Sales of group pension buy-outs reached $3.8 billion in the second quarter 2015, a record for second quarter sales dating back to the early 1990's, according to a LIMRA Secure Retirement Institute sales survey.
Pension buy-out sales tend to be seasonal, with most of the activity occurring in the fourth quarter. Sales increased more than 700 percent in the second quarter of 2015 compared to prior year, due in part to Kimberly-Clark's group annuity conversion effective June 1, 2015.
"We've seen a big increase in small and medium sized companies that are looking to convert their pensions," said Michael Ericson, research analyst for LIMRA Secure Retirement Institute. "As a result, there is much more activity throughout the year, not just the fourth quarter."
For the last five years, the first two quarters of the year have seen an upward trend of pension buy-out activity. In the first half of 2015, 107 plan sponsors have converted their defined benefit (DB) pension plans into group annuity contracts. That tops the previous number of 95 contracts in the first half of 2012.
The number of contracts only tells part of the story. In 2012, corporate giants General Motors and Verizon transferred their group pension obligations to Prudential. Those two contracts resulted in a sales spike of $35.9 billion for that year. While two deals that big occurring in one year is an anomaly, a single "jumbo" deal can have a significant impact on annual pension buy-out sales.