Timothy Deacon
Analyst · Desjardins
Thanks, Tom, and good morning, everyone. Turning to Slide 12. We reported solid underlying net income of $1.05 billion in Q1, consistent with the prior year. Reported net income before notable items this quarter was $775 million, reflecting $220 million of market impacts, primarily related to yield curve movements in equity market and real estate performance below long-term expectations. Total reported net income was $465 million, which includes 2 previously disclosed items, a $165 million charge related to the completion of the BGO and Crescent acquisitions and $145 million provision for a previously disclosed proposed legal settlement. Turning to Slide 13. Total insurance sales increased 17% over the prior year to $1.7 billion. Individual insurance sales were very strong, reaching a record $1.2 billion in the quarter, up 32%, with growth largely driven by Asia across multiple markets, led by Hong Kong and Indonesia. Group Insurance sales were $552 million, reflecting continued progress in the U.S. with higher sales across all business segments led by medical stop-loss, commercial dental and the timing of large case sales in Canada. New business CSM grew by 6%, driven by the strong sales growth in Asia. Gross flows were up modestly, driven by higher fundraising from SLC, higher MPF sales in Hong Kong and higher group fund sales in India, tempered by lower volumes in Canada. In Asset Management and Wealth, net flows reflected outflows in the U.S. equity products by retail investors and institutional portfolio rebalancing at MFS. Turning to Slide 14. Sun Life Asset Management underlying net income of $265 million declined 3% year-over-year, largely reflecting the impact of catch-up fees and seed mark-to-market gains at SLC in the prior year, partially offset by higher fee income at MFS and net investment income in the Solutions and Other segment. Reported net income includes the final costs associated with completing the BGO and Crescent acquisitions at the end of March. Fundraising and deployment activity across the platform remained solid. Gross inflows were led by Crescent's flagship private credit strategies and BGO's European debt platform alongside continued institutional engagement in MFS, where gross flows were consistent with last quarter and included 12 new institutional mandates over $100 million. Net outflows were driven primarily by elevated U.S. equity redemptions at MFS. At the same time, ETFs, fixed income and SMA products continued to see growth with $2 billion in net inflows in the quarter. Sun Life Asset Management managed assets increased 7% over the prior year, reflecting strong fundraising and deployment at SLC, demonstrating the continued scale of the platform and growth in AUM from positive public equity market performance at MFS despite outflows. Turning to Slide 15. Canada underlying net income of $370 million increased 7% from prior year, reflecting higher fee income from higher AUMA and strong net investment results in the Asset Management and Wealth businesses, alongside solid performance in Sun Life Health and Individual Insurance. Reported net income of $87 million reflects the charge from the proposed legal settlement and market impacts from a flattening yield curve and lower equity and real estate performance. Canada's Wealth platform reached $261 billion in AUMA, up 12% from last year with strong retail adviser activity and market appreciation. Insurance sales declined year-over-year from a record in Q1 '25, which included a significant large case sale in Sun Life Health. Q1 '26 Sun Life Health sales remain above our historical quarterly average. In Individual Insurance, sales declined, reflecting lower participating life sales as we continue to focus on optimizing our product mix. Turning to Slide 16. Our businesses in the U.S. continue to build momentum. Underlying net income is up 6% from growth in medical stop-loss from strong premiums and cost discipline as well as solid contributions from in-force management supported by favorable investment results and insurance experience. Sales were solid across all businesses. Medical stop-loss sales increased 43% year-over-year, building from strong fourth quarter momentum and continued success in winning high-quality business in a hardening market. This reflects our disciplined approach to pricing and risk selection. In Dental, we continue to execute on our strategy to improve business mix, and we're seeing solid growth in commercial sales. The decline in premiums this quarter reflects the impact of our deliberate actions to reprice and, in some cases, exit underperforming Medicaid business. As expected, this is resulting in lower membership but an improving loss ratio. As part of this repositioning, the U.S. team remains focused on aligning expenses to the lower revenue base to improve profitability in the near term. Turning to Slide 17. Asia had another excellent quarter with underlying net income increasing by 23% over the prior year, driven by robust sales growth, lower expenses and higher investment earnings. Insurance sales exceeded $1 billion in the quarter with growth across most markets. Hong Kong individual insurance sales increased 75% with double-digit growth across all distribution channels and a 25% increase in agent count. Indonesia delivered 40% sales growth with higher margins generated by the strong momentum from the CIMB Bancassurance partnership. New business CSM grew by 23%, driven by the strong sales growth we've seen across Asia. CSM margins reflect increasing competition and the impact of regulatory changes. Turning to our capital position on Slide 18. We ended the quarter with a LICAT ratio of 143%, which decreased 14 percentage points over the prior quarter with 10% of the decrease driven by the BGO and Crescent acquisitions and the remainder from the impact of markets and lower reported net income. We delivered book value per share growth of 2% to $41.10 and maintained a financial leverage ratio of 23.2%. Total CSM of $14.7 billion increased 8% over Q1 '25, driven by strong insurance sales through 2025, which continued this quarter. These metrics underscore our continued financial strength and provide resilience in more volatile periods. Turning to Slide 19. In the quarter, we returned $0.5 billion to shareholders through common shareholder dividends, delivering a dividend yield of 4.2%. We also announced our intention to renew our NCIB, subject to regulatory and TSX approvals, enabling the repurchases of up to 10 million common shares, returning capital as market conditions permit. In addition, our Board approved a $0.04 increase to the quarterly common shareholder dividend. In closing, our first quarter results reflect the resilience of our diversified business model and the discipline we apply in the execution of our strategy and capital management. We delivered solid underlying earnings, continued progress against key businesses and maintained strong capital and balance sheet strength while returning $500 million to shareholders and preserving flexibility to invest for growth. These fundamentals provide a strong foundation for navigating ongoing market volatility, supporting our strategic priorities and delivering consistent progress towards our medium-term objectives. With that, I will now turn the call back to Natalie to begin the Q&A.