE INVESTMENT FUND AND BNY MELLON INVESTMENT PORTFOLIOS (f/k/a Dreyfus Variable Investment Fund and Dreyfus Investment Portfolios)
(12) |
(a) |
(b) |
(c) |
(d) |
(e) |
6
BNY MELLON SUSTAINABLE U.S. EQUITY PORTFOLIO (f/k/a Dreyfus Socially Responsible Growth Fund)
(13) |
(a) |
(b) |
(c) |
(d) |
BNY MELLON STOCK INDEX FUND (f/k/a Dreyfus Stock Index Fund)
(14) |
(a) |
(b) | BNY Mellon Stock Index Fund: Amendment dated as of July 1, 2002 to Fund Participation Agreement. 36/ |
(c) |
(d) |
BNY MELLON FUNDS (f/k/a Dreyfus Funds)
(15) |
(a) |
(b) |
(c) |
(16) |
(a) | BNY Mellon: Amendment to Letter Agreement (Shareholder Services) dated as of March 1, 2007. 39/ |
(17) |
DEUTSCHE DWS
(18) |
(a) |
(19) |
7
(20) |
(a) |
(b) | Deutsche DWS: Amendment dated as of April 10, 2006 to Administrative Services Letter Agreement. 39/ |
(c) | Deutsche DWS: Amendment dated as of May 1, 2008 to Administrative Services Letter Agreement. 24/ |
(d) | Deutsche DWS: Amendment dated as of May 1, 2010 to Administrative Services Letter Agreement. 26/ |
(21) |
ALPS VARIABLE INVESTMENT TRUST (Morningstar Portfolios) (f/k/a Ibbotson Portfolios)
(22) |
(a) | Morningstar Portfolios: Amendment to Fund Participation Agreement dated November 23, 2007. 39/ |
(b) |
(c) | Morningstar Portfolios : Amendment dated April 30, 2013 to Fund Participation Agreement. 31/ |
(d) | Morningstar Portfolios: Amendment dated June 14, 2017 to Fund Participation Agreement. 34/ |
(23) |
(24) |
FRANKLIN TEMPLETON VARIABLE INSURANCE PRODUCTS TRUST
(25) |
(a) |
(b) |
(c) |
(26) |
(a) |
(27) |
JANUS ASPEN SERIES
(28) |
(a) |
(b) | Janus Aspen Series: Amendment effective January 2, 2004 to Fund Participation Agreements. 39/ |
(c) | Janus Aspen Series: Amendment effective May 1, 2004 to Fund Participation Agreements. 39 / |
(d) | Janus Aspen Series: Amendment effective December 1, 2005 to Fund Participation Agreements.21 |
8
(29) |
(30) |
MORGAN STANLEY VARIABLE INSURANCE FUND (f/k/a Van Kampen)
(31) |
(a) |
(b) |
(c) |
(d) |
(e) |
(32) |
(a) |
(b) |
(33) |
AIM VARIABLE INSURANCE FUNDS (INVESCO VARIABLE INSURANCE FUNDS) (f/k/a Oppenheimer Variable Account Funds)
(34) |
(a) |
(b) |
(35) | Invesco: Letter Agreement (Administrative Services) with Invesco Funds dated July 1, 2002. 36/ |
(36) |
PIMCO VARIABLE INSURANCE TRUST
(37) |
(a) | PIMCO Variable Insurance Trust: Amendment dated December 1, 2004 to Participation Agreement. 18/ |
(b) |
(c) |
(d) | PIMCO Variable Insurance Trust: Amendment dated May 1, 2015 to Participation Agreement. 32/ |
9
(38) |
(39) |
THE TIMOTHY PLAN
(40) |
(i) | The Timothy Plan: Amendment effective January 12, 2006 to Participation Agreement. 21/ |
(41) |
(i) | Timothy Plan: Amendment as of May 19, 2009 to Administrative Services Agreement. 39/ |
(42) |
WILSHIRE VARIABLE INSURANCE TRUST
(43) |
(44) |
LINCOLN VARIABLE INSURANCE PRODUCTS TRUST
(45) |
(46) |
(i) | Not Applicable |
(j) | Other Material Contracts |
(1) |
(2) | Amendment to MassMutual Administrative Services Agreement 40 |
(k) |
(l) | Consents of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm |
(i) Consent of independent registered public accounting firm (KPMG LLP) FW
(m) | Not Applicable. |
(n) | Not Applicable. |
(o) | Not Applicable. |
(p) |
(1) |
(2) |
(3) |
(4) |
1/ | Incorporated by reference to Form N-4 EL filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-19725 (Spirit), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on December 23, 1996. |
10
1A/ | Incorporated by reference to Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 (Form N-4 EL/A) filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account A, 1933 Act File No. 033-59861 (Nauticus), 1940 Act File No. 811-07299, on November 8, 1995. |
2/ | Incorporated by reference to Pre-Effective Amendment No. 3 (Form N-4 EL/A) filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account A, 1933 Act File No. 033-59861 (Nauticus), 1940 Act File No. 811-07299, on December 4, 1995. |
2A/ | Incorporated by reference to Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 (Form N-4 EL/A) filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-19725 (Spirit), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on June 3, 1997. |
2B/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 13 to Form N-4 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-19725 (Spirit), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on February 27, 2004. |
3/ | Incorporated by reference to Form N-4 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-51971 (Advantage), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on May 6, 1998. |
3A/ | Incorporated by reference to Form N-4 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-51955 (Independence), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on May 6, 1998. |
3B/ | [text intentionally deleted] |
4/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 2 to Form N-4 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-19725 (Spirit), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on April 29, 1998. |
5/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 1 to Form N-4 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-51955 (Independence), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on February 26, 1999. |
6/ | [text intentionally deleted] |
7/ | [text intentionally deleted] |
8/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 5 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-19725 (Spirit), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on February 26, 1999. |
9/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 8 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-19725 (Spirit), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on May 2, 2001. |
10/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 11 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-19725 (Spirit), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on February 28, 2003. |
11/ | [text intentionally deleted] |
12/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 3 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-19725 (Spirit), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on November 17, 1998. |
13/ | [text intentionally deleted] |
14/ | [text intentionally deleted] |
15/ | [text intentionally deleted] |
16/ | [text intentionally deleted] |
17/ | [text intentionally deleted] |
18/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 6 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account C, 1940 Act File No. 811-21095, on March 1, 2005. |
19/ | [text intentionally deleted] |
20/ | [text intentionally deleted] |
21/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 18 to Form N-4 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-19725 (Spirit), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on May 1, 2006. |
22/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 13 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-51955 (Independence), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on or about May 1, 2007. |
23/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 14 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-51955 (Independence), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on or about May 22, 2007. |
24/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 1 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account C, 1933 Act File No. 333-148676 (Access100), 1940 Act File No. 811-21095, on or about April 27, 2009. |
25/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 2 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account C, 1933 Act File No. 333-148387 (Transition20), 1940 Act File No. 811-21095, on or about February 16, 2010. |
26/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 3 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account C, 1933 Act File No. 333-148387 (Transition20), 1940 Act File No. 811-21095, on or about April 29, 2010. |
27/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 20 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors Variable Account A, 1933 Act File No. 033-59861 (Nauticus), 1940 Act File No. 811-07299, on or about April 22, 2011. |
28/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 21 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-51971 (Advantage), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on or about April 25, 2012. |
28A/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 20 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-51955 (Independence), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on or about April 23, 2012. |
29/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 27 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors Variable Account B, 1933 Act File. No. 333-19725 (Spirit), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on or about April 26, 2012. |
30/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 22 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors Variable Account A, 1933 Act File No. 033-59861 (Nauticus), 1940 Act File No. 811-07299, on or about April 25, 2013. |
11
31/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 7 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors Variable Account C 1933 Act File No. 333-148387 (Transition20), 1940 Act File No. 811-21095 on or about April 25, 2014. |
32/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 8 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors Variable Account C 1933 Act File No. 333-148387 (Transition20), 1940 Act File No. 811-21095 on or about April 28, 2015. |
33/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 10 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors Variable Account C. 1933 Act File No. 333-148387 (Transition20), 1940 Act File No. 811-21095 on April 28, 2017. |
34/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 26 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors Variable Account B. 1933 Act File No. 333-51955 (Independence), 1940 act File No. 811-08017 on or about April 27, 2018. |
35/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 22 filed on behalf of AIM Variable Insurance Funds, Inc., 1933 Act File No. 33-57340, 1940 Act File No. 811-7452, on February 12, 2002 as Exhibit H75. |
36/ | Incorporated by reference to Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 (Form N-4 EL/A) filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account C, 1933 Act File No. 333-88300 (Helmsman), 1940 Act File No. 811-21095, on July 26, 2002. |
37/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 10 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account A, 1940 Act File No. 811-07299, on April 29, 2005. |
38/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 4 to Form N-4 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-19725 (Navigator), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on February 1, 1999. |
39/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 36 to Form N-4 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-19725 (Spirit), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on August 28, 2020. |
40/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 38 to Form N-4 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-19725 (Spirit), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on February 1, 2022. |
41/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 39 to Form N-4 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-19725 (Spirit), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on April 18, 2022. |
42/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 41 to Form N-4 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-19725 (Spirit), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on May 1, 2023. |
43/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 42 to Form N-4 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333-19725 (Spirit), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on April 30, 2024. |
44/ | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 42 to Form N-4 filed on behalf of Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, 1933 Act File No. 333- 19725 (Spirit), 1940 Act File No. 811-08017, on April 30, 2024. |
FW/ Filed herewith.
Item 28. | Directors and Officers of Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company® |
The following are the Officers and Directors who are engaged directly or indirectly in activities relating to the Registrant or the variable annuity contracts offered by the Registrant and the executive officers of the Company.
Name and Principal Business Address |
Positions and Offices with the Company | |
Dominic Blue 1295 State Street, Springfield, MA 01111-001 |
Director, Chief Executive Officer | |
Donna Carrelli 191 Rosa Parks Street, Cincinnati, OH 45202 |
Head of Insurance Operations | |
Susan Cicco 1295 State Street, Springfield, MA 01111-001 |
Director | |
Geoffrey J. Craddock 1295 State Street, Springfield, MA 01111-001 |
Director | |
Roger W. Crandall 1295 State Street, Springfield, MA 01111-001 |
Director, Chairman of the Board | |
Mary Jane Fortin 1295 State Street, Springfield, MA 01111-001 |
Director, CFO | |
John P. Gruber 191 Rosa Parks Street, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202 |
Senior Vice President, Secretary, CCO and General Counsel |
12
Name and Principal Business Address |
Positions and Offices with the Company | |
Vy Ho 1295 State Street, Springfield, MA 01111-001 |
Director | |
Paul A. LaPiana 1295 State Street, Springfield, MA 01111-001 |
Director | |
Sears A. Merritt 1295 State Street, Springfield, MA 01111-001 |
Director | |
Mark F. Muething 191 Rosa Parks Street, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202 |
Director, President | |
Michael J. OConnor 1295 State Street, Springfield, MA 01111-001 |
Director | |
Eric W. Partlan 1295 State Street, Springfield, MA 01111-001 |
Director, Chief Investment Officer | |
Brian P. Sponaugle 191 Rosa Parks Street |
Senior Vice President & Treasurer |
Item 29. | Persons Controlled by or Under Common Control with the Insurance Company and the Registered Separate Account |
The Insurance Company, Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company, is a stock life insurance company incorporated under the laws of the State of Ohio. It is a wholly owned subsidiary of MassMutual Ascend Life Insurance Company (formerly Great American Life Insurance Company), which is a wholly owned subsidiary of Glidepath Holdings, Inc., which is in turn a wholly owned subsidiary of Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company.
Annuity Investors ® Variable Account B is a segregated asset account of Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company. ®
Item 30. | Indemnification |
The Code of Regulations of Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company® provides in Article V as follows:
The Corporation shall, to the full extent permitted by the General Corporation Law of Ohio, indemnify any person who is or was director or officer of the Corporation and whom it may indemnify pursuant thereto. The Corporation may, within the sole discretion of the Board of Directors, indemnify in whole or in part any other persons whom it may indemnify pursuant thereto.
Insofar as indemnification for liability arising under the Securities Act of 1933 (1933 Act) may be permitted to directors, officers and controlling persons of the Depositor pursuant to the foregoing provisions, or otherwise, the Depositor has been advised that in the opinion of the Securities and Exchange Commission such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the 1933 Act and is, therefore, unenforceable. In the event that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities (other than the payment by the Depositor of expenses incurred or paid by the director, officer or controlling person of the Registrant in the successful defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer or controlling person in connection with the securities being registered, the Depositor will, unless in the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether such indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the 1933 Act and will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.
The directors and officers of Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company® are covered under a Directors and Officers Reimbursement Policy. Under the Reimbursement Policy, directors and officers are indemnified for loss arising from any covered claim by reason of any Wrongful Act in their capacities as directors or officers, except to the extent the Company has indemnified them. In general, the term loss means any amount which the directors or officers are legally obligated to pay for a claim for Wrongful Acts. In general, the term Wrongful Acts means any breach of duty, neglect, error, misstatement, misleading statement, omission or act by a director or officer while acting individually or collectively in their capacity as such claimed against them solely by reason of their being directors and officers. The primary policy under the program is with National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, PA, in the name of American Premier Underwriters, Inc.
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Item 31. | Principal Underwriter |
(a) | MM Ascend Life Investor Services, LLC (formerly Great American Advisors®, Inc.) is the principal underwriter for the following investment companies (including the Registrant): Annuity Investors® Variable Account A, Annuity Investors® Variable Account B, and Annuity Investors® Variable Account C. |
(b) | The principal business address of each director and officer of MM Ascend Life Investor Services, LLC is 191 Rosa Parks Street, 12th Floor, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202. |
Name |
Position with MM Ascend Life Investor Services, LLC | |
Mark F. Muething | Vice President, Secretary & Chief Legal Officer and Director | |
Peter J. Nerone | President, Chief Executive Officer & Chief Compliance Officer | |
Athena Purdon | Treasurer |
(c) Required information is included in, and incorporated by reference to, Part B of this Registration Statement.
Item 31A. | Information about Contracts with Index-Linked Options and Fixed Options Subject to a Contract Adjustment. |
Not applicable.
Item 32. | Location of Accounts and Records |
Omitted
Item 33. | Management Services |
Not Applicable.
Item 34. | Fee Representation |
The Company represents that the fees and charges deducted under the Contract, in the aggregate, are reasonable in relation to the services rendered, the expenses expected to be incurred and the risks assumed by the Company.
Undertakings
Rule 484 Undertaking Insofar as indemnification for liability arising under the Securities Act of 1933 may be permitted to directors, officers and controlling persons of the registrant pursuant to the foregoing provisions, or otherwise, the registrant Ha been advised that in the opinion of the Securities and Exchange Commission such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Act and is, therefore, unenforceable. In the event that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities (other than the payment by the registrant of expenses incurred or paid by a director, officer or controlling person of the registrant in the successful defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer or controlling person in connection with the securities being registered, the registrant will, unless in the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether such indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the Act and will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.
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SIGNATURES
As required by the Securities Act of 1933 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant certifies that it meets all the requirements for effectiveness of this registration statement under rule 485(b) under the Securities Act and has caused this Post-Effective Amendment to its Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned in the City of Cincinnati, State of Ohio on April 28, 2025.
ANNUITY INVESTORS® VARIABLE ACCOUNT B | ||
(Registrant) | ||
By: | /s/ Brian P. Sponaugle | |
Brian P. Sponaugle | ||
Senior Vice President and Treasurer | ||
Annuity Investors Life Insurance Company® |
ANNUITY INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY® | ||
(Insurance Company) | ||
By: | /s/ Brian P. Sponaugle | |
Brian P. Sponaugle | ||
Senior Vice President and Treasurer |
As required by the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, this Post-Effective Amendment to the Registration Statement has been signed by the following persons in the capacities and on the dates indicated.
Signature |
Capacity |
Date | ||
/s/ Dominic L. Blue* Dominic L. Blue* |
Director, Chief Executive Officer (principal executive officer) |
April 28, 2025 | ||
/s/ Susan M. Cicco* Susan M. Cicco* |
Director | April 28, 2025 | ||
/s/ Geoffrey J. Craddock* Geoffrey J. Craddock* |
Director | April 28, 2025 | ||
/s/ Roger W. Crandall* Roger W. Crandall* |
Director, Chairman of the Board | April 28, 2025 | ||
/s/ MJ Fortin* MJ Fortin* |
Director, Chief Financial Officer (principal financial officer) |
April 28, 2025 | ||
/s/ Vy Ho* Vy Ho* |
Director | April 28, 2025 | ||
/s/ Paul A. LaPiana* Paul A. LaPiana* |
Director | April 28, 2025 | ||
/s/ Sears A. Merritt* Sears A. Merritt |
Director | April 28, 2025 |
Signature |
Capacity |
Date | ||
/s/ Mark F. Muething* Mark F. Muething |
Director, President | April 28, 2025 | ||
/s/ Michael J. OConnor* Michael J. OConnor* |
Director | April 28, 2025 | ||
/s/ Eric W. Partlan* Eric W. Partlan* |
Director | April 28, 2025 | ||
/s/ Brian P. Sponaugle Brian P. Sponaugle |
Senior Vice President and Treasurer (Principal Accounting Officer) |
April 28, 2025 | ||
April 28, 2025 |
/s/ John P. Gruber |
*John P. Gruber, as Attorney-in-Fact April 28, 2025 |
EXHIBIT INDEX
Exhibit No. | Description of Exhibit | |
27(l)(i) | Consent of KPMG LLP | |
27(p)(3) | Power of Attorney Vy Ho | |
27(p)(4) | Power of Attorney Mary Jane Fortin |