Robin Raju, the chief financial officer at Equitable, wants to talk about the company's efforts to add lifetime income options to the nation's 401(k) plans.
He wants to talk about the value the company gets from its AllianceBernstein asset management arm.
But the conversation often turns to the rise of the U.S. individual registered index-linked annuity market.
Equitable created the modern U.S. market for RILAs, or variable annuities with crediting rates that depend on the performance of one or more investment indexes, rather than on the performance of funds that resemble mutual funds.
Equitable was the leader in the RILA market in the first quarter. Its RILA sales increased to $3.4 billion in the latest quarter, from $2.2 billion in the year-earlier quarter, according to LIMRA issuer survey data.
Why is the RILA market so strong?
Raju gave Wall Street securities analysts a short introduction to RILAs during a recent conference call that the company held to go over first-quarter results. Here are five things he said about the popularity of the products during the call and an interview afterward.
1. The products help clients prepare for retirement.
Raju said offering RILAs is a way to provide a solution that can protect a retirement saver against an adjustable level of investment market risk.
"We allow clients to still participate in the equity market but with downside protection," he said.
2. An issuer can use derivatives to handle exposure to changes in stock or other investment indexes.
Raju sees RILA products as "spread-based" products. That means that Equitable's results depend mainly on the difference, or spread, between the rates it's paying the annuity holders and the yields it gets on the portfolio supporting the annuities.