Moody’s Sees Pent-Up Demand for Life and Annuity Deals

One factor: Accounting rules are pushing variable annuity blocks into private capital companies' hands.

(Credit: Allison Bell/ALM)

Low interest rates and new accounting rules may continue to push publicly traded life insurers to sell variable annuity blocks to private capital companies in 2021.

Bob Garofalo, a senior credit officer at Moody’s Investors Service, and other Moody’s analysts make that prediction in a new report on the state of mergers and acquisitions in the U.S. life and annuity markets.

Resources

Many life insurers turned away from M&A activity earlier this year, to focus on building capital, increasing liquidity and shoring up operations, the Moody’s analysts write.

Now, “as the economy recovers, we are starting to see a wave of deals, and we expect a high level of M&A activity will continue into 2021,” the Moody’s analysts write.

Life companies may want to free up capital by selling “non-core” operations, buying insurance technology companies, and increasing their focus on their core operations, or on products that are less vulnerable to low interest rates, the analysts say.

New accounting rules now require or encourage big, publicly traded life insurers to include adjustments for the estimated value of a variety of assets and liabilities in their quarterly and annual earnings.

Many life insurers for example, now routinely report quarterly net earnings and quarterly net losses over $1 billion, because of “mark to market” accounting rules for the hedging arrangements that life insurers use to pass interest rate, stock price  and currency exchange rate risks to other financial services companies.

(Related: Equitable Records $12 Billion in Hedging Gains)

Many blocks of business with apparent earnings volatility, due to mark-to-market accounting rules, generate strong, predictable cash flow, the Moody’s analysts write.

Many private capital companies face less concern about the effects of mark-to-market accounting on their earnings because they are privately held, the analysts say.

“This reduced transparency allows the firms to focus on long-term economic value, and has helped to drive an increased appetite for long-duration blocks with volatile earnings, such as variable annuity [blocks],” the analysts say.

The analysts say high stock prices have also spurred life and annuity sector M&A activity, by reducing what life insurers are paying for annuities where benefits guarantees are “in the money” — meaning that the subaccount earnings are below the guaranteed level of earnings.

When the cost of “in the money” annuity benefits guarantees is low, that makes it easier for life insurers and reinsurers to make deals, the analysts say.

In some cases, the analysts say, private capital companies may try to improve the performance of blocks of insurance business by using relatively new or risky investment strategies.

“When reviewing the investment strategies relative to the underlying liabilities, it is important to understand how much additional risk is being introduced to the investment portfolio and whether the policyholder is protected,” the analysts say.

If an insurer transfers responsibility for an asset-intensive block to a reinsurer, and the reinsurer defaults, or makes bad investments, the insurer that “ceded” the block may end up having to pay the promised benefits, the analysts say.

“The structuring of such deals is critical to managing longer term counterparty risk,” the analysts say.

The analysts say the climate for life and annuity deals could change.

“We are watching the pace of economic activity, cost of capital or changing hurdle rates and private capital’s continuing appetite for life insurance business to determine how sustainable M&A activity will be over the next 12 to 18 months,” the analysts say.

— Read 5 New Questions About Life and Annuity Deals in 2019on ThinkAdvisor.

— Connect with ThinkAdvisor Life/Health on FacebookLinkedIn and Twitt