Life Insurers See Q2 Mortality Decrease

Masks

What You Need to Know

COVID-19 continues to kill more than 2,800 people per week, though that number is down significantly compared to the first quarter of 2022.
Life insurers say the drop has had an obvious effect on the flow of U.S. life insurance death claims.
The Equitable Holdings CFO says mortality may continue to be volatile.

Retirement advisors may be facing a new longevity planning problem: An easing of the COVID-19 pandemic could give clients extra years of post-retirement life.

The number of reported pandemic-related deaths fell to about 30,000 in the second quarter, which ended June 30. This is down from about 158,000 in the first quarter.

Life insurers say the drop has had an obvious effect on the flow of U.S. life insurance death claims.

“Our COVID mortality experience actually declined by 90% from the first quarter to the second quarter,” Daniel Fishbein, president of U.S. business at Sun Life Financial, told securities analysts last week.

Michel Khalaf, the CEO of MetLife, said group life mortality at that company fell to 85.8% in the second quarter, down from 103.8% in the first quarter, and down from 94.3% in the second quarter of 2021.

The mortality drop could be affecting working-age clients more than clients who are already retired.

“The age demographics for mortality continue to shift away from the working-age population to the more elderly population,” according to Steve Zabel, chief financial officer at Unum Group.

The percentage of pandemic-related deaths affecting working-age people fell to 16% in the second quarter, from 24% in the first quarter, and 35% in the fourth quarter of 2021.

See also  How much life insurance coverage does a 24-year-old need?

At Unum, the number of pandemic-related claims fell to about 200 in the second quarter, from 1,400 in the first quarter, Zabel said.