Union Warns Pension Funds to Be Wary of Private Equity-Backed PRT Insurers

UNITE HERE singles out Brookfield-owned American National Insurance Company as using risky strategies.



A U.S.-Canadian labor union warned hundreds of defined benefit pension plans of potential risks involved with conducting pension risk transfer deals with private equity-backed insurers.

Hospitality workers’ union UNITE HERE, which represents 300,000 workers, sent to several hundred pension plan administrators and actuaries a letter that singled out Galveston, Texas-based American National Insurance Co., which is owned by Brookfield Reinsurance Ltd., an affiliate of Canadian alternative asset manager Brookfield Corp. According to the letter, Brookfield’s strategy incorporates acquiring blocks of annuities and group annuities and then replacing a portion of the safest assets with complex or illiquid investments such as private loans.

The union letter claimed Brookfield’s focus will be originating or acquiring private loans intended for American National Insurance’s portfolio, where they do not need to be during short-lived downturns. However, it added that what might happen to the private-debt assets during long downturns or permanent credit impairments is far less clear.

“In our view, pension obligations should not be used as a cheap funding source for private equity asset managers chasing the illiquidity premium or offloading illiquid assets their own affiliates have originated,” the letter stated. “Unless and until there is updated guidance from the [Department of Labor], plan fiduciaries must navigate the new developments in PRT themselves.”

But American National Insurance disputes claims that there are liquidity issues with its practices.

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“Like all insurance companies, American National and the group annuity product used for pension risk transfers are highly regulated and we maintain high levels of liquidity,” American National Insurance Senior Vice President Scott Campbell said in an emailed statement.  “Brookfield has a lengthy history as an owner and operator of real assets and businesses. Their long-term investment approach is aligned with the long-term nature of pension risk transfer insurance contracts.”

The union urged pension funds to carefully review the investment practices of prospective group annuity providers, including the degree to which they use affiliated offshore reinsurance and their track record as risk managers of long-duration liabilities. It noted that regulators “have turned their attention to the risks inherent in private equity-backed insurers” and cited the U.S. Department of the Treasury as saying that the growth of alternative and non-traditional investments in the insurance sector may be associated with the potential amplification and migration of risk in at least five ways:

  1. Regulatory incentives may help drive private equity-owned insurers to incorporate substantial reliance on offshore risk-bearing entities, potentially masking the degree of risk to U.S. policyholders.
  2. The increased interconnectivity of the U.S. and Bermuda insurance markets through the growth of private equity-owned insurers may have implications for U.S. policyholders.
  3. The increased use of complex investment strategies has led to the greater prominence of illiquid and volatile assets on insurers’ books.
  4. Firms may be leveraging opportunities for capital arbitrage that may exist because regulators and the NAIC have not fully aligned supervisory frameworks with market developments.
  5. Alternative asset managers and private equity-owned insurers have access to diversified channels to source private credit, enabling them to engage in more complicated transactions.

The letter cited public filings, earnings calls and statements from Brookfield executives that indicate that since it acquired American National Insurance, the company has moved to replace bonds and other liquid securities with private credit, asset-backed securities and other alternative investments. The union also stated that shortly after the acquisition was approved by regulators, American National Insurance placed its entire $13 billion bond portfolio as “available for sale.”

In Brookfield’s 2022 earnings report, the company announced it closed 28 pension risk transfer deals last year, which was “our most active year to date,” representing $1.6 billion of premiums, a 50% increase over the previous year. That total included its first PRT transaction in the U.S. market, “where we expect to continue to be active in 2023.”

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Pension Risk Transfers: What to Watch Out For

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AI Application ChatGPT Beats Stock Market, Study Says

Researchers found that investing using ChatGPT analysis produced a return of more than 400% during a time period that saw the market average decline.



A study published by the University of Florida found that using ChatGPT for sentiment analysis of publicly traded companies generated investment returns far in excess of the market average.

ChatGPT, an artificial intelligence chat application developed by OpenAI, is a large language model, which is a type of artificial intelligence algorithm, though it is not one explicitly trained for financial analysis.

The study used headline data for various stocks from October 2021 through December 2022 and tracked actual stock prices for that same time period. The study omitted headlines in which companies were mentioned passively in a story about something else, daily stock movement reports and duplicate headlines. In total, the study drew on 67,586 headlines related to 4,138 companies.

During the study’s time period, the researchers found that a strategy of investing $1 in the market and buying on good news and selling on bad news (as identified by ChatGPT itself) would have turned the $1 into more than $5.50 when not accounting for transaction costs, even though the market average declined over the same time period. This strategy was repeated on a daily basis.

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When accounting for transaction costs, investing based on ChatGPT’s positive or negative evaluation outperformed the market average, provided transactions costs are 25 basis points or less per transaction.

The study also found that a strategy of only selling on bad news outperformed the inverse strategy of only buying on good news. Researcher Alejandro Lopez-Lira explained that bad news depresses stock prices more than good news inflates them, and ChatGPT was able to detect this pattern.

Additionally, companies with smaller market capitalization are more sensitive to headline sentiment than larger ones. Lopez-Lira says that, on average, a positive headline can increase the stock price of a small company’s stock by 60 bps, but the effect was only 20 bps for larger stocks.

The study did not set out to explain that gap, but Lopez-Lira suggests one explanation is that because less is known about smaller cap stocks, investors might be more sensitive to headlines than they would be for larger stocks. Lopez-Lira contends that investors can more ably balance the headline against their existing knowledge of the larger company and be less influenced by it.

Lopez-Lira explains that AI digests headline data and performs sentiment analysis much faster than a human can, so the primary advantage of using AI in trading would be the ability to act more quickly on public sentiment than a competitor relying on human expertise could.

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