The world, the stock market and banks went through some things in the first quarter. Accounting rules made life insurers put estimates of future fluctuations in the value of assets and benefits in current earnings, and that made some life insurers' net income figures look awful.
Lincoln Financial, for example, reported a $909 million net loss for the first quarter, but $260 million in adjusted income from operations, and $883 million of the net losses were the result of the "mark to market" account rules.
Sales were generally great, and investment portfolios muddled through with lower asset values but with low default rates and wider spreads between the annuity issuers' cost of money and what the issuers could earn on their own assets.
Marc Rowan, CEO of Apollo Global Management, the parent of Athene Holding, which has rapidly become a major writer and reinsurer of annuities, described 2022 as the best year in Athene's history. "This year, I expected to be better, and it has started even stronger," he told analysts during a call Apollo held to go over its results for the first quarter. "Every metric worked."
Fixed annuities are now paying rates of about 5%; bank certificates of deposit are paying about 2%. Consumers prefer earning 5% to earning 2%, and "it's not more complicated than that," Rowan said.
Kevin Hogan, CEO of Corebridge Financial, said conditions for fixed annuity sales continue to look great to him.
"We have not seen anything to suggest margin compression," he said. "We continue to see very attractive new business margins."
But Hogan and Rowan, like other CEOs and chief financial officers at publicly traded annuity issuers, spent much of their companies' conference calls trying to persuade the analysts that life insurers can outlast the volatility.
What It Means
Top executives at the companies supporting your clients' life insurance policies and annuity contracts see at least as much fear in the eyes of securities analysts, and the analysts' clients, as you see in the eyes of many of your clients.
The Fear
Laura Prieskorn, CEO of Jackson Financial, cited an Employee Benefit Research Institute survey data showing a significant drop in the confidence that Americans feel about having enough money to live comfortably in retirement.
Those survey results demonstrate the need for annuities, Prieskorn said.
"Two-thirds of retirees prioritized income generation over maintaining wealth during retirement," she said.
5 Reasons to Come Out From Under the Bed
Analysts and investors would like to see life insurers continue to generate income, not just to increase product sales.
Here are five types of arguments that life and annuity executives have been making in the past week to give the analysts hope.
1. Life insurance companies are not banks.
Equitable had Robin Raju, its chief financial officer, try to ease fears that life insurers might go through the same kind of implosion that First Republic went through by giving analysts a quick tutorial on how life insurers are different from banks.