Randal J. Freitag
Analyst · FBR
Thank you, Dennis. Last night, we reported income from operations of $322 million or $1.09 per share for the second quarter. It was an excellent quarter that again demonstrated our ability to generate strong and improving results in the face of a challenging environment. Strong results across all 4 businesses were boosted by our alternative investment portfolio, which added 20 million to the quarter's results. Adjusting for this, normalized earnings came in at $1.03 per share. Looking at key value drivers. Normalized operating return on equity of 11.3% and book value per share growth of 5.3% continued to perform very nicely. Operating revenue growth of 1.5% was muted as the daily average S&P grew only 2.4% year-over-year, while net investment income growth was negatively impacted by the interest rate environment. Normalized operating EPS growth of 12% was helped by crediting rate actions in the Life, Annuity and Retirement businesses, which largely offset the decline in our earn rates; tight management of baseline expenses, that is expenses excluding strategic investments, which grew 3% year-over-year; and capital management as we repurchased 6.5 million shares during the quarter for a total investment of $150 million. All in all, a very, very good quarter. Turning to net income. We reported income of $324 million or $1.10 per share. Net income benefited from a small net realized gain resulting from a positive NPR adjustment, which was offset by RMBS and CMBS related impairments, mark-to-market adjustments on trading securities and VA hedge performance. After tax impairment and other net realized losses of $33 million were consistent with the levels we have seen in preceding quarters. The VA hedge program continued to perform very well, particularly in a volatile quarter with assets associated with the hedge program exceeding the liability by $450 million at the end of the quarter. In my opinion, no single statistic better exemplifies that our program is uniformly recognized as a leader in the industry and its ability to continually develop and grow the assets required to fund the liability for the guaranteed benefits that we issued. Before turning to segment results, let me comment on a couple of items, starting with the impact of today's interest rate environment. Previous guidance, which assumed a 10-year treasury rate of 2% was for an earnings impact of $50 million, $100 million and $150 million in 2012, 2013 and 2014, respectively. Our revised guidance, which is based upon today's treasury rate environment and which includes actions that we have taken on credit rates, our new business pricing and which incorporates our actual experience for the first half of 2012 is for a smaller impact over the same period of approximately $10 million for the remainder of 2012, $75 million in 2013 and $140 million in 2014, representing a 25% reduction from the $300 million 3-year total of the previous guidance. I'd attribute most of the improvement in the projections to the actions that we've taken around credited rates and good performance in the investment portfolio. Looking forward, while in the Life and Retirement business we are essentially out of room to cut crediting rates further, I do anticipate that there is room for further management actions to mitigate the bottom line impact primarily through expense management in the investment portfolio, where we have capacity to take on more risk after an extended period of risk reduction. My previous guidance are no near to midterm impact on statutory capital remains unchanged by today's rate environment. As a reminder, we have estimated and continued to estimate an impact of up to $500 million in the second half of a 10-year period of low rates. Looking at expenses. G&A grew $28 million or 7.7% from the second quarter of 2012 with approximately 60% of the growth attributable to strategic investments that we are making across the company, with a focus on the Group Protection and Retirement businesses. Of course, the positive impact of those investments can be seen in the results, with strong sales growth in both businesses driven by investments in distribution and technology. Moving forward, we will continue to manage baseline expenses very tightly, while growth at strategic spending will level off as we exit 2012. Turning to segment results and starting with Annuities. Reported earnings for the quarter were $158 million or $146 million normalized due to better-than-expected alternative investment income and a favorable stack adjustment. Returns in the Annuity business were very strong, with an ROE of 20.4% and an ROA of 70 basis points. Interest spreads remain strong in the Annuity business. Looking forward, the Annuity business continues to have ample room for further crediting rate cuts. As a result, I expect little pressure on economic interest spreads with any decline due primarily to new business that we'll put on with lower required interest margins. I made this point last quarter, and I'll make it again: when operated in a responsible and disciplined way, which is our approach, the Annuity business is a high-return business, the value of which is not fully reflected in our share price. Retirement Plan Services produced another solid quarter, with earnings of $38 million or $34 million normalized, and strong returns, with an ROE in excess of 15% and an ROA of 37 basis points. Interest spreads decreased in the quarter by approximately 7 basis points relative to the first quarter as new investments brought down the earned rate. Looking forward, I'd expect to see spread compression of 20 to 25 basis points a year. We, of course, will not be standing still, and I fully expect that the strategic investments that we are making in the retirement business will fuel the growth needed to overcome the headwind of spread compression. Turning to Life Insurance. We reported earnings of $138 million or $132 million after normalizing for strong alternative investment results. As I noted in my remarks on the first quarter call, Life earnings growth this year is affected by the multiple reserve financing transactions that we did last year. Adjusting out the reserve financing impact, the current quarter's earnings grew by 5% relative to the second quarter of 2011. Interest spreads were relatively flat for the first quarter as incremental relief on credited rates offset a small decline in yield. Looking forward, I'd expect to see 10 to 15 basis points of spread compression per year in today's rate environment. The Group Protection had a very good quarter, reporting income from operations of $27 million or $24 million normalized. Net earned premium benefited from several quarters of strong sales and was up 8%. Non-medical loss ratio of 72.7% returned to the midpoint of our expected range, with all product lines experiencing a good quarter. LTD incidents and severity continued to perform within our expectations, and life mortality returned to a more normal level when compared to the first quarter. Our discount rate for new LTD claims remained at 4.25% during the quarter. I'd note that we lowered our rate to 4.25% back in the second quarter of 2011. This early movement on the discount rate should allow us to maintain this rate for the remainder of 2012. Today's rate environment would likely lead us to lower our discount rate 25 to 50 basis points in 2013, and we are taking this into consideration on the pricing of new and renewal business. Turning to the balance sheet and capital management. Life company capital remained level during the quarter at 7.6 billion, and RBC came in at approximately 500%. Cash at the holding company was just north of $800 million, including $300 million of debt proceeds that we will use in August to fund the debt maturity. We repurchased 6.5 million shares for a total cost of $150 million, bringing the year-to-date total to $300 million. As I noted during the first quarter call, I expect to exceed initial guidance for the year for $400 million of capital deployment. Given our belief that our share price remains significantly undervalued, we have a bias to skew capital deployment toward share buybacks. But we'd note that we will also can continue to take leverage over the organization when the opportunity arises. Let me wrap up what was a great quarter by noting that last week, Moody's affirmed our ratings and positive outlook, another indicator of both our positive past performance and the strength of our franchise as we move forward. With that, let me turn the call over to the operator for questions.