MetLife U.S. retail unit rebranding as Brighthouse Financial

MetLife U.S. retail unit rebranding as Brighthouse Financial
.
AUG 04, 2016
MetLife Inc., the New York-based insurer that traces its roots to the 1860s, said it's come up with a new name for a U.S. retail unit that's slated for separation. The business will be known as Brighthouse Financial once it's broken off from the parent company, MetLife said Thursday in a statement. MetLife said in January that it would pursue a spinoff, sale or initial public offering for the unit and hasn't yet announced which path it will take. The insurer is seeking to give a fresh identity to the U.S. operation that offers annuities and life policies to individuals, a business which will be led by Eric Steigerwalt. MetLife Chief Executive Officer Steve Kandarian is working to reshape the parent company to free up cash and focus on operations in Asia and Latin America and the business selling insurance through employers. “As a separate entity, Brighthouse will benefit from greater focus and more flexibility in products and operations,” Mr. Kandarian said in the statement. “This separation will also bring significant benefits to MetLife as we focus even more intently on our group business in the U.S., where we have long been the market leader, as well as on our international operations.” Financial firms have been forced to rebrand operations as businesses reorganize. Voya Financial Inc. took that name after being separated from Dutch bank ING Groep NV. And General Electric Co. rebranded a consumer-lending operation as Synchrony Financial and then spun it off. “Our optimistic outlook on what we will create for people's financial futures, coupled with our guiding principles of simplicity and transparency, are captured in our name, Brighthouse,” Mr. Steigerwalt said in the statement. Mr. Kandarian's company traces its roots to a company that insured Civil War soldiers and sailors against wartime disabilities. MetLife opened for business in 1868, according to a history on the company's website. MetLife has been recognizable for years by the Snoopy and Peanuts characters it uses for marketing. That branding will stay at MetLife after the split, and the firm routinely evaluates their use, according to Meghan Lantier, a spokeswoman for the company. She said the company intends to keep the MetLife name on the football stadium used by the New York Jets and New York Giants.

Latest News

Robinhood just made a bold move into AI-powered trading for the retail market
Robinhood just made a bold move into AI-powered trading for the retail market

Traders will be able to connect their own third-party AI agents to the brokerage platform.

Jamie Dimon signals up to $20 billion acquisition for JPMorgan
Jamie Dimon signals up to $20 billion acquisition for JPMorgan

The bank's outspoken CEO says it's scanning for deal targets even as geopolitical risks and elevated asset prices cloud the outlook.

Fintech bytes: Envestnet's Bill Crager wants to fix tech's disconnection dilemma
Fintech bytes: Envestnet's Bill Crager wants to fix tech's disconnection dilemma

Virtual family office platform Strad and Ai-native CRM slant are also supporting centralization for advisors with newly inked partnerships.

Advisor moves: Cetera's Commonwealth pitch draws public sector-focused veteran
Advisor moves: Cetera's Commonwealth pitch draws public sector-focused veteran

Meanwhile, Raymond James' employee arm welcomes a $550 million advisor from JP Morgan, and LPL attracts another advisor trio from D.A. Davidson.

Crypto has arrived in the brokerage account but what does it mean for advisors?
Crypto has arrived in the brokerage account but what does it mean for advisors?

Prometheum's Aaron Kaplan on why clearing ETH inside a US brokerage account changes the conversation and what still needs to happen before adoption scales.

SPONSORED When Growth Outruns the System

According to Flyer Financial Technologies, rising portfolio complexity is exposing the limits of legacy infrastructure and widening the gap between automation and reality

SPONSORED Why strategy matters more than performance

In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.