Topic: Dividend Stocks

Canadian insurance giants aim for rising sales in Asia, less risk in U.S.

Canadian insurance giants aim for rising sales in Asia, less risk in U.S.

SUN LIFE FINANCIAL (Toronto symbol SLF; www.sunlife.ca) sells savings, retirement, pension and life insurance products to individuals and corporations.

Sun Life mainly operates in Canada, the U.S. and the U.K., but it continues to expand into Asia. It has $640 billion of assets under management.

Last year, the company sold its riskier, money-losing U.S. annuity business, which offers products that guarantee minimum long-term returns even if markets fall.

In the three months ended December 31, 2013, Sun Life’s earnings per share jumped 95.8%, to $0.94 from $0.48. Revenue rose 11.6%, to $4.2 billion from $3.8 billion.

The improved results came as the value of the assets the company manages rose, which pushed up its fee income. It also had higher sales of individual and group insurance in Canada and the U.S., as well as personal insurance in Asia.

The stock has moved up 34% in the last year. It yields a high 3.7%.

Dividend stocks: Lower sales in Asia push Manulife revenue down

MANULIFE FINANCIAL (Toronto symbol MFC; www.manulife.ca) sells life and other forms of insurance, as well as mutual funds and investment-management services. The company operates globally and has $599 billion of assets under management.

Manulife’s earnings per share rose 25.0% in the three months ended December 31, 2013, to $0.35 from $0.28 a year earlier. However, revenue declined 2.4%, to $5.92 billion from $6.07 billion. Insurance revenue fell mostly due to lower sales in Asia, where the year-earlier quarter was unusually strong ahead of tax changes. That offset higher demand for mutual funds and investment products.

Manulife has made substantial progress cutting its U.S. insurance business’s exposure to unpredictable stock markets and interest rates.

At the same time, the company continues to steadily increase its market share in Asia. Right now, about a third of Manulife’s insurance premiums come from its operations in Japan, China, Hong Kong, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore and the Philippines.

The stock has moved up 38% over the past year. It yields 2.5%.

In the latest issue of Canadian Wealth Advisor, we consider whether SunLife’s shares can keep on rising based on its earnings outlook. We also look at whether increases in Asian sales and improvements in its American business will let Manulife’s shares continue to rise. We conclude with our clear buy-hold-sell advice on these two stocks.

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Do you include insurance companies as well as banks among the financial stocks in your portfolio? Do you choose insurance stocks mainly for the dividend, or is there another reason you invest in them? Have you had any experiences that stand out, good or bad, with insurance stocks?

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