Industry consolidation, calls for federal
oversight, and unexpected savings incentives in the Bush budget may signal
significant changes ahead for the life sector.
By Jennifer C. Rankin
Change is in the air. So what
else is new? After all, the life insurance industry has coped with everything
from convergence to globalization, a go-go market to a stocks freefall, and
executive greed to big layoffs during the past decade. What’s different now?
In a word, lots. Surprising
M&A announcements from large, well-established companies. Stunning—dare we
say shocking—proposals from President Bush for new savings programs, and
behind-the-scenes maneuvers by both proponents and opponents of federal
oversight.
Let’s start with industry
consolidation, which was arguably the No. 1 news topic of 2003 and still is four
months into the new year.
Merger and acquisition activity
picked up in 2003 after several relatively quiet years and analysts believe
there will be even more M&A transactions in the year ahead. According to
Thomson Financial, the value of M&A deals worldwide grew 131 percent in 2003
compared to 2002 with virtually all of the growth coming in the U.S. markets.
Activity soared in the country’s life/health sector, up 545 percent in 2003
compared to 2002.
What’s driving the recent wave
of consolidation? According to a recent Standard & Poor’s commentary, a
major factor is the improving economy. Rising interest rates benefit spread
businesses such as insurance. Healthier stock markets help equity-based products
such as variable life and annuities and 401(k)s. Decreasing credit defaults
protect corporate balance sheets. All of these factors contribute to a company’s
valuation and, hence, its attractiveness as a potential acquisition.
Which companies fit the buyer
profile? Kevin Ahern, director in Standard & Poor’s insurance sector,
names Manulife, Prudential, BankOne, AXA, RGA, Great-West, and AIG as good
examples of large companies well positioned for growth. Many of them have
already purchased other insurance units or companies as part of an acquisition
strategy. Their shared traits include diversified operations, a capacity for
taking on additional risk, and enhanced financial flexibility because of
improved stock valuations.
The seller profile, conversely,
is typically characterized by small to mid-sized companies that lack financial
flexibility and have seen their income decline because of investment losses
sustained during the long bear market. A concentration in one line of business
can put them at a competitive disadvantage.
Another driver is demutualization.
The mutual form of ownership that historically dominated the life industry
tended to discourage consolidation, because it limited insurance companies to
cash acquisitions. Therefore, widespread demutualization was a prerequisite
before industry consolidation could really take off. Many companies have
demutualized during the past decade in anticipation of M&A activity. Prime
examples are Manulife, John Hancock and MONY. The conversion from mutual to
public stock ownership, however, is a double-edged sword. While it has given
insurers the ability to use stock to purchase competitors, it also turns
acquirers into acquisition targets.
Merge Ahead
The most talked about deal is
Manulife Financial’s acquisition of John Hancock in a stock-for-stock,
tax-free transaction that will give Manulife a market capitalization of about
US$ 24 billion, making it comparable in size to MetLife and larger than
Prudential Financial.
"We see this as a unique
strategic opportunity," says Manulife’s Dominic D’Alessandro, who will
serve as chairman and CEO of the combined company, "to combine two
exceptionally strong companies into a single, integrated, global market leader
whose scale and capital base will drive even greater growth and shareholder
value. The benefits of this transaction are many, strengthening our position in
each of our core businesses. The merger also enables us to create the largest
life insurance company in Canada and the second-largest in North America."
The companies announced the deal in September 2003 and, in February, John
Hancock shareholders gave their approval.
Analysts expect the acquisition
to close by mid-year. When it does, Manulife Financial will be the largest life
insurer in Canada, the second-largest in North America and No. 5 in the world.
If that wasn’t excitement
enough, the same month brought an announcement from AXA Financial that it would
acquire The MONY Group, a financial services leader that provides protection,
accumulation and retail brokerage products through advisory and wholesale
distribution channels. Like Manulife, AXA is betting that scale will enable it
to succeed in an increasingly competitive market place.
With US$ 458 billion in assets
under management, AXA Financial is the U.S. arm of French powerhouse AXA Group
and owns The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the U.S., AXA Advisors, LLC,
Alliance Capital Management, OP, Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., and wholesale
distribution company AXA Distributors, LLC. The global AXA Group is a worldwide
leader in financial protection and wealth management.
Facing shareholder opposition to
the deal, MONY announced in late February that it would delay until May 18 a
shareholder vote on the merger. Opponents believe AXA Financial’s US$ 31 per
share bid is too low and that the deal gives MONY executives a financial
windfall at shareholders’ expense.
Another big surprise was GE’s
decision to spin off its life and mortgage insurance operations in an initial
public offering (IPO) of a new company it has named Genworth Financial. The
conglomerate filed a registration statement with the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission in January and hopes to complete the IPO in the first half
of the year. GE plans to retain 70 percent ownership of the new company and to
sell about 30 percent of it in the IPO. GE will reduce its ownership stake over
the next three years as Genworth transitions to being a fully independent
company.
If all goes as planned, Genworth
Financial will have 5,640 employees, US$ 28.6 billion in assets, headquarters in
Richmond, Va., and offices in 19 countries outside the United States, according
to published reports. It will sell mortgage insurance and investment products as
well as individual life insurance, long-term care insurance, retirement savings
products, and group life and health products.
Why would a company so well
respected by consumers for product design and knowledgeable direct marketing
representatives choose to exit the business? Since taking the reins from Jack
Welch, Chairman and CEO Jeff Immelt has said repeatedly that he intended to
reduce the company’s exposure to the insurance business after taking a US$ 1.4
billion charge in 2002. He intends to reduce GE’s insurance business from 40
to 15 percent of its overall financial services assets, which now total US$ 500
billion. This is a real loss for consumers and potential big win for rivals
interested in acquiring a well-managed block of business once the carve-out
settles into the market place.
Another major industry carve-out
is Fortis NV’s divestment of Assurant, its U.S. insurance arm, which has
operated as a standalone entity for more than a decade. Fortis is a
Dutch-Belgian financial services giant. Assurant sells health insurance,
funeral-related insurance, benefits insurance, and other products.
Assurant stock made its debut on
the New York Stock Exchange in February as this year’s first billion-dollar
IPO. Assurant will not receive any proceeds from the offering and Fortis will
retain a 45 percent stake in the company after the IPO. Fortis CEO Anton van
Rossum says the IPO’s proceeds will be used to develop and expand Fortis’s
core operations.
What purpose do these carve-outs
serve? According to Wall Street Journal analysts, carve-outs are one of the
easiest ways for a company to pay off debt or to build other businesses. They
also help companies with capital management. How? Monetizing assets enables a
company to redeploy capital to faster-growing or more profitable businesses and
to generally improve its balance sheet.
Also exiting the life sector is
CNA Financial Corporation, the insurance arm of conglomerate Loewes Corporation
and the 4th-largest commercial writer in the United States.
In January, CNA sold its group
life and accident, short- and long-term disability, and certain specialty
businesses, excluding group long-term care, to Hartford Financial Services Group
for some US$ 500 million. One of the nation’s largest financial services
companies, The Hartford is a leading provider of investment products, life
insurance and group benefits, auto and homeowners products, and business
property/casualty insurance.
In February, CNA sold its
individual life insurance business to Swiss Reinsurance Company’s Life &
Health America, Inc. for about US$ 690 million. The sale included term,
universal and permanent life insurance policies and individual annuity products,
but excluded the individual long-term care and structured settlement businesses.
Swiss Re also bought CNA’s Nashville, Tenn.-based insurance servicing and
administration operation.
According to Stephen W.
Lilienthal, chairman and CEO, the sales will enable CNA to focus solely on its
core business—property/casualty insurance—and move forward on the new
capital plan he announced to the media this past November.
The acquisition also bolsters The
Hartford’s strategy to increase the scale of its group life and disability
operations and to expand its distribution capability. "The Hartford will
continue to pursue strategic acquisitions to add to our current
operations," says Ramani Ayer, chairman and CEO. "We’re always on
the lookout, and when we find transactions that make economic sense and bolster
earnings, we will seize the opportunity."
When will the merger mania slow
down? Perhaps not for quite a while. According to Bernstein Research, the life
industry still has lots of room for consolidation. The industry’s top 10
companies control about one-third of industry assets. In the commercial banking
industry, the top 10 companies control two-thirds of the assets; in the
securities brokerage industry, the top 10 companies control 99 percent of the
assets.
Speed Limit
If the challenge of acquiring or
being acquired isn’t enough for industry executives, they can always worry
about regulation. Calls for an optional federal charter have heated up, and
federal oversight is an issue that simply will not go away, much to the chagrin
of smaller insurers, state insurance commissioners, and state governments.
The states have regulated
insurance for 150 years. Under state regulation, most insurance writers must
register in each and every state in which they want to do business. This is
expensive and time-consuming for companies that want to do business nationally.
Major life insurers continue to
push—thus far, unsuccessfully—for an optional federal charter to simplify
nationwide filing of products and licensing.
What’s new in the debate is
that proponents of a state regulation have gotten feisty in recent months,
launching a public relations campaign on Capitol Hill and working hard to speed
up the passage of model bills that address insurance company concerns.
Why all the activity? The
National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) is increasingly worried
about the likelihood of Congress introducing a bill this year that advocates
some form of federal oversight. In a National Underwriter interview, NAIC
President Ernst Csiszar, South Carolina Director, said, "The urgency is
immediate and to wait until the original 2008 timetable in the NAIC’s
statement of intent is not realistic. The market moves too fast. The message is
to get going."
The NAIC statement of intent to
which Csiszar refers sets a goal of at least 30 states or states representing 60
percent of the premium volume, enacting the compact legislation by year-end
2008. One of his big goals for 2004 is to establish standards for an interstate
compact for life insurance products. The goal of the compact is uniformity,
which is necessary to streamline—read that, speed up—state regulation. In
short, the best defense is offense. To that end, the NAIC recently launched the
Alliance for Sound State Uniform Regulatory Efficiency (ASSURE) program, an
organization that promotes the benefits of state-based regulation.
In the past, leading life
insurers have relied on the American Council of Life Insurers (ACLI) to press
their case. Like their opponents, they have become increasingly proactive in
recent months, speaking out publicly on the federal oversight issue. In fact,
several companies—including Principal Financial, Aegon, Mass Mutual and
Lincoln National—released statements to the media in late 2003 and early 2004
outlining their support for an optional federal charter.
Speed-to-market is the pivotal
issue. In a December 2003 interview with the Des Moines Register, Merle
Pederson, group vice president of government relations, Principal Financial,
said, "Our 401(k) plan looks and feels just like Wells Fargo’s or
Fidelity’s. Yet, Wells Fargo and Fidelity can move faster because they do not
have that extra layer of oversight by the 50 states."
Another issue is agent licensing,
which has become a major burden for producers who increasingly do business in
multiple jurisdictions. The relentless scrutiny of life insurance tax issues in
Congress and at Treasury, too often based on misinformation, is another
challenge, according to a February e-briefing from Insurance News Net. "The
recent firestorm over corporate-owned life insurance may never have happened had
there been a federal insurance department that could have provided assurances
that any alleged abuses were based on a legal landscape that no longer exists.
And a federal insurance department may have been able to persuade Congress that
variable annuities should receive the same treatment on dividend taxation as
other investment products."
Various trade groups are
clarifying their positions in the debate, as well. The board of the National
Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors (NAIFA) is taking lots of heat
for aligning itself with backers of an optional federal charter. In a January
press release, Randy R. Kilgore, NAIFA’s president, said, "While NAIFA
stands by its support of state regulation, the changing dynamics of the
financial services industry in the 21st century compels us to be open-minded to
all promising options to improve the regulation of the industry." NAIFA
supports the establishment of a federal producer’s license, the creation of an
office for an insurance advocate within the federal government, and a single
point of filing for insurance products.
The ACLI immediately applauded
NAIFA for strengthening its position on insurance regulatory reform. "This
marks a very important step in the march toward a better regulatory structure
for consumers, agents and companies," said ACLI President and CEO Frank
Keating. "Exclusive state regulation of an industry as large and diverse as
ours is an anomaly. In this era where companies compete not only against each
other, but against banks and securities firms and international financial firms,
the state-based system does not work for everyone. That said, both the ACLI and
NAIFA expect the state to maintain a very significant role in insurance
regulation. Companies and agents can and will choose to remain state
regulated."
Insurance regulatory reform,
then, will be a top industry issue this year. According to the Insurance
Chronicle, the debate appears to be settling on a choice between two options as
to the federal government’s role in regulating the industry: the establishment
of a federal level of insurance regulation with an optional federal charter for
insurers operating on a national basis, or the establishment of federal
guidelines by Congress that would be enforced at the state level.
New Directions?
Another surprising twist in the
life insurance sector is President Bush’s involvement in tax-friendly savings
vehicles. The nation’s staunchest proponent of Republican values, the
President is obviously pro-business. But he has some very specific ideas about
giving Americans tax breaks—ideas that strike at the heart of the life
insurance, annuity, and pension industries. Consequently, industry executives
and lobbyists have spent much time on Capitol Hill to protect their turf.
In 2001, the Bush administration
repealed estate taxes and the President has signaled his intention to lobby for
permanent repeal. The administration also pushed through tax cuts on dividends
and capital gains. And the President is trying to sell, for a second time, the
special tax-free savings accounts that legislators rejected in his proposed 2003
budget.
In February, the U.S. Treasury
Department announced that President Bush has included four new savings programs
in his 2005 budget. The programs would create lifetime savings accounts (LSAs),
retirement savings accounts (RSAs), employer retirement savings accounts (ERSAs),
and individual development accounts (IDAs).
The President wants to simplify
the existing web of tax-preferred savings accounts for retirement, health care,
and education. According to the Treasury, the plan makes saving simple for
everyone and for every purpose. Under the plan, existing tax-favored accounts—including
IRAs, education savings accounts, and 401(k)s—would be replaced by Bush’s
proposed accounts:
--Lifetime
savings accounts. An all-purpose savings account for augmenting retirement,
health care, education and emergency needs. Each taxpayer could contribute up to
US$ 5,000 per year in after-tax dollars. Contributions would be taxed, but gains
would not. Investors could withdraw the money at any time for any purpose
without paying taxes.
-- Retirement savings accounts.
Dedicated solely to retirement savings. Each taxpayer could contribute up to US$
5,000 per year under contribution and distribution requirements that are similar
to those for Roth IRAs. Withdrawals taken after age 58 would be tax-free.
-- Employer retirement savings
accounts. Only employers could contribute to these accounts, which follow
existing rules for 401(k) plans, subject to certain simplification of the rules,
with employees able to defer up to US$ 13,000 annually in wages, with the amount
increasing to US$ 15,000 in 2006. Contributions would be tax deductible and
withdrawals at retirement would be taxed as ordinary income. Conversions from
existing IRAs and defined contribution plans to the new savings accounts are
outlined in the budget proposal. Defined benefit plans are unaffected. According
to the National Underwriter, the Bush proposal calls for ERSAs to replace
401(k), SIMPLE, 403(b) and 457 plans. Most of the proposed changes would
simplify the accounts for their sponsors.
-- Individual development
accounts. These are aimed at low-income and moderate-income taxpayers. The
government would provide up to US$ 500 in dollar-for-dollar matching
contributions for the poorest individuals.
No existing tax-sheltered
accounts would be cut, though most would be ineligible for new contributions.
State 529 college savings plans and health savings accounts (HSAs) would be
unaffected.
Support is building for the Bush
proposal. In a statement supporting these expanded savings opportunities, Gordon
Bernhardt, CFP, CPA, and chairman of the Financial Planning Association’s tax
subcommittee, said, "It is estimated that 70 million Americans do not
currently have an individual retirement account or a 401(k) plan. This proposal
holds the promise of simplicity and universality. It would provide all Americans
with increased opportunities to save and invest."
The American Society of Pension
Actuaries (ASPA) also has come out in support of the Bush savings initiatives,
saying they will result in greater retirement plan coverage and, consequently,
greater retirement savings for working Americans. The ASPA lobbied hard to
ensure that the new proposals would expand workers’ savings options while
still maintaining the necessary incentives for small business owners to provide
employer-sponsored retirement plans to workers. Its work with the Bush
administration helped to reduce LSA and RSA contribution limits from US$ 7,500
to 5,000 and to retain important nondiscrimination testing flexibility, which
the ASPA believes are critical factors in promoting new small business
retirement plans.
In general, the life industry
opposes these plans. For starters, the lack of restrictions on LSAs means many
savers would place their money in LSAs first. In an interview with Insurance
News Net’s Thomas A. Fogarty, Principal Financial CEO Barry Griswell said,
"[These plans] would turn the life insurance industry on its head."
All of these moves have the
potential to siphon money from insurance products and usurp the traditional role
of the insurance company. Retirement products—among them, annuities, 401(k)s,
defined benefit pension plans, and IRAs—have long been the bailiwick of
insurance companies. Even life insurance, the primary function of which is to
protect families from economic catastrophe when a wage earner dies, enables
policyholders to save for heirs and for unexpected expenses. All of these
products have enjoyed tax advantages for years—advantages that made them more
appealing to consumers than less tax-friendly investments.
Life insurers are tired of being
passed over when tax cuts are handed out. Estate tax repeal has hurt insurance
sales. Tax cuts on dividends and capital gains were not extended to variable
annuities. And, if Congress authorizes LSAs and RSAs, the life industry will
take yet another hit. These tax issues have contributed in a big way to the
federal oversight debate.
The ACLI, while commending the
President’s emphasis on savings, is especially concerned about LSAs, which it
emphatically opposes. In an Insurance Chronicle analysis, ACLI president Frank
Keating said, "The LSA effectively is a consumption account and I think all
of us know we consume enough, thank you. And they will shortchange retirement
savings and lifetime savings, the 30-year savings." Keating believes
Congress should incentivize insurance products by not only allowing tax-free
inside build up, but also tax-free withdrawals. He believes Congress should
support further tax incentives for long-term payout products, such as lifetime
annuity payout accounts (LAP), which the industry continues to propose. And he
supports mandatory private savings, which many other countries have.
There are obstacles in the Bush
administration’s way. Analysts say growing concern about the country’s
budget deficit, a short congressional year due to the presidential election in
the Fall, and the lack of outside support could derail momentum for the savings
plans.
The life industry, then, is at a major crossroads
this year. Resource expects significant acquisition activity, significant
movement on federal oversight, and significant progress on tax-friendly products
that will threaten the industry’s competitive position. As always, we will
keep you posted as events unfold.