IRS Slashes Life Insurer Yield Benchmark

News April 22, 2024 at 01:54 PM
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Issuers of new bonds may be paying higher interest rates, but low rates on older bonds continue to hurt U.S. life insurers' investment performance.

The Internal Revenue Service reported on the pain Friday in Revenue Procedure 2024-20, a batch of guidance that will help non-U.S. insurers with operations in the United States fill out their income tax forms.

One item that non-U.S. life insurers need to file their taxes is U.S. life insurers' "domestic investment yield" for the previous year. That's the U.S. life insurers' total net investment income divided by their assets, according to a version of IRS Notice 89-96 posted by Tax Notes. In other words, the insurers' investment returns per dollar of assets fell.

The benchmark rate fell to 2.3%, down from 3% a year ago, and down from 10% in 1989, when the IRS first began publishing the benchmark, which helps non-U.S. life insurers compute how much net investment income they have that could be subject to U.S. federal income taxes.

What it means: U.S. life insurers are like institutional versions of the most cautious retirement income planning clients.

Because of investment philosophies and regulatory constraints, they focus mainly on using high-grade corporate bonds and other fixed income assets, such as mortgages and mortgage-backed securities, to create a low-risk stream of earnings.

The drop in the IRS domestic investment yield shows how difficult it has been for clients who would prefer to stick with bonds and other fixed-rate assets to earn a good rate of return.

The history: The IRS began publishing the domestic investment yield figures when overall interest rates were much higher.

At that time, the Federal Reserve and other world central banks were keeping rates high in an effort to fight inflation.

In the 1990s, after inflation cooled, rates began to come down.

Central bankers pushed rates down even more later, to try to nurse homebuyers, businesses and the stock market through the internet stock crash in 2000, the 2007-2009 Great Recession and the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Fed began raising rates two years ago, but many life insurers' overall portfolio returns are still falling, because of the maturation of high-paying bonds they bought decades ago and because of volatility related to investments in vehicles such as mortgage-backed securities and private equity funds.

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