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Jackson National extends variable annuity lead

Sales of Elite Access product helps firm stay ahead of Lincoln National, TIAA-CREF and AIG.

Jackson National Life, owned by UK-based Prudential Plc, extended its lead in U.S. variable annuity sales at its unit as rivals scaled back.
Jackson sold $12.7 billion of the retirement contracts in the first six months of 2014, an increase of 24% from a year earlier, according to data released Monday by the Limra Secure Retirement Institute. Industrywide sales fell 4% to $70.4 billion.
Jackson has been emphasizing the breadth of options in its Elite Access product, including offerings from BlackRock Inc. (BLK) and Jeffrey Gundlach’s DoubleLine Capital.
“Most of the growth right now is coming from the Elite Access,” Greg Cicotte, president of Jackson’s distribution arm, said in an interview. “If Elite Access continues to perform the way it has since launch, then I would be very happy and comfortable with us continuing to grow our variable annuity sales.”
The company began offering the product in 2012.
(Related: Zurich restricts contributions to popular variable annuity contract)
Jackson’s pretax operating income in the first half of 2014 climbed 20% to $1.1 billion, fueled by increased annuity sales and higher assets under management, the Lansing, Mich.-based unit said Aug. 12.
MetLife Inc., the largest U.S. life insurer, was the top variable annuity seller in 2011, before scaling back as CEO Steve Kandarian worked to reduce the insurer’s risk from market slumps. Newark, N.J.-based Prudential Financial (PRU) Inc. was No. 1 in 2012, and Jackson took the top spot last year.

LINCOLN, AIG
Lincoln National Corp. retained the No. 2 post as first-half sales fell 11% to $6.42 billion. TIAA-CREF came in third, with $6.38 billion. At American International Group Inc. (AIG), variable annuity sales rose 12% to $6.17 billion, putting the firm at No. 4.
Variable annuities offer tax deferral for savers and can guarantee a stream of payments. Jackson and Lincoln are among insurers working to increase the proportion of annuities that are sold without so-called living benefits. Those guaranteed minimum returns can pressure insurers’ finances when stocks tumble, as they did in the financial crisis.
Some firms have limited the risks tied to the guarantees by forcing clients to hold both stocks and bonds, or by requiring investments in funds that change their holdings based on market fluctuations. That’s increased the appeal of Jackson’s offerings, which don’t restrict allocations, said Judson Forner, director of investment marketing at ValMark Securities Inc.
(Don’t miss: Variable annuity scam architect settles with SEC, admits to wrongdoing)
SHUNNING CONSTRAINTS
“They have a niche that no one else shares,” Mr. Forner said. “Your investment-oriented advisers, many of them have been unwilling to accept the constraints.”
Prudential Financial was No. 5 in the first half, selling $4.95 billion of variable annuities, down from $6.63 billion a year earlier. Sales fell to $3.21 billion from $6.26 billion at New York-based MetLife, which was No. 8.
Allianz SE’s U.S. business was the top seller of fixed annuities, followed by policyholder-owned New York Life Insurance Co. and AIG.

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