COVID-19 now seems more likely to hurt U.S. life insurers by depressing interest rates than by causing a catastrophic increase in life insurance claims.
Analysts from S&P Global Ratings gave that assessment Tuesday, at a webinar the rating agency organized to review the effects of the pandemic on insurers' earnings and capital levels.
The analysts produced a chart that 10 large life insurers S&P rates now use base long-term interest rate assumptions ranging from 2.25% to 5%.
Some life insurers are waiting to cut the base interest rate assumptions they use, to reflect falling U.S. Treasury rates, because the rates investment-grade companies were paying on bonds in first quarter were actually pretty high, the analysts reported.
The analysts expect many life insurers to wait until the third quarter to update their assumptions.
If rates stay low, "life insurers will just choose to sell products that are less sensitive to interest rates," Anika Getubig, an S&P associate director, said. "The consumer will just have to pick the highest of the low-rate offerings,"
In some cases, Getubig said, consumers may not find the highest of the low-rate offerings to be acceptable, and sales may fall.