Hartford Financial Services offers to pay employees to give up their pensions

Insurer offers voluntary lump-sum payments to about 13,500 workers who have left the company and haven't yet started receiving pension payments.
JUN 09, 2014
Hartford Financial Services Group Inc. (HIG) is working to reduce its retirement obligations by paying former employees to give up their pensions. Last month, the insurer offered voluntary lump-sum payments to about 13,500 workers who had left the company and hadn't yet started receiving pension payments, Hartford said Tuesday in its quarterly filing. The former workers have until November to make a decision, and will get the payouts the following month. Hartford has divested life insurance and retirement units to focus on property-casualty coverage. The firm has also offered payments to clients to give up some retirement products it sold in prior periods in an effort to limit future obligations. “We delivered margin expansion across the business lines and top-line growth in P&C,” Chief Executive Officer Christopher Swift said Tuesday in a statement announcing third-quarter results. “Looking ahead, our primary objectives are to drive return-on-equity improvement and growth in book value per share.” A high acceptance rate on the offer disclosed today may trigger a fourth-quarter settlement charge of as much as $140 million, Hartford said. The cost would be cushioned by adjustments to other accounts that aren't included in net income. Hartford had $5.52 billion in retirement benefit obligations and $4.63 billion of assets as of Dec. 31, leaving a shortfall of $886 million, according to the company's annual report with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The company froze the pension plan as of Dec. 31, 2012, limiting the ability of employees to accrue further benefits. The insurer said Tuesday that it added $100 million last month to its U.S. pension plan.

Latest News

RIA moves: Beacon Pointe tops $4B in New England with latest female-founded partner firm
RIA moves: Beacon Pointe tops $4B in New England with latest female-founded partner firm

Meanwhile, Carson Group fully integrates a decades-old practice in Phoenix, Arizona, and Triad Wealth touts its 5x growth to hit a $2 billion milestone.

Gen Z is cutting spending but retirement savings are still constrained by living costs: BofA
Gen Z is cutting spending but retirement savings are still constrained by living costs: BofA

Matt Gellene shares the bank’s latest research on how young adults are managing their finances.

For most advisors, AI turns from threat to competitive necessity
For most advisors, AI turns from threat to competitive necessity

Survey data reveal a widening divide between early AI adopters and those still on the sidelines – with career stage and AUM emerging as key fault lines.

Participation without panic: How outcome-driven ETF portfolios keep skittish clients invested
Participation without panic: How outcome-driven ETF portfolios keep skittish clients invested

Sitting between equity and insurance-like solutions, defined-outcome ETF strategies have matured as an alternative to staying in cash during choppy markets.

Can AI double advisor productivity?
Can AI double advisor productivity?

Orion CEO Natalie Wolfsen says artificial intelligence could double the number of Americans receiving financial advice as RIAs deploy AI to boost advisor productivity

SPONSORED Beyond wealth management: Why the future of advice is becoming more human

As technical expertise becomes increasingly commoditized, advisors who can integrate strategy, relationships, and specialized expertise into a cohesive client experience will define the next era of wealth management

SPONSORED Durability over scale: What actually defines a great advisory firm

Growth may get the headlines, but in my experience, longevity is earned through structure, culture, and discipline