Principal Is Hoping for Congressional 401(k) Annuitization Help

The company won some pension risk transfer cases but let several big group life customers go elsewhere.

(Photo: Allison Bell/ALM)

Principal Financial Group Inc. posted $600 million in sales of the big group annuities that help employers shed defined benefit pension obligations in the first quarter.

Now the company is hoping Congress will help boost sales of group annuities, or group annuitization features, to 401(k) plans and other defined contribution retirement plans.

Renee Schaaf, the head of the Des Moines, Iowa-based life insurer’s retirement income solutions unit, talked about the federal 401(k) plan annuitization safe harbor fight Friday, during a conference call the company held to go over the company’s first-quarter earnings.

(Related: 7 Winners and Losers in 401(k) Deferred Annuitization World)

Congress is considering legislation  that could help employers reduce their potential exposure to legal liability when they pick providers of lifetime income options for their 401(k) plans.

A higher-profile proposal that would help multiple employers team up to sponsor retirement plans would help, too, but the annuitization safe harbor proposal is also very important, Schaaf said.

“We really believe that it’s in the best interest of Americans to have this kind of income guarantee available to them moving forward,” Schaaf said.

Earnings

Principal as a whole is reporting $452 million in net income for the first quarter on $3.7 billion in revenue, compared with $402 million in net income on $2.9 billion in revenue for the first quarter of 2018.

The company’s U.S. insurance solutions unit, which sells products such as life insurance, disability insurance, dental insurance and vision plans,  is reporting $111 million in pretax operating earnings on $1.1 billion in revenue, compared with $115 million in pretax operating earnings on $1 billion in revenue for the year-earlier quarter.

Commission expense at the unit increased to $96 million, from $84 million.

Individual life commission expense increased to $30.5 million, from $28 million.

Specialty benefits commission expense increased to $65 million, from $57 million.

Here’s what happened to sales of some of the products Principal sells, in terms of annualized premiums, between the first quarter of 2018 and the latest quarter:

At the group life unit, sales and overall revenue increased even though the lapse rate increased to 7.1%, from 4.7% in the first quarter of 2019.

Amy Friedrich, the head of the U.S. insurance solutions said, said the lapse rate increased because some larger “cases,” or employers, dropped their Principal group life policies.

“Keep in mind that, as we look at the business, we look at what rate we need,” Friedrich said. “We asked for rate increases.

The profitability of the group life block has been increasing, Friedrich said.

“So, I’m comfortable with any lapses that happened in the first quarter,” Friedrich said.

Analysts’ Perspective

Nigel Dally and Bob Huang of Morgan Stanley said in a commentary sent Friday that Principal’s results were in line with their expectations and should come as a relief.

We view Principal as a strong franchise operating in a challenging operating environment, where fee compression and challenges generating inflows have clouded the fundamental outlook,” the analysts wrote.

But Principal’s results were solid, and better than its results in the second half of 2018, the analysts wrote.

Resources

Links to documents related to Principal’s first-quarter earnings are available here.

Information about Principal’s earnings call recordings is available here.

Correction: An earlier version of this article gave an incorrect figure for Principal’s universal life and variable universal life sales for the first quarter of 2018. The company reported $45 million in UL and VUL sales for that period.

— Read What 4 Carriers Are Saying About Agents and Agent Compon ThinkAdvisor.

— Connect with ThinkAdvisor Life/Health on LinkedIn and Twitter.