Subscribe

Ameriprise offloads $1.7 billion in fixed annuities

Firm is trying to shift its business mix, freed up $200 million in capital.

Ameriprise Financial Inc. has offloaded $1.7 billion in fixed-annuity liabilities to Global Atlantic Financial Group, representing roughly 20% of the company’s fixed-annuity account balances, the firm announced Tuesday.

Commonwealth Annuity and Life Insurance Co., a Global Atlantic subsidiary, is reinsuring the annuities on the books of Ameriprise subsidiary RiverSource Life Insurance Co., which will retain account administration and servicing of the policies.

In a reinsurance transaction, one firm contractually accepts the risk of another company. There are several reasons a company might enter into a reinsurance agreement. Ameriprise, for example, is shifting its business mix toward less capital-intensive lines and generated $200 million of deployable capital.

(More: Insurers create pain points for advisers and clients)

Other potential reasons include transferring certain types of risk, such as longevity or investment risk, exiting a certain business line, increasing the profitability of an insurance product, and reducing an insurer’s exposure to large claims, according to the Society of Actuaries.

Global Atlantic was the No. 4 seller of fixed annuities last year through the third quarter, having sold $5.6 billion in products over that period, according to Limra, an insurance industry group.

A number of big annuity deals have happened recently.

Great-West Life & Annuity Insurance Co. announced in January it is selling the bulk of its individual annuity and life insurance businesses to Protective Life for roughly $1.2 billion via a reinsurance transaction.

Voya Financial Inc. sold more than $50 billion in annuities to three private-equity firms last year. Those assets are now held by a company called Venerable Holdings Inc.

The Hartford Financial Services Group last year sold about $48 billion in annuity contracts to a group of six investors.

Moody’s Investors Services said in a research note late last year that it expects the trend of life insurers selling off legacy blocks of business to continue, given favorable economic conditions such as rising interest rates and a sizable inventory of legacy businesses.

Related Topics:

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

SEC issues FAQs on investment advice rule

The agency published answers to four questions about Form CRS.

SEC proposes tougher sales rule for exchange-traded products

The agency, concerned about consumer protection, says clients need a baseline understanding of product risk

Pete Buttigieg proposes a ‘public’ 401(k) program

The proposal is similar to others seeking to improve access to workplace retirement plans but would require an employer match.

DOL digital 401(k) rule not digital enough, industry says

Some stakeholders say the disclosure proposal is still paper-centric and should take into account newer technologies.

Five brokers lose Ohio National lawsuit over annuity commissions

Judge rules the brokers weren't beneficiaries of the selling agreement between the insurer and broker-dealers.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print