Guest guest Posted March 4, 2009 Report Share Posted March 4, 2009 While the general public is loudly applauding the new administration and the Democrats, here is what other people are saying... Administrator http://finance.sympatico.msn.ca/Investing/Brush/Article.aspx?cp-documenti\ d=18113329 The next big financial meltdown? The mortgage and credit sickness that brought banks and brokers to their knees has now infected the companies that insure lives and protect families. By Brush February 25, 2009 The life insurance companies that millions of Americans entrust to help protect their families or pay the bills in their golden years are caught in a downward spiral eerily similar to the one that has brought down banks and brokers. Like Bear Stearns and Lehman Bros. (LEHMQ.N), U.S. life insurers Hartford Financial Services (HIG.N), Principal Financial Group (PFG.N), Lincoln National (LNC.N) and many others all have significant exposure to mortgage-backed securities and other risky debt instruments. They're reporting huge losses that -- if they continued -- could trigger a meltdown. That could wipe out shareholders, who already have suffered declines of 20% to 40% in the past week alone. Customers with annuities or insurance policies might have to turn to U.S. state insurance backstop funds and settle for only a portion of the money they were expecting. Health, auto and property insurers are better off. But based on how far life insurance stocks have fallen, investors are worried many won't survive at all. What are the chances this doomsday scenario will play out? " To know that, you have to gauge how bad this market will get over the next six months, which none of us know, " responds Jim , an analyst with Morningstar (MORN.O). It all comes down to how much worse things could get for the (U.S.) economy and for the debt instruments and stocks that life insurance companies hold. " We're telling people to be more careful, particularly if you are going into longer-range products that involve significant upfront funding like annuities, " says Bob Hunter, the director of insurance for the Consumer Federation of America. " You want to make sure that the company is actually around when you want to get the money out. I'd say there's a good likelihood some of them will go under. " Death spiral It's easy to imagine a spiral that takes many insurers out or at least has them asking for help from the U.S. government. It starts with those serious market losses. Life insurance companies rely on investments in bonds and stocks to meet cash-flow needs years from now. But because of exposure to dubious debt securities backed by shaky subprime and commercial real-estate loans, they're now piling up investment losses big time. In early February, for example, Hartford Financial reported a loss of $806 million, or $2.71 per share for the previous quarter, including a $610 million realized loss on investments. Lincoln National reported a $1.98-per-share loss, including a realized loss on investments of $238 million after taxes. This isn't the end of it. Analysts at Stanley (MS.N), for example, estimate Lincoln National is sitting on $7.6 billion more in unrealized losses in its $58 billion investment portfolio. Many other companies have significant unrealized losses, too. These big losses create two problems for life insurance companies. First, they have to reserve more capital against payments they promise by selling annuities and life insurance policies. More importantly, the erosion of their capital bases has ratings agencies downgrading their debt. If that continues, big corporate customers and individuals might consider them too risky and pull business -- sparking a " run on the bank " at insurers. " Over the course of 2009, we expect signs of a flight to quality on the part of annuity buyers, " Wachovia analyst Hall wrote in a recent research note. He thinks that's already playing out at Lincoln National. All of this, then, brings another cycle of downgrades in credit ratings -- a kind of vote on how likely a company is to pay back its debt. Taken to extremes, investment losses that spark ratings downgrades -- combined with stock price declines -- would make it virtually impossible for insurers to raise capital. It would also be tough to roll over debt coming due over the next two years. Poof. There would go your life insurance companies. This scenario inched closer to reality in recent weeks as insurers announced big fourth-quarter losses. The news had debt-rating agencies such as Fitch Ratings, Moody's Investors Service and Standard & Poor's Ratings Services cutting their ratings for Hartford, Principal Financial, Prudential Financial (PRU.N) and Genworth Financial (GNW.N), citing " surging investment losses and weakening earnings capacity. " Some help from regulators As a sign that the problems for insurers are getting more serious, regulators are loosening accounting standards to try to help them out. In the past few weeks, insurance regulators in Connecticut, Iowa and Ohio have eased accounting standards for life insurers like Hartford and Allstate (ALL.N) in an effort to help them meet standards for capital on hand. State regulators are allowing insurers to count more deferred tax assets as capital, which seems odd because these are tax refunds expected years from now, not money in the bank. They are also permitting insurers to reserve less cash against promised annuity payments. Again, this seems disconcerting, since you might expect regulators to ask for more reserves at a time when investment assets are falling. " They are trying to grasp for other forms of capital, " says , an accounting analyst with Gradient Analytics. " This is a sign of stress among these companies. " The Consumer Federation of America likens the practice to doling out " lollipops at a barbershop. " Don't worry, be happy Though industry supporters acknowledge there could be serious trouble if the U.S. economy and the markets sink low enough, they cite several reasons a doomsday scenario isn't realistic: * First, life insurers typically have very little money invested in stocks or risky mortgage-backed securities. Most of it is in bonds -- and in a broadly diversified portfolio of high-grade corporate or government bonds at that, maintains Weisbart, the chief economist at the Insurance Information Institute. " There may be one portion of their portfolios where they are experiencing investment losses, but you have to look at their overall business and how they are managing that business, " Ohio Insurance Director Jo Hudson told me. " Based on the analysis that we do here in Ohio, the insurance companies are safe and sound. " * Next, outright bankruptcies are unlikely, says Sterne Agee analyst Nadel, because life insurance companies have agreed to make payouts over the long term -- typically several decades from now. They can survive near-term market weakness because they aren't required to make payouts right away. * Nadel also doubts a run on the insurance companies will occur, because they charge hefty fees for cashing out accounts. Uncle Sam hits policyholders with penalties for cashing out early, too. * And unlike Bear Stearns and Lehman Bros., insurers did not borrow huge amounts of money to make investments, Connecticut Insurance Commissioner Sullivan says. Despite recent downgrades to its debt rating, Principal Financial says its capital position actually doubled in the fourth quarter to about $800 million and that it still has relatively strong debt ratings and a strong capital base. The company also says it won't have to pay out on many of its annuities and policies for a long time, so it can wait out near-term unrealized losses on investments. It also says that its wealth management divisions could continue to operate well even if the company got lower ratings. * Talk back: Which company will be the next to fall? Last Friday, Hartford chief Ramani Ayer told investors: " We entered 2009 well-capitalized and with ample liquidity. The Hartford remains well-prepared to meet our commitments to our customers, as we have for the past 200 years. " And as for relaxed accounting rules, two state insurance commissioners I spoke with defended the practice. Allowing insurers to take credit for deferred tax assets makes sense because insurance companies typically overpay taxes on life insurance premiums. The taxes get paid back to the companies over time, says Hudson, Ohio's chief insurance regulator. So allowing companies to recognize 15% of the deferred tax asset -- up from 10% -- is no big deal. Next, insurers already reserve more than required for variable annuities. An easing of the standards has been approved by the U.S. National Association of Insurance Commissioners for 2010. Regulators are only speeding up that change, Connecticut's Sullivan says. It's also important to keep in mind that health, auto and property insurance companies make fewer long-term investments, because their policies and payouts stretch out over much shorter periods. They invest in more-liquid short-term securities and may not face the same level of portfolio losses as life insurers. As for those life insurers, the points above may be reasons to feel more secure. But if the U.S. economy and the markets continue to tumble hard, the companies won't be safe. The number of insurance companies with supposedly safe debt that are on the verge of slipping into junk territory hit an 18-year high in January, according to Standard & Poor's. Nouriel Roubini of RGE Monitor thinks continuing economic damage will ultimately push their credit losses to $3.6 trillion, up from recent levels of around $1.6 trillion. U.S. government guarantees If an insurance company does go bust, a policyholder will get a hand from " guarantee funds " run by states. Once the assets of a bankrupt insurer were exhausted, policyholders could file claims against these state funds for insurance losses or lost annuities. One drawback is that these funds limit claims to a few hundred thousand dollars. " If you have a million-dollar life insurance policy, you're going to get a haircut, " says Hunter, of the Consumer Federation of America. And a lot of these state guarantee funds don't actually have any money. Instead, they assess surviving insurance companies for the money they need to satisfy claims. In a real disaster scenario that took out a lot of insurance companies, it might be hard for states to raise enough money to satisfy claims. At that point, some states would dip into their general funds. Ultimately -- in the meltdown scenario -- it might be Uncle Sam that would be asked, once again, to save the day. Last month, U.S. federal banking regulators approved applications from Hartford and Lincoln National to acquire existing savings and loans and become thrift holding companies. That move makes an insurer eligible for federal government bailout funds. VoilĂ . Problem solved -- assuming U.S. taxpayers will stomach more bailouts at that point. At the time of publication, Brush did not own or control shares of any company mentioned in this column. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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