Not All Financials Are Poison
I am overweight financials, but I don’t own any banks, or entities where the primary business is credit risk. I own a bunch of insurers, because they are cheap. The first one to report came Monday after the close, Reinsurance Group of America. They beat handily on both earnings and revenues. They are the only pure play life reinsurer remaining. Competition is reduced because Scottish Re is for all practical purposes dead. They make their money primarily off of mortality, charging more to reinsure lives than they expect to pay in death claims.
This is a nice niche business, and a quality competitor in the space — well-respected by all. And, you can buy it for less than book value. Well, at least you could prior to the close on Monday.
Here are the financial stocks in my portfolio at present:
- Safety Insurance (SAFT) (Massachusetts personal lines)
- Lincoln National (LNC) (Life, Annuities, Investments)
- Assurant (AIZ) (Niche lines — best run insurer in the US)
- Hartford (HIG) (Life, Annuities, Investments, Personal lines, Commercial Lines, Specialty Lines)
- RGA (RGA) (Life reinsurance)
- Universal American Holdings (UAM) (Senior Health Insurance — HMO, Medicare, etc.)
- MetLife (MET) (Life, Annuities, Investments, Personal lines)
- National Atlantic (NAHC) (waiting for the deal to close)
Now, I do have my worries here:
- Even though asset portfolios are relatively high quality, they still take a decent amount of investment-grade credit risk, and even squeaky-clean portfolios like the one Safety has are exposed to Fannie and Freddie, unlikely as they are to default on senior obligations.
- Those that are in the variable annuity and variable life businesses might have to take some writedowns if the market falls another 10% or so. For those in investment businesses, fees from assets under management will decline.
- Pricing is weak in most P&C lines.
Away from that, though, the companies are cheap, and I have a reasonable expectation of significant book value growth at all of them. Also, a number of the names benefit from the drop in the dollar — Assurant, MetLife, Hartford, and RGA.
One final note before I close: diversification is important. I have Charlotte Russe (CHIC) in the portfolio, and it got whacked 20%+ yesterday. Yet, my portfolio was ahead of the S&P 500 in spite of it. If Charlotte Russe falls another 5% or so, i will buy some more. There is no debt, earnings are unlikely to drop much (young women will likely continue to buy trendy clothes), and there are significant assets here. I don’t expect a quick snapback, but as with all of my assets, I expect to have something better 3 years from now, at least relative to the market.
Disclosure: Long SAFT LNC AIZ HIG RGA UAM MET NAHC CHIC
Related Articles
|
Hedge Fund Jobs
Job Seekers: Search jobs by category, get job alerts by email or live feed, apply online See full list of jobs »
Employers: See all recruitment options, get applications online or by email Post a job »




This article has 3 comments:
- Aalan
- 87 Comments
Jul 22 11:51 AMCasualty risks from weather events are at an all-time high.
I don't see much future here, but good luck to you.
- nyka
- 141 Comments
Jul 23 06:13 PM- oldtrdr
- 113 Comments
Jul 24 12:47 AMA bit harsh....actually, the author's to be commended for pointing out there ARE some/a few things worth looking at in the sector, AND he had the stones to be explicit vis a vis personal holdings.
A good piece, Dave. I pay attention to your "stuff".
old trader