Underrated: Falling Interest Rates and Charitable Gift Annuities
-We’ve been hearing quite a bit about the Federal Reserve system (“the Fed”) likely cutting the Fed Funds rate – the key interest rate that it controls – at its next Open Market Committee meeting, which is September 17-18. The Fed aggressively hiked the Fed Funds rate from February 2022 to August 2023 in a determined effort to bring down inflation, which peaked at over 9% in 2022. It has kept the Fed Funds rate at the same relatively high level for the past year. Lately, however, there have been various reports showing that the economy is showing signs of slowing down, and inflation in recent months has approached the Fed’s 2% target. This has led the Fed to signal it is finally comfortable with reducing interest rates.
When the Fed cuts the Fed Funds rate, other interest rates tend to follow suit – especially short-term and medium-term interest rates. Even long-term interest rates, such as mortgage rates, are eventually affected. And that brings us to the topic of charitable gift annuities (CGAs). We’ve been receiving calls over the past few weeks from gift officers questioning if, how, and when the declining interest rates in the economy will affect CGAs. Our client organizations are asking, should they be promoting gift annuities at current rates – so donors can “get in” before an overall reduction in payout rates?
That’s a great question and something worth talking about.
Have Gift Annuity Benefits Peaked for Donors?
-It is no secret that the American Council on Gift Annuities (ACGA) recently increased its suggested maximum annuity rates. The new rates, which went into effect on January 1 of this year, marked the third increase in the ACGA rates in the last 18 months. At typical annuitant ages, the current rates are roughly 1.5% higher than they were in June 2022. For example, the ACGA rate for a 75-year-old annuitant was 5.4% in June 2022 and is 7.0% today.
The larger story is that today’s ACGA rates are the highest they’ve been in 15 years. What does all this mean for gift annuities?