(Bloomberg) – MetLife Inc., the largest U.S. life insurer, plans to separate much of its domestic retail business as Chief Executive Officer Steve Kandarian works to shrink the company amid tighter government oversight. The stock rallied in extended trading.
The insurer is weighing a possible sale, spinoff or public offering of the operation, New York-based MetLife said Tuesday in a statement. The new company would have about $240 billion of assets and accounts for approximately 20 percent of MetLife's operating earnings, according to the statement.
MetLife joins General Electric Co.'s finance unit in seeking to simplify operations after being designated by a U.S. panel as a non-bank systemically important financial institution, a tag that can lead to stricter limits on the balance sheet. Kandarian has sought to reverse that designation in court.
The retail business, as part of a SIFI, faces "higher capital requirements that could put it at a significant competitive disadvantage," Kandarian said in the statement. "Even though we are appealing our SIFI designation in court and do not believe any part of MetLife is systemic, this risk of increased capital requirements contributed to our decision to pursue the separation."
Share rebound
MetLife rallied 8 percent to $45.35 at 4:34 p.m. on the announcement, which was after the close of regular trading. The company had dropped 13 percent this year through Tuesday's close after slumping 11 percent in 2015.
MetLife would retain units providing workplace benefits and property-casualty coverage along with the corporate benefit funding division that offers pension and retirement products. Kandarian's company will also keep operations in Asia, Latin America, Europe the Middle East and Africa.