// . //  Insights //  COVID-19 Impact On US Life Insurers

Based on 2020 Q4 earnings calls, Oliver Wyman made observations regarding the impact of COVID-19 on life insurance in the United States related to mortality, financials, operations, and sales. 

 
Mortality Impact
 
Companies quoted impacts in various formats, some pre-tax vs post-tax, some gross vs net of reinsurance, and some with vs without IBNR reserves

Ranges of projected claims have been converted to midpoints 

  • Most companies reported higher COVID-19 claims in Q4 in comparison to Q3, and in most cases, Q2
  • Projected 2021 impacts
    • Companies generally expect elevated claims in the first half of 2021, with levels decreasing later in the year
    • Principal, SCOR, and VOYA estimate between 280,000 and 300,000 COVID-related deaths in the U.S. in 2021
    • Munich Re projects €200M in COVID-19 related life and health claims in 2021. This is greater than their €170M 2020 Q4 impact, but less than their €370M total 2020 impact
  • AIG estimates up to 40% of reported COVID-19 claims reflect an acceleration of claims they would otherwise expect in the next 5 years
  • Non-COVID mortality
    • Lincoln and Principal experienced unfavorable non-COVID-19 claims, which may be indicative of disruptions to normal healthcare and under-reported COVID-related deaths
    • RGA realized favorable non-COVID mortality experience driven by lower large claims
    • SCOR recognized a positive impact from reduced flu claims in the U.S.

Economic Impact

  • Rebounding investment yields
    • Munich Re, RGA, SCOR, and Swiss Re noted higher investment yields over Q3
    • 10 year treasury has risen more than 50bps since the start of 2021, as of February 26th
    • As yields have risen, most major US Life insurer stock prices have increased between 10% and 20% YTD, as of February 26th
  • Impairments
    • Aegon had very low impairments in 2020, and expects residual impairments post-COVID
    • RGA impairments remain below the low end of their previous stress scenario ranges; Q4 net impairments and change in allowances of $3M pre-tax
    • Swiss Re had net realized losses from impairments of $27M; no increase from first half of 2020
    • SCOR had limited impairment charges of €42M pre-tax
    • Principal realized $70M of capital impacts from credit drift and losses, significantly lower than initial estimates at pandemic onset

Operational Impact

  • Companies will likely wait until at least the second half of 2021 before bringing people back into the office
  • Insurers are likely to allow 30% of their workforce to remain remote permanently
  • Employee sentiment is still split, with half wanting to return to office and half wanting to stay virtual
  • 98% of Nationwide’s employees pivoted to WFH at the start of the pandemic (compared to 18% pre-pandemic)
  • Data shows that many insurers have a lower lease obligation for 2022 than 2021

Sales Impact

  • Sales rebounded for younger issue ages, while older ages rely more on in-person sales and are slower to recover
  • SCOR Global Life gross written premiums are up 1.4% YoY at constant exchange rates
  • RGA traditional net premiums for both Q4 and full-year 2020 increased 2% YoY
  • AIG sales have improved from the first half of 2020
 
Additional Resources