Subscribe

Jackson temporarily shuts off access to Stattman fund in VAs

Jackson National Life Insurance Co. has temporarily closed off access to the JNL/BlackRock Global Allocation fund option in the carrier's variable annuities.

Jackson National Life Insurance Co. has temporarily closed off access to the JNL/BlackRock Global Allocation fund option in the carrier’s variable annuities.
The announcement, which was made to advisers on Feb. 22, comes less than five months after the insurer added a $600 million clone of the fund — one of the most popular mutual fund picks of financial advisers — to its lineup. The master BlackRock Global Allocation fund, which has roughly $51 billion in total assets, is managed by Dennis Stattman.
Jackson also submitted a filing to the Securities and Exchange Commission on Feb. 22 detailing the closure.
The fund, officially referred to as the BlackRock Series Fund Inc., won’t accept any additional allocations or transfers, including any automatic transfers related to re-balancing or dollar cost averaging. Advisers have until April 22 to select a replacement if they have any automatic transfers scheduled to go into the fund, according to the filing.
Advisers can also move money out, but won’t be able to return until the fund has reopened, according to the SEC filing.
Pending contracts with money allocated to the JNL/BlackRock Global Allocation fund will instead be allocated into the JNL/Select Money Market fund.
For now, access to the JNL/BlackRock Global Allocation fund is being closed because additional shares in its master fund, the BlackRock Global Allocation fund, are unavailable, according to the filing with the SEC.
The closing is temporary, according to the filing, and affects the Perspective II, Perspective L Series, Perspective Advisors II, Retirement Latitudes and Perspective Rewards annuity contracts.
Jackson’s spokesman Andrew Silver was unavailable to provide further information.

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Stuck in the middle

Newly elected Finra board member whose firm is connected to a bribery scandal says the matter should have no effect on his ability to serve.

Fighting for market share in the LTC business

A handful of publicly held life insurers dominate the market for traditional long-term-care insurance, but mutual life insurers are beginning to make inroads with agents and financial advisers.

Breaking up is hard to do – especially with annuities

When a client came to his office bearing her new divorce decree, adviser Dale Russell became the bearer…

Longevity insurance promising – but higher rates would help

The Treasury Department and the Internal Revenue Service like it, as do many estate-planning experts. Now all…

Long-term care: Cutting back coverage

When a 74-year-old client visited Ellen R. Siegel six years ago with news of an upcoming 12% rate increase on the premium of her long-term-care insurance, the adviser knew she had to navigate the potential benefit cuts with the precision of a surgeon.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print