Steven Wevodau
Ahead of the Bell: Prudential Financial Inc.
POSTED BY STEVEN WEVODAU
Analyst cuts Prudential’s estimates, citing investment losses and potential need for capital
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Continued declines in equity markets and the potential for a capital raise — including offloading its joint venture with Wachovia Corp. — led an analyst on Monday to cut his earnings estimates and price target for insurer Prudential Financial Inc.
Citi Investment Research analyst Colin Devine cut his fourth quarter and 2008 earnings estimates because of “sub-par performance” from the company’s domestic variable annuity and 401(k) group pension businesses and continued declines in equity markets on fee based revenues.
“To be certain, Prudential has issues; a lot of them,” Devine wrote in a research note to clients.
Devine lowered his fourth-quarter earnings estimate to $1.54 per share from $2.01 per share, and his 2008 estimate to $5.95 per share from $7.40 per share.
Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters, on average, forecast quarterly earnings of $1.40 per share and $5.97 per share for the year.
Devine slashed his price target to $30 from $80, but raised his rating for the Newark, N.J. company to “Buy” from “Hold.” He said he believes the market has significantly over-discounted the company’s shares.
Prudential’s shares closed Friday at $21.70. In premarket trading Monday, the shares were down 35 cents to $21.35.
Devine said Prudential may need to raise capital by year-end, as many insurance firms have been hit hard in recent quarters by investment losses as the stock markets have sunk. It could consider monetizing the company’s nearly 25 percent stake its retail-brokerage joint venture with Charlotte, N.C.-based Wachovia, he said.
“We expect Prudential will attempt to either negotiate an early exit from the joint venture or potentially sell its stake to a third-party,” Devine wrote.
Steven Wevodau: Results of AXA Employee Share Offering in 2008
PARIS, Dec. 1 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — On August 18, 2008 AXA announced the launch of its 2008 SharePlan offering, a capital increase reserved to its employees worldwide.
Approximately 36,000 employees in 37 countries, representing 30% of eligible employees, subscribed to SharePlan 2008. The large number of employees who chose to subscribe represents a clear vote of confidence in AXA, its business model and its project Ambition 2012 to become the preferred company in its industry.
The aggregate proceeds from the offering amount to approximately Euro 460 million, for a total of more than 24 million newly issued shares, subscribed at a price of Euro 17.18 for the classic plan and Euro 18.43 for the leveraged plan(1). The new shares have been created with full rights from January 1, 2008. This offering increases the total number of outstanding AXA shares to 2,089 million as of November 28, 2008.
AXA’s employees investing in SharePlan 2008 will have direct voting rights at AXA’s general shareholders’ meetings and will thereby be able to directly express their opinion on the decisions driving the strategy of the AXA Group. Following SharePlan 2008, AXA’s employees hold around 5.84% of the share capital and 6.42% of the voting rights.
This press release is available on the AXA Group web site: www.axa.com
About AXA
AXA Group is a worldwide leader in Financial Protection. AXA’s operations are diverse geographically, with major operations in Europe, North America and the Asia/Pacific area. For full year 2007, IFRS revenues amounted to Euro 93.6 billion and IFRS adjusted earnings to Euro 6.1 billion. AXA had Euro 1,281 billion in assets under management as of December 31, 2007.
The AXA ordinary share is listed on compartment A of Euronext Paris under the ticker symbol CS (ISIN FR0000120628 - Bloomberg: CS FP - Reuters: AXAF.PA). The American Depository Share is also listed on the NYSE under the ticker symbol AXA.
POSTED BY STEVEN WEVODAU
Federal Regulation Unlikely In 2009, FDIC Says - Steven Wevodau
BY ARTHUR D. POSTAL
NU Online News Service, Dec. 1, 6:00 a.m. EST
WASHINGTON—Congressional approval of federal regulation for insurance appears unlikely for 2009, and an optional federal charter may never be created, the head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. indicated in a recent confidential briefing to American Insurance Association directors, National Underwriter has learned.
Indeed, if insurance is addressed at all next year, the focus of the incoming Obama Administration and federal banking regulators will be on the life insurance side of the business, not property-casualty, FDIC Chair Sheila Bair told AIA directors in an off-the-record briefing on Nov. 14. A copy of a summary of her remarks was obtained by NU and confirmed through other sources.
Meanwhile, Ms. Bair said that plans to create an optional federal charter may fall by the wayside in Congress, as the administration seeks to consolidate regulatory agencies, not create new ones.
She suggested that insurers seeking federal regulation might be better off finding a regulatory home within existing federal banking agencies.
“Re-regulation will favor fewer regulators at the federal level, rather than more, and it will be done in phases,” she said. “All current federal regulators have their hands full with the various bailout and stimulus packages that Congress has passed.”
Creation of a separate federal agency to regulate insurance is unlikely, she added, because “the last thing federal regulators need is to be distracted by turf fights among the four current federal regulators.”
Those in the p-c industry who want federal oversight in general, and a federal charter in particular, face a difficult uphill climb because their sector “is not in any financial trouble, and it is state-regulated, so it is not in the sights of those will be involved in federal financial services regulatory reform,” Ms. Bair explained.
Ms. Bair told AIA the p-c industry “may have to fight to get in the process and the [regulatory reform] legislation, and differentiate itself from the banks, if that’s what the AIA companies want.”
However, “in the long term, there seems to be consensus that it would be beneficial to Congress and the Treasury/Administration if there were insurance expertise at the federal level,” Ms. Bair said, according to the AIA summary.
Looking at the broader regulatory reform picture, Ms. Bair told AIA officials that dealing with an overhaul of financial services regulation will be delayed by the incoming Obama administration and Congress until 2010 in favor of tackling more urgent priorities. Moreover, it will be done in “phases,” she said.
She also told AIA members that the Obama administration will take the lead in drafting legislation overhauling regulation of financial services. During the question-and-answer session that followed, an industry lobbyist said that Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., chair of the Senate Banking Committee, and Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., who heads the House Financial Services Committee, will serve to “balance things out.”
Asked to elaborate on her remarks to the AIA, Ms. Bair, responding through FDIC representative David Barr, said that “since this was not a public event, we will not comment on the discussion.”
Blain Rethmeier, an AIA representative, would only say that “as with all our meetings, they are closed to the press, so I can’t give you any guidance on what she said.”
One industry lobbyist working on the future shape of insurance regulation cautioned that “nothing is set in stone, and this is just one idea.”
However, several life insurance lobbyists confirmed that as a result of recent direction as to how insurance might be regulated by the federal government, their companies are going back to the drawing board to determine what form of federal regulation would be acceptable, and which banking agency they believe would be their most appropriate federal regulator.
Jack Dolan, a representative for the American Council of Life Insurers, confirmed that Kim Dorgan, its chief lobbyist, recently told an industry strategy group that “Congress will be quite busy at the start of 2009,” and that an “OFC is likely not a top item on their agenda.”
However, Mr. Dolan added, “that does not mean it is a non-issue.” Moreover, he said, the “ACLI is still pursing an OFC.”
In her comments to AIA, Ms. Bair said the Obama administration’s priorities in 2009 will be:
• Regulation of mortgage-backed securities and credit default swaps.
• Standards for the mortgage lending industry and for all mortgage brokers/originators.
• Stronger disclosure rules for executive compensation and balance sheets.
Regarding the possibility of “systemic regulation” across industries, she said that would be “hard to conceptualize.” In theory, she said, “such a regulator would look at the systemic/liquidity risk of the enterprise and work with its functional regulators to address its financial problems.”
However, the current thinking is that such a regulator would be a backstop for financial services entities that cannot be allowed to fail, she added.
“It is anticipated that there would be a recovery/fee/assessment mechanism for any funds provided by backstop to such an entity,” she said.
On Nov. 24, President-Elect Obama said he will nominate Timothy Geithner, current president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York—which oversees the government’s bailout of American International Group—as Treasury secretary.
Ms. Bair told the AIA directors that AIG represents the first non-bank entity that is “too big to fail” as seen through a federal lens.
POSTED BY STEVEN WEVODAU
Angry Citi Investors To Unveil New Court Complaint - Steven Wevodau
NEW YORK (Reuters) - After Citigroup Inc (C.N: ) shares tumbled last year on the bank’s subprime mortgage woes, angry investors sued for fraud. Now, stockholders are due to file a new version of their lawsuit as their losses have become much more stark.
A lot has changed for the worse for Citigroup stockholders since the lawsuit about its subprime debt exposure was first brought in November 2007. The bank’s shares are trading at around $6 apiece compared with $31 a year ago — even after two government bailouts in the last two months.
The U.S. government this week agreed to inject $20 billion of capital and shoulder nearly $250 billion in potential losses on about $306 billion of the bank’s risky assets — after injecting $25 billion of taxpayer money in October.
A consolidated shareholder complaint in the case is scheduled to be filed in U.S. District Court in Manhattan by Monday. An earlier version accused Citigroup and several individuals, including former CEO Charles Prince, of violating securities law by artificially boosting the bank’s stock price by concealing its exposure to subprime-linked debt.
Citigroup believes the lawsuit “is without merit, and will defend against it vigorously,” company spokesman Mike Hanretta said on Tuesday.
The lawsuit, which seeks class-action status on behalf of a large group of stockholders, could be among the biggest subprime-related cases moving through U.S. courts, given Citigroup’s huge stock market declines.
The company was once the biggest U.S. financial institution based on stock market value, but shares have plummeted and are down 54 percent this month alone. Shareholder lawsuits can take years to litigate, and many are ultimately thrown out by courts or settled.
The lead plaintiff is a group of former employees and directors at closely held Automated Trading Desk (ATD) who received Citigroup stock in exchange for selling their electronic trading firm to the bank in a $680 million deal announced in July 2007.
Through that deal, group members acquired more than 3.9 million Citigroup shares, which were valued at about $52 a piece at the time the buyout was being negotiated, according to a January court filing from the ATD plaintiffs.
The group said its members had suffered losses of about $76.8 million as of January, a figure that is much higher now given Citigroup’s stock declines this year.
A lawyer for the shareholders, Ira Press of law firm Kirby McInerney LLP in New York, declined to comment about the specifics of the new court complaint, saying it is still being drafted.
“If last week is any indication, the story may still be unfolding,” he said. “We are obviously continuously monitoring the unfolding events.”
The original lawsuit was filed by an individual investor. Other shareholders have competed to become lead plaintiff, a role that allows investors to help set strategy in litigation and play a role in any possible settlement talks.
U.S. District Judge Sidney Stein, who is overseeing the case, appointed the ATD Group as the lead plaintiff in August.
POSTED BY STEVEN WEVODAU
Economy Shrinks At Fastest Pace In Seven Years - Steven Wevodau
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. economy contracted at its fastest pace in seven years in the third quarter as consumer spending plunged to a 28-year low, data showed on Tuesday, raising the specter of a deeper recession.
Separate reports showed U.S. home prices continued their downward spiral, with the cost of single-family homes plunging by a record 17.4 percent in September from a year earlier.
The data painted a dismal picture of the troubled economy and backed views the Federal Reserve could push benchmark lending rates to an unprecedented zero percent by early 2009.
“We are in the early stages of one of the worst recessions in the post-war period, even factoring in a massive stimulus program,’ said Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at IHS Global Insight in Lexington, Massachusetts.
The grim reports partially overshadowed the Fed’s announcement that it would use up to $800 billion to buy mortgage-related debt and consumer debt securities. The Dow Jones industrial average ended up 36.47 points at 8,479.86, after a choppy session.
U.S. government debt prices rallied, helped by a safe-haven bid fueled by the worsening outlook. The dollar, however, fell a third session against the euro, handing the European single currency its best three-day percentage advance ever.
The Commerce Department revised the annual rate of decline in third-quarter gross domestic product to 0.5 percent from the 0.3 percent that it reported a month ago. It was the sharpest fall in GDP since the third quarter of 2001, in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks.
Corporate profits dropped for a second straight quarter and business investment fell for the first time since the end of 2006, signaling a wariness about prospects for future sales.
Consumers, hard hit by rising unemployment and plunging home equity, held back and sent spending falling at its sharpest rate since the second quarter of 1980. Consumer spending accounts for two-thirds of economic activity.
Many analysts believe the United States already has joined Europe in recession, though it will take another quarter of contraction to meet a widely used definition for it — back-to-back quarters of declining output.
The third-quarter decline in GDP was a striking contrast with the second quarter’s relatively brisk 2.8 percent rate of growth. The U.S. economic decline is widely predicted to accelerate in the fourth quarter and last into 2009.
POSTED BY STEVEN WEVODAU
Department of Justice Will Not Challenge Formation of Consortium of Commercial Insurers
POSTED BY STEVEN WEVODAU
WASHINGTON, Nov 24, 2008 /PRNewswire - Proposal Could Result in Greater Competition for Large Commercial Insurance Policies
The Department of Justice announced today that it will not challenge a proposal by the Ivy Capital Group, LLC (Ivy) to form a consortium that will offer business insurance policies to large companies. The Department said that the formation and operation of the consortium is not likely to reduce competition and could offer a new competitive option for large commercial insurance policies.
Ivy has proposed forming Concepta Services LLC (Concepta) to offer large commercial insurance policies equal to or in excess of $250 million, by consolidating the capacity of commercial insurers that lack the capacity individually to offer large commercial insurance policies.
The Department’s position was stated in a business review letter from Deborah A. Garza, Acting Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Department’s Antitrust Division, to counsel for Ivy. Ivy is a Delaware limited liability company, the investors of which are principals in an independent firm that provides management and financial consulting services to Fortune 500 companies.
“The formation of Concepta is not likely to reduce competition in the sale of large commercial insurance policies,” said Garza. “To the contrary, Concepta may provide a competitive new option for those looking to purchase these types of policies.”
Ivy proposed forming and operating Concepta as a consortium that would allow commercial insurers to combine their insurance capacity to jointly offer large commercial insurance policies. Membership in the consortium would be limited to those insurers who do not have the ability to offer such policies on their own. Ivy represented that the likely Concepta participants currently generate no more than five percent of the total premiums from the sale of large commercial insurance policies in the United States, and that they do so by pooling capacity with other insurers. Jointly offering large commercial insurance policies through Concepta could be more efficient for these insurers than their current methods of offering such policies, including the use of reinsurance.
Under the Department’s business review procedure, an organization may submit a proposed action to the Antitrust Division and receive a statement as to whether the Division currently intends to challenge the action under the antitrust laws.
A file containing the business review request and the Department’s response may be examined in the Antitrust Documents Group of the Antitrust Division, U.S. Department of Justice, 450 Fifth Street, NW, Suite 1010, Washington, D.C. 20530. After a 30-day waiting period, the documents supporting the business review will be added to the file, unless a basis for their exclusion for reasons of confidentiality has been established under the Business Review Procedure.
SOURCE U.S. Department of Justice
Pennsylvania Insurance Commissioner Announces $40 Million Settlement With Deloitte & Touche LLP - Steven Wevodau
HARRISBURG, Pa., Nov 24, 2008 /PRNewswire - Litigation Recoveries at $145 million
Pennsylvania Insurance Commissioner Joel Ario, in his capacity as statutory liquidator for Reliance Insurance Company, announced today that the Insurance Department has finalized a $40 million settlement with Deloitte & Touche LLP in connection with the firm’s auditing services for Reliance.
“We have fought long and hard in this case, and we are pleased with this settlement,” Commissioner Ario said, adding that the goal in this, and prior actions, has been to maximize recovery for Reliance policyholders from its parent companies, management and outside professionals.
“This $40 million settlement will directly benefit Reliance’s policyholders. When combined with the $45 million previously recovered from the Reliance parent companies, as well as the approximately $60 million recovered from the settlement of actions against the company’s former officers and directors, the grand total of recoveries in the Reliance estate total nearly $145 million from litigation brought by the department,” Ario said.
In addition to this substantial recovery, insurance regulation now provides additional protections to minimize the risks associated with the auditing of insurance companies.
The department has been working through the National Association of Insurance Commissioners on new requirements related to auditor independence, corporate governance and internal control over financial reporting designed to promote the accuracy and reliability of financial statements filed by insurance companies.
Other key developments in financial regulation include strengthening risk-based capital requirements and adopting more stringent standards for actuarial opinions on the adequacy of insurance company reserves.
The department will continue working to develop and implement new tools for state regulation of insurance company financial solvency and to minimize the number and impact of insurance company insolvencies.
A copy of the settlement agreement can be found at the Reliance Documents Web site: www.reliancedocuments.com. Policyholders with questions in the Reliance liquidation estate should call (215) 864-4500.
The Insurance Department took statutory control of Reliance on May 29, 2001, under an Order of Rehabilitation, followed by an Order of Liquidation that October. On Oct. 15, 2002, the department, as the liquidator, filed a complaint in Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania against Reliance’s outside auditor, Deloitte & Touche LLP, and its appointed actuary, Lommele. This complaint was originally captioned as “Koken v. Deloitte & Touche LLP et al” (Docket No. 734-MD2002) and is now captioned as “Ario v. Deloitte et al.” Among other things, the complaint alleged claims for breach of fiduciary duties, professional negligence and the recovery of preferential transfers.
A Pennsylvania-based insurance company, Reliance was licensed to write insurance in all 50 states. The states with the largest number of policyholders included California, New York, Florida, Pennsylvania, Illinois and Texas. Reliance Insurance Company’s insurance business consisted primarily of workers’ compensation, commercial auto, commercial liability and personal auto coverage.
POSTED BY STEVEN WEVODAU
2008 - First Half Results - Steven Wevodau
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By Dr. Robert P. Hartwig, CPCU The property/casualty (P/C) insurance industry reported an annualized statutory rate of return on average surplus of 5.4 percent during the first half of 2008, down by nearly two-thirds from 13.1 percent during the first half of 2007 and by more than half from the 12.3 percent return for all of 2007. The sharp decline in profitability is partially attributable to a spillover of the housing and credit bubble collapse into the mortgage and financial guarantee segments of the property/casualty insurance industry. The decline in profitability was led by a substantial deterioration in underwriting performance in those two segments, pushing the first-half combined ratio up to 102.1, more than 9 points above the 92.7 combined ratio for the same period last year and 6.5 points above the 95.6 combined ratio for full-year 2007. Excluding mortgage and financial guarantee insurers reveals declines of a more modest and cyclical nature, with return on average surplus coming in at 7.6 percent (compared to 12.8 percent in first-half 2007). Net written premium growth, which turned negative in 2007 for the first time since 1943 (down 0.6 percent), continued on its negative trajectory, falling once again by 0.6 percent (-0.7 percent excluding mortgage and financial guarantee insurers). Policyholders’ surplus, a measure of capacity, decreased for the third consecutive quarter, down 2.5 percent to $505.0 billion as of June 30 from $517.9 billion at year end 2007. The results were released by ISO and the Property Casualty Insurers Association of America (PCI). |
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Mortgage and Financial Guaranty Lines Drive Underwriting Results, Obscuring Modest Cyclical Deterioration and Impact of Catastrophes Three key factors drove underwriting performance during the first half: the impact of the housing and credit crisis on mortgage and financial guarantee insurers and the resulting spillover into the overall property/casualty insurance industry sector’s financial results; the continuation of soft market conditions through much of the industry; and a surge in catastrophe losses. Each of these factors is discussed in detail below. Underwriting: Separating Mortgage and Financial Guarantee Impacts The first-half’s underwriting performance was influenced significantly by underwriting losses reported by many mortgage and financial guarantee insurers. While it is not unusual for results in any given quarter to be driven by the experience in a small number of lines or by a specific event (such as home and commercial property coverage after a major catastrophe), it is rare for lines that account for just a sliver of industry premiums to produce large-scale impacts on industry performance. The mortgage and financial guarantee lines—with $4.1 billion in net written premiums during the first quarter—accounted for just 1.8 percent of the $221.9 billion industrywide total. Nevertheless, according to ISO, the loss and loss adjustment expenses of this segment ballooned to $10 billion—an increase of 462.2 percent—propelling its combined ratio to an unprecedented 242.3 for the half compared to 74.1 during the first half of 2007. That was enough to add 2.9 points to the industrywide combined ratio, which finished the first half at 102.1—its highest level in six years. Cyclical Considerations Premium Growth Remains Negative Catastrophe Losses: First Half Total Exceeds All of 2007 Catastrophe losses during the first half of 2008 were fueled primarily by record-breaking tornado activity, severe hail and wind losses (apart from tornadoes). During the second quarter, the Midwest suffered its most severe floods since 1993—which cost private insurers $600 million. While flooding is not covered under standard home insurance policies, private insurers do cover flooded motor vehicles (provided the policyholder carries comprehensive coverage) and some businesses purchase protection on commercial structures along with business interruption and contingent business interruption losses in some cases. Private crop insurance is also commonly purchased. It is important to note that crop (agricultural) losses are not included in the official catastrophe figures compiled by ISO’s PCS unit. The losses have continued apace through the third quarter, historically the most expensive for insurers due to the fact that the peak of hurricane season occurs in September. The most significant catastrophe so far in 2008 was Hurricane Ike, which roared ashore in Galveston, Texas, on September 13 as a strong Category 2 storm. Official PCS insured loss figures were not available as of this writing, but by averaging the midpoint of independent catastrophe modeling firm estimates, insured losses from the storm appeared to total approximately $9.8 billion. If this figure holds, Ike will become the fourth most expensive hurricane in United States history. Ahead of Ike (stated in 2007 dollars) are Hurricane Katrina ($43.6 billion), Hurricane Andrew ($22.9 billion) and Hurricane Wilma ($10.9 billion). Because the range across all modeling firms’ estimates extends from a low of $7 billion to a high of $12 billion, Ike could potentially be ranked as the third most expensive storm in history. Much of the loss in Texas will be borne by the Texas Windstorm Insurance Association, which insures the majority of properties in the state’s coastal counties. Hurricane Ike was not the only severe hurricane of the year. Hurricane Gustav caused $1.9 billion in insured losses, according to PCS, when it struck the Louisiana coast on September 1. Investments The upshot of the volatility, according to ISO and PCI, is that the industry’s total investment gain slipped by 18.4 percent or $5.6 billion to $24.8 billion from $30.3 billion during the first half of 2007. Investment gains consist primarily of interest earned from the industry’s bond portfolio as well as realized capital gains and losses from investments, especially stocks. Contributing to the decline was a $1.1 billion realized capital loss compared to a $10.4 billion gain during the same quarter last year. Insurers realized $9.0 billion in investment for all of 2007. It is too soon to estimate realized investment gains or losses for the full year. Although markets were down further during the third quarter, they remain exceedingly volatile. Moreover, capital gains (and losses) are realized at the discretion of management. The last time insurers turned in an industrywide realized capital loss for a calendar year was 2002. Profitability and Capacity Net income after taxes (profits) during the first half of 2008 fell $18.8 billion or 57.4 percent from $32.7 billion during 2007’s first half. The decline is attributable to the previously discussed deterioration in underwriting and investment performance. Losses at mortgage and guarantee insurers are another key factor. Excluding those insurers would imply a smaller reduction in net income of 38.8 percent, according to ISO/PCI. Because profits fell more quickly than policyholders’ surplus, return on average surplus declined to 5.4 percent during the first half, down from 13.1 percent during the same period one year earlier and 12.3 percent for all of 2007. Excluding mortgage and financial guarantee insurers yields a return on average surplus of 7.6 percent during the first half compared with 12.8 percent in the period a year earlier. Policyholders’ surplus decreased in the first half by $12.9 billion, or 2.5 percent, to $505.0 billion from $517.9 billion at year-end 2007. The decline is the third consecutive quarterly drop in policyholders’ surplus, which recently peaked at $521.8 billion during the third quarter of 2007. The net $16.8 billion decline in surplus represents a reduction of 3.2 percent in the industry’s capital base. Surplus increased by 6.2 percent in 2007, 14.3 percent in 2006, 8.2 percent in 2005, 13.4 percent in 2004 and 21.6 percent in 2003, following declines in 2000, 2001 and 2002. The return to negative capital accumulation is attributable to several causes, the largest and most obvious being declining prices for financial assets. During the first half, insurers recorded unrealized capital losses totaling $18.5 billion in addition to $1.1 billion in realized capital losses. Some insurers also continue to return capital to shareholders through dividends and share buybacks. Share buybacks reached a record $23.2 billion in 2007. |
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The Global Financial Crisis: Implications for Insurers The credit crunch that began with the subprime mortgage meltdown in mid-2007 has precipitated a broader economic crisis in the United States and abroad that has challenged every industry in ways that were not foreseen a year ago—insurers included. The insurance industry’s financial performance in 2008 has been bruised by the bloodshed on Wall Street. That being said, insurance has remained the most resilient of the financial services segments. The scope of destruction arising from the nation’s credit crisis is both frightening and breathtaking. Amid the wreckage are all five of the nation’s investment banks—all highly levered institutions that made too many bad bets in risky subprime mortgages and related securities. Lehman Brothers, having survived innumerable crises over its 158 years of existence, filed for bankruptcy on September 15. Back in March, Bear Stearns was effectively bankrupt before the Federal Reserve agreed to take $29 billion in risky debt of its books while at the same time forcing it into the arms of JPMorgan Chase. Merrill Lynch saw the writing on the wall after Lehman’s bankruptcy and on that same day sold itself to Bank of America for about $50 billion—half its value of just a year earlier. With their stock under siege and their operating models badly damaged by the seizure of credit markets, the two remaining investment banks, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, successfully petitioned the Federal Reserve to convert to bank holding companies—effectively ending in a span of less than six months the Wall Street model that had reigned since the Great Depression. That was not all, not even by a long shot. The year has borne witness to some of the largest bank failures in United States history. The September 26 bankruptcy of Washington Mutual—with $307 billion in assets—was by far the country’s largest. On July 12, the government seized IndyMac Bank, with $32 billion in assets, ranking the collapse as the third largest (now the fourth) of all time. On September 29, Wachovia (the sixth largest US bank by assets) narrowly averted bankruptcy through an FDIC-assisted purchase by Citigroup. On September 7 federal regulators also seized Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the nation’s largest mortgage lenders, which collectively own or guarantee $5.4 trillion in mortgages—about half of the U.S. total. These events and many others persuaded Treasury Secretary Paulson, Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke and President Bush (not to mention presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama) that an emergency “bailout” plan was necessary in order to shore up shaky financial institutions, restore the flow of credit and avoid a total financial collapse. After much effort, the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 was put to a vote in the U.S. House of Representatives on September 29 but failed. The “Troubled Asset Relief Program” proposed within the bill would have created a mechanism for financial institutions to sell to the government as much as $700 billion in problem mortgage-related assets. The failure of the bill led to a drop of nearly 800 points on the Dow Jones Industrial Average—the largest drop in history. On a global scale, governments have worked to try to contain the financial contagion by injecting liquidity. In an unprecedented move on September 29, the governments of Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg nationalized Fortis, a bank and insurance conglomerate that is one of Europe’s largest financial institutions, with an injection of 11.2 billion Euros ($16.4 billion). Fortis suffered from its exposure to certain structured credit assets and a loss of confidence among investors. The AIG Rescue Package |
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Are Insurance Companies a Pillar of Strength in the Financial Services Sector? A case can be made that the property/casualty insurance industry has fared relatively well since the beginning of the global credit crisis in mid-2007. Investment portfolios are generally conservatively managed. Although AIG made big headlines when it appeared headed toward bankruptcy, insurance regulators throughout the United States and abroad made it clear that the insurance subsidiaries they supervise were solvent and that the problems arose in non-insurance operations. As discussed previously, there have indeed been severe problems at several financial guarantee and mortgage insurers. More fundamentally, insurance companies have avoided most of the problems of the investment banks and many other financial institutions because of their superior risk management model. Specifically insurers have done a better job of ascertaining and underwriting risks. Many banks “gave away the pen” and allowed mortgage brokers to peddle loans to people with increasingly poor credit characteristics. Because these mortgages could be pooled and sold as mortgage- backed securities, originators of mortgages had little or no “skin in the game” and consequently no stake in the long-term performance of the loan. This separation of underwriting and risk bearing contrasts sharply with insurers’ approach to underwriting and risk management. Insurer control over underwriting authority is much tighter. And although insurers spread risk through the use of reinsurance, they always retain some share of the losses. Insurers are also much less dependent on borrowed money than are banks and investment banks. Most of the major investment banks in the United States borrowed 25 to 30 dollars for every dollar they held in capital. Large debt burdens are uncommon in the insurance world. The reality is that throughout its nearly 200-year history in the United States, the property/casualty insurance industry has endured every conceivable economic circumstance and crisis and managed to persevere. Financial panics, deep recessions and war plagued the country throughout the nineteenth century and well into the first half of the twentieth. Since then inflation, stagflation, stock market bubbles and gyrating interest rates have made their presence known, but ultimately insurers have managed their way through each of these challenging periods. Experience has demonstrated that insurers, unlike banks, rarely run into deep financial trouble because of poor economic conditions. Instead, it is deficient loss reserves and inadequate pricing that historically account for the lion’s share of insurer impairments. |
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The Weak Economy and Credit Crunch: Implications for Insurers While the economy may have averted sinking into an official recession during the first half of 2008 (defined as two consecutive quarters of negative real GDP growth), a steady stream of bad economic news, from slumping home prices and sales to record oil prices to rising unemployment have begun to take their toll on the wallets and confidence of consumers and the businesses that depend on them. Some of the key impacts of the economic downturn for insurers are reviewed in the sections below. Exposure Impacts Frequency and Severity Impacts Apart from the subprime and credit crises, most of the discussion related to the economy, especially in recent months has centered on record high oil prices and rising inflation. Historically both have had significant impacts on the industry. Rising Energy Prices and Personal Auto Insurance Claim Behavior In 1973/1974 and again in 1979/1980, oil shocks sent gasoline prices to record highs—if it was available at all. People drove less and consequently were involved in fewer motor vehicle accidents. According to ISO Fast Track data records for the period coincident with the Arab oil embargo of 1973/1974, personal auto claim frequency for collision, property damage liability and bodily injury coverages fell by 7.7 percent, 9.5 percent and 13.3 percent, respectively. After the embargo was lifted and gas prices began to fall, claim frequency rebounded almost immediately, reaching pre-crisis levels within two to three years. Claim severity, in contrast, tended to increase after the oil shocks. The reason is that the increase in oil prices drove inflation for most goods and services higher, pushing up repair, replacement and labor costs. Medical costs and ultimately tort costs were also driven higher. The analogy between the energy price shock today and the 1970s is not a perfect one. Gasoline is available today, whereas that was not always the case during the supply crises of the 1970s. Congress also lowered the speed limit to 55 miles per hour in 1974 as part of the Emergency Highway Energy Conservation Act (authority to regulate speed limits on highways was returned to the states in 1995). The act contributed to the reduction in accident frequency. No such legislation is currently before Congress. |
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Summary Economic turbulence has had an impact on the financial and underwriting performance of the P/C insurance industry during the first half of 2008. The sharp decline in profitability is primarily attributable to a spillover of the housing and credit bubble collapse into the mortgage and financial guarantee segments of the property/casualty insurance industry. Excluding this segment reveals a much more modest decline in profitability more in keeping with the pace normally associated with cyclical downturns. Volatile investment markets also contributed to the decline. One continued cause for concern in 2008 is that premium growth remains in negative territory and is, in fact, severely negative on an inflation-adjusted basis. Fundamentally, however, the property/casualty insurance industry remains quite strong financially, with policyholders’ surplus close to all-time record highs. A detailed industry income statement for the first half of 2008 follows: |
First Half 2008 Financial Results*
($ Billions)
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Net Earned Premiums |
$217.7 |
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Incurred Losses (Including loss adjustment expenses) |
162.4 |
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Expenses |
60.2 |
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Policyholder Dividends |
0.7 |
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Net Underwriting Gain (Loss) |
-5.6 |
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Investment Income |
25.8 |
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Other Items |
0.2 |
|
Pre-Tax Operating Gain |
20.4 |
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Realized Capital Gains (Losses) |
-1.1 |
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Pre-Tax Income |
19.3 |
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Taxes |
5.4 |
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Net After-Tax Income |
$13.9 |
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Surplus (End of Period) |
$505.0 |
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Combined Ratio |
102.1** |
| *Figures may not add to totals due to rounding. Calculations in text based on unrounded figures. **Includes mortgage and financial guarantee insurers. Excluding these insurers the combined ratio was 99.2. |
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Fed increases lending to banks, investment firms - Steven Wevodau
CENTRAL BANK: The Fed said its net holdings of business loans over the week ending on Wednesday increased US$16.5 billion from the previous week
AP, WASHINGTON
Sunday, Nov 30, 2008, Page 11
The US Federal Reserve boosted its lending to commercial banks and investment firms over the past week, indicating that a severe credit crisis was still squeezing the financial system.
The Fed released a report on Friday saying commercial banks averaged US$93.6 billion in daily borrowing for the week ending on Wednesday.
That was up from an average of US$91.6 billion for the week ending on Nov. 19.
The report also said investment firms borrowed an average of US$52.4 billion from the Fed’s emergency loan program over the week ending on Wednesday, up from an average of US$50.2 billion the previous week.
The Fed said its net holdings of business loans known as commercial paper over the week ending on Wednesday averaged US$282.2 billion, an increase of US$16.5 billion from the previous week.
The central bank on Oct. 27 began buying commercial paper, the short-term debt that companies use to pay everyday expenses. It was one of a series of moves the Fed has made to try to unfreeze credit markets.
The report also said insurance giant American International Group’s (AIG) loan from the Fed averaged US$79.6 billion for the week ending on Wednesday.
That was down by US$5.6 billion from the average the previous week.
The reduction reflected a modification of the government’s support program for AIG earlier this month.
Under that change, the Treasury stepped in with a US$40 billion purchase of stock in AIG, using money from the government’s US$700 billion financial system rescue package.
The increased support from the Treasury allowed the Fed to reduce slightly the size of its total loans to AIG.
POSTED BY STEVEN WEVODAU
On Eve of Black Friday, Survey Suggests a Mixed Forecast for Consumer Technology and Media Sales
POSTED BY STEVEN WEVODAU
NEW YORK–(BUSINESS WIRE)–As the holiday shopping season approaches, six out of ten U.S. consumers intend to cut their spending in at least one area of communications and media entertainment – ranging from purchases of PCs, digital cameras, and music players to premium TV channel subscriptions and landline phone service – according to a detailed new survey of consumer sentiment by international management consulting firm Oliver Wyman. Only 21% of survey respondents plan to increase spending in at least one of the areas.
If this snapshot of consumer sentiment were to prevail over the next year, the overall impact for these sectors would be a 5-6% decline in sales, said Mark Teitell, a partner in Oliver Wyman’s Communications, Media, and Technology practice. Teitell directed the online survey of more than 500 adults across the country.
Sales of devices such as desktop and notebook computers, music players, and digital cameras are the most threatened, with over 50% of respondents reporting they plan to spend less on devices over the next year, which equates to about a 10% drop in sales. However, sales of next-generation devices are expected to increase: Blu-ray players by 140%, smartphones by 9%, and HDTVs by 3%.
In most device categories, promotional pricing would increase unit sales but not enough to justify broad discounts. Teitell noted that a discount of 20% could motivate a handful of on-the-fence purchasers to buy, but broad discounts might result in an overall decrease in sales revenue. “Price discounts should be used cautiously and targeted at on-the-fence purchaser segments when used,” he said. “There’s a risk of cannibalizing revenue from consumers already intending to make the purchase, without drawing sufficient new buyers to increase revenues overall.”
Subscriptions including broadband Internet access, mobile phone plans, pay-TV and content subscriptions such as Netflix are the most insulated from the economic downturn. 63% of respondents expect their spending to be about the same next year as it was this past year, and 9% plan to spend even more. Only 28% plan to spend less on network subscriptions. However, a 5% sales decrease is still predicted within this category, with premium TV channels being the most vulnerable; 22% of current subscribers said they are somewhat likely to discontinue premium channels to watch more standard pay-TV.
In the area of entertainment content, such as movies, TV shows, and video games, 36% of consumers intend to spend less, equating to a 5% sales drop. Of these entertainment categories, watching movies in theaters could prove to be most volatile, as it’s the most cited category among both respondents who plan increases and those who plan decreases in spending in entertainment.
“Consumers are being selective in where they pull back,” Teitell said. “Delaying the purchase of a computer, digital camera, or music player as a cost-saving measure is easier than canceling or downgrading a subscription for high-speed Internet access or a mobile phone data plan, which consumers may be contractually locked into.”
About Oliver Wyman
With more than 2,900 professionals in over 40 cities around the globe, Oliver Wyman is an international management consulting firm that combines deep industry knowledge with specialized expertise in strategy, operations, risk management, organizational transformation, and leadership development. The firm helps clients optimize their businesses, improve their operations and risk profile, and accelerate their organizational performance to seize the most attractive opportunities. Oliver Wyman is part of Marsh & McLennan Companies (NYSE: MMC - News). For more information, visit www.oliverwyman.com.
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