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Life Health > Running Your Business

Life, Health and Annuity Issuers Post Their Q1 Numbers

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Life and annuity issuers seemed a little quiet in the first quarter.

Was that because they were nervous about Washington, coping with asset management issues, or just too busy selling new annuities?

Investors are about to get new data, when the publicly traded issuers post earnings for the first quarter.

What it means: This is the time to find out whether insurers are saying the same things to investors that they’re saying to you and your clients.

Public companies: In the United States, dozens of life insurers, including giants such as New York Life and MassMutual, are “mutual insurers,” meaning that they’re owned by their policyholders.

Others are owned by individuals, families or small investor groups and are classified as “privately held.”

Mutual insurers and privately held insurers may prepare financial reports based solely on the statutory accounting principles rules used by state insurance regulators.

When insurers have more than about 2,000 shareholders, federal law classifies the companies as “public companies” and requires them to release quarterly and annual results prepared using the Financial Accounting Standards Board’s U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.

Most publicly traded life and annuity issuers must release their quarterly results within 40 days after the end of each of the first three quarters and annual results within 60 days after the end of the year.

The first quarter: Many banks have already posted their results.

UnitedHealth, the health insurance giant, put out its numbers last week.

Life and annuity issuers opened the curtains Monday, when Ameriprise Financial reported that “notable” growth in sales of registered index-linked annuities was strong and Globe Life said its life insurance sales were up 7%.

Executives from those companies and others hold analyst calls shortly after the companies announce their earnings. Financial professionals and other members of the public who want to know what the executives are saying can listen live on the web or listen to recordings later.

The calendar: For a look at when many big, publicly traded companies in the life, annuity and health sectors are expected to release earnings, see the list below.

April 16

  • UnitedHealth Group (UNH)

April 18

  • Elevance (ELV)

April 22

  • Ameriprise Financial (AMP)
  • Globe Life (GL)

April 24

  • Humana (HUM)
  • Molina Healthcare (MOH)

April 25

  • Principal Financial Group (PFG)

April 26

  • Centene Corp. (CNC)

April 29

  • CNO Financial Group (CNO)

April 30

  • Equitable Holdings (EQH)
  • Lemonade (LMND)
  • Prudential Financial (PRU)
  • Unum Group (UNM)
  • Voya Financial (VOYA)

May 1

  • American International Group (AIG)
  • Aflac Inc. (AFL)
  • CVS Health (Aetna) (CVS)

May 2

  • Cigna Corp. (CI)
  • Genworth Financial (GNW)
  • Lincoln National Corp. (LNC)
  • MetLife (MET)
  • Reinsurance Group of America (RGA)

May 3

  • Corebridge Financial (CRBG)

May 7

  • Brighthouse Financial (BHF)
  • EHealth (EHTH)
  • Oscar Health (OSCR)
  • Primerica (PRI)

May 8

  • F&G Annuities & Life  (FG)
  • Jackson Financial (JXN)

May 9

May 10

  • Abacus Life (ABL)
  • Manulife Financial Corp. (MFC)
  • Sun Life Financial (SLF)

To Be Announced

  • American Equity Investment Life Holding Co. (AEL)
  • Credit: Shutterstock

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