American International Group (AIG) is reporting a $9.7 billion pre-tax operating loss for the second quarter, but the life and retirement business did fine, after adjustments.
AIG is reporting a $7.9 billion net loss for the second quarter on $9.4 billion in revenue, compared with $1.1 billion in net income on $13 billion in revenue for the second quarter of 2019.
About $8.4 billion of the operating loss was due to the sale of businesses outside of the life and retirement sector.
The company's life and retirement unit is reporting $650 million in adjusted pre-tax income on $4.5 billion in revenue, compared with $804 million in adjusted pre-tax income on $3.8 billion in revenue for the year-earlier quarter.
The individual retirement unit is reporting $550 million in adjusted pre-tax income on $1.3 billion in revenue, compared with $588 million in adjusted pre-tax income on $1.5 billion in revenue.
Although the life and retirement business was profitable, after adjustments, the decrease in earnings was "driven by private equity losses, continued spread compression and elevated mortality related to COVID-19," the company said Monday.
"Spread compression" refers to a narrowing of the gap between what an insurer pays holders of products such as annuities and what it earns on its own investments.
The full, unadjusted results for the life and retirement business include the effects of a $1 billion drop in the value of derivatives embedded in variable annuities, net of related hedges.
"Mark-to-market" drops in the value of derivatives do not involve loss of cash.
Here's what AIG said happened to net flows of assets for several individual retirement products, in the United States, between the second quarter of 2019 and the latest quarter:
- Indexed annuities: A $439 million inflow (down from a $1.1 billion inflow)
- Variable annuities: A $423 million outflow (compared with a $594 million outflow)
- Fixed annuities: A $703 million outflow (compared with a $79 million outflow)
Ameriprise Financial (NYSE:AMP)
Ameriprise is reporting $1.5 billion in net income for the second quarter on $2.7 billion in revenue, compared with $492 million in net income on $3.2 billion in revenue for the second quarter of 2019.
The annuities unit is reporting $155 million in pre-tax adjusted operating earnings on $583 million in adjusted operating revenue, compared with $129 million in operating earnings on $620 million in operating revenue for the year-earlier quarter.
The protection unit, which sells life insurance, is reporting $70 million in pre-tax adjusted operating earnings on $257 million in adjusted operating revenue, compared with $65 million in operating earnings on $259 million in operating revenue for the year-earlier quarter.
Here's what happened to cash sales of three types of protection products between the second quarter of 2019 and the latest quarter:
- Variable universal life and universal life: $41 million (down from $70 million)
- Term and whole life: $10 million (down from $11 million)
- Disability insurance: $32 million (down from $34 million)
Although the company's Riversource annuity unit increased operating earnings in the second quarter, company executives had bad news for financial professionals who have been counting on having a wide array of annuities to offer clients: Because of the very low interest rate environment, the company has stopped new sales of Riversource fixed annuities, and of new Riversource indexed annuities filed as non-variable products.
Jim Cracchiolo, the company's chief executive officer, said the company is now focusing on sales of a new structured annuity product, which offers purchasers limited protection against loss of principal.
Between sales of the new structured annuity contract and the company's main variable annuity product, "more than 50% of new Riversource annuity sales in the quarter were in products without living-benefit guarantees," Cracchiolo said. "As we progress through the year, we should increase that even further."