Life Insurers Triumphed Over Q2 Storms: Morgan Stanley
Life insurers tend to put a large majority of their assets in high-grade corporate bonds and similar types of instruments, and rising interest rates helped the performance of life insurers’ interest-sensitive holdings, the analysts say.
Although COVID-19 killed about 30,000 people in the second quarter, that was much lower than the 155,000 death toll in the first quarter, and the decrease in mortality helped all companies with substantial amounts of life insurance policies in force.
Negatives
The analysts note that some factors that did well in the second quarter, such as the performance of alternative investments, might look better than they should because of reporting lags, and that the future course of other factors, such as COVID-19 mortality, are hard to predict.
The Future
The analysts are hoping that the new drop in COVID-19 mortality is the start of a return to normal, not just the result of a temporary lull.
“The debate is now shifting to whether we will see a period of favorable mortality, as a number of claims that would have occurred in the next several years were essentially brought forward by the pandemic,” the analysts write.
Morgan Stanley’s headquarters in New York. (Photographer: Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg)