QUOTE(Wedchar2912 @ Jul 17 2023, 06:28 PM)
actually, your case is very special. based on a few of your postings, while your spending may appear high to many of us here, it is actually nothing compared to your networth/assets. And your assets are quite liquid, which makes it quite robust.
Plus due to your life choice, you don't need to get any annuity product at all. May as well just invest the annuity portion in some bond funds that goes super long duration and diversified across currencies.
Annuities are usually for people who worries they may live longer than their assets can last them, hence they convert that risk into a fixed cashflow as long as they are alive.
To some, they wanted diversification of risk.
There is something called too rich to be insured (retirement cashflow that is).

The annuity plans I purchased were kind of a natural progression from the original “didn’t know any better so buy insurance” plans which I guess every young man who’s a bit financially naive went through with a friend of a friend’s who works as an insurance agent.
Once I realised that my income and savings and passive returns were more than required to cover my old age and then some, I changed strategies and focused more on full health insurance coverage and bought annuity plans instead of life or worst, investment linked policies.
These plans were bought decades ago, around the same time as my bond purchases started. They had lower entry criteria - I didn’t have to have $250,000 in cash per bond - so these annuities also had their value then.
I personally wouldn’t buy them again if I had a chance to turn back the clock, but hindsight is always 20/20…