Subscribe

$400M sale to let Hartford retire from retirement biz

The Hartford Financial Services Group Inc. is selling its retirement plan business to Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co.

The Hartford Financial Services Group Inc. is selling its retirement plan business to Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. for $400 million as part of a restructuring it embarked on this year.

“The agreement marks the second of three planned business sales as we continue to make good progress executing on our strategy,” Liam McGee, president and chief executive of the insurer, said in a statement. “With The Hartford's sharper focus on its historical strength in insurance underwriting, along with efforts to improve expense efficiencies, increase capital generation and reduce market risks, we are on the right path to deliver greater shareholder value.”

SHARPENING FOCUS

The Hartford said in March that it would focus on its core businesses of property-and-casualty insurance, group benefits and mutual funds.

The insurer said in July that it would sell Woodbury Financial Services Inc., its independent broker-dealer subsidiary, to American International Group Inc. That followed the purchase of Hartford's annuity business by Forethought Financial Group in April.

Bloomberg has reported that the Hartford is close to selling its individual life insurance business to Prudential Financial Inc. That transaction could be worth as much as $1 billion.

The move to reduce the company's size is the result of pressure by hedge funder John Paulson, the largest shareholder of The Hartford (HIG).

Its shares were trading at about $18 last Thursday, down about 18% from when the restructuring was announced.

The latest deal, which is expected to close in the fourth quarter, will give MassMutual's retirement plan business a big boost.

The company, owned by policyholders and members, will see assets in its plans grow to $120 billion in assets under management, from $66 billion. MassMutual will service 40,000 retirement plans, a dramatic rise from 7,600.

Plan participants will about double to 3.1 million.

A GOOD FIT FOR BUYER

Hartford's strength in the small plan and 403(b) markets was viewed as a good fit with Mass-Mutual's focus on midsize to large retirement plans.

“This transaction enables us to accelerate growth into new sectors, add complementary distribution capabilities and nearly double the number of retirement plan participants we serve,” Roger Crandall, chief executive of MassMutual, said in a statement.

Elaine Sarsynski, head of MassMutual's retirement services division, will oversee the transition.

[email protected] Twitter: @jasonkephart

Related Topics: ,

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Who will be alts’ best in show?

The demand for liquid alternatives has never been higher, and it is drawing in a pack of money managers who are all vying to be leaders of the pack.

One year on, iShares’ Core series clawing back market share for BlackRock

One year on, iShares' Core series is clawing back market share for BlackRock as price cuts, rebranding helps firm recover from case of “Vanguarditis.”

American Funds to expand sales force aggressively

The sales team will increase over the next six to eight months to help the company cope with the evolving adviser business model, said Matt O'Connor, director of distribution in North America.

American Funds makes push to increase transparency

Firm will share how portfolios are managed but won't reveal performance and holdings

Vanguard raked in almost every dollar that went into U.S. equity funds this year

If you bought a U.S. equity fund this year, there's about a 98% chance you invested in a fund managed by Vanguard. Jason Kephart has the story.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print