Voya to exit individual life insurance business

Voya to exit individual life insurance business
The insurer joins other large players that have recently left the business, which is less profitable than it used to be.
OCT 31, 2018

By the end of the year, Voya Financial Inc. will no longer sell individual life insurance in order to focus on higher-growth business lines. Voya, which was spun off from Dutch parent ING Groep in a 2013 initial public offering, decided to exit the individual life business following a strategic review, said CEO Rodney O. Martin Jr. during an earnings call Tuesday night. Moving forward, the firm will focus on its retirement, investment management and employee benefits units, which are "higher-growth, higher-return, capital-light businesses," Mr. Martin said. Voya's exit follows the sale of the vast majority of its individual annuity business earlier this year to a trio of private-equity investors. It divested around $56 billion in variable and fixed annuities to Venerable Holdings Inc., which encompasses investors Apollo Global Management, Crestview Partners and Reverence Capital Partners. Voya will continue to service and pay claims to existing life insurance customers. The firm has roughly $310 billion in total policies in force among 785,000 customers. Although two-thirds of its business on the books is from individual term insurance, the vast majority of its new sales have come from indexed universal life insurance. Voya sold $55 million in individual life policies this year through the third quarter, down 11% from the same period in 2017. Voya joins other large insurers to have recently exited the life insurance business. MetLife Inc. spun off much of its individual life and annuity business into Brighthouse Financial Inc. last year and stopped writing new retail business. Liberty Life Assurance Co. of Boston announced earlier this year that it was selling the bulk of its individual life and annuity business to Protective Life Corp., via reinsurance, for $1.17 billion. Life insurance is less profitable for insurers than it used to be, said Samantha Chow, senior life insurance and annuity analyst at Aite Group. Margins are small, partly because of costly overhead, maintenance and legacy systems, as well as the low interest rate environment, she said. "I think those margins will increase in the future when these carriers start to become more digital, both internally with automation as well as externally to the customer when servicing," Ms. Chow said. "It'll be a less costly product in terms of overhead and expense for the company."

Latest News

Advisor moves: Baird gains $508M RBC team as Merrill Lynch lands $560M in talent
Advisor moves: Baird gains $508M RBC team as Merrill Lynch lands $560M in talent

The latest father-son additions at Merill include a tandem originally with Wells Fargo and an Iowa-based trio that crossed over from Baird.

Investors sue Blue Owl advisor, allege inflated marks drove windfall fees
Investors sue Blue Owl advisor, allege inflated marks drove windfall fees

Investors say the advisor graded its own assets - then cashed in

Investors accuse Norada Capital of hiding note risks
Investors accuse Norada Capital of hiding note risks

Oregon investors allege Norada sold high-yield notes through a Ponzi scheme

Schwab enters prediction markets despite CEO's gambling warnings
Schwab enters prediction markets despite CEO's gambling warnings

Schwab founder Charles Schwab invested in Kalshi in 2021. Now the brokerage is launching binary options on predicting the S&P 500 through Cboe.

How AI has gone mainstream with ultra-high-net-worth investors
How AI has gone mainstream with ultra-high-net-worth investors

With more HNW clients coming to meetings armed with AI research, BNY Wealth report finds advisor expertise is more critical than ever as the final human check.

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.