Hartford Profit Up As Focus Shifts to P/C Insurance
Hartford Financial Services Group Inc.’s profit surged as the insurer focused on property/casualty coverage after divesting life and annuity units. The company gained in extended trading.
Third-quarter net income advanced to $293 million, or 60 cents a share, from $13 million, or 1 cent, a year earlier, when the sale of a life insurance unit weighed on results, Hartford said Monday in a statement. Profit excluding some investing results was $1.03 a share, beating the 83 cent average estimate of 17 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.
Chief Executive Officer Liam McGee sold the life unit and a broker-dealer and retreated from variable annuities amid pressure from investors including John Paulson to narrow the company’s focus. Hartford has rallied 51 percent this year, driven by rising interest rates and higher stock prices.
“There is a lot of confidence now in Hartford executing what they’ve set out to do,” Vincent DeAugustino, an analyst at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, said by phone before results were announced. “Within the foreseeable horizon, we can think about Hartford as being a mostly pure-play P/C company.”
Hartford advanced 1 percent to $33.90 at the close in New York and has beaten the 24 percent gain of the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index this year. The stock added 55 cents to $34.45 at 4:39 p.m., after results were released.
Catastrophe Costs
Core earnings in the P/C unit were $263 million, a 4.4 percent decrease from a year earlier, as costs tied to natural disasters rose. Hartford spent 96 cents on claims and expenses for every premium dollar it collected, one penny more than in the year-earlier period. Catastrophes cost the firm $66 million, up from $10 million a year earlier.
In the commercial segment, policy sales rose 1 percent to $1.57 billion. Sales advanced 2.9 percent to $988 million in the consumer unit, Hartford said. Rates increased 8 percent on standard commercial policies that were renewed, according to Monday’s statement, the same pace as a year earlier.
Hartford said improved group long-term disability results contributed to a 57 percent increase in core earnings at the unit that provides workplace benefits, to $36 million.
Hartford spent $241 million to repurchase 7.5 million common shares and about 500,000 warrants in the third quarter, the company said. McGee increased the share-repurchase authorization by $750 million in June to $1.25 billion. Book value, a measure of assets minus liabilities, rose to $38.87 a share from $38.59 three months earlier.
Variable Annuities
The insurer initially reported a larger profit for last year’s third quarter, before finding a material weakness in internal controls over financial reporting and correcting the results. The loss was tied to the sale of a life unit to Prudential Financial Inc.
McGee also divested its retirement-plans business, broker-dealer and individual annuity origination unit, the company said in January.
Hartford still has liabilities tied to retirement products sold before exiting the variable-annuity business in the U.S. and Japan. McGee, 59, used hedges against market fluctuations on the products, which can guarantee minimum payouts regardless of the performance of assets backing the policies. Liabilities typically shrink as stock markets rise.
Net income at the Talcott Resolution business, which includes results from the retirement products, was $7 million, compared with a loss of $121 million a year earlier. Customers’ account values declined in the U.S. and Japan as more clients gave up their variable annuities. Hartford said net realized capital losses of $123 million were driven by hedges on its international variable annuity block.
Client Surrenders
In Japan, variable annuity account values fell to $22.8 billion of Sept. 30 from $28.7 billion a year earlier, as more clients turned in their contracts. Rising stock markets limit the value of the guarantees that clients purchased from Hartford.
Hartford reached a deal in June to sell its U.K. variable-annuity business to Berkshire Hathaway Inc. for $285 million as Hartford sought to limit liabilities.
(Editors: Dan Reichl, Dan Kraut)